NEWJOURNAL & GUIDE Serving Norfolk, Portsmouth, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Suffolk & The Peninsula
Vol. 123, No. 43 | $1.50
October 26, 2023 - November 1, 2023
Publishing since 1900 ... that no good cause shall lack a champion and evil shall not thrive unopposed.
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GAZA CRISIS: THE EQUIVALENT SANCTITY OF LIFE
By Julianne Malveaux News Analysis
TRICEEDNEY WIRE I must join others in condemning the bombing in Tel Aviv that killed more than 1,200 people. Those killed were mothers and fathers, children and grandparents. They were soldiers and civilians, people simply attending a concert. They had no idea they had breathed their last breath when they died. They were going about their business, possibly blissfully clueless about the next moment. Their deaths, horrible deaths, must be mourned. There are also as many as 200 hostages, some American citizens. Brutally, some of the hostages have been paraded about. Some families have no idea whether
their loved ones are dead or alive. Barbarism is associated with taking hostages, mainly innocent civilians, and it must be condemned, with the hostages released soon. But Netanyahu’s assertion that he will not bargain with Hamas, the group that took the hostages, does nothing to facilitate hostage release. Israel is justifiably enraged and has vowed to retaliate. And the retaliation has begun with bombing attacks on Gaza. These ruthless attacks have hit mothers and fathers, children and grandparents, soldiers and civilians, and people living their lives. They had scant warning of their coming slaughter. They were going about their business, possibly blissfully clueless about the next moment. Thousands in Gaza are dead, and their horrible deaths must
the West Bank between the last
Israeli lives must be valued, and so must (2008) and now, not including the conflict. There have been Palestinian lives. Human life is equivalent, current 6407 Palestinian fatalities and Israeli fatalities. Where have but the media does not reflect it. Can’t we all 306 world voices, now united against Hamas brutality, been in the face of stand with life? Palestinian fatalities exponentially be mourned. Tens of thousands of others are affected by Israel’s blockade of Gaza, which has restricted the availability of food, water, and medical supplies. The Bible says something about an eye for an eye, but an eye for an eye leaves everyone blind. I fear that we in the United States have been blinded long ago. There is no excuse for the carnage Hamas imposed on Israel. Period. There is also no excuse for
starving people to death or removing tens of thousands from their homes, forcing them to leave everything behind. When President Biden says, “We stand behind Israel,” already sending military equipment and asserting a strong presence, what is he speaking to the Palestinian people? The United Nations Office for Humanitarian Affairs (https://www. ochaopt.org) has documented the loss of human life in Gaza and
greater than any Israeli fatalities? Without excusing Hamas (because their cruelty is inexcusable), cannot one understand Palestinian frustration and, perhaps, brutal action? Hamas didn’t do the Palestinian people any favors. Israel’s retaliation has left as many as a million displaced. But I think of the Harlem Renaissance poet Claude McKay, whose 1919 poem, “If We Must Die,” spoke of armed resistance against racism. ...see Gaza, page 5A
PROGRAM WILL HONOR 38 WHO NJG Presents BEACH’S SCHOOLS Impacting Lives ByDESEGREGATED Leonard E. Colvin Reunion Ceremony Chief Reporter New Journal and Guide
NORFOLK NJG Publisher Brenda H. Andrews graciously accepts a beautiful bouquet of flowers presented by her Assistant Desmond Perkins from her NJG Team and Friends. ...see pages 4B and 5B
The first AfricanAmerican students to desegregate two all-white public schools in Virginia Beach in 1962 will be honored for the first time this Saturday, October 28. An event planned and hosted by the Centerville Historical Society will be held at the Mt. Bethel Baptist Church, 4636 Indian River Road, at 1:30 p.m. In 1963, many of the students lived in that community. The exposure of their school desegregation story results from the efforts of Virginia Beach Historian Hendrix, whose Photo: Randy Singleton Edna dedicated research has shed light on other previously ignored Black figures and events in Virginia. Hendrix said much of the information she unearthed about the timeline leading up to the 38 Black students walking into the two white schools and the aftermath
was found in the pages of the Norfolk Journal and Guide. Also critical were the recollections of many of the 38 students and their family members. Hendrix said that up to 26 of the 38 students will be on hand at the commemorative event and will receive a certificate for their contributions. Also, a plaque with the 24 students who were enrolled at one of the schools, Woodstock Elementary School, will be placed at the school. The other school that was the first to be desegregated was Kempsville Junior High (now Kempsville Middle). In the June 30, 1962, edition of the GUIDE, seven days of news from across the globe were detailed in the National, Peninsula, Portsmouth, and home sections of the GUIDE. Nationally, on the front page, a group of White Congressmen called for an investigation into the business affairs of civil
rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. King welcomed the probe he said in the article. The state’s anti-boycott laws were on the verge of taking effect to weaken Black resistance to Jim Crow segregation.
Virginia’s Jim Crow public seating laws were being threatened by the courts. The short desegregation article was found on the Peninsula section and on the bottom of the Home Edition. ...see Students, page 7A
STUDENTS WHO DESEGREGATED VIRGINIA BEACH SCHOOLS IN 1962 WOODSTOCK ELEMENTARY Shelton Sheppard Ruby R. McCoy Patricia Jones Denice K. McCoy Marjean Russell Thornton E. Russell Theodore O. Wilder Valerie Gills Andrew Lee Gills Andrea L. Gatlin Carolyn A. Wilder Angela McCoy Michael E. McCoy Jerry McCoy Carroll E. McCoy Sylvia M. Gilchrist Dwight A. McCoy Robin Towns Mary Stephenson Jerry Jones
Vernice V. Sanderson Gale Sanderson Michael W. Melvin Earl Smith Samuel L. Stephenson Earl E. Stepheson Sandra McCoy Cynthia McCoy Robert A. Fentress Tyrome W. Fentress Gerald A. Bridgers Ronald E. Barrington Roxanna Stephenson Angelia Smith KEMPSVILLE JUNIOR HIGH Earnestine Hodnett Sylvia A. Fentress Jean A. McCoy Franklin Melvin
WHY DEMOCRATS CAN’T SAVE Georgia’s Fani Willis And Ignoring REPUBLICANS FROM THEMSELVES Receiving Threats; Pressing On
By Stacy M. Brown
By Rosaland Tyler
Senior National Correspondent @StacyBrownMedia NNPA NEWSWIRE Rep. Jim Jordan’s repeated failure to garner the necessary 217 votes, even within his own party, to win Speaker of the House’s crucial position has left the GOP in disarray. Jordan, a prominent conservative and election denier, faced fierce opposition from a faction within the Republican caucus. At least 22 Republicans were relentless in their refusal to back Jordan, especially after the Ohio legislator and his supporters allegedly made threats against them and their families. Meanwhile, across the aisle, Democrats remained united. Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries garnered unanimous support from all 212 members of the Democratic caucus. As Jeffries aptly noted, the GOP is amid a civil war, the ramifications of which are felt within their ranks and reverberate throughout the halls of Congress. While the refusal of a substantial faction of Republicans to endorse their chosen Speaker candidate paints a stark picture of a party grappling with internal strife,
Associate Editor New Journal and Guide
Photo: Courtesy
Meanwhile, across the aisle, Democrats remained united. Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries garnered unanimous support from all 212 members of the Democratic caucus. an intriguing question emerges: Why haven’t Democrats leveraged this rift within the GOP to their advantage? Jeffries could have clinched the Speaker’s gavel with just five additional votes from across the aisle.
“It may seem as if it should be easy for the Democrats to peel off five votes from the Republicans in the House of Representatives to elect Hakim Jeffries speaker. ...see Dems, page 3A
Annual Indigenous Peoples Celebration Machicomoco State Park is hosting its annual Indigenous Peoples Celebration on November 4, 2023. Learn about local tribes, experience traditional dance and drums. ...see ... see page 8A
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said that even though a Russian website posted her address and other confidential documents online, she still refuses to back down. “To threaten me is a waste of time,” Willis said at the Revolt World Festival in Atlanta earlier this month. “It’s a waste of time,” said Willis, who describes herself as an “equal opportunity prosecutor” seeking accountability and justice no matter the violator’s name. To date, Willis has extracted guilty pleas from four of the defendants in the election interference case she is trying that centers around former President Donald Trump. As of Tuesday, October 24, Willis had garnered guilty pleas from three of Trump’s former attorneys:
D.A. Fani Willis Jenna Ellis, Kenneth Chesebro, and Sidney Powell. Powell could be a key witness for Willis due to her proximity to Trump. Scott Hall, a former bail bondsman, pled guilty early on in the case. House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), who recently failed to get his party to elect him the next House Speaker, tried unsuccessfully to disparage Willis. ...see Willis, page 8A
INSIDE: Part Two: “How Jim Crow Destroyed The Thriving Black Community Of Sugar Hill”
...see page 7A