March 2 4, 2017 issue

Page 1

CIAA highlights

Moonlight

A8, B8

wins top Oscar

B3

B2

Richmond Free Press c e l e b rat ing o u r 2 5 t h A nniv e r s ar y

© 2017 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.

VOL. 26 NO. 9

RICHMOND, VIRGINIA

www.richmondfreepress.com

ee Fr

Fr ee

Angela Davis speaks

MARCH 2-4, 2017

Individuals in two different eras drive change for the better

Power of one

16-year-old has state building named in her honor By Holly Rodriguez

Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press

Joan Johns Cobbs, right, listens as Gov. Terry McAuliffe delivers remarks during a dedication ceremony for the Barbara Johns Building, named for her sister, pictured in the portrait, left, in the building’s lobby at 202 N. 9th St.

Salon owner runs free food bank in her North Side shop By Jeremy M. Lazarus

The colorful interior of Rise Above in North Side looks like any hair salon, with beauticians and barbers busy with customers. But walk into a back room and that’s where the shop at 109 W. Brookland Park Blvd. is un-

like any other. Two days a week — Tuesdays and Fridays — the room is stuffed with surplus food that salon owner Marsha Edwards collects from Sam’s Club Please turn to A4

Nearly 66 years after Barbara Johns, a 16-year-old student at Robert Russa Moton High School in Farmville, led hundreds of her classmates on a walkout to protest substandard conditions in her segregated school that were separate but not equal, her sister tearfully thanked Gov. Terry McAuliffe for naming a newly renovated state building in Downtown in Ms. Johns’ honor. “Barbara was a strong, brave, courageous person who saw injustice and did something about it,” Joan Johns Cobbs said. “Her legacy has been firmly planted in the statue in Capitol Square and now on this building, proving that patience is a virtue.” Ms. Johns died in 1991 at age 56. Three

Owners seek return of Maggie Walker papers

of her children, Dawn, Kelly and Terry, her siblings and other relatives attended the dedication ceremony last Thursday held before an audience of more than 200 people in the ornate lobby of the building at 202 N. 9th St. Reading from her sister’s diary, Mrs. Cobbs shared Ms. Johns’ initial discouragement when, after complaining about the school’s conditions to a teacher, she was asked, “Well, why don’t you do something about it?” Ms. Johns wrote that she asked herself, “What could one person do about such a situation?” After spending time in the woods praying and contemplating what to do, Ms. Johns had a vision for action that she believed was divinely inspired. Please turn to A4

Trump lays out tough agenda in address before Congress Free Press wire report

Heralding a “new chapter of American greatness,” President Trump issued a broad call for America first, investing in the nation’s infrastructure, slashing taxes and revamping health insurance in his first By Jeremy M. Lazarus address to Congress. The president offered few details to support the Eight years ago, curious stunationalist agenda he laid out, and, according to dents from the College of Wilfact checkers, padded his speech with numerous liam & Mary stumbled across whoppers. Nonetheless, he received numerous ovaa treasure trove of documents tions and high marks for swapping his trademark hidden in the attic of a vacant pugnaciousness and personal insults for a more building in Gilpin Court. restrained, presidential tone. The building once housed Photo courtesy of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Still, he left many perplexed by his promises the Independent Order of St. to usher in “historic” tax cuts for major corporaLuke, a mutual aid society, tions and the middle class, while touting plans Fifth-graders from Richmond’s Carver Elementary School join Principal Kiwana S. Yates and teachers and the documents provide around an indoor fountain at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and for $1 trillion in “Buy American, Hire American” more information about the Culture in Washington. The students also visited the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, which infrastructure spending to create “millions of jobs,” organization and its noted hosted the Feb. 22 trip in partnership with The New Y-CAPP, Youth Challenged Advised & Positively while also proposing plans to pump up spending leader, Maggie L. Walker, the Promoted. At the foundation, they learned about efforts to advance the global black community and on the Armed Forces and veterans and to build his pioneering civic leader who the separate work of members of the Congressional Black Caucus. The goal of the trip: To enable signature “great wall” along the 1,800-mile U.S. the students to gain a better understanding of the contributions of African-Americans. Please turn to A5 border with Mexico. The question of how he would pay for it all with reduced revenues went unanswered. Deficit hawks in Congress already are signaling disdain for what they see as more of the borrow-and-spend approach By Reginald Stuart that they believe has underWASHINGTON mined the country’s financial President Trump made historic and symbolic embraces of the health. nation’s historically black colleges and universities this week, Some Democrats heard welcoming university chiefs to the White House and issuing ideas they could support in an executive order continuing the White House Initiative on the speech. HBCUs and moving its office to the White House to facilitate For example, U.S. Sen. more direct contact with Trump senior staff. Tim Kaine of Virginia said Monday’s brief White House gathering was the first time a even though President Trump president officially greeted a group of HBCU presidents and “repeated many of his hardchancellors. It was followed Tuesday by a smaller audience of line campaign promises, he HBCU chiefs invited to the White House to witness President also called for some policies Trump signing the executive order. that I support, including paid President Trump, in the executive order and in his address later family leave and smart inTuesday night to a joint session of Congress, stopped short of govestments in our military and ing beyond symbolic gestures, however, despite declaring HBCUs infrastructure.”

 essential partners in the nation’s higher education network. “But,” Sen. Kaine added, President Trump did not answer challenges from HBCU “it’s one thing to give a speech presidents to restore the “aspirational goals” started by former filled with lofty promises. It’s President Jimmy Carter and formalized by the late President another to deliver real, thoughtPablo Martinez Monsivais/Associated Press Ronald Reagan requiring all federal agencies to award 5 percent As President Trump meets Monday with presidents and chancellors of historically black out solutions.” of their contracts and grants annually to HBCUs. Virginia’s senior statesman, colleges and universities, Kellyanne Conway, counselor to the president, sits shoeless

Immersed in history

Controversies rattle HBCU presidents’ meetings with Trump, White House officials

Please turn to A4

on an Oval Office sofa working on her cellphone. The photo went viral.

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