The Westside Gazette

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THE WESTSIDE GAZETTE POST OFFICE 5304 FORT LAUDERDALE, FL 33310

PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID FT. LAUDERDALE, FL 33310

PERMIT NO. 1179

Black Attorneys Battle Inside A Criminally Unjust Court System

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Former Lieutenant Governor Jennifer Carroll To Be Recognized As Trailblazer In Florida Politics

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Apaches Refuse To Relinquish Sacred Land PAGE 7

Broward County's Oldest and Largest African American Owned and Operated Newspaper VOL. 44 NO. 26 50¢ A Pr oud PPaper aper ffor or a Pr oud PPeople...Sinc eople...Sinc Proud Proud eople...Sincee 1971 THURSDA THURSDAYY, AUGUST 6 - WEDNESDA WEDNESDAYY, AUGUST 12 12,, 2015

NULholds 2015 Conference in Fort Lauderdale Who is this ‘Scrap Man’? By Charles Moseley Thousands of Urban League members from across the country representing some of the best and brightest minds in America, gathered in Fort Lauderdale along with local citizenry from South Florida to participate in the Urban League’s National Conference. The conference was held July 29 -Aug. 1, at the Greater Fort Lauderdale Convention Center and hosted by the Urban League of Broward County (ULBC), the Greater Fort Lauderdale Convention & Visitors Bureau, and TD Bank. The Urban League of Broward County (ULBC) served as the affiliate host and was very clear about attaining positive results for its surrounding community, “We knew the conference would be a great success,” said Dr. Germaine Smith-Baugh, president and CEO. “We also knew that our attention should be focused on what would be left behind on Aug. 2 for our City, its residents, and our affiliate.” This year’s conference theme was titled, “Save Our Cities: Education, Jobs, & Justice” and featured several presidential

Former Secretary of State and Democratic Presidential hopeful, Hillary Clinton, addresses National Urban League (NUL) plenary session, which featured candidates from both the Democratic and Republican Parties. candidates representing both the Democratic and Republican Parties. The candidates included; former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former Governor Jeb Bush (R-FL), retired neurosurgeon Dr.Ben Carson, former Governor Martin O’Malley (D-MD), and Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT).

National Urban League (NUL) CEO Marc Morial kicked off the presidential candidate forum by outlining the significance of the event, before a packed auditorium on July 31. The plenary session was also simulcast worldwide on CSpan.

“This is a very special event because it is the first time in this election cycle that candidates from both the Democratic and Republican Party have come together on one stage. The presence here today of these candidates represents an outreached hand, an important signal that they take our issues, that they take our communities and they take each and every one of you very seriously,” said Morial. Democratic hopeful Hillary Clinton wasted no time in an apparent jab at her Republican opponents, inferring that they were less than generous when it came to addressing the needs and concerns of the African American community. “The real test of a candidate’s commitment is not whether we come to speak at your national conference, as important as that is; it’s whether we’re still around after the cameras are gone and the votes are counted. It’s whether our positions live up to our rhetoric. And too often we see a mismatch between what some candidates say in venues like this and what they actually do afterward.”

“And he said to them, “You yourselves know how unlawful it is for a man who is a Jew to associate with a foreigner or to visit him; and yet God has shown me that I should not call any man unholy or unclean.” Acts 10:28 (NASB) By Bobby R. Henry, Sr. It’s not difficult to see messages from scriptures throughout our daily walk in life. As I was driving to church on Sunday morning, two things popped out at me as teaching moments from lessons learned from my daily Bible reading. Sunday mornings have always been regarded in my home as a day of reverence and personal introspections. More than other days I am searching for those exquisite nuggets of profound knowledge that leaves the undeniable truth in God’s Word open for those with “eyes to see it.” (Cont'd on Page 3)

Senate appropriations bill cuts housing vouchers for poor families

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Thousands march nearly 900 miles in Journey for Justice “It’s OK that we’re angry and fed up,” Brooks told UNS. “It’s OK that we respond with emotion. But this is more than an emotional trip. This is a reform movement. And we believe putting the emotion with education makes a difference.” “We’ve seen more civil rights challenges in the last year than in decades,” Brooks added. “That’s why we believe we have to inundate the halls of Congress. Across the country, people have been asking, ‘Why is this happening?’ The problem is that the people asking the questions are not in the room with the people who can do something to change it. We intend to change that.” (Cont'd on Page 5)

A coalition of organizations, led by the NAACP, embarked recently on an 860-mile, 40day, 40-night march from Selma, Ala. to Washington, D.C. By Curtis Bunn, Urban News Service SELMA, AL -The movement that began in a bungalow is traveling nearly 900 miles to the home of Dr. King’s “Dream.” A coalition of organizations, led by the NAACP, embarked recently on an 860mile, 40-day, 40-night march from Selma, Ala. to Washington, D.C. This initiative recalls the original Civil Rights Movement. America’s Journey for Justice began Aug. 1 with a prayer at the historic Boynton House, a modest home in Selma that witnessed much of the fight for integration, including Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s 1965 march across the noto-rious Edmund Pettus Bridge. Fifty years later, activists will caravan some 860 miles through Alabama,

Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, and conclude Sept. 16 in Washington. “Why march?” NAACP President Cornell William Brooks asked. “We march because our lives matter, our votes matter, our jobs matter, our schools matter.” The organizers of America’s Journey for Justice stress four issues: the vitality of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, criminaljustice reform, job growth and higher wages, and better public education. “This march is not merely about putting boots on the ground,” Brooks told Urban News Service. “It’s about putting laws on the books. . . This has been a history-laden year, with the anniversaries of the Voting Rights Act, ‘Bloody Sunday’ and so forth. But it’s a good opportunity to make history, too.”

Pleading Our Own Cause

Jamiah Adams of the NAACP said the organizers expect thousands of people to join the marchers at every stop, with a “core group” of more than 100 making the trek from Selma to D.C. “I’m looking forward to marching,” said Damon Younger, 32. The Atlantan plans to join the group when it reaches Georgia’s capital on Aug. 10. After four days of “teachins” on legislation, health, education, and criminal justice, Younger expects to march north. “I’m inspired,” Younger said. “Obviously, I wasn’t born when they marched for our rights in the ’60s. To have a chance to do that now, with all that is going on in the United States, I have to take the time off from work to go. And I go with pride and hope for change.”

WWW.

Homeless families that received vouchers were nearly 60 percent less likely to become homeless again. (Stock Photo) By Freddie Allen, Senior Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON, D.C. (NNPA) – For many Americans living in poverty, housing vouchers mean the difference between having a home of your own or living in a homeless shelter. As many as 85,000 low-

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Fifth Annual Walker Family Appreciation Day continues family tradition By Charles Moseley

L to r: Son, Willie A. Walker, with wife Verdelle and sons Ryan and Terrance Walker.

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income families could lose access to those vouchers under policies crafted in a new funding bill approved by the Senate Appropriations Committee (SAC), according to a recent report by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

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There are not many businesses along the Sistrunk Corridor of Fort Lauderdale which can claim the distinction of being in business for 77 years but that’s just how long Walker’s Grocery has been around, serving customers for four generations. The Fifth Annual Walker Family Appreciation Day is planned for Saturday, Aug. 8, from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m., at the store located at 1217 N.W. Sistrunk Blvd. Refreshments will be served free of charge. Willie Walker and his wife Beatrice began operating Walker’s Grocery in 1938, making it one of Fort Lauderdale’s oldest family-owned businesses. The Walkers had five children, including Willie Alfred and Eardean (now deceased), Ronnie, Tonita and Carolyn. (Cont'd on Page 11) MEMBER: National Newspaper Publishers Association ( NNPA), and Southeastern African-American Publishers Association (SAAPA) Florida Association of Black Owned Media (FABOM)


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