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

Left, Right Seek TTo o Halt $4.2 Billion In Asset-Seizure Abuse

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VOL. 45 NO. 12 50¢

A Pr oud PPaper aper ffor or a Pr oud PPeople...Sinc Proud Proud eople...Sincee 1971 eople...Sinc

Fr om American Dr eam TTo oA From Dream Nightmare: Black Female Lawyer For ced TTo o Sue the Forced Florida Bar for Dafamation And Discrimination

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Patrice Cur Currry On Losing Her Mother To AIDS

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THURSDA Y, APRIL 28 - WEDNESDA Y, MA Y 44,, 2016 THURSDAY WEDNESDAY MAY

Howard students call news of President Obama’s Don’t treat people commencement speech ‘surreal’ like cut flowers By Imani Fox and Kishana Flenory Howard University News Service

Then-Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., waves while speaking at the Howard University convocation ceremony in 2007. President Obama will speak at the school’s commencement ceremony in May. (Chuck Kennedy/MCT/MCT via Getty Images)

WASHINGTON - Howard University students reeled with excitement in reaction to the news that President Barack Obama will deliver the address for their May 7 commencement. “We were freshmen in high school when he first got elected and we were freshmen in college when he got re-elected,” said graduating senior Jeremiah Jones. “So, we were a part of his legacy in the eight years he led the United States.” The film production major said he could hardly believe it when he first got the news through social media. But then the university made the official announcement. Howard University President, Dr. Wayne A. I. Frederick announced President Obama’s visit in a statement issued to students and employees.

“For my father and my mother have forsaken me, But the Lord will take me up.“ Psalms 27:10 By Bobby R. Henry, Sr. Sometimes do you feel like an old flower arrangement made from cut flowers that only capture the color and the beauty seen from one point? These arrangements usually last only a few days and once your beauty has served its purpose you’re discarded into a pile of junk with life still in you. That’s a terrible feeling; you still have life but others see you as if life seems to have passed you by. You go places, attend events where people look past you and no longer do they see you as useful; they think of you as all used up. Dressed up but don’t have any use except for window dressing. The King sought guidance from the elders who attended to the needs of the wisest man that ever lived, King Solomon. “King Rehoboam consulted with the elders who had served his father Solomon while he was still alive, saying, “How do you counsel me to answer this people?” 1Kings 12:6 (Cont'd on Page 9)

Broward Schools pioneer Florida electing delegates to the 2016 Democratic expires at age 88

National Convention By Linda Thigpin The state of Florida is gearing up for choosing its delegates to the 2016 Democratic National Convention (DNC) to be held on July 25–28, 2016 in Philadelphia, Penn. Florida’s Delegates, to the DNC, are allocated to each Presidential Campaign based on votes received from the March 15, 2016 Presidential Preference Primary. Individuals seeking delegate positions had until April 7 to file

late the process to select its delegates to the DN C as follows: 1. The results of Florida’s March 15, 2016 presidential primary election will be used to apportion delegates to the national convention. 2. On May 7, 2016, grassroots Democrats from each of Florida’s 27 congressional districts will meet in congressional district caucuses to elect 135 district-level delegates to the DNC. (Cont'd on Page 3)

application forms, pledging their loyalties to a presidential candidate. After the April 7 deadline, each presidential campaign had until April 20 to review submissions and exercise the option to strike names from the list. The official list of accepted names were finalized and posted on Florida’s Democratic Party website on April 21. Florida Party rules stipu-

Dr. Michael Wiltshire, school reformer

DR. WILTSHIRE By K. Barrett Bilali, Urban News Service As a first-time principal, Dr. Michael Wiltshire was assigned in 2001 to one of America’s worst government-run schools. At Brooklyn’s Medgar Evers High, only 60 percent of students graduated, and 24 percent of all pupils reached college. The school’s enrollment was low, at just 600 students, of whom 99 percent were Black. Yet with dogged determination and stringent reforms, Wiltshire did what few thought possible: He turned the

Pleading Our Own Cause

(Cont'd on Page 9)

Dr. Samuel A. Ford, Jr. passed away on March 29, 2016 peacefully in his sleep at Big Bend Hospice House in Tallahassee, Fla. A native of Memphis, Tenn., Sam graduated from Douglas High School as class president. He then graduated from Tennessee State University in Nashville as a music major. Also a member of the TSU band, they received honors for a performance at Carnegie Hall in April

Prince the businessman as significant as Prince the musician THIGPIN school into an institution of academic excellence. Wiltshire previously chaired the math and science department at Long Island’s Islip High School. Its students were 99 percent white, and 100 percent of them advanced to college. Wiltshire was hired to lift Islip’s math scores, which had slid to a 77 percent passing rate. In fact, Islip’s superintendent reminded Wiltshire that “the real estate in our community depends on our schools” — the higher the test scores, the higher the home prices. At Medgar Evers, however, Wiltshire found no urgency to boost its statistics. The school was mediocre, and that seemed OK. “No ethnic group has a monopoly on intelligence,” said Wiltshire. “That is what made me go to work. I went to work to change the trajectory of this school.” (Cont'd on Page 9)

WWW.

By Eric Easter, Urban News Service While much of the coverage of Prince’s death focuses on the artist’s musical legacy, he may have an equally lasting impact on the music business itself. The Strokes, The Black Keys, Alabama Shakes — the list of popular musicians who cite Prince as a guiding influence is too long to mention. Yet today’s generation of artists, particularly those who have eschewed the old way of doing business, have Prince to thank as well. His highly public dispute with Warner over ownership of his music, and the use of his stature to educate others about the business of creating and performing, transformed how musicians began to think about control of their own careers. (Cont'd on Page 5)

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DR. FORD 1949. He then served two years in the US Army during the Korean War, earning the rank of Sergeant. In 1952, he immediately accepted the position as the first band director at Attucks High School in Dania, Fla. Many of his students were awarded full scholarships in music to the Florida A & M University (FAMU) band under the direction of Dr. Foster. He met his wife of 62 years, Jerutha, in 1954. A fellow educator in Broward Schools, they began outstanding educational careers that lasted for a total of 85 years (43 and 42 years respectively). They continued their personal educational growth together earning Masters degrees from Florida Atlantic University, and Doctoral degrees from Nova Southeastern University. His positions included band director, social worker, middle and high school administrator and retiring as the Assistant to the South Area Superintendent in 1995. (Cont'd on Page 3) MEMBER: National Newspaper Publishers Association ( NNPA), and Southeastern African-American Publishers Association (SAAPA) Florida Association of Black Owned Media (FABOM)


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