FIFTY50 THE WASHINGTON INFORMER CELEBRATES Fifty Years of News Excellence; 50 Years of Service
Marion Barry was a Personal Hero See Page 26 •
C e l e b r a t i n g 5 0 Ye a r s o f S e r v i c e
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Serving More Than 50,000 African American Readers Throughout The Metropolitan Area / Vol. 50, No.8 Dec 4 - Dec 10, 2014
Ex-Offenders, Barry Supporters Honor Fallen Leader By Barrington M. Salmon WI Staff Writer@bsalmondc Tiffani Howard stood in the middle of Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, watching several dozen ex-offenders and other supporters of former mayor and Ward 8 Council member Marion S. Barry march chanting “Marion Barry! Mayor for Life! She looked intently at the six men carrying an empty casket topped with African mud cloth and emblazoned with pictures of a smiling Barry walking in front of a white hearse and burst into tears. Howard, a resident of Conyers, Georgia, said Barry, who died on the morning of Nov. 23, served as a father-figure and mentor. “I spoke to him while he was in hospital and he said from his hospital bed that he was going to get out of bed and help the people,” she recalled. “I used to tell him to slow down. He knew he couldn’t waste any time. He was on a deadline, a schedule.” “He was just dedicated. You don’t have that anymore. This generation has to rise to this level of commitment or we won’t survive as a species. Mayor Barry was relentless, unyielding, moving not standing. We have to take his example. This man has done more in one day than people have done in a month.”
As a teenager, Howard said she participated in the Marion Barry Youth Institute. Barry established the institute in January 1979 and drew from his civil rights experience. The program inculcated in hundreds of the District’s young people at a time, the concepts of self-esteem, goal-setting, community activism. “He saw something in me at age 14,” said Howard, a documentary filmmaker. “They taught us leadership and other skills at Howard University. There were 200 children who spent four weeks there. They fed us, paid us and treated us like kings. I’m a leader in my community because of Marion Barry. He was always so good to us.” That sentiment is precisely why Al-Malik Farrakhan organized the march and rally for ex-offenders to pay their respects to, and praise Barry’s life and legacy. The group of more than three dozen marched from 9th and Pennsylvania Avenue NW to the John A. Wilson Building. “We’re doing this because we know as ex-prisoners we have to honor this man,” said Farrakhan, founder and executive director of Ceasefire, Don’t Smoke the Brothers and Sisters. “He was in the forefront in the
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Prince George’s County Executive Rushern L. Baker, III (with hand raised) is administered the oath of office by Judge Sheila R. Tillerson Adams (right), as his family watched, in Upper Marlboro, Maryland, on Dec. 1. /Photo by Travis Riddick
Prince George’s County Executive Rushern Baker, Council Installed By Avis Thomas-Lester WI Editor-at-Large Prince George’s County Executive Rushern L. Baker, III, who lost two bids to become the jurisdiction’s chief executive before his election in 2010, took the oath of office for his second term Dec. 1 before an audience
including several of his loved ones and a host of state and local officials. The installation of Baker, 56, of Cheverly, occurred outside the Prince George’s County Administration Building in Upper Marlboro, Maryland. The program also included the swearing-in of the nine members
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of the Prince George’s County Council. The body includes three new members who replaced term-limited representatives: Dannielle Glaros (D-District 3), Deni Taveras (D-District 2) and Todd Turner (D-District 4). Incumbents Derrick Leon
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