VOL. 54, NO. 22 • MARCH 14 - 20, 2019
Spring Equinox, March 20, Ushers in the First Day of the Season!
WI Health Supplement Center Section
Gray, Newsham Urge Ward 7 to Proactively Fight Crime
Launch of Anacostia Busboys Evokes Memory of Marion Barry
By James Wright WI Contributing Writer
By Sam P.K. Collins WI Contributing Writer @SamPKCollins Hundreds of revelers, including many of D.C.’s political and cultural elite, celebrated the grand opening of the region’s seventh Busboys and Poets on Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue SE during a red-carpet extravaganza. The star-studded event took place March 6, what would have been the 83rd birthday of late D.C. icon Marion S. Barry, a staunch advocate for and key player in the expansion of the Busboys franchise to Southeast.
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5 Andy Shallal, Mayor Muriel Bowser and Ward 8 Councilmember Trayon White with other city leaders, cut the ribbon at the new Busboys and Poets in Southeast during its official opening on Tues., March 12. (Roy Lewis/The Washington Informer)
Congressional Hearing Scrutinizes Black Male Mentorship Programs By Sam P.K. Collins WI Contributing Writer @SamPKCollins U.S. lawmakers and leaders of some of the nation’s leading mentorship organizations addressed ways to provide better male role models for Black men and boys during a hearing Tuesday afternoon on Capitol Hill. Statistics show that many Black men and boys who’ve grown up in the era of the first Black president haven’t and more than likely won’t be able to enjoy a similar level of success in the
career field of their choice without positive male role models. For years, Black male mentorship had been a way of helping those unexposed to love and opportunities that lead to a fulfilling life. The Congressional Caucus on Black Men & Boys’ first hearing of the 116th Congress allowed for further discussion between the lawmakers and mentoring organizations about areas of improvement. 5 The Honorable Eleanor Holmes Norton and the Honorable Danny K. Davis co“The odds were set against chairs of the Congressional Caucus on Black Men and Boys hold a Caucus hearing with me to fail,” said Derrell Fra-
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the Honorable Eddie Bernice Johnson and the Honorable Bobby Scott on mentoring programs for Black men and boys on Tuesday, March 12. (Robert R. Roberts/The Washington Informer)
D.C. Councilmember Vincent Gray recently held a crime summit in his ward and encouraged the residents not to complain about criminal lawbreaking but to do something about it. Gray, a Democrat who represents Ward 7 and did so in that capacity from 2005-2007 before he became chairman of the council from 2007-2011 and the mayor from 2011-2015, has become alarmed at the escalating homicide rate. “We are only two months into 2019 and we have had 12 homicides in the ward already,” Gray said, who served as mayor of the District from 2011-2015. “In a space of about 12 months, we have had 42 homicides. We want to hear from you and if we get one or two ideas that will work, we will be happy. “We want this session to be to be solution-oriented,” he said. “We don’t want to celebrate the problem; we want to know how to move forward.” The summit took place at the Jones Memorial United Methodist Church that sits off of Benning Road NE. and where the Rev. Loretta Ewell Johnson serves as the pastor. Overall, the crime rate in the District has taken a significant dip, with reductions in sex abuse, assault with a dangerous weapon, robbery, burglary, motor vehicle
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