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Who Killed Det. Sean Suiter? 197 Days and Counting June 2, 2018 - June 2, 2018, The Afro-American
Volume Volume 127 123 No. No.43 20–22
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Boxer Jack Johnson, the first Black world heavyweight champion, was granted a rare posthumous pardon, clearing Jack Johnson’s name more than 100 years after a racially-charged conviction. Film star Sylvester Stallone on May 30 announced plans for a biopic on Johnson.
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Former AFRO Reporter, William C. Rhoden, Among Those Inducted into Hall of Fame By J. K. Schmid Special to the AFRO
On Finally Leaving Scandal-Plagued R. Kelly Behind
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William C. Rhoden, who covered Baltimore and sports at the AFRO in the 1970s, is one of five journalists inducted in the NABJ Hall of Fame. The ceremony will be held in Aug.
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14-Year-Old Gets College Degree and High School Diploma in One Day has always been ahead of the game. By 4-years-old, McKenzie was reading, by 8, he began taking high school courses, at 11, he was already enrolled in college courses, and now at 14 he graduated with an associates degree and as valedictorian of his high school class. While the whiz kid deserves the accolades, his parents noticed his talent at an early age and began homeschooling him. “We would pull material from different textbooks and custom create his curriculum,” his mother, Monique McCord, told Fox 5 Atlanta. This fall McKenzie will begin courses at Kennesaw State University to study biochemistry. Afterwards, he wants to go to Georgia Teach to get Masters and Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering.
Micha Green AFRO Washington, D.C. Editor mgreen@afro.com
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A former AFRO reporter was inducted into the National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame (NABJ) May 25. William “Bill” Rhoden, journalist, columnist and author, is a Morgan State alumnus, whose career spans publications from the AFRO to the Baltimore Sun to Ebony Magazine to the New York Times. Rhoden joins four additional names to the 2018 class: Albert J. Dunmore (posthumous), a former managing editor and executive editor of the Michigan Chronicle; Victoria “Vicki” Jones (posthumous), a TV news program producer with Boston’s WGBH and WBZ, Harvard Graduate
and former president of the Boston Association of Black Journalists; Louis Martin (posthumous), the commonly known “Godfather of Black Politics,” Martin was a Black rhetorical advisor to Democratic presidents Roosevelt, Kennedy, Johnson and Carter, and a reporter, editor and publisher with institutions such as the Chicago Defender and also the Michigan Chronicle. The only other living inductee is Bob Ray Sanders, a journalist whose career crossed radio, TV and written media. Sanders, reporting from Texas, was an early critic of South African Apartheid and covered Texas’ process of divestment from the regime. “When I look at the list
Usually teens graduate from high school and, if fortunate enough to follow their collegiate dreams, years later they get the honor of walking across the stage to receive a degree. Yet, for 14-year-old, homeschool student, Matthew McKenzie, his graduation order was anything but conventional. “We like to do things differently in the homeschool community,” Mackenzie said to Fox 5 Atlanta, after graduating from Chattahoochee Tech with a degree in Interdisciplinary Studies during the day and later that evening receiving his high school diploma. At 14, McKenzie is wowing the world with his educational tenacity and future goals, yet he
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Now that Matthew McKenzie has his high school and college degree, he’s preparing further his studies at Kennesaw State University this fall.
Copyright © 2018 by the Afro-American Company
Homicides on the Rise, District Struggles to Cope
D1 At Least 4,645 Died After Hurricane Maria, Not 64 By The Associated Press A new study contends that many more deaths than normal occurred in Puerto Rico in the three months after Hurricane Maria devastated the island, mostly because of problems getting medicines or medical care. Researchers surveyed a small sample of neighborhoods and from that estimated that up to 4,600 more deaths than usual occurred, far more than earlier studies have suggested. At least one independent expert questioned the methods and the number in the new study. “This estimate could be off by thousands. Easily,” Donald Berry, a professor of biostatistics at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, told The Associated Press in an email. The research was published online in the New England Journal of Medicine. It’s the latest study to analyze how many people died during or after the Category 4 storm that hit the U.S. territory in September 2017, causing more than an estimated $100 billion in damage. Continued on A3
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The Afro-American, June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018
WHAT’S TRENDING ON AFRO.COM NAACP Joins Black Motorcyclists in Suing Myrtle Beach for Discrimination By Perry Green AFRO Sports Editor pgreen@afro.com
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A lawsuit alleges members of Black Bike week in South Carolina were the victims of discrimination. A group of Black motorcyclists teamed up with the NAACP to file a lawsuit against the city of Myrtle Beach, S.C., as well as its local police department, for alleged racial discrimination shown towards those who participate in Black Bike Week. According to the NAACP, the complaint alleges that there are major differences in the treatment of African-American bikers during Black Bike Week in comparison to how bikers are treated during Harley Week, which attracts mostly White riders. While both bike events occur in May, Black Bike Week is traditionally held during Memorial Day Weekend, while Harley Week occurs a week prior. The complaint is mainly about a different traffic plan that Myrtle Beach has enforced during Black Bike Week; the city doesn’t enforce the same traffic plan during Harley Week, despite both events attracting a similar amount of people in attendance. “The City of Myrtle Beach and its police department impose no formal traffic plan during Harley Week. However, during Black Bike Week they restrict the main two-way thoroughfare, Ocean Boulevard, to a single lane of southbound traffic. All vehicles entering Ocean Boulevard at night are forced to travel through a 23-mile loop with just one exit. On Sunday night of Black Bike Week, it could take over six hours to complete the loop,” the NAACP said in a statement. The suit also mentioned how Myrtle Beach drastically beefs up its police force, which “utilizes overly aggressive policing tactics against African Americans.” The NAACP claims Myrtle Beach’s city government are employing these tactics in attempt to deter Black riders and
tourists from visiting the city. “All citizens are entitled to equal protection under the law and have the rights of expression, assembly and association,” said NAACP President and CEO Derrick Johnson in the press release. “The City’s traffic plan and overly aggressive policing tactics during Black Bike Week violate those fundamental constitutional rights. The Association will continue to use the courts to fight such blatant discrimination.” The NAACP fought and beat Myrtle Beach for the exact same issue more than a decade ago. In 2005, the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina granted the NAACP’s motion for preliminary injunction, citing the differences in the traffic plans for both events were likely motivated by race, which violated the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. According to the NAACP, an agreement was then reached that forced Myrtle Beach to apply the same traffic plan for both events. But that agreement expired three years ago, and Myrtle Beach has since begun to enforce an even more rigorous traffic plan for Black Bike Week than before. Chauncey Harris, a Maryland native who regularly drives out to Myrtle Beach to ride his bike during the event, said the current traffic plan and heavy police presence is causing some of the bikers to consider moving the event just north of Myrtle Beach, near Atlantic Beach. “The loop that they’re forcing us to drive is affecting everybody,” Harris told the AFRO. “There’s talks going around of just meeting up at North Beach, where we’ll probably feel more comfortable because the White folks ate acting like they don’t want us here.” Myrtle Beach Mayor Brenda Bethune said the different plans are due to “public safety,” according to Myrtle Beach Online. “What I want to do on behalf of council is to reassure the public that our number one concern always has been and always will be public safety. And that’s just really what I want to stress. To me, my job is to make the public feel secure in their city management and their city government and our number one focus is to make sure our public is safe in all situations and all special events no matter how many people are here,” she said at a recent city council meeting. Health Officials ‘Cautiously Optimistic’ on Ebola By The Associated Press
(Salvatore Di Nolfi/Keystone via AP)
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Secretary General of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), Elhadj As Sy, informs the media about IFRC’s and WHO’s response on ebola cases in the Democratic Republic of the Congo at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland. The World Health Organization said May 29 it is “cautiously optimistic” about efforts to curb the spread of Ebola in an urban area in Congo, although the lethal virus is still reported in at least two remote areas. There have been 35 confirmed cases, including 12 deaths. The U.N. health agency and partners have vaccinated more than 400 people with an experimental Ebola vaccine, the first time it has been used in an emerging outbreak. WHO emergencies chief Peter Salama told reporters that the response has gone “quite smoothly” and that the agency’s first priority had been to stop Ebola’s spread in Mbandaka, a city of more than 1 million that sits on a river described as a “highway” connecting it to other regions. “We can’t conclude we have safeguarded the city of Mbandaka, but so far there hasn’t been an explosive increase in cases ... We have reason to be cautiously optimistic,” Salama said. He added that the next stage of the vaccination strategy would focus on the remote regions of Iboko and Bikoro, where most of the cases have been reported. Salama also said officials were planning to test five unlicensed drugs for Ebola, pending Congo’s approval. Two of the drugs were previously used in past Ebola outbreaks, but the three remaining medicines have mostly been tested in animals. Salama said using the drugs in Congo’s basic health clinics would be challenging since some involve intravenous infusions and require daily monitoring of kidney and liver
functions. Bikoro has had no electricity and no functioning lab, officials said, and outbreak response efforts in Iboko have required the establishment of helicopter landing sites and electricity. Salama said WHO has been focused on three separate chains of Ebola transmission connected to a funeral, a church gathering and a visit to a health center in Bikoro. He said officials were trying to monitor about 900 contacts of Ebola cases but couldn’t say how many of the newly reported cases are coming from previously identified contacts. Having new cases arise from people not already under observation suggests the virus could be spreading unchecked in certain areas. “This is a work in progress,” Salama said, adding that the “overwhelming majority” of contacts were being followed up on a daily basis and that vaccination was providing further reassurance the epidemic might soon be controlled.
Civil Rights Activists Rally Outside of NFL HQ By The Associated Press
(AP Photo/Ralph Russo)
New York Councilman Jumaane D. Williams, second from right, with the help of Kirsten John Foy, second from left, Northeast Regional Director of the National Action Network, holds a jersey with Colin Kaepernick’s name on the back, during a rally of civil rights activists outside of Civil rights activists protested outside NFL headquarters May 25, calling on team owners to overturn their new national anthem policy and urging a boycott of the league and its sponsors. About 50 people gathered at the midtown Manhattan office building for a rally organized by National Action Network, a civil rights nonprofit. Kirsten John Foy, the group’s northeast regional director, was the first of 10 speakers who took turns during the 40-minute demonstration to criticize NFL team owners and President Donald Trump. “Our demand is that the NFL reverse that immoral and unconstitutional decision,” Foy said. NFL owners voted Wednesday to require players to stand for the national anthem or stay in the locker room. Teams will be fined if players don’t stand. Some players have been kneeling during the playing of “The Star-Spangled Banner” before games the last two seasons to protest police brutality and racial inequality. Former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick started the protest in 2016. He did not play last season after being unsigned as a free agent. He is suing the NFL and team owners for colluding to keep him out of the league. ional Action Network spokesman Alex Butcher-Nesbitt said the group planned to hold similar demonstrations around the country, including Detroit and Los Angeles. The Rev. Charles Williams II, president of the Michigan chapter of the National Action Network, said if Detroit Lions owner Martha Ford and the team adhere to the anthem policy, “then they are doing nothing more than ... standing with racism.” In New York, Foy was joined by progressive talk radio host Mark Thompson, who wore a long shirt with a depiction of Kaepernick in his 49ers uniform taking a knee, and city councilman Jumaane Williams, who brought a Kaepernick No. 7 jersey to display after he spoke and wore a shirt with the slogan #IMWITHKAP across the front. “I’m proud because I’m going to be on the right side of history,” Williams said. “I’m going to be standing and kneeling with Colin Kaepernick.” Several speakers said supporters of Kaepernick and the protesting players should stop watching NFL games and no longer patronize companies that sponsor the league. “You can’t inundate us with tens of millions of dollars in commercial ads and then strip the people that generate your money and your profits of their first amendment rights,” Foy said. “And if they choose to protest, they’ve got to stay in the locker room. So the locker room is the new slave shanty.”
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The Afro-American, June 2, 2018 - June 2, 2018
June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018, The Afro-American
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Rhoden Continued from A1 of previous inductees, this honor becomes even more humbling. Many of those men and women are people I have looked up to and admired for decades and who were beacon lights for my own career,” Rhoden told the NABJ. “The sole focus of my life and career at this point is mentoring and sponsoring a new generation of talented African Americans, not only in sports journalism but throughout a sports industry that tends to exclude and ignore Black talent that does not run and jump. I appreciate what this honor says about my past and am even more excited about the momentum it provides for an exciting future.” One such mentor was AFRO sports editor Sam Lacy, of the eponymous NABJ Sam Lacy Pioneer Award. Lacy was 1991’s NABJ Lifetime Achievement Awardee. “Sam was a crusader, I became a crusader,” Rhoden wrote of Lacy in “Overcoming Barriers With His Sports Pen” a May 2003 article for The New York Times. “In the roughand-tumble 1940s and 1950s, he fought so many battles in a sports industry coming to terms with the emergence of African-American athletes. Lacy, Wendell Smith and Joe Bostic played a major role in integrating major league baseball. Sam and Wendell shepherded Jackie Robinson into White baseball and chronicled his first seasons for a Black audience that couldn’t get enough. Sam was an advocate for Black rights, a watchdog, a voice of reason.” Since that 2003 article, Rhoden went on to publish 40 Million Dollar Slaves: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of the Black Athlete in
2006. A deeply conflicted work; Rhoden’s literally-on-the-field account of 1968’s Whitney Young Classic, wherein he and the Morgan State Bears played the Grambling Tigers in Yankee Stadium, describes thrilling instances of courage, daring, foolhardiness, desperation and resolve. He and his Bears won, but in the echoes of the twin hammerblow assassinations of Malcolm X and Martin
The reality of Black sport, Rhoden’s research uncovers, is explained by his term “Jockey Syndrome.” Named so for the first instances of Black domination in American sport: horse racing. 18th and 19th century slaves, who tended, trained and finally rode their masters’ horses were nigh-unbeatable on the track. But White ownership coupled with White popular resentment, changed the rules to
“I appreciate what this honor says about my past and am even more excited about the momentum it provides for an exciting future.” –William Rhoden Luther King, questions what the ecstasy that comes with Black excellence ultimately delivers without Black advancement. “This was a snapshot of out past, our present, and--I hoped--our future,” Rhoden wrote. “I walked off the Yankee Stadium turf bursting with pride, thankful to be part of something this big, this Black, this beautiful. We had the athletes, we had the fans, we had the money. This day, I thought, was the beginning of something. After all that happened in 1968--the assassinations, the riots, the protests--things would never be the same again; there was no going back. I felt that something new had awakened in us. Decades later, I would still be waiting. The dream was a mirage.”
The Morgan State University Class of 1969 is attempting to locate classmates in preparation of its May 201950th Anniversary celebration. Please visit www.morganstate1969.org or contact Jesse Bennett 443 286-5355 for details.
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marginalize and all but eliminate Blacks from competition. Rhoden works reveals a similar pattern in the back-and-forth integration of baseball, the rise of and fall of Negro leagues, and Robinson’s 1947 break of the color line coming to overshadow Moses Fleetwood Walker’s debut in the major leagues in 1884. While working for the AFRO in the 1970s Rhoden covered sports and Baltimore City among other things. One memorable article about various scams from 1974 carried the headline, “Summertime is ‘sting season’ for city’s flim-flammers.” Rhoden now writes for The Undefeated. While chronicling the ever-rising LeBron James on the court, or profiling UMBC’s own Freeman Hrabowski’s leadership; one critical
eye remains on how the NCAA compensates players. “What happens if the players don’t show up?” Rhoden wrote in “The NCAA Tournament and the Billions of Dollars That Need to be Shared” for The Undefeated. “What happens if they stage a protest and demand a promise for greater distribution of the wealth? This year’s tournament is expected to take in more than $800 million. Are players willing to fight for greater compensation? Will March Madness ever take a knee? Perhaps sooner than you imagine.” Rhoden and his peers will be inducted into the NABJ Hall of Fame August 5 during the organization’s convention in Detroit.
14-Year-Old Continued from A1 “I want to be a Cosmetic Chemist. I want to start my own line of chemical products, the beauty of things,” said the 14-year-old, who has been planning his career since the age of 8. “At one point he said I’m going to cure wrinkles, and I said, good because one-day mom is going to have wrinkles and I’m going to need you,” McCord said. In addition to going to school, McKenzie enjoys playing football and plays saxophone with the Joyful Noise Homeschool band.
Hurricane Maria Continued from A1 Researchers led by Harvard University called the official toll of 64 deaths a “substantial underestimate.” Maria caused the longest blackout in U.S. history, leaving the entire island of 3.3 million people without power, including those in hospitals and nursing homes who relied on respirators. Researchers surveyed 3,299 households earlier this year and used the findings to extrapolate to the whole island. They found that 31 percent reported disruptions in medical services, and more than 14 percent said they were unable to access medications. “Indirect deaths resulting from worsening of chronic conditions or from delayed medical treatments may not be captured on death certificates,” researchers said in the study. They calculated 4,645 more people died in the three months after Maria compared with the same period in 2016. One of the researchers, Rafael Irizarry of Harvard University, told the AP that the estimate is uncertain because of its limited size, but that the study still provides valuable information, including how some people died. Previous studies have found that the number of direct and indirect hurricanerelated deaths in Puerto Rico is higher than the official toll, including a 2017 report that there were nearly 500 more deaths than usual on the island in September. In late February, Puerto Rico’s governor announced that a team of experts at George Washington University would lead an independent review to determine the number of deaths caused by Hurricane Maria amid ongoing accusations that the government undercounted the toll. A preliminary report was due in May, but Puerto Rico officials announced last week that the team requested and was granted more time. The director of that study did not return messages for comment. The government of Puerto Rico issued a statement Tuesday in response to the
AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa
A new study contends that many more deaths than normal occurred in Puerto Rico in the three months after Maria devastated the island, mostly because of problems getting medicines or medical care.
study saying that it welcomed the research and would analyze it. “As the world knows, the magnitude of this tragic disaster caused by Hurricane Maria resulted in many fatalities. We have always expected the number to be higher than what
was previously reported,” said Carlos Mercader, executive director of Puerto Rico’s Federal Affairs Administration. Meanwhile, a couple of media organizations have gone to court to obtain more details on the deaths reported in Puerto Rico last year.
Demographers have said that Puerto Rico recorded an official average of 82 deaths a day in the two weeks before Maria hit. The number increased to 117 a day after the storm pummeled the island in mid-September and then fell below usual in October.
Engineering Subcontracting Opportunities Michael Baker International is seeking qualified, Minority Business Enterprise (MBE) subconsultants to participate in upcoming contracting opportunities. We are presently seeking assistance in the following areas: Water and Wastewater Engineering, Geotechnical Engineering, Value Engineering, Surveying, Cost Estimating, Mechanical and HVAC Engineering, Electrical Instrumentation and Controls Engineering, Structural Engineering, Environmental Science, and Sustainability. Qualified MDOT certified MBE consultants should immediately forward their business information to Stephanie Allder at stephanie.allder@mbakerintl.com for consideration.
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The Afro-American,June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018
COMMENTARY
Year Up Changes Lives
“Your story may not have had the happiest of beginnings, but that doesn’t make you who you are. It is the rest of your story, who you choose to be.” When I first heard these words, they resonated with me in a profound way. I could relate because in a way it described not only my life, but also my time here at Year Up. When I started out as a younger adult, I wanted to go the traditional route: attend a four year university, graduate and then get a career in my chosen field. However, life didn’t turn out that way. Sacrifices had to be made. I dropped out of college after my first year. For the next six years I stumbled through life trying to find my way. I moved from place to place staying with friends and family. I worked night jobs with 12 and 14 hour shifts. Some days I would walk over 2 hours, both to and from work, because I had to pay bills and I didn’t have any bus fare. In what I thought was the beginning of my life, I wasn’t thinking about how to succeed; I was simply thinking about how to survive. I like to think of this time as a learning experience. Although there were struggles and hardships, I was able to learn about myself and about life. I learned responsibility, resilience and dedication. I learned about the value of hard work, and the value of a dollar. I learned about how difficult it is being an adult on your own, and how ill equipped I was to make it without the proper foundation. Hope was a seldom thought, it was something that I never let go of. The hope that one day things will get better. That’s what Year Up gave me. Year Up was my hope, my opportunity. Year Up was my chance for a new beginning. To describe my Year Up experience in one word, I would call it transformative. I knew why I joined this program, and what I wanted to get out of it, but I never expected to grow as a person in such a way that I did. It was here at Year Up that I found my voice, my confidence. I remember when we were just a few weeks into classes, and during one of our career development classes Mr. Emmanuel had everyone in the class share their experiences before coming here. I was actually nervous about sharing, because I was still getting to know my classmates and I was self-conscious about myself. But after seeing my peers be so open, honest and raw with their stories, I felt that I should be able to do the same thing, so I did. I felt empowered and relieved that I could express my thoughts with my peers in a judgment free zone. It was a huge personal victory and the first step in developing and growing as a person. I challenged myself in different and creative ways. From public speaking, to being social with my peers, I felt blessed and lucky to be in a place that not only nurtured personal and professional growth it was the standard. As young adults we all had a rough start, a not so happy beginning. Life got in the way of our plans. But when we came here, no matter what we were coming from we all made a commitment, a resolution, to better our lives. We chose to start over, to start on a new path in our lives. This was, and is, our genesis. And as we prepare to embark on our individual journeys, and carve out our destinies in this world, I know that we will never be alone. We have the bonds we made throughout our Year Up journey. We are a part of a movement that will never end. Although your story may not have had the happiest of beginnings, that doesn’t make you who
Davon Banks
you are. It is the rest of your story, who you choose to be. So be someone great in your homes, in your communities, and in the world. Help your fellow man. Never stop working to achieve your greatest destiny possible, and in doing so, not only as individuals, but also as a connected Year Up unit. I am sure we will all leave a legacy that will stand the test of time. Davone Banks graduated from Year Up in January 2018. Year up is a professional training corps, on the campus of Baltimore City Community College. Year Up offers an intensive, oneyear program for college students, ages 18-24, combining professional coaching, hands-on skill development, and internships at some of America’s top companies.
Environmental Fake News and The Truth
Last week I was on social media and ran across a post with a lovely picture of a honey bee covered in pollen inside a flower bloom with the caption, “Maryland will be the first state to ban pesticides and save the bees.’ Unfortunately, that is environmental fake news. Here’s the truth. On May 1, 2018 the state of Hawaii came close to making history by becoming the first state in our nation to ban the harmful chlorpyrifos pesticide in all agriculture use, a rule started under the Obama administration. Our current Scott Pruitt-led EPA reversed that pledge. Hawaii bill SB3095 requires all users of Restricted Use Pesticides (RUPs) to report usage of chlorpyrifos pesticide and mandates minimum 100-foot no-spray zones for RUPs around schools during school hours. Maryland 2018 Environmental Legislative Session proposed bill (HB116/SB500) This bill would have banned chlorpyrifos in that state for agriculture use. It is already banned for residential use. Chlorpyrifos is a toxic nerve agent pesticide proven to cause brain damage in children and known to harm the environment (honey bees) and wildlife. This bill raised concerns on the Senate floor, and the House bill was withdrawn by the sponsors, Delegate Stein/Senator Nathan-Pulliam.
Cathy Allen
Maryland is moving forward in other important environmental matters such as these environmental wins in the 2018 Environmental Legislative Session. (HB003/SB0138) This bill passed both chambers and requires Governor Hogan to include the state as a member of the U.S. Climate Alliance on or before July 18, 2018 and mandates that only the General Assembly may withdraw that state from the U.S. Climate Alliance. It also requires Governor Hogan to provide an annual report on the activities of U.S. Climate Alliance to the General Assembly. This bill is awaiting the Governor’s signature. Sponsored by: Delegate Stein/ Senator Conway. (HB1350/SB1006) This bill advances efforts to adapt to climate change and passed the House and Senate and is currently awaiting Governor Hogan’s signature. Sponsored by: Delegate Stein/Senator Pinsky. (HB1135/SB1058) This bill would have halted the development of offshore wind projects by moving them at least 26 nautical miles off the coast of the state and halt offshore wind projects. This bill was voted down in the House Economic Matters committee and securing the future of offshore wind in Maryland. Sponsored by: Delegate Adams/Senator Hershey. (HB0744/SB0850) These bills created a “Complete Street Program” on both a state and local level. The first bill provides
grants to local governments to encourage their adoption of complete streets policies. The second: requires that the state Department of Transportation to adopt and implement a ‘complete streets policy.” These policies seek to make walking and bicycling safer and more attractive. Both bills are awaiting the Governor’s signature. Sponsored by: Delegate Lafferty/ Senator Mathias. (HB993/SB0898) This passed bill will require the Board of Trustees for the state Retirement and Pension System to conduct a climate risk assessment of investments in the pension system every four years consistent with its fiduciary duties. The bill awaits Governor Hogan’s signature. Sponsored by: Delegate Adams/Senator Korman. Fake news has become the ‘norm’ in our society, so much so that it is now spreading into the environmental sector. Check your facts. Cathy Allen is an award-winning Urban Environmentalist, the co-creator of G.R.A.S.S. (Growing Resources After Sowing Seed) as well as Chair of the “Grow-It Eat It” campaign. G.R.A.S.S. is an environmental entrepreneurial nonprofit program based on the fundamentals of gardening, agriculture and ecology. In conjunction with Baltimore City Public Schools, Allen’s campaign has planted over a half-million trees on the lawns of Baltimore City public schools.
Celebrating Pentecost In the Midst of a Divided Evangelicalism?
All around the country and, specifically in the city of Baltimore, people are celebrating the Feast of Pentecost (Shavuot). Pentecost is believed by most evangelicals and mainline denominations to be a prophetic divine encounter and empowerment of the Holy Spirit, as a cosmic reality, into the human domain. The primary purpose is to bring to humanity an awareness of latent power dynamics in our lives for a new way of living. Subsequently, power is not only defined as the ability to define one’s destiny and reality but also to influence and act to get things done. However, imbalances of power continue to be allowed and remain among the very same people that claim as their Pentecostal tenet to have “power from on high.” According to a recent survey, Christianity in America is statistically divided into 25.4% Evangelical, 14.7% Protestant Mainline denominations, 6.5% historically Black Protestant, 20.8% Catholic, 1.6% Mormon, 0.5% Orthodox Christianity, 0.8% Jehovah Witness, and 0.4% Other. The statistical divide is also mimicked in how they prioritize the interpretation of power both in principle and in the practice of social justice and other moral issues. For example, (1) during the National Day of Prayer, many evangelicals celebrated President Trump for his executive order to expand government grants to religiously-affiliated groups, while other denominational groups were morally challenged
Kevin Daniels
that nothing was said on the same day news broke of hush money paid by President Trump’s lawyer in a settlement to the pornographic film actress Stormy Daniels over the affair the president had with her a decade ago; (2) while many evangelicals celebrated 70 years of Israel becoming a state since May 14, 1948, and the U.S. Embassy be moved from Tele Aviv to Jerusalem, other Christian denominations were disturbed how nothing was said critically concerning the multiple deaths and war scrimmages that broke out at the borders among the Palestinians; and lastly, (3) while over 50 evangelical pastors converged on the Billy Graham Center at Wheaton in Chicago to discuss the “soul of evangelicalism” in America during the era of Trump, other denominational groups were challenged that nothing was said concerning the recent Chinese Telecom firm ZTE being spared from collapse by the current administration and then to allow the Chinese government to approve five new trademarks for Ivanka Trump’s businesses. Many evangelicals at the Billy Graham Center raised questions concerning how global Christians are viewing what’s happening to the American witness around the world and evangelical willingness to risk an entire future generation because of their current silence. All of this on the heels of the life and legacy celebration of the death of Dr. James Cone, who during the Civil Rights Era originated Black Liberation Theology, which was a prophetic protest theology against the
interpretive divide between southern and northern churches. Even though historically the church has seen a divide during antebellum, Civil War era, and the Civil Rights era, many Baltimore Pastors, at a recent roundtable discussion, were also extremely concerned that this current divide could, in fact, risk future generations. With the current statistical gap between church attendance and ideology of the millennials, generation X, and baby boomers, many expressed concerns that like the Rev. William Barber “we need to revisit the biblical term of “evangelicalism as good news” outside of partisan politics, and to revisit the prophetic scripture that calls us to accept the call by Jesus “to make us one, like God is one.” If the power of Pentecost is to have the kind of impact it intended in the prophetic text, we must continue to rediscover, uncover, and recover the theological (our position living with God fully present), relational (organizing in one place and on one accord), economic (having all things in community), directional (positioning for mighty rushing winds of change), and dimensional components (breaking through sound and many other barriers in the earth from heaven). Dr. Kevin Daniels is an Associate Professor at the Morgan State School of Social Work, Chair of the Civic Actions Committee (Minister’s Conference of Baltimore & Vicinity), and The Pastor at the St. Martin Church in Baltimore.
The opinions on this page are those of the writers and not necessarily those of the AFRO. Send letters to The Afro-American • 1531 S. Edgewood St. • Baltimore, MD 21227 or fax to 1-877-570-9297 or e-mail to editor@afro.com
June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2, 2018, The Afro-American
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Kim Kardashian West Goes to the White House to Talk Pardon classified portions of a submarine. Kardashian West supported Trump’s rival, Reality TV star Kim Kardashian West went Democrat Hillary Clinton, during the 2016 to the White House Wednesday to make a star- election. But her husband, rapper Kanye powered case for prison reform and advocate West, recently offered his support for Trump on behalf of a great-grandmother serving a life in a series of tweets, saying they both share sentence. “dragon energy.” Kardashian West has urged the president Johnson was convicted in 1996 on eight to pardon Alice Marie Johnson, 63, who is criminal counts related to a Memphis-based serving a life sentence without parole for a cocaine trafficking operation involving more nonviolent drug offense. than a dozen people. The 1994 indictment In an interview with Mic, Kardashian West describes dozens of deliveries and drug said she’d been moved by Johnson’s story transactions, many involving Johnson. after seeing a video by the news outlet. She was sentenced to life in prison in 1997, “I think that she really deserves a second and appellate judges and the U.S. Supreme chance at life,” Kardashian told Mic. “I’ll do Court have rejected her appeals. Court whatever it takes to get her out.” records show she has a motion pending for a She said in the interview she’d been in reduction in sentence, but federal prosecutors touch with Jared Kushner, President Donald are opposed to a sentence reduction, saying in a court filing that the sentence is in accord with federal guidelines, based on the large quantity of drugs involved. The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Memphis did not immediately respond to a request for comment – Kim Kardashian West Wednesday afternoon. A criminal justice advocacy site, CAN-DO, and one of Johnson’s Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, over attorneys say a request for clemency was the case. rejected by former President Barack Obama. “I’ve been in communication with the The reasons are unclear. White House and trying to bring her case to A 1997 Associated Press story on the president’s desk and figure out how we Johnson’s sentencing said she lead a can get her out,” she said of Johnson, who has multimillion-dollar drug ring. But Memphis spent over two decades behind bars. attorney Michael Scholl, who filed the latest Kushner oversees the administration’s court documents in her request for a sentence push to overhaul the nation’s prison system reduction, said she was not a leader in the and help former inmates gain skills and more cocaine operation. effectively make the transition back into “What is the purpose of putting a lady with society no prior criminal record, on a nonviolent drug Trump last week granted a rare posthumous offense, in jail for her entire life?” he said in a pardon to boxing’s first Black heavyweight telephone interview. “She’s a model inmate.” champion, clearing Jack Johnson’s name more Scholl added that Johnson has admitted her than 100 years after what many saw as his wrongdoing, which is borne out in letters she racially-charged conviction. has written to U.S. District Judge Samuel H. The boxer’s pardon had been championed Mays, who now oversees her case. by actor Sylvester Stallone, who brought the “Judge Mays I’m writing to you to story to Trump’s attention in a spring phone express my deep remorse for the crime that call. I committed over 20 years ago. I made some Trump has issued just a handful of other bad choices which have not only affected my pardons, including one for former Maricopa life, but have impacted my entire family,” County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, a staunch she said in a February 2017 letter in the court campaign supporter; one for Scooter Libby, record. who served as chief of staff to former Vice In a hand-scrawled letter last June she President Dick Cheney; and one for a U.S. wrote: “I’m a broken woman. More time in Navy sailor convicted for taking photos of prison cannot accomplish more justice.” By The Associated Press
“I think that she really deserves a second chance at life. I’ll do whatever it takes to get her out.”
Serena Williams Launches Fashion Collection of Her Own By The Associated Press Serena Williams has launched a fashion collection soon after participating in her first major tennis tournament in 16 months, dressed in a black “warrior princess” catsuit, no less. But don’t look for her French Open outfit among the athleisure, office and evening clothes on her new namesake website , the only place her duds are available. Following collaborations with HSN and Nike, Williams’ “Serena” line includes an “S’’ motif and comfortable price points. The letter adorns bralettes and high briefs, along with a T-shirt with the name of her childhood home, Compton. She says she hopes to inspire women to own their own “s’’ words, like strong, sexy, sophisticated, sassy, smart, silly and spontaneous. Prices range from $40 for the logo T-shirt to $215 for a gold and black anorak jacket.
AP Photo/Thibault Camus
Venus, right, and Serena Williams of the U.S. celebrate after scoring a point against Japan’s Shuko Aoyama and Miyu Kato during their women’s doubles first round match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris, France May 30. Serena launched her own fashion line dubbed “Serena.”
Courtesy photo
Kim Kardashian is asking the White House to pardon Alice Marie Johnson (left), who is serving a life sentence. Tretessa Johnson (right), her daughter , has been championing the pardon.
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The Afro-American, June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018
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June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018, The Afro-American
BALTIMORE-AREA
Race and Politics
Fallen Hero Eddison “Eddie” Hermond
‘Racial Firestorm’ in Baltimore County Has Long Smoldered
`Always Professional and a Nice Guy’
The Baltimore Sun’s Jean Marbella posted a story May 25 with the headline, “Baltimore County Sean Yoes Police Baltimore AFRO Officer’s Editor syoes@afro.com Death Ignites a Racial Firestorm,” in reference to the death of Baltimore County Police Officer First Class Amy Caprio, 29, who died after being run over by a Jeep allegedly driven by Dawnta Harris, 16. Harris, a resident of Baltimore City was waiting in a Jeep while three other teen boys, Darrell Jaymer Ward, 15, Derrick Eugene Matthews, 16 and Eugene Robert Genius IV, 17, were allegedly robbing a home in the Perry Hall community of Baltimore County. All four have been charged as adults with first degree murder. “It’s hard to think of a more volatile mix: Four young Black males from Baltimore City, accused in the death of a White female police officer in Baltimore County,” Marbella wrote.
There has been a racial firestorm in Baltimore County for decades... She’s right, there is a racial firestorm in Baltimore County, but the tragic circumstances of Caprio’s death and the possible life sentences being faced by four boys didn’t ignite it. There has been a racial firestorm in Baltimore County for decades, at least for as long as there has been a significant Black population in the county. Although I was born in West Baltimore and spent my high school years there, I lived in Baltimore County, Randallstown specifically, with my mother and sister during my elementary school years. Back then in the 1970’s the Black population was sparse; initially I was one of only a handful of Black kids at Winfield Elementary School. However, the Black community in Randallstown grew rapidly. Today, Randallstown is majority Black going out all the way to Owings Mills. In the 1970’s, large swaths of farmland and wooded areas gave way to sprawling community developments, which today house mostly Black families. With a burgeoning Hispanic population in East Baltimore County, at its current rate the County will be majority, people of color in the not so distant future. Yet, Black people, people of color wield very little political power.
Continued on D2
(Photo: Howard County Police Department via AP)
Eddison Hermond, a sergeant with the Maryland National Guard, died after attempting to rescue a woman during flash floods in Ellicott City. By AFRO Staff On May 29, the body of Eddison “Eddie” Hermond, 39, a National Guard sergeant was recovered in the Potapsco River by searchers, according to Howard County Police. Hermond’s body was swept away during torrential rains and flooding that ravaged Ellicott City for the second time in two years, as well as other parts of Baltimore City. According to WJZ-TV, Hermond was attempting to rescue Kate Bowman who was stranded on May 27 in downtown Ellicott City during the flooding. Bowman was eventually rescued, but that was the last
time Hermond was seen alive. “Sgt. Hermond was always professional and a nice guy from our conversations and working together at the National Guard,” said Ret. Staff Sgt. Shervell Stevenson, who served with Hermond for three years in the National Guard. “He was always smiling and was a good person.” Gov. Larry Hogan has ordered flags flown at half staff until Hermond is laid to rest. Funeral arrangements had not been announced at AFRO press time. Hermond is survived by a 15year old son.
Young Named One of ‘Talkers Heavy Hundred’ Sixth Year In a Row
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Ervin Sues to Get on Ballot By Sean Yoes Baltimore AFRO Editor syoes@afro.com Maryland gubernatorial candidate Valerie Ervin has filed a lawsuit against the Maryland State Board of Elections to get the ticket of her and running mate Marisol Johnson on the ballot in time for the Democratic Primary on June 26. Ervin, who ascended to the top of the gubernåtorial ticket once occupied by Kevin Kamenetz, who died suddenly of a cardiac arrest May 10, officially filed the lawsuit May 29. “There’s no basis for the State Administrator’s hasty announcement -- it casts a wide shadow over the integrity of the election. Marylanders deserve a clear outcome the morning of June 27,” Ervin said in a statement. “The State Board must fulfill its legal obligation to not only ensure the integrity of the election, but also ensure the right to vote is protected.” Ervin was referring to the assertion by Donna Duncan, the Maryland Board of Elections assistant deputy, that it was too late to print new ballots and that the cost of $2 million would be prohibitive, according to a report by the Washington Post. “We clearly determined it was not possible to reprint the ballots,” Duncan said. Duncan also said any vote cast for Kamenetz would be Continued on D2
ABC Political Forum: Moving From Protest to Policy By AFRO Staff
(Courtesy photo)
Larry Young is celebrating his 20th year in Baltimore radio. By AFRO Staff Larry Young, the venerable Baltimore radio host was named one of the most important radio talk show hosts in the nation, by Talkers Magazine, known
as, “the Bible of Talk Radio and the new Talk Media. Young, the host of the Larry Young Morning Show on WOLB Talk 1010, was ranked in the top 50 (number 45), in the 2018 edition of TALKERs magazine’s “100
Most Radio Talk Show Hosts In America,” known as the “Heavy Hundred.” It is the sixth year in a row Young, who is celebrating his 20th year in radio, has cracked the TALKERS top 100.
On May 29, Associated Black Charities (ABC), sponsored the forum, “Moving From Protest to Policy: Making Advocacy Count,” which focused on the substance of the recently concluded Maryland General Assembly’s Legislative Session. The forum was produced by ABC in partnership with the University of Maryland School of Social Work and was held at the School of Social Work’s auditorium. The event was coordinated by A. Adar Ayira, of ABC’s senior leadership team, who led the two-hour conversation between community members and leaders and the panelists, who included (from left), Marc Steiner, human rights activist and veteran talk show host, Sean Yoes, Baltimore AFRO Editor and Catalina Byrd, political consultant and community advocate. Not pictured is Tom Hall, host of Midday, on WYPR, 88.1. (Photo credit: Alaysia Corley)
Associated Black Charities political forum participants include: (l to r), A. Adar Ayira, ABC senior leadership team; Marc Steiner, veteran talk show host; Sean Yoes, Baltimore AFRO Editor; Catalina Byrd, Community Advocate and Tom Hall, host of Midday, WYPR.
Candidates for Governor Debate Policing By The Associated Press Maryland’s Democratic candidates for governor focused much of their second televised debate Wednesday on painful recent events in the state, including the death of a Baltimore County police officer and devastating flooding in Ellicott City. Panelists in the debate hosted by Sinclair Broadcasting asked the nine candidates about what they think needs to be done to ease tensions between police and communities in the aftermath of last week’s death of Baltimore County Officer Amy Caprio, who was killed as she investigated a report of a suspicious vehicle. Sixteen-year-old Dawnta Harris is accused of running her down in a stolen car. Prince George’s County Executive Rushern Baker said he has worked to improve policecommunity relations with training during his two terms in office. “I’ve buried too many police officers as a county executive, but I’ve also seen young people who have been killed in my community, and so we have to move forward with leadership at the top, at the governor’s level, that understands that and moves it forward, and that’s what I’ll do as governor,” Baker said. Valerie Ervin, a former Montgomery County councilmember, said top leaders need to do Continued on D2
1
Past Seven Days
110 2018 Total
Data as of May 23
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The Afro-American, June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018
Race and Politics Continued from D1
There is only one Black member of the Baltimore County Council, Julian Jones, the council chairman. There has never been a Black Baltimore County Executive. Never. Demographically, the western section of the county is dominated by Blacks, but politically, Baltimore County is probably more reminiscent of Jackson County, Miss. In Baltimore County, Klan activity had been a very real thing in the areas around Deer Park and Liberty Dam for many years and the Baltimore County Police Department has historically run roughshod over the Black community. Outside of the large Black enclaves of Woodlawn, Milford Mill, Randallstown and Owings Mills, much of Baltimore County is Trump country, with close to 40 percent of it voting
for Trump in the 2016 presidential election. The racial firestorm has been smoldering in Baltimore County for many years and there have been several notable flare ups recently. Racial strife at Towson University sparked by the formation of a White Student Union in 2012 garnered national headlines. No charges were brought against County Police in the killing of Korryn Gaines, the 23-year old mother of two and the shooting of her five-year old son during an armed standoff at her Randallstown apartment in August 2016, which angered many. Police were at Gaines’ home to serve a warrant for a traffic violation (in February, the Gaines family was awarded $37 million in a wrongful death suit).
Ervin Sues
Candidates for Maryland
Continued from D1
Continued from D1
(Photo: Twitter)
Marisol Johnson (left), a candidate for Maryland Lt. Gov. and Valerie Ervin, candidate for Maryland Gov., are the first Maryland gubernatorial ticket comprised of women of color in the state’s history. counted for Ervin. The gubernatorial ticket of Ervin/Johnson is the first gubernatorial ticket in Maryland history with two women of color. Lamone said the Board has opted to post signs or notices at polling places around the state to notify voters to the change. Ervin’s lawyer, Mariana Cordier, who filed the suit in Anne Arundel County offered the
There was more outrage when no criminal charges were filed in the killing of Tawon Boyd at the hands of Baltimore County Police and Emergency Medical Technicians in Sept. 2016. Boyd and his finance summoned police to his home in Middle River because he was experiencing a medical episode. An educator and community leader, who happens to be a good friend (who I won’t name) said to me shortly after the Perry Hall incident erupted that ended in the death of Officer Caprio, `This is going to be bigger than Freddie Gray.’ I hope he’s wrong, but I suspect he may be right. Sean Yoes is the Baltimore Editor of the AFRO and host and executive producer of the AFRO First Edition video podcast, which airs Monday and Friday at 5:00 p.m. on the AFRO’s Facebook page.
official statement concerning the legal action according to the Ervin/Johnson campaign. “It affects the integrity of an election if the voters are not aware of or do not have accurate information as to who they can vote for -- who they can ultimately choose,� Cordier told WTOP radio.
more to improve relations between the police and the communities they serve. “This is a really important time, especially now,� Ervin said, for top leadership to put themselves in front of the problem. Former NAACP President Ben Jealous said it’s about trust. “It’s clear that we as a state finally have to act to end the killings of unarmed civilians by officers,� the former head of the nation’s oldest civil rights group said. Many of the candidates also mentioned increased education funding and better schools would help restore hope and prevent people from heading toward crime. “You’ve got to invest massively in education,� Alec Ross said. “The very simple fact of the matter is that a lot of the problem we have with crime right now is fueled by people who got bad educations.� Jim Shea, the former chairman of the state’s largest law firm, said the state needs to stop an epidemic of violent crime, create a restorative justice system and increase trust in authorities. “We’re failing in all three areas and we need to attack each of these simultaneously or we won’t have a solution,� Shea said. The candidates in the crowded primary also took turns criticizing Republican Gov. Larry Hogan. State Sen. Richard Madaleno said the governor has been absent from addressing the problems in Baltimore, when what’s needed is a leader who can bring hope back to struggling parts of Maryland’s largest city. “Look, we need a governor who doesn’t seek to erase Baltimore city, avoid Baltimore city,� Madaleno said. “That’s been the Hogan administration.� Scott Sloofman, a Hogan campaign spokesman, said the governor has invested record funding in K-12 education in each of his four years in office. “Thankfully for Maryland voters, there are only two more debates left for them to be subjected to blatant falsehoods about the governor’s incredibly strong record,� Sloofman said. James Jones, a Baltimore police pastor, said it’s time for police and residents to re-establish the relationships that were lost years ago. “I think that there just needs to be something done on each side of the track,� Jones said. Krish Vignarajah said she would focus on root causes of the social ills that led to crime, including public health and educational opportunities. She also said policies of mass incarceration and the war on drugs must end. “Second, I want to make sure that we institute true community policing reform, such that law enforcement officers look like, live with and engage with the communities that they are tasked with protecting,� Vignarajah said. Ralph Jaffe, who is running as a political reformer, said that without trust in politicians, there can’t be much meaningful progress. “We don’t have politicians that can be trusted,� Jaffe said. The candidates got 20 seconds to answer how they would address whether they would use tax dollars to rebuild Ellicott City, which was hit be devastating flooding Sunday for the second time in less than two years. They all said yes. “A thousand-year storm now comes every couple years. We have to have a mindset where we will rebuild in a way that is resilient, that is smart, and not simply give up, because if we give up, we have so much coastline, we have so many tributaries we will see this challenge in other places,� Jealous said.
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June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018, The Afro-American “Now is the accepted time, not tomorrow, not some more convenient season. It is today that our best work can be done and not some future day or future year. It is today that we fit ourselves for the greater usefulness of tomorrow. Today is the seed time, now are the hours of work, and tomorrow comes the harvest and the playtime.” W. E. B. Du Bois The 112th annual closing of The DuBois Circle at Martin’s West was an exciting evening as guests enjoyed celebrated author Margot Lee Shetterly, author of Hidden Figures. The closing event included a timeline of the life of W E B DuBois created by circle member Helena Hairston. Guests who enjoyed the educational evening were John and Beverly Carter, Nanette Mitchell, Judge Marcella Holland, Pam McNeill, Michael Settles, Aran Shetterly, Denese and Leonard Powell, Jennifer Carter Jones, Sofie Jones, Madelyn Jones, and Pastor Fraces M. Toni Draper, Publisher of the AFRO. “I slept and dreamt that life was joy. I awoke and saw that life was service. I acted and behold, service was joy.” Rabindranath Tagore A rainy, spring day did not deter Councilwoman Sharon Green Middleton, Michele Emery, Luwanda Jenkins (candidate for Maryland Lt. Gov.), Kathy Madeleno, Diane Hocker of the AFRO, Marcine Britton and retired Councilwoman Agnes Welch, from attending The Women’s Civic League annual spring luncheon at The Capital Grille. The Hon. Marilyn Mosby, Baltimore City State’s Attorney, was the guest speaker. Neighborhood groups represented were Metropolitan, Mt. Washington and Southwest groups. Denise DeLeaver, Celeste Scott, Joy Savage, Trish MacDonald, Amy Snyder, Amelia Campbell and Val Beads, all members of The Women’s Civic League attended. Guests had a choice of grilled salmon, grilled shrimp, or filet mignon sliders. Naturally, I selected the filet mignon since The Capital Grille steaks are legendary. “Begin each day as if it were on purpose.” Mary Anne Radmacher The overcast skies did not dampen the surprise 80th birthday party for Club Climax owner Ann Butler hosted by her children Kim Butler Bennett, Deryl Butler and Rodney Butler at Diamonz Event Center in Randallstown. Ann, escorted by her husband of 49 years, Ray Butler was in total amazement when she entered Diamonz where her grandchildren, great grandchildren, and other family members and friends greeted her. Everyone was amazed that they were able to surprise Ann, because she knows everything that is happening. Ann held court at Club Climax where friends, family and her patrons stopped by to wish my beautiful friend a happy 80th birthday. Ann you are wearing 80 years well. Sending happy birthday greetings to Bertha Dixon, Sen. Shirley Nathan Pulliam, Teddy Coates, Stacey Duncan Grace, Denise Dobson McDonald, Del. Cheryl Glenn, Dr. Marie Washington, Kendra Sykes, Danielle Hill and Juanita Rollins. A special 80th birthday wish to Virginia Stanford. “No one else can make me feel the colors that you bring. Stay with me while we grow old and we will live each day in springtime. ‘Cause lovin’ you has made my life so beautiful and every day of my life is filled with lovin’ you.” Minnie Riperton Wishing love and happiness for Rep. Anthony Brown and Karmen Brown, Harry and Janet Johnson, Nevie and Karl Chen
and Pastor Donte and Danielle Hickman, as they celebrate their wedding anniversaries. “One cannot reflect in streaming water. Only those who know internal peace can give it to others.” Lao Tzu Please keep our friend Bill Goodin in your prayers as he mourns the death of his wife, Yetty Goodin. Iota Phi Theta Fraternity are mourning the death of one of their founders John Slade. Many remember John, who was born and raised in East Baltimore, as the first Black person to have his own TV show in Baltimore, “North Star” on WBAL. He retired as an Army Lt. Col. and the Prof. of Military Science and Tactics at Howard University. “My greatest service to others is living happily, and radiating happiness and joy to those around me.” Jonathan Lockwood Huie The death of our longtime friend and prominent dentist Dr. Lawrence Bell and his engaging smile has left a void in the community. His office located at the corner of Gwynns Falls Parkway and Auchentoroly Terrace was a welcoming oasis for low-income people, who just stopped in when they needed dental care knowing that Bell and his wife Eleanor would not refuse them service. To meet Lawrence Bell was an introduction to the entire Bell family including his sons Lawrence and Marshall. “A hero is someone who has given his life to something bigger than himself or something other than himself.” Joseph Campbell Remembering retired Air Force veteran Eddison “Eddie” Hermond the National Guard sergeant who died in the Ellicott City flood saving the life of a woman in distress. “No struggle can ever succeed without women participating side by side with men.” Muhammad Ali Jinnah Congratulations Shirley Jada Hudson, daughter of Sherry Scipio and Jay Hudson and granddaughter of Shirley Belton on receiving her master’s degree in Marketing Intelligence from Towson University. The graduate is marketing her own line
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of clothing for full figured women. Proud momma Barbara Banks was glowing when her son Charles Banks Jr., took command of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Northland in Portsmouth, Va. Living for the Weekend wishes smooth sailing for Commander Banks and the crew of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Northland. What’s happening? June 1, the unveiling of the 20th anniversary commemorative plaque for the Benjamin Banneker Historical Park and Museum. Contact Cynthia deJesus 443-831-6827 for tickets. June 23, Gerald Alston, Howard Hewitt and Russell Thompkins Jr. will perform at Morgan State University to benefit “concerts for a cause” a nonprofit organization raising money to purchase musical instruments for under privileged children. Contact Tanya Williams at 443-562-5203 or www. concertsforcausesinc.org. for tickets or information on how to donate to this worthy cause. July 14-15, Baltimore/Washington One Carnival at Lake Clifton park for more information contact Dr. Elaine Simon 410362-2957
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The Afro-American, June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018
Coppin’s graduation was held at the CSU Physical Education Complex on May 19. Paris Holmes (CSU SGA Pres.) and Destiny Brown (CSU Senior Class Pres.) gave greetings. CSU President Maria Thompson introduced the keynote speaker Stedman Graham, chairman and CEO of S. Graham and Associates, and longtime companion of Oprah Winfrey. Former Alumni Assoc. Pres., James “Winky” Camphor was awarded an honorary doctorate degree. There were over 800 graduates in the Spring Class of 2018.
Doctor Of Nursing Practice graduates: Christy E. Abumere, Miriam P. Washington, Cathy D. Hardwick, Lori A. Yerrell-Garrett and Paula U. Ohiku
Kambrielle Phillips and graduating mom Okema Johnson
Janet P. Hopkins (60th year class reunion) James “Winky” Camphor receives a Honorary Doctor’s Degree from CSU President Maria Thompson Ph.D
Dr. Ruth J. K. Pratt Paris Holmes (CSU SGA President) and Destiney Brown (CSU Senior Class President)
Keynote speaker Stedman Graham
The Leutze family from the Republic Of Cameroon CSU President Maria Thompson Ph.D. Photos byAnderson R. Ward
The DuBois Circle, the oldest Black women’s organization in Baltimore, held its annual closing meeting on May 15 at Martin’s West, in Woodlawn. Members of the Circle welcomed their guest speaker, Margot Lee Shetterly, the African American author of Hidden Figures. Shetterly’s
Dr.Linda Fassett, Frances Watkins, Toni Colvin, Elizabeth Hickey, Lovetta Turnage. Seated are Mayziner Welllons, Norma Brooks, Dr. Shirley Evans, Gloria S. Jennings
book (which was made into a motion picture), featured three brilliant AfricanAmerican women at NASA who served as the brains behind one of the greatest operations in history: the launch of astronaut John Glenn into orbit. The year’s theme was “The DuBois Circle and the City.” Vocal selection was performed by Jasmine Barnes, a graduate of Morgan State University.
Pamela Holt, Samuel Redd, Lydia McCargo Redd, Judge Yvonne Holt-Stone, Mr. Williams, Elizabeth Williams, Sandy Simms
DIVAS - Girls Mentoring Group; designed to develop inner values to acquire success
Di’ Jones, Dr. Valeria Hairston, Joan M. Pratt, Comptroller, Baltimore City, Tina Hall
Valerie Montague with several Girl Scouts of Central Maryland
Jennifer Carter, Beverly Carter, Rev. Dr. Frances Murphy Draper, AFRO Publisher, Margot Lee Shetterly, author, Hidden Figures, Aran Shetterly
Sara Jerkins, Asia Adams, Dr. Clara Adams, Leonara Terrell, Joyce Sturgis
Rev. Canon Dr. Sandye Wilson, Dr. Patricia Schmoke, Alice Pinderhughes, Margarett J. Shipley, president, Dr. Maxine Wood, Carolyn Cole
Janet T. Johnson, Henry S.Johnson, Valerie Fraling , AFRO columnist
Judith Adams, Rev. Dr.Richard Adams, Dr. Edmonia T. Yates, Sarah Elias, Elise Mason Jude Photos by Dr. A. Lois De Laine
June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018, The Afro-American
Opinion
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ARTS & CULTURE
On Finally Leaving Scandal-Plagued R. Kelly Behind
featuring Usher, it was another successful project despite the mixed reviews. This was a time where my fandom began to wear off, not only because time and growth would open my I remember the first time I came across music by R mind up to different sounds but there were way too many Kelly. I was 10-years-old, a nerdy, rather chubby kid bent on allegations revolving around him. He was too hot in these scavenging through people’s CD cases for movies and video streets, son. Plus, there were so many more artists to push games (sorry uncle Floyd). boundaries in the genre currently, like SZA or Daniel Caesar. However, nothing made me more intrigued than the albums These current years of uncovering Kelly’s past has been the grown folks had around, specifically my parents. This is nothing but a horror story. With a better palette of music and long before my pops broke out his missing vinyl collection and a grown mind, I’ve laid my R. Kelly fandom to rest. My final before my father discovered Napster, so we had CDs all around moment as a fan was seeing the marriage certificate he had the house including a case holder full of PC games and music with Aaliyah. With current allegations speculating that the in our living room. So though you may find an Age of Empires “Trapped in the Closet” singer has sexually abused yet another demo from PC Gamer, there were also albums like D’Angelo’s teenager, Spotify has banned him from their music playlists. “Brown Sugar” and Stevie Wonder’s “Innervisions” a few slots Sure, R Kelly still managed to release albums over the last down. decade. He’s worked with current stars in Chicago like Chance One day I found two R. Kelly albums: his second self-titled the Rapper, and there’s a 100% chance that you’ll hear your project and “R.” This was the moment I was introduced to the uncle play “Happy People” at the cookout. We can’t take away Chicago artist in his earlier years, and it made me a fan. the fact that he’s dominated the R&B game for literally over I continued to grow up and he continued to drop albums two decades. like “Chocolate Factory” and hits like “Step In The Name Of Unfortunately, with that same time of blatant evidence Love,” “Big Chips” and “Fiesta.” These songs were major accumulated, the same talent and content that he’s been able to hits but also narrated my life as a young teenager. That would possess musically make listening to those slow jams a cringeall change in 2002, when the first allegations began to surface worthy experience. With the #MeToo movement becoming a (Photo by Frank Micelotta/Invision/AP) about his most talked about court case. force that exposes a lot of high profile males for the alleged A woman recently filed a lawsuit in New York against R. The mid-2000’s were years of appreciation for Kelly and trash that they are, it makes me proud to see that the many skepticism towards the allegations. Not going to lie, these were Kelly, claiming the singer sexually assaulted her. He has women finally have a voice to speak out about what they’ve long been the target of sexual misconduct allegations, serious allegations against him, but my young mind and ears experienced. which he has denied. couldn’t stop playing “Ignition” on repeat. There were already I have sisters, I have a mother, I have female family allegations surfacing about an incident with an underaged intern members, mentors, and friends. What if I have a daughter? Why at Epic Records, but the highly talked-about sex tape was what would I want them to experience situations similar to this one, really caught the attention of the media, the music world, and the Black community as a whole. or even support the lames who are about this life with my ears, body and money? Maybe I could These allegations began to surface around the time of Michael Jackson’s investigation, so ignore all of these allegations and keep dancing like I was as a kid, but that would only make me both of these cases were talked about for years until their final verdict. Whether covered by the as ignorant as those who voted for 45. news or the Chappelle Show, people had hot takes long before one ever trended. But once R. Distancing from R. Kelly not only was a move I needed to do as an adult, it was just one Kelly was acquitted of all charges in 2008, it felt like we had another Black superstar finesse the way for me to show them that there are people who care about what women have to say. It’s just detrimental system that oppresses our reality. another way for me to develop and become a better person. But if a DJ played “Happy People” The Black community didn’t lose him at what was initially his last hoorah musically. “Double and somehow had me grooving a little, at least I know that deep down inside, R Kelly is a trash Up” came out a year before the acquittal and with hits like “I’m a Flirt” and “Same Girl” ass negro, and his catalog to me can only be from random encounters. By Vance Brinkly Special to the AFRO
Black Exec Cancels ‘Roseanne’ SPORTS After Star’s Racist Tweet, Barr Death, Taxes and LeBron in the Finals Blames Ambien and Herself
By The Associated Press
The maker of Ambien said May 30 that “racism is not a known side effect” after Roseanne Barr cited the insomnia drug in explaining the tweet that led ABC to cancel her show. Hours after ABC pulled the plug on “Roseanne” because of her offensive tweet about former Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett — and quickly breaking a promise to stay off Twitter — the comedian was busy posting on (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP) the social media platform. ABC has canceled its hit reboot of “Roseanne”, following Barr tweeted that what she Roseanne Barr’s racist tweet about former Obama adviser did was unforgiveable and urged Valerie Jarrett. supporters not to defend her. She urged in an MSNBC special Tuesday about racism said of the Jarrett tweet, “It was 2 in the morning that the incident become a teaching moment. and I was ambien tweeting.” “Tone does start at the top, and we like to look The drug maker Sanofi took to social media to up to our president and feel as though he reflects the say that “while all pharmaceutical treatments have values of our country,” Jarrett said. “But I also think side effects, racism is not a known side effect of any that every individual citizen has a responsibility Sanofi medication.” too, and it’s up to all of us to push back. Our Barr later tweeted that she has had odd government is only going to be as good as we make experiences while taking the drug late at night. “I it be.” blame myself, not Ambien,” she tweeted. ABC and Disney had taken notable steps to be After not mentioning Barr’s firing in a more inclusive in its entertainment, and Dungey campaign-style rally in Tennessee Tuesday night, is the first African Amerian to be entertainment President Donald Trump broke his silence on president of a major broadcast network. But much Twitter. He noted that Robert Iger, chief executive of its progress would have been threatened if it of ABC parent Walt Disney Co., called Jarrett to tell looked the other way at Barr’s tweet. her that ABC did not tolerate Barr’s comments. She has a history of diving into political “Gee, he never called President Donald J. Trump conspiracy theories on Twitter, and that’s how she to apologize for the HORRIBLE statements made ended her Memorial Day weekend. She criticized and said about me on ABC,” Trump wrote. “Maybe Democratic financier George Soros and tweeted I just didn’t get the call?” that Chelsea Clinton was “Chelsea Soros Clinton,” Trump reveled in the success of “Roseanne” implying she was married to a nephew of Soros. after Barr’s character in the show came out as a Clinton herself corrected Barr online. Donald supporter of his presidency. Trump Jr. retweeted two of Barr’s statements about “Roseanne” was an instant hit when it returned Soros, although not the remark about Jarrett. this spring after a two-decade hiatus. But after Jarrett’s name came up in response to Twitter Barr’s tweet that likened Jarrett, who is Black, to commentary that raised her name in relation to an a cross between the Muslim Brotherhood and the Obama conspiracy theory. Barr tweeted: “muslim “Planet of the Apes,” ABC canceled the show in a brotherhood & planet of the apes had a baby=vj.” one-sentence statement from network entertainment “Roseanne” earned an estimated $45 million president Channing Dungey, who is African in advertising revenue for ABC through its nine American. She called it “abhorrent, repugnant and episodes that started airing in March, according inconsistent with our values.” to Kantar Media. The firm estimates that the 13 Barr’s agent also dropped her and several episodes that had been ordered for next season services pulled “Roseanne” reruns. would have brought in as much as $60 million, with Jarrett, who said she was “fine” after the slur, more through repeat episodes.
By Stephen D. Riley, Special to AFRO
A believable shocker. I don’t think the phrase has been coined but it was the only words I could get off watching LeBron James clinch an eighth-straight Finals appearance in an 87-79 Game 7 win over Boston on Memorial Day Eve. Counting LeBron in for another championship round wasn’t (AP Photo/Elise Amendola) the shocker but analyzing the The Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Boston Celtics 87-79 in way he got there and who Game 7 of the NBA basketball Eastern Conference finals he came with was the thing because of one word: LeBron. that made you blink twice. Cleveland starters like Tristan Thompson, Jeff Green and J.R. Smith wouldn’t even start on worst teams but magically they’re key cogs in the James train. How? One word: LeBron. It’s a strong chance that Cleveland gets obliterated next round and James departs in the summer in the search for more help but as of right now, we should all take the next few days to marvel at James’ greatness. It’s not the first time that LeBron has taken a hodgepodge Cavaliers group to the bonus round of the NBA playoffs but this might be the most special. Critics call the Eastern Conference a weaker version of its opposite coast counterpart but Boston could be the league’s deepest team next year. Toronto finished this season with the best record in the East and Indiana may have the Association’s most improved player in Victor Oladipo and they all succumbed to LeBron’s greatness. It might sound homerish but LeBron-lovers have come to realize the continuous championship appearances as title-like accomplishments. James may be the only player in NBA history who gets praised for consistency but pardoned for his biggest failures. Maybe the reason to ooh and oggle is because we know things will come to a screeching halt over the next two weeks but to fully understand this season’s championship play-in was done with absolutely no help. Going into last summer, the dumbest thing the Cavs brass could’ve done was trade Kyrie Irving, do a complete roster revamp during midseason at the trade deadline and rely on Kevin Love to step up as the always revered LeBron James sidekick. Cleveland did all those dumb things, Love never stepped up and Cleveland still made it back to the Finals because of one word: LeBron. We never like to say ‘this team only did this because of playerX’ but that’s exactly what just happened. You can legitimately give LeBron all the credit for this makeshift Cleveland group that took down a triplet of East coast teams that were probably all more talented than them. Boston’s clearly the future; Toronto was the best of the conference; and ironically, Indiana gave them the most trouble. But even with a roster full of starters that wouldn’t even sniff heavy minutes on the remaining top three teams as of last week, the Cavs still survived all of that because of one simple thing. LeBron. We’re currently witnessing true greatness. Even without the amazing array of championship rings.
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FCAC Delta of the Year Award (L-R): Lenior Simmons (President, FCAC), Gwendolyn King (Awardee) and Connie Jackson
The Fairfax County Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority celebrated its 25th Anniversary on May 20 with a Spring Hat Luncheon at Westfields Marriott Washington Dulles, Chantilly, VA. The Theme was “Continuing the Commitment to Service, Empowerment, and Leadership.” Guest speaker, Lt. Gen. Stayce D. Harris, Inspector General, U. S. Air Force, spoke about sisterhood and community service. As part of the celebration, FCAC awarded $27,000 in scholarship funds to nine young women and book awards to two young men.
Scholarship Recipients (L-R): Ashley Rock-Smith, Nadia Hernandez, Lauren Dessaure, Hannah King, Danielle Newsome, Rachel Jackson, Sinclaire Jones, Alissa Wells, Lauryn Mann, Jessica Kitchings and Kelli Boyer
FCAC Outstanding Community Partner Award: Joanelle Baptiste and Kofi Annan (President, Fairfax County NAACP
Empowering Males to Build Opportunities for Developing Independence (EMBODI) Awards (L-R): Benita Toler, Kelcey Parks (Awardee), Wallicia Gill and Emory Ortiz (Awardee
Photos by Ashley Rock-Smith
Chapter Presidents: Front Row (L-R): Darlene Faltz (19931995), Peggy Ridley (1995-1998), Yvonne McCall (19982003), Angela Wade (2003-2007), Princess Powell-McEvilley (2007-2011), Regina Milteer-Rock (2011-2015). Standing (L-R): Vicki West (2015-2017), Lenior Simmons (2017 to Present
Charter Members (Standing L-R): Arlene Donnelly, Carol Bradley, Juanita Trapp, Opal Cotton, Jonesetta Lassiter, Mary Ann Bosley, Benita Toler, Barbara Speed, Joyce Green, Linda Jones Kemp, Sharon Bundy, Janice Scott andShelia Edwards. Front Row (L-R): Darlene Faltz, Peggy Ridley, Yvonne McCall, Princess Powell-McEvilley andRegina Milteer-Rock
Joigic Tolson, Regina Davis Moss, Tisha Hyter, Edna Moffitt and Annie Whateley
Phyllis Caudle Green, (front, right), Chapter President and Dr. Glenda Newell-Harris, National President, The Links, 2nd front, left)
Educator Advisory Committee Program Excellence Award (L-R): Sharon Bundy (Awardee), Lenior Simmons (President, FCAC) and Shari Terry (Awardee)
On the Dais (L-R): Lenior Simmons (President, FCAC), Lt. General Stayce D. Harris (guest speaker), Michelle Lewis and Regina Milteer-Rock
Fairfax County Alumnae Chapter 2017-2018
The Capital City Chapter of The Links, led by chapter President Phyllis Caudle Green and Vice President, Nicole Venable, hosted it’s seventh annual Women’s Recognition High Tea, April 22 at the Fairmont Hotel, Washington, D.C. MSNBC’s Michelle D. Bernard and CNN’s Symone Sanders, members of Capital City Links, were Mistresses of Ceremonies. The High Tea honored six African American women including retired Dunbar High School counselor Willa Renee Burroughs Wallace; Denise Rolark Barnes, publisher, “The Washington Informer;” ColorComm president Lauren Wesley Wilson; Professor Anita F. Hill, Janaye M. Ingram, Director, National Partnerships, Airbnb; and Journalist/author April D. Ryan. Annie Whatley was the Chair of High Tea with Co-Chairs Dianna Campbell, Marilyn Gail Charity, and Joigie Tolson. Dignitaries included Glenda Newell-Harris, M.D., National President, The Links, Inc.; Kimberly Jeffries Leonard, Ph.D., National Vice President, The Links; Natalie H. Fant, Eastern Area Director, The Links.
Claudia McKoin, Alisa Dotson and Paulette Scott
FCAC Community Service Award : Jacy Yates Hobson (Awardee) and Joy Galberth
Sixty+ (60+) Years in Delta (L-R): Connie Jackson and Fredericka Phelps (Honoree)
Tracey Tolbert Jones, Debra Murphy and Michelle Jackson
April Gaines Jernigan, Shirley Bowden and Debbie Bragg
CNN News Contributor, Symone Sanders and Michelle Bernard, emcee
Dr. Glenda Newell-Harris receiving a special award from Phyllis Caudle Green, chapter president
Sixty+ (60+) Years in Delta: Yvonne McCall
McKenzie Green and Chelsey Rodgers
Councilmember Brandon Todd (Ward-4) speaking to guests
Dr. Kimberly Jeffries Leonard, National Vice President, The Links, (front, right) with other Links members and honorees
Michelle Bernard, Honoree Willa Renee Burroughs Wallace, Honoree Denise Rolark Barnes, Honoree Lauren Wesley Wilson, Honoree Anita Hill, Honoree Janaye Ingram, Honoree April Ryan, Phyllis Green and Annie Whatley Photos by Rob Roberts
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Bishop Michael Stop The Killing Curry, Church Leaders Call Out Trump By Hamil R. Harris Special to the AFRO On Saturday May 19, a small framed African American preacher stood in St. George’s Chapel adjacent to Windsor Castle and lit a fire to the royal family by preaching about, “The Redemptive Power of Love” days before coming back to the United States to ignite a flame about activism. Five days after he spoke at the wedding for the Duke and the Duchess of Sussex, the Rt. Rev. Michael Curry, the 27th Presiding Bishop and first African American to lead the Episcopal Church in the U.S. led a candle light march to the White House after he spoke at the National City Christian Church The sanctuary, foyer and steps of National City were filled as Curry spoke to a standing room only crowd about the redemptive power of love. In a statement, Curry Continued on D2
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Bishop Michael Curry, 27th Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church, gathered religious leaders from around the country to protest Trump and preach love.
Homicides on the Rise, District Struggles to Cope
Gentrification Sparks New DC Lawsuit By Brianna Rhodes Special to the AFRO Over the past 12 years, District land use policies have been put into place in an effort to attract “creatives” to D.C., with little regard to how long-time residents are being affected. That’s according to a lawsuit filed April 13 by civil rights attorney, Aristotle Theresa. The complaint alleges land use policies that are being used to help attract the “creative” demographic do not include family units or true affordable housing. The policies not only discriminate in terms of age and source of
Photo Courtesy ofMarkus Batchelor (D.C. School Board Ward 8 Representative)
Concerned residents gathered on Memorial Day to discuss the alarming uptick in violence. Hamzat Sani Special to the AFRO Late Tuesday Mayor Muriel Bowser gathered several of her agency heads to address a 50 percent increase in homicides since last year and spike in violence over the Memorial Day weekend, which claimed the lives of 4 district residents and saw another 10 wounded by gunfire. Bowser addressed a crowd of media and a few community members outside of the Department of For-Hire Vehicles on Shannon Place Southeast with a mural of the late Mayor Marion Barry serving as backdrop for what was at times a testy press conference. In a Monday press release Mayor Bowser said, “Over the weekend, we deployed additional police and non-law enforcement resources to communities in Wards 7 and 8 experiencing an increase in violence. While an enhanced police presence can help keep residents safe, we know that policing alone will not put a permanent stop to the violence in our communities. We ask residents to partner with us by reporting any criminal activity and send a clear message: violence will not be tolerated.” The release noted that the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) increased staffing levels to nearly 25 percent in the Sixth and Seventh Districts in addition to partnering with the Narcotics and Special Investigation Division, the Special
Operations Division, and the Homeland Security Bureau to add additional personnel over the weekend. On the non-law enforcement side the administration activated the Safer Stronger Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement, the Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services’ Credible Messengers, and the Department of Parks and Recreation’s Roving Leaders in Wards 5, 7 and 8. The Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency, tasked with monitoring all adults on supervised release, will conduct checkins throughout the week with individuals on probation and parole in the District. Bowser acknowledged the frustration of community members subject to continued violence noting a gathering of about 200 residents at a Community Planning Meeting held at the Check It Enterprises Event Space on MLK Jr. Ave in Anacostia. The meeting held on May 28 to address the Ward 8 violence crisis included remarks from Councilmembers Trayon White and Kenyon McDuffie focused on community oriented approaches to curbing the spike in violence. At Large Council candidate Marcus Goodwin who was present at the gathering said, “People are frustrated with the lack of community and parental engagement to stop systemic violence; as well as the public safety climate that our law enforcement officials and elected leaders have allowed to Continued on D2
“So what we want is just equity in the projects…then you know the neighborhood can gentrify and we can be a part of the gentry.” –Aristotle Theresa income, but it also impacts other classes such as race, family and religion. According to the complaint, the city is trying to “lighten” Black neighborhoods through construction of “high density, luxury buildings, Continued on D2
The Phillips Collection Hires Its Superhero Focused Library Opens in Ward 4 Newcomer First Chief Diversity Officer By Lenore T. Adkins Lewis Seeks Special to the AFRO
By Hamzat Sani Special to the AFRO Racism seems to be having a moment. Whether it’s your local legislature, at the culture of carshare service Uber; in the syrup at your local Waffle House or disrupting your cup of coffee at Starbucks, incidences of overt racism seem to makes news at a daily clip. Often as a response these institutions then hire executives armed with the ability to handle the complex landscape of racial bias. Frequently Black women have been just what the doctor ordered to restructure, reshape and reconcile organizations on the brink of collapse. The art world has not been without incident. Earlier this year the Brooklyn Art Museum came under public scrutiny after it announced the appointment of a White curator for their African Art collection. Art lovers called out the inequitable relationships that had become ingrained in how museums engaged with non-majority White communities. While The Dupont located Phillips Collection hasn’t recently experienced
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Makeba Clay is the first Chief Diversity Officer of the Phillips Collection. backlash or accusations of racism, the country’s oldest modern art institution is taking the progressive step of hiring on its first Chief Diversity Officer Makeba Clay. The New York born expert on Diversity and Inclusion Strategies has consulted with several art and academic institutions in the D.C. area including American University, Princeton University, the University of Maryland and the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art. In an interview with WAMU Clay mentioned that she suggested
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Can’t get enough of “Black Panther” and Marvel’s other exciting super heroes? Disney Publishing Worldwide and Little Free Library have joined forces to launch a Marvel’s Avengers: Infinity War-themed library at Upshur Recreation Center, 4300 Arkansas Avenue NW. This library, which is one of nine Marvel themed locations in the United States, is stocked with titles including “The Heroes’ Journey (Road to Avengers: Infinity War),” “The Cosmic Quest Vol. I,” Continued on D3
Council Seat with Positive Message By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com
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Jesse J. Holland, author of Marvel’s book for the hit ‘Black Panther’ movie and Ward 4 Councilman Brandon Todd Join Community at the Marvel’s Avengers: Infinity War Themed library at Upshur Recreation Center in Northwest, D.C.
During the Nov. 6 general election, voters in the District will elect a independent atlarge representative on the council. Rustin Lewis hopes residents will consider his
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Battle for DC Dems Central Committee By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com On June 19, District of Columbia voters will go to the polls to vote in the Democratic primary. Many will focus on the mayoral, attorney general, D.C. Council chairman, and ward council races. However, near the bottom of each ballot will be positions that don’t get a lot of attention but are important to the direction of the District’s Democratic Party. Voters in the District will choose
representatives on the District of Columbia Democratic Central Committee, the city’s arm to the Democratic National Committee. These positions are important in helping Democrats shape the party’s message in the District and implementing campaigns such as voter registration and education. “People are concerned about the state of politics in D.C.,” Philip Pannell, a wellknown Democratic leader who lives in Ward 8, told the AFRO. “I have joined a group of activist Democrats who have formed a slate, Dump Trump Dems 4 Action. There are Continued on D3
Photo courtesy
Rustin Lewis is a candidate for the non-Democratic at-large seat on the D.C. Council.
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The Afro-American, June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018
Homicides
Continued from D1 persist for generations. Both Bowser and MPD Chief Peter Newsham called for continued community involvement in taking illegal guns off the street and bringing crime suspects to justice. Newsham went on to provide details on 3 homicide suspects: 17 year old Kaevon Sutton, 16 year old Daquan Gray; and Alonzo Lewis. The 33 year old Lewis is wanted in connection with the double homicide, this past Saturday, of 40-year old Jaquon Helm of Southwest, D.C. and 35-year old Venius Badgett of Southwest, D.C. MPD offers a reward of up to $25,000 to anyone who provides information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for any homicide committed in the District of Columbia. One of the victims of this weekend’s
Lawsuit rash of violence was the owner of District Culture in Anacostia. Alexander Mosby was a husband, father and respected member of the community he loved, grew upon and sought to serve. “Many of the homicides that we are seeing in the city are these minor disputes that evolve into shootings and homicides because of the introduction of an illegal firearm into the incident,” Newsham said. The Tuesday press conference marks the first time back at the podium since she was granted adoptive custody of a little girl. The Mayor ended the press conference noting that while a little tired she felt lucky to have her little girl. “The thing that I enjoy the most is looking down at those little eyes looking back at me.”
Curry
Continued from D1 connected his message in England with his work in the U.S. “ As elders, we view bringing the “Reclaiming Jesus” declaration to the public square as a tangible example of how to live out that way of love,” Curry Said. “We are Christian leaders bearing moral witness to the teachings of our faith in the public square. As citizens we want our government to reflect our values. As a Bishop I believe we should follow the teachings of Jesus - who taught us to love God and love our neighbor.” Curry and leaders from the Episcopal, Lutheran, Methodist churches and a range of other faith groups called on President Trump to make a paradigm shift in rhetoric and policies that are dividing the nation. “We came together, liberal and conservative and everything in the middle. What binds us together is Jesus Christ and his way, his teaching and his life,” Curry said. “And when we leave this place this is not a protest march, this is a procession of Christian people. This is what they did on Pentecost, this is a Pentecostal moment.” Curry was referring to the Day of Pentecost, which according to the New Testament is when the Holy Spirit descended on a group of Jesus’ followers, including his mother and the apostles, and caused them to speak in many languages or “tongues” 50 days (Pentecost literally means 50) after Easter. According to PBS Newshour, the first Pentecost marks the beginning of the Christian Church. Rev. William H Lamar IV, Pastor of the Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church in D.C., stood in
the doors of National City Christian Church because he said it was important to take part in this event. “We are here tonight because our faith demands that we stand in confrontation of injustice that is sweeping the nation, injustice against the immigrants, the poor, the incarcerated and doesn’t mind using the most vile and racist terms to dehumanize God’s people to unite. You see there are Black people here, White people here, gay people here, straight people, Christian people and people of no faith. We will not stop until justice is
special prayer to change hearts going forward. “My prayer at the gate was: Lord please touch the hearts of our leaders in the Congress and the White House that they have compassion and mercy for all Gods children,” Skinner said in an interview with the AFRO. “We are fighting racism at every level because it demeans the divine imprint. Our battle is not against Trump but to address the needs of all Americans whose jobs are not coming back. This is a message of love.” Skinner said that leaders of this new movement are planning a series of organizational meetings to build bridges with a new generation of clergy of many races and background to forge a common agenda. But change is already coming. While the elders of this movement were speaking inside the church at Thomas Circle, the steps leading into the historic sanctuary became a –The Rt. Rev. Michael Curry diverse quilt of many: Black and White, old and young. a reality in the United States of Rev. Leslie Copeland America.” Tunes, Director of Ecumenical After gathering at the Advocacy Days, a progressive church, people silently walked group of ministers who have to Lafayette Square May 24 challenged those on the where they offered prayerful so-called Religious Right petitions in front of the White weighed in on the importance House to challenge President of the gathering. Trump for policies that some “For us to come together, leaders charge has put the for us to say that we are nation in a moral crisis. reclaiming Jesus from those Rev. Barbara Skinner, who have hijacked and a former faith adviser to distorted the gospel and for President Obama, was one of us to proclaim that it is a the organizers of the rally and liberating gospel,” Copeland silent March that drew several Tunes said. “To say that Jesus thousand people to the gates loves the poor and cares for of the White House while the poor and we are not going President Trump was inside. to stand for policies that During the vigil she offered a discriminate against people.”
“As citizens we want our government to reflect our values. As a Bishop I believe we should follow the teachings of Jesus - who taught us to love God and love our neighbor.”
Continued from D1 that primarily only offer studios and one bedrooms.” The neighborhoods that are being targeted include Navy Yard, U street, Bloomingdale, H street, Union Market, and soon Anacostia, according to Theresa. Parties that are affected are all African-Americans living East of the River. “I think my clients have issues and concerns with the Zoning Commission and not feeling like they were heard in sincerity and their arguments were not heard earnestly,” Theresa told the AFRO. “I think that the residencts who face displacement have expressed fear and just uncertainty as to what’s going to happen in their lives.” Theresa said that Black people were disproportionately missing from the discrete class of creatives that the city is seeking to grow. “When you list out the professions that are part of the creative class, research and studies have shown that Black people are not in those professions to the extent as White people or other races,” Theresa said. According to some studies, the African American portion of the creative class is 20
percent less than Whites, so that would be a policy that has a disparate impact, Theresa said. He also said this means resources are being siphoning from one group [Black people] to another group. Spokesman for the District’s Office of the Attorney General, Robert Maurus, said the city would not comment on the lawsuit until its response is filed by its due date on June 25th, according to a Washington Post article. “I think it’s important for our communities to fight for equity in the projects that are coming to our neighborhoods,” Theresa said. “Equity could mean land, money, programming or jobs, but you want to be a part of whatever development happening in the city, because a lot of things that people are asking for are things that take away from your community. If you don’t get anything in return, then you’re losing and you’ll soon be pushed out,” Theresa said. “So what we want is just equity in the projects…then you know the neighborhood can gentrify and we can be a part of the gentry. But, if we don’t get equity then that would never happen and that means the usage of gentrification displacement.”
Courtesy Photo Flickr
According to a lawsuit, the Navy Yard neighborhood is one of the neighborhoods being affected by the District’s land use policies.
Phillips
Continued from D1 the Smithsonian hire for the role she currently occupies at Phillips, but as far as she knows, they haven’t followed her advice. The Smithsonian does have an Office of Equal Employment and Minority Affairs which, according to its web site, is designed to “promote diversity and inclusion in all aspects of the Smithsonian’s workforce, programs, and activities.” Clay’s role at the Phillips Collection will be to be responsible for all aspects of the Phillips’s institutional diversity and inclusion strategy. Clay layed out the details of her new role for the AFRO, “As the Chief Diversity Officer at The Phillips Collection, I
am charged with leading the institution through an organizational culture transformation process that aligns with our values of diversity, equity, and inclusion.” While Clay’s role is a new, The Phillips Collection
expertise and leadership will enable us to build upon the strong foundation we have established and better reflect on our exhibitions, programs, board, and the diverse populations we serve.” Clay hit the ground running as she is in charge of
By ensuring that we have people from all backgrounds within the museum, we will be a stronger institution.” –Makeba Clay has had an official Diversity Statement as part of its Strategic Plan since 2013 and staff have worked with an Inclusion anD Diversity Task Force since 2016. In addition the art institution also has partnered with THEARC as far back as 2014 to bring its artistic programming to residents on the East side of the city. Currently the Collection offers Free field trips to schools in Wards 7 and 8 and will establish longterm Phillips@THEARC programming in winter of this year. Despite these efforts Phillips leadership recognized the importance of pushing forward, “This is a truly pivotal moment for the museum world but also for the Phillips as we approach our 100th anniversary,” said Dorothy Kosinski, director of The Phillips Collection. “Duncan Phillips embraced a philosophy of diversity and inclusion as part of the museum’s cultural DNA. Makeba’s
an initiative that waives the $12 admission to the museum for visitors that are younger than 30 from Memorial Day to Labor Day. “I am working with my colleagues to build institutional capacity through training and workshops focused on implicit bias and inclusion. By ensuring that we have people from all backgrounds within the museum, we will be a stronger institution. This also includes making the pathway to jobs in a museum accessible to people of all backgrounds.,” Clay told the AFRO. She’s also working on a paid internship program. “Many students may be interested in museums, but because internships in art museums are widely unpaid, they may not have the option to take an unpaid position. We are working to eradicate this road block and make the way to employment at an art museum that much more accessible.”
June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018, The Afro-American
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Superhero Continued from D1
and others. The goals of the library are developing and inspiring young readers and their families, building communities where people have access to “epic” storytelling and igniting creativity. Ward 4 Councilman Brandon Todd and Maryland resident Jesse J. Holland, author of Who is the Black Panther, the companion book for the blockbuster hit “Black Panther” held a community kickoff for the library on May 26. “Upshur Park’s new little library is a great way to kick off the summer reading season and open up the wonderful world of books for our young people,” Todd said in a statement to the AFRO. “…this Marvel-themed little library will bring fun, engaging books directly to children in our community. I look forward to this resource helping our youth strengthen reading skills, spark curiosity, and build a lifelong love of learning.” The library will be open for two years thanks to Disney Publishing Worldwide and First Book, a nonprofit, and maintained by Little Free Library community stewards. People are encouraged to donate books as well. The library is supported by the Mayor’s office, Todd’s office, the Community Alliance for Upper Fourteenth Street and the D.C. Department of Parks and Recreation, according to Petworth News. You can find related activities for kids, phone wall papers and other information about “Avengers: Infinity War-themed free libraries at littlemarvellibrary.com. For more information about Little Free Library, visit littlefreelibrary.org.
Central Committee
Cathy Hughes accepts her award
Former President of the National Press Club and Honoree, Jeff Ballou
Rapper and DJ Biz Markie, who DJ’d the afterparty.
Continued from D1
41 of us and we are running across the city.” The chair of the District’s Democratic Party is D.C. Council member Anita Bonds (D-At Large). She is running for re-election to the council on the June 19 ballot. All indications say she wants to remain the party chair. Within three months of the June 19 primary, there will be an election for party officers. Pannell’s slate is one group of Democrats seeking to take control of the central committee. Others are Democrats Moving Forward #Resist and Democrats 2020. Ward 8 State Board of Education member Markus Batchelor is a leading figure on the Dump Trump ticket as its nominee for national committeeman and activist Nikki M.G. Lewis is its
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Ward 8 State Board of Education member Markus Batchelor is running for national committeeman.
national committeewoman hopeful. Democrats Moving Forward is led by D.C. Council member Jack Evans (D-Ward 2) and Sylvia Martinez as national committeeman and national committeewoman, respectively. Former Small Business deputy administrator Marie Johns is running for national committeewoman independently. There are several candidates running for atlarge committeeman and at-large committeewoman, including Pannell. There are also races for each ward to have a committeeman and committeewoman. Philosophically, there is little difference in the slates as far as opposing the Trump agenda and wanting statehood for the District. The difference appears to be style, with the Democrats Moving Forward being the more established organization, while Dump Trump is the more grassroots and outspoken group. The District is an overwhelmingly Democratic jurisdiction with 76 percent of all registered voters in the party. The District participated in its first presidential election in 1964 and has supported the Democratic presidential nominee since then. Each mayor and D.C.
Jeff Ballou and Dr. Sheila Brooks Beatriz Acevedo, David Morgan, and Soledad O’Brien at the Multicultural Media Correspondents Gala Photos by Brigette White
Council chair has been a Democrat since the advent of Home Rule in 1974 and about 90 percent of all council members have been members of the party. Pannell said there is concern among some Democrats that the District’s party has lost its focus. “The central committee is pretty much ineffective,” Pannell said. “We need to be more active in getting people to register to vote and participate in the political process.” Members of the central committee receive no compensation.
Newcomer Lewis Continued from D1
bid. “I come from a non-profit background and I work at the University of the District of Columbia (UDC) as a member of its faculty,” Lewis told the AFRO. “We need someone with a non-profit background on the council and someone who understands the way nonprofit leaders think.” Lewis is the former executive director for College Bound, an organization dedicated to helping young people go to college and a board member of Bowen McCauley Dance and National CARES Mentoring Movement. Lewis has never run for political office. He received bachelor’s and masters’ degrees in public administration from Clark Atlanta University and a doctorate in public administration from the University of Baltimore. If elected to the council, Lewis will focus on developing a pipeline that supports children in their pre-K years to pursue college and job opportunities with UDC as well as help university graduates find good-paying jobs. Lewis is concerned about the rising costs of housing in the District and wants to address that. “We are all concerned about the escalating costs of housing, and we do not want residents to choose between rent and eating,” he said. “The displacement of our residents is of grave concern. I want to collaborate with the business and non-profit communities to ensure that government policies support helping senior citizens keep their homes or that they are equitably
On May 24, the Multimedia Correspondents Soledad O’Brien and Herman Cain Association held the third annual Multimedia Correspondents Dinner at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. Honorees included, Hermain Cain, Soledad O’Brien, Jeff Ballou, Raynard Jackson, Beatriz Acevedo and Radio One pioneer, Cathy Hughes. Throughout the evening the honorees received awards in front of their peers and colleagues and gave speeches about Raynard Jackson and Micha Green, continuing to be truthAFRO Washington, D.C. Editor tellers in media. After the dinner, guests went to Claudia’s in D.C., where rapper Biz Markie kept the party going as DJ for the evening.
compensated should they choose to sell.” Lewis said as a council member, he will focus on developing affordable housing units and workforce housing. “We need to make sure that teachers and police officers can live in the city they work in,” he said. “I heard a story about a teacher who lives some distance from the city getting up at 5 a.m. in the morning to make sure that her children got off to school, fight traffic and arrive at school on time with a smile. That’s not easy and housing is expensive in the city.” Lewis said District government surplus property can be converted into affordable or workforce units as well as abandoned property can serve in that function as well. Lewis, a resident of the Hillcrest section of Ward 7, said economic development east of the Anacostia River can be achieved with creative policies. “I support creating incubators that will help senior and seasoned citizens start their own businesses,” he said. “I believe the government should play a role in helping people start businesses. That helps the city because tax money will be coming in and D.C. residents will be employed.” Lewis suggested a two-year moratorium on some businesses fees to help entrepreneurs get a start. Lewis will be competing against D.C. Council member Elissa Silverman (I-At Large), entrepreneur Dionne Reeder, and Ward 7 health care activist Ambrose Lane, among others. The filing deadline for the Nov. 6 general election is Aug. 8.
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The Afro-American, June 2, 2018 - June 8, 2018
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