Baltimore Washington 7-14-2017

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Volume Volume 125 123 No. No.50 20–22

July 15, 2017 - July 15, 2017, The Afro-American A1 $2.00

www.afro.com

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JULY 15, 2017 - JULY 21, 2017

Inside Commentary

Improve Healthcare, Don’t Destroy It By Sen. Chris Van Hollen

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Baltimore

Tina Lifford on Being the Bedrock of ‘Queen Sugar’ C1

the AFRO Facebook Family

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• Pathfinders

B1 AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews

Jabbar Washington, 43, center, hugs his mother Martha Washington, left, and daughter Jasmine, 21, at Brooklyn Supreme Court July 12 in New York. Washington, who spent 21 years behind bars for murder, was set free after prosecutors abandoned his conviction, acknowledging jurors got misleading testimony from an eyewitness.

Black Women Awarded More Master’s Degrees Than Black Men at HBCUs Black women are being awarded Master’s degrees at a significantly higher proportion than Black men at historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs), a 1990-2015 National Center for Educational Statistics (NCES) shows. In the 2015 academic year, the most recent data available, 3,869 master’s degrees were awarded to Black women compared to 1,545 Master’s awarded to Black Men, a ratio of approximately 5 to 2. In the same academic year, 141,358 Black women were enrolled at HBCUs compared to 86,905 Black males, a ratio Continued on A3

Some of the 2017 graduating class at Morgan State University. Courtesy photo

Your History • Your Community • Your News

afro.com

By Stacy M. Brown NNPA Newswire Contributor

Courtesy photo

Martha Rivera Chavis passed away in her home in Montclair, N.J. at 3 a.m. on July 6.

Join Host Sean Yoes Monday-Friday 5-7 p.m. on 88.9 WEAA FM, the Voice of the Community. 17

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Washington • Exclusive with Former Del. Walter Fauntroy

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D.C. Gears Up to Fight Trump Policies By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com

Tributes Pour in Celebrating the Life of Martha Rivera Chavis

Listen to Afro’s “First Edition”

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Justice By J. K. Schmid Special to the AFRO

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• Notorious Baltimore Police Group Faces New Allegations of Corruption

Martha Rivera Chavis was not just the wife of civil rights leader Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., but by all accounts, from those who knew the Dominican Republic-born activist, Rivera Chavis strived just as hard as her beloved husband for freedom, justice and equality for Blacks and other minorities. “I met Martha in 1993 when she was head of the

America’s Got Talent’ Airs Audition of Black Contestant Who Died

Women in NAACP [WIN] committee and she simply brought new life to that organization,” said Zach McDaniels, who served as the strategic adviser for Dr.

Chavis, when he organized the Million Man March. “Martha shook up the NAACP, she had a very vibrant spirit and to be around Continued on A3

Martha Rivera Chavis, wife of the Dr. Ben Chavis died recently (see story at left). Ben Chavis is a long time civil rights activist who was imprisoned for approximately 12 years, along with 9 other people, for a crime they did not commit. The story below is from right before Chavis was sent to prison. He, along with the other 9, eventually received pardons for their time in prison.

AFRO Archived History

N.C. focus—a clash over bias in justice system Ben Chavis of the Wilmington 10 May 3, 1975

By The Associated Press

By Ruth Jenkins

“America’s Got Talent” has aired the audition of a contestant who died in a car accident last month. Dr. Brandon Rogers, a family physician from Portsmouth, Virginia, tried out for the show in March. He earned a standing ovation and a trip through to the next round of the NBC reality competition after singing Stevie Wonder’s Continued on A3

WASHINGTON—The Rev. Ben Chavis took part in his first civil rights demonstration at the age of 14, spurred by resentment at seeing plantation workers being taken advantage of in the North Carolina tobacco farm area where he lived. He has fought injustice and repression ever since, which brings him 14 years later to the point where he faces a 34-year prison term.

Trae Patton/NBC via AP

Brandon Rogers performs during America’s Got Talent auditions.

D.C. Council member David Grosso recently convened a public meeting on the policies of the Trump administration and how should the city respond to them. Grosso, who is an independent at-large council member, held the meeting at the Columbia Heights Education Campus on July 10 with an audience of 50 people. Grosso said the city political leadership is committed to preventing the Trump agenda from harming the city’s education, health and resource systems. He said he wants to hear from people. “This is an opportunity to Continued on A5

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Copyright © 2017 by the Afro-American Company


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