Baltimore Washington Afro-American Newspaper July 16 2016

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Volume Volume 124 123 No. No. 50 20–22

July 16, 2016 - July 16, 2016, The Afro-American A1 $2.00

www.afro.com

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JULY 16, 2016 - JULY 22, 2016

Inside

‘Be Together, Not Apart’

Baltimore • What Activists

Want from the Next Administration

The Truth about ‘To Protect and to Serve’

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Washington

By Ken Morgan

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• Residents Halt

Best Bets at Baltimore’s Artscape Festival

AP Photo/Gerald Herbert

Cameron Sterling, the 15-year-old son of Alton Sterling, who was shot and killed by Louisiana police, spoke out for the first time on July 13, calling his father a good man and asking people not to resort to violence after Alton Sterling's death. Cameron urged people to "be together, not apart."

Senate Confirms Hayden to be Librarian of Congress

665k

By The Associated Press

That’s how many people have liked the AFRO Facebook page. Join last week’s 2,200 new fans and become part of the family.

The Senate has confirmed the longtime head of Baltimore’s library system to be the next Librarian of Congress. She is the first woman and the first AfricanAmerican to hold the position. The vote was 74-18 for Carla Hayden on July 13. President Barack Obama had nominated Hayden to be the

14th Librarian of Congress in the institution’s 214year history. He called her milestones on gender and race “long overdue.” Obama signed a law last year establishing a 10-year term for the Librarian of Congress with an option for reappointment. The position was previously considered a lifetime appointment. The previous Librarian of

Sweet Taste of Success

afro.com

Your History • Your Community • Your News

Martin’s Soul Food Cooks Up Family Tradition By Avis Thomas-Lester Urban News Service It took Timothy Martin just eight years to go from gasstation chef to soul-food restaurant mogul. Growing up in Norfolk, Va., Martin and his 10 siblings eagerly anticipated the dinners their father, Ernest, prepared. “He’d work eight hours a day, come home and Continued on A3

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The Rev. Harry L. Seawright and Rev. Frank M. Reid III Among Newly Elected AME Bishops By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com The Rev. Harry L. Seawright of Union Bethel AME Church in Brandywine, Md., and the Rev. Frank Madison Reid III of Bethel AME Church in Baltimore, Md., were among the six candidates elected to be bishops at the 50th Quadrennial Conference that was held in Philadelphia on July 11. Seawright was elected on the first ballot while Reid was the final bishop elected. Reid’s election had a lot more drama than Seawright’s. Throughout the day, Reid and his associates caucused and politicked with delegates and fellow competitors to win his post. The Revs. Harry Seawright (left) and Continued Frank Reid are newly elected bishops. on A3

Exclusive

First Hand Account of Dallas Police Shooting By Jerica Deck Special to the AFRO

peaceful protest organized by the social justice group Next Generation Action Network in Dallas Tx. to protest the killing by police officers of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile when Micah Johnson allegedly killed five police officers and injured nine. Johnson was eventually killed Continued on A3

Defense Rests Officer’s Trial in Freddie Gray’s Death

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

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Courtesy Photo

The new Librarian of Congress, Dr. Carla D. Hayden

When 21-year-old Lauren Hendricks planned on protesting against police brutality, the last thing she expected was to be right in the middle of a mass shooting. The Hampton University journalism student was at a

Listen to Afro’s “First Edition”

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Congress, James Billington, was criticized for not keeping up with advances in technology. Billington was appointed by President Ronald Reagan and served for 28 years before stepping down last year.

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Courtesy photos

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New Business Development

By The Associated Press

Photo courtesy of Timothy Martin

Timothy Martin, owner of the Martin’s Soul Food restaurant chain in Virginia’s Hampton Roads region, learned to cook as a child while watching his father in the kitchen.

The defense has rested in the fourth trial of a Baltimore police officer in the death of a man whose broken neck in police custody provoked riots last year. Lt. Brian Rice is the highest-ranking of six officers charged in Freddie Gray’s death. Baltimore Circuit Judge Barry Williams dismissed an assault charge against him, but he still faces charges of manslaughter, reckless endangerment Continued on A3

Copyright © 2016 by the Afro-American Company

Courtesy photo

Lauren Hendricks was at the Black Lives Matter protest in Dallas when a sniper killed five police officers. She lost her shoe in the ensuing commotion.


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