February 14, 2015 - February 14, 2015, The Afro-American
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Volume 123 No. 28
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FEBRUARY 14, 2015 - FEBRUARY 20, 2015
Sherrilyn Ifill Calls for Renewed Focus on Housing Segregation Proposed Tax Credit Could Help Private Colleges Serving Low-Income Persons
By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO
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Photo by Roberto Alejandro
Sherrilyn Ifill, president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, speaks to students at the University of Maryland School of Law. Defense and Education Fund (LDF), told a gathering of law and social work students at the University of Maryland on Monday. Speaking at a series held by the University
of Maryland School of Law titled ‘Beyond Ferguson,’ Ifill cautioned that rather than move beyond what happened in Missouri last August, we Continued on A5
Tim Watts No Longer at Magic Baltimore 95.9 FM By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO Tim Watts and Lorraine ‘Lolo’ Milliner, both long-time radio personalities for Magic Baltimore 95.9 FM, have been suddenly let go by the station according to statements posted on their respective Facebook pages. Watts’ statement suggested that his age was behind his having
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Continued on A5
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Douglass is the only private, predominantly Black university in the state, serving almost exclusively a population of working adults striving to achieve a higher education To increase donations to private, higher education institutions degree and further their serving high needs areas, career prospects. “This is an Sen. Nathaniel McFadden opportunity for us to help Sojourner-Douglass College (D-Baltimore City) has continue its mission,” said introduced a bill to create McFadden. a tax credit these donors SB02 would authorize the could use to offset income Maryland Higher Education and other Maryland taxes. Commission to set aside The bill is supported by up to $20 million annually Sojourner-Douglass College in available tax credits for and its president, Dr. Charles projects in what are known as Simmons. Testifying Feb. 4 before the Photo by Roberto Alejandro priority funding areas (which includes Baltimore City) and Senate Budget and Taxation Dr. Charles Simmons, benefiting persons making Committee on behalf of his president of Sojournerbill, the ‘Higher Education Douglass College, waits to below the area median income Investment Tax Credit testify before the Maryland as established by the U.S. Department of Housing and Program’ or Senate Bill 02 Senate Budget and Urban Development. (SB02), McFadden called the Taxation Committee. Private institutions of proposed tax credit program higher education that are attempting to raise “another tool in the toolbox to help SojournerDouglass get through a crisis.” Continued on A5 According to McFadden, SojournerBy Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO
Preventing future Fergusons will require dismantling the patterns of segregation established by decades of federal housing policies, Sherrilyn Ifill, president and directorcounsel of the NAACP Legal
Black History Month Feature
Baltimore City Legislators, Advocates Pushing to Expand Voting Rights of Ex-Felons By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO Baltimore City legislators and advocates are pushing to expand the voting rights of former felons by making them eligible to vote immediately upon release from prison, even if they are still serving a term of parole or probation. Sen. Joan Conway (D-Baltimore City) has submitted a bill in the senate and Del. Cory McCray (D-Baltimore City) will soon submit a house version. Conway’s bill, senate bill 340 (SB340), would expand the re-enfranchisement rights then Gov. Martin O’Malley signed into law in 2007. That law restored the franchise to felons who had completed their sentence including any term of parole or probation. Conway’s bill would reform that law, removing the requirement that formerly convicted felons complete parole or probation terms prior to having their voting rights reinstated. SB340 would also require that the Department of Public
The Chitlin’ Circuit Brought Bright Lights and Artistry to Baltimore’s ‘Avenue’
reaction. “Oh, yeah,” they’ll say. Then they will list the names: Billie Holiday, Redd Foxx, Ask any black Baltimorean of a certain Aretha Franklin. The times you could stroll age about Pennsylvania Avenue at its prime into a sandwich shop and get an autograph – that is, any time between 1940s through and a short chat with a famous Black star the late 1960’s - and you will get the same – the two of you pushed together because there were only so many places that either of you could be anyway. What helped create this boom of talent and culture in the city was the fact that many of the performance halls, especially the Royal Theater, were part of the Chitlin Circuit – that is, places where Black artists could perform for Black audiences. By all accounts, Pennsylvania Avenue was the place to be. Anybody and everybody could stop by the AFRO Archive photo Continued on A8
Continued on A5
By Lisa Snowden-McCray Special to the AFRO
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Photo by Roberto Alejandro
Perry Hopkins (left) and John Comer, organizers with Communities United, posed for a picture while waiting outside the offices of Sen. Joan Conway(D-Baltimore City) in the Miller Senate Building for information on Conway’s senate bill to restore voting rights to ex-felons immediately upon release from prison.
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ONE NIGHT in MIAMI... By Kemp Powers Directed by Kwame Kwei-Armah
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