Baltimore Afro-American Newspaper July 5 2014

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July 5, 2014 - July 5, 2014, The Afro-American A1 $1.00

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Volume 122 No. 48

JULY 5, 2014 -JULY 11, 2014

BlackCivil Rights Act: 50 Years Later Baltimore’s Owned Food Trucks By Zenitha Prince Senior AFRO Correspondent

Have Your Taste Cravings Covered

Fifty years ago, United States President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the 1964 Civil Rights Act on July 2, signaling a sea change in American society. “That Act absolutely transformed America,” said Barbara Arnwine, executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. She added, “It is most possibly one of the most radical pieces of legislation in

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By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO Since 2002, the Baltimore City area has witnessed a growing industry of Black-owned food trucks. With a variety of cuisine, these food trucks not only provide Baltimoreans with original mealtime options, but serve as a conduit for the dreams and passions of their enterprising owners. James “Shawn” Glanville, a 15-year veteran of the Baltimore City Police Department, started out cooking for his fellow officers and squad mates. His Caribbean style cuisine was such a hit that one of his colleagues suggested he start a food truck. Three years ago, Glanville did exactly that. His truck, Continued on A8 Wikimedia Commons

President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the 1964 Civil Rights Act as Martin Luther King Jr., and others, look on. the world.” In 1963, when the CRA was introduced and being debated in Congress, America was a country still steeped in segregation. It was still legal to refuse to serve Blacks, Latinos, Native Americans, and Asians at restaurants and in hotels … to deny people transit on private transportation … to deny women access to certain jobs. Workplaces were segregated, colleges banned women from matriculating, and interracial gatherings – and relationships – were still outlawed in some places. “Today, we can walk down the street and share the sidewalks and Blacks don’t have to give way to Whites,” Arnwine said. Women comprise the majority of college graduates and can pursue careers in fields from which they were previously barred, and those

advancements were all because of the Civil Rights Act, she added. But, even then the fight for equal rights and opportunity continued to be waged. “A lot of Americans walk around thinking that the society became the way it looks today naturally,” Arnwine said. They don’t understand it took two-to-three decades of litigation to change this society. “We had to sue almost every police department, fire department, restaurants, hotels – everybody – before people started to accept that the laws had changed.” Even with those victories there were losses – but that’s par for the course in the history of the civil rights struggle, said Sherrilyn Ifill, president and director-counsel, NAACP Legal Continued on A3

Photo courtesy of Eric Sessions

South Carolina Bar-b-que, is owned by Eric Sessions, is the way Sessions pursues his passion to feed people.

According to NASA Sub, Morgan’s Contract Was Never in Real Jeopardy By Sean Yoes Special to the AFRO Despite recent reports to the contrary, Morgan State University’s largest research contract in school history is not in any imminent danger of being revoked or restricted. “From the tone and specificity of the issues outlined in the USRA letter, it appears Morgan is confronting a raft of federal complaints regarding virtually every aspect of its administration of the program,” read a commentary in the Baltimore Sun published June 30. “Unless something

dramatic changes, the school will either have the program’s funds revoked or the award won’t be renewed when the current agreement expires,” it continued. The commentary refers to a $28.5 million research contract awarded to Morgan State University by the Universities Space Research Association (USRA) in May of 2011. USRA is a subcontractor of the NASA Goddard Space Flight

Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. The contract is scheduled to be renewed at the end of five years. The USRA sent a letter to Morgan State – which in 2006 became a research institution with a Carnegie Classification – in March of 2014 outlining various issues they had with Morgan’s administration of the contract. “Performance issues include, but

are not limited to, failure to make transfers of researchers to MSU in a reasonably timely manner, hiring and reporting delays, slow response to requests for corrections to performance problems, and lack of plan to engage more students in research related to Goddard,” wrote Patricia Artimovich, director of Contracts and Compliance with the USRA in a segment of her letter to Morgan. According to Morgan State University President Dr. David Wilson, all the issues outlined by the Continued on A3

Michelle Howard First Woman Promoted Baltimore City NAACP Looks to Provide to Rank of Four-Star Admiral Resources for Youth in Baltimore City By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO

By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO

Another glass ceiling lies shattered on the floor as Admiral Michelle Janine Howard was promoted to the rank of four-star admiral on July 1, 2014. She became the first woman, and the first African-American woman, to be promoted to this rank in the United States Navy. Howard, previously the deputy chief of Naval Operations for Operations, Plans, and Strategy, will now take over the position of vice chief of Naval Operations. Howard, promoted during a ceremony at the Women in Military Service for America Memorial at Continued on A4

Worried about the impact of the stricter youth curfew law passed by the Baltimore City Council, the Baltimore City Branch of the NAACP decided to take action. The NAACP Branch is building a coalition of community organizations and businesses to create a “database of the resources” that provide mentorships, jobs, housing, and other necessary services to youth and other members of the Baltimore City community. At a meeting of community activists and leaders in June, Tessa Hill-Aston, president of the

Photo Courtesy of CHINFO

Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus and Wayne Cowles, Four-star Admiral Michelle Howard’s husband, work together to affix Admiral Howard’s four stars at her promotion and swearing-in ceremony.

Copyright © 2014 by the Afro-American Company

Baltimore City Chapter, recalled her childhood in Cherry Hill. “When I was little, even in Cherry Hill in West Baltimore, if you threw a stone at someone’s car or you were running across somebody’s grass, if my mother wasn’t out front the next door neighbor could tell me ‘don’t do that,’” HillAston said. “And it was okay for her to do that … What we have to do is find things and ways to support people when they need help.” The initiative is being supported by a wide array of enterprises, from former military and private businesses to entertainment industry insiders and labor unions. Continued on A4


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