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Volume 122 No. 39
MAY 3, 2014 - MAY 9, 2014
Backlash By Zenitha Prince Senior AFRO Correspondent
Displaying an unprecedented unified front
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LeBron James was very vocal on the Sterling matter.
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against racism, NBA players, past and present, are leading the charge against Los Angeles Clippers’ owner Donald Sterling in light of his alleged anti-Black statements that were caught on tape and released by TMZ on April 25. “This is a very serious issue which we will address aggressively,” said Chris Paul, president of the National Basketball Players Association and, incidentally, the Clippers’ point guard. The Association is calling on the NBA to bar Sterling from all playoff games this season. They also want a full reckoning of the past accusations of discrimination against Sterling, an explanation of whatever disciplinary measures are decided upon, close involvement in the process and a swift resolution. Paul and his Clippers teammates held a silent but emphatic protest at their April 27 game against the Golden State Warriors, piling their warm-up uniforms at centercourt and wearing their shirts inside-out to hide the team’s
Continued on A6
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Tekeya Mayfield stares in disbelief at her brother, Michael Mayfield, another victim of urban violence.
Fellow cadets, Xavier and Adrian
Baltimore Community Leaders Address Youth Violence and Potential Solutions By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO
Remembrances and vigils in the wake of the murder of Michael Mayfield two weeks ago are beginning to fade into memory. In the aftermath, leaders in the Baltimore community are calling for a more community-based and sustained effort to address the issues that drive violence. David Miller, chief visionary officer and a co-founder of the Dare to Be King Project, an organization that supports groups providing services to boys of color, stressed the need for early intervention – identifying aggressive and problem behavior at the elementary-school age level and getting parents and other professionals involved. He is also calling for improved access
May 17th.
to mental healthcare services in Baltimore city. Miller would like more resources funneled to groups and organizations already operating within communities affected by violence and that possess credibility with area residents. Too often, he lamented, outside groups, though well intentioned, are limited in their effectiveness by a lack of history with the communities they seek to serve. Adam Jackson, CEO and co-founder of Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle, a policy think tank engaged in advocacy and educational efforts in Baltimore, pointed out that too often violence is thought of in a vacuum rather than within the context of the social conditions that underlie violent behavior. “We don’t really think about the way we can arrange our Continued on A5
When Integration Hit Baltimore
I was in school with children who looked like me and spoke a different language. Together we learned to eat Spam. Therefore, I could not imagine why these women did not want their children to go to school with me. A memory from a Baltimore woman whose life was changed radically by To be perfectly honest I was more interested in the events of Baltimore the landmark Brown v. Board decision of 1954. than going to school. In the fall of 1953 Baltimore came alive. The electricity in the air was palpable. May 17, 1954 marked a defining moment in the history of the United The Baltimore Colts had moved to town. Everyone, Black and white, States. The Supreme Court declared the doctrine of welcomed the Colts with open arms. Baltimore was “separate but equal” unconstitutional and handed The the Colts and the Colts were Baltimore. NAACP’s Legal Defense Fund the most celebrated The great Buddy Young became my neighbor. victory in its storied history. Reversing the 1896 the Imagine, I could babysit for his family. One of Supreme Court’s decision that separate but equal the first Blacks to play pro football (after the educational facilities for Negroes were legal. “unofficial” ban from 1934 to 1945) Buddy Young I’m sure you’ve seen the film and pictures of all #22, experienced the humiliations of prejudice. of the White women upset about their children going But Buddy Young always insisted that the worst MarshaRose Joyner shares her to school with Black children. On that evening in prejudice he encountered was against his size being memories of Brown v. BOE. May, like everyone in America who had a TV, I was the shortest NLF player. He said his size was not watching the 10 inch black and white television; a disadvantage and delighted in outsmarting larger witnessing the drama being played out. opponents who attempted to tackle him. ‘’They hate In New York I had gone to Catholic School with a little redhead boy to miss the little man, who can make them look foolish, so they hesitate,’’ he named Greenberg. At Holy Providence for Negros and Indians in Cornwells once said. ‘’That’s beautiful.’’ With Buddy Young being only a few inches Heights, Pa., the convent where I was a boarding student; we were taught taller than me, I learned to love my short genes. the Great Books and nothing about being a Negro or an Indian. In Saipan Continued on A5 By MarshaRose Joyner Special to the AFRO
26th Street Collapse
HBCU Town Hall Meeting Planned for Coppin State By Sean Yoes Special to the AFRO
Photo by James Bentley
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Police officers struggled to hold back passersby who couldn’t believe their eyes at the sight of much of the first block of E. 26th Street and the cars formerly parked there now resting in the belly of the train tracks. At approximately 3:45 p.m., workers in the 2500 block of N. Charles Street, including those in the AFRO office heard a sound that mimicked loud thunder with the jolting effect of an earthquake. Not knowing what it was, many went to investigate and found the collapse.
Lawyers for the Coalition for Excellence and Equity in Higher Education, which represent Morgan State University, Coppin State University, the University of Maryland Eastern Shore and Bowie State University have been engaged in a legal battle alleging unlawful duplication of their programs by traditionally White Institutions since October 2006. The legal wrangling has reached the mediation phase between the two sides, and still very little is known by the general public in reference to what’s really at stake for the state’s historically Black colleges and universities. A town hall style meeting on the plight of the state’s HBCU is planned for 6 to 8:30 p.m., May 13 on the campus of Coppin Continued on A6
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