February 6, 2016 - February 6, 2016, The Afro-American A1 PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 124 No. 46
JUNE 18, 2016 - JUNE 24, 2016
Inside
Baltimore
Valuing Women
The AFRO’s Tribute to Fathers
• What Went Wrong with the Election?
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B1
Washington
Top 5 Hip-Hop Beefs of All-Time
C1
• New Affordable
Housing Site in D.C. AP Photo/Cliff Owen
First lady Michelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey have a discussion on Trailblazing the Path for the next generation of women during the White House Summit on the United State of Women in Washington, June 14.
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United State of Women Summit
Michelle Obama, Oprah Winfrey Highlight Self-Worth
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By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com The first-ever United State of Women Summit, not only brought together the Obama administration, private-sector companies, foundations and organizations to announce $50 million in commitments and new policies to expand opportunities for the nation’s women and girls, it also offered a rare opportunity for women leaders across the world to encourage
and partner with each other. Entering the Walter E. Washington Convention Center to Chaka Khan’s I’m Every Woman, U.S. First Lady Michelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey broadened the day-long discussion of gender pay, student, and media equity, to also include tools, particularly for Black women, to develop improved self-value. According to Winfrey, not only are those issues exacerbated by the media, but also hindered by thoughts women and girls have about who
inner voices becomes the capstone to many of the initiatives affirmed during the conference, including more than $3 million from the Department of Justice, through its Office on Violence on Women (OVW), to prevent domestic violence homicides. It is the commitment each woman and girl makes to herself, Obama said, that helps that fight against social and economic insecurity.
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W. Va. High School Site of Alleged Racial Bullying By Jerica Deck Special to The AFRO A West Virginia high school student’s mother said that her son is the victim of racial slurs and cyberbullying at the hands of his lacrosse team. The teen, who the AFRO is not naming because he is a minor, is a student at Fairmont Senior High School. Romelia Hodges told the AFRO her son was allegedly taunted in an Instagram group
Photo by Romelia Hodeges
The N-word was written on one of the doors of the Fairmont Senior High School in Fairmont, W. Va., according to a parent at the school.
Prosecutors Rest Case in Freddie Gray Trial By The Associated Press
AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana
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they are and what expectations are beyond their reach. “The root of every dysfunction I have encountered or the root of every problem is some sense of lacking self-value or self-worth,” Winfrey told the thousands of women gathered for the talk. “We live in a world where we are constantly being bombarded by images that encourage you to be light, literally, and it is a lot to live up to. The pressure of other people’s expectations is great.” Winfrey said that retooling those
Demonstrators protest outside of the courthouse during the trial of Officer Caesar Goodson Jr., one of six Baltimore city police officers charged in connection to the death of Freddie Gray.
Prosecutors have rested their case against a Baltimore police officer charged with murder in the in-custody death of a man whose neck was broken in the back of a police van. The prosecution rested on June 15 in the case against Officer Caesar Goodson after calling Stanford O’Neill Franklin to testify as an expert on police training and practices. Franklin is a former commander of education and training for the Baltimore Police Department. Franklin says Goodson
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message titled “Damned Niggers.” According to Hodges, pictures of her son were accompanied by captions like “Shut up you ape” and “I’ll send you back to the cotton field.” Hodges said there were 14-15 students involved in the group. “He thought this was his team, his band of brothers,” Hodges told the AFRO. “To see that they have done something like this to this day he can’t wrap his head around it.” The school, for its part, said they Continued on A3
Education Initiative
Morgan President Leads HBCU Students on Cultural Exchange Trip to China By Zenitha Prince Senior AFRO Correspondent zprince@afro.com This summer, 168 students and 22 chaperones from Congressional Black Caucus districts will travel to China, as part of a Black education initiative sponsored by the China – United States Exchange Foundation and China’s Ministry of Education in collaboration
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with its partners. The program is an extension of the HBCU scholarship initiative announced by Chinese Vice Premier Madam Liu Yandong on Capitol Hill in November 2013. “This exciting initiative is a cross-cultural relationshipbuilding effort designed to enhance U.S.-China relations – and to give students from Continued on A3