Washington-Baltimore Afro-American Newspaper August 13 2016

Page 1

Volume Volume 125 123 No. No.220–22

The AFRO Initiates 125th Year Celebration

August 13, 2016 - August 13, 2016, The Afro-American A1 $2.00

www.afro.com

$1.00

AUGUST 13, 2016 - AUGUST 19, 2016

Black Gold

Inside

Baltimore

• Baltimore Moves

Finding Success on Black YouTube: Comedy, Hair and Sex

Closer to $15 Minimum Wage

B1

Washington

C1

Late AFRO Sports Editor Sam Lacy Inspires Sports Achievers

C6

afro.com

Your History • Your Community • Your News

That’s how many people have liked the AFRO Facebook page. Join last week’s 1,658 new fans and become part of the family.

Listen to Afro’s “First Edition” Join Host Sean Yoes Monday-Friday 5-7 p.m. on 88.9 WEAA FM, the Voice of the Community. 18

47105 21847

2

• D.C. Schools Start Year Early

D1

DOJ Echoes Baltimore’s Black Community; Finds Series of Civil Rights Violations in Report By Alexis Taylor Special to the AFRO

671k

7

AP Photo

Simone Biles performed the final floor exercise as one of the five members of the U.S. gymnastics team that won a gold medal at the Olympics in Rio. The other members of the team are Aly Raisman, Gabby Douglas, Madison Kocian and Laurie Hernandez. See story on A3.

The Baltimore Police Department’s “pattern of civil rights violations” has officially been uncovered and acknowledge by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). A DOJ report released Aug. 9 said that Baltimore police routinely use excessive force while unconstitutionally stopping, searching, and arresting African-Americans. In addition to racial discrimination, the report also found that “individuals

with mental health disabilities or in crisis” are being met with excessive force, and that sexual assault cases

engaging in activities protected by the U.S. Constitution. Few were baffled by the findings.

“It’s an opportunity to look forward at how we create a better environment and fairness in the equity of policing.” – Councilwoman Helen Holton are being mishandled- possibly due to gender bias. Police have also been retaliating against Baltimoreans for

“I was not overly shocked or surprised,” said Councilwoman Helen Holton (District 8), who called the

report an echo of the many “comments and concerns that citizens have expressed over the years.” “I think it’s an opportunity for us to be better than we’ve been- not to look back and lay blame,” Holton told the AFRO. “It’s an opportunity to look forward at how we create a better environment and fairness in the equity of policing.” Data collected from 2010 to 2016 was used to create the report, which categorically lists the ways police have targeted Charm City’s Black Continued on A3

AME Zion On Aug. 13 the AFRO will kick-off a series of events celebrating our 125th anniversary. Founded in 1892, the AFRO will turn 125 years-old on Aug. 13, 2017. Between now and then there will be a series of events honoring our community, supporters and our readers. As part of that celebration every week until the anniversary the AFRO will be printing stories from our archives, decade by decade, that showcase the AFRO’s legacy and contributions to the field of journalism. The first article is from 1899 and is a gripping, horrifying and all too common story of how a Black man was lynched. It is breathtaking in its details and gives the reader a sense of how life was lived back then. While only one article from that edition appears in this week’s paper we invite you to visit afro.com where the entire front page can be viewed. Sponsored By:

Only a Negro The Burning of a Poor Negro by Members of the Anglo-Saxon Race Last Sunday a Great Day of Frolic for Georgians Below we give from the telegraphic despatches an account of the roasting of a colored man by nearly three thousand white men. This event took place on last Sunday at a place called Newnan, not in Cuba or Philippine Islands but in the

Christian community commonly called the State of Georgia. It was a real hot time for those who took part. If the devil himself, that grand old rascal, the enemy of the world, had to be punished by a Georgian community, his punishment could hardly in, utter horribleness, surpass that meted out to Samuel Hose. Newnan, GA., April 23-in the presence of nearly 2,000 people, who sent aloft yells of defense and shouts of joy, Samuel Hose, a negro, was burned at the stake in a public road, one and-half miles from here, this afternoon, for the murder of Alfred Crawford and an alleged assault on his victim’s widow. Before the torch was applied to the pyre Continued on A5

This AFRO article from 1899 offered an eye-witness account of Samuel Hose being burned alive and then cut into pieces, which were sold as souvenirs, after being accused of murder in Georgia.

Copyright © 2016 by the Afro-American Company

Moore Ready to Lead Mid-Atlantic District By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com African Methodist Episcopal Zion Bishop W. Darin Moore is looking forward to his new assignment. He is now the leader of the denomination’s Mid-Atlantic district. At the 50th Quadrennial Session of the AME Zion Church, held at the Koury Convention Center in Continued on A3

Courtesy Photo

AME Zion Bishop W. Darin Moore will preside over the Baltimore and Washington, D.C. regions, among others.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.