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Volume 121 No. 42
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BREXTON REALTY
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SERVING & SUPPORTING THE COMMUNITY
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MAY 25, 2013 - MAY 31, 2013
District Baby Doctor Charged with Porn D.C. Tenants Speak Up for Affordable Housing
By AFRO Staff
A Southeast Washington pediatrician has been charged with possession of pornography, officials said. Robert Paul Dickey, 73, who runs his medical office out of his home at 1647 38th Street SE, was charged after FBI agents
Photo courtesy of Google
The Dickey residence
who arrived at his office on May 8 found him on a computer looking at a website that features child porn. He was held without bond and a preliminary hearing was scheduled for May 23.
News of Dickey’s arrest sent shock waves through the area as parents of patients feared that he may have taken pictures of their children. Authorities said there is no evidence that Dickey had taken or possessed pictures of children he had worked with in his decades-old practice. @DezilagelZsaZsa, who indicated she was a former patient, tweeted of the popular pediatrician: “Young OMG I Know Everybody Went to Dr. Dickey Smh…He Used To Give Me All The Stickers..I Wonder…” According to information posted online, Dickey has practiced for about 40 years. The website vital.com said Dickey was affiliated with two practices in California where recorded messages on telephone lines indicated they were no longer in business. It also stated that he was affiliated with Children’s National Medical Center, but a spokeswoman for the hospital said he is not on staff there. “He refers patients to Children’s,” said hospital spokeswoman Paula Darte. “I don’t think he’s been on site. He has the ability to refer people here…Most of the pediatricians in the D.C. area refer patients to us when they have complex needs or acute care needs.” The charging document in the case details the arrest of Dickey after safeguards set up by Microsoft caught him in a snare Continued on A4
By Teria Rogers AFRO Staff Writer They came from points in the city where people aren’t enthralled with the boom that has led to an explosion in young, moneyed Whites who have changed the flavor of their
“With all the economic development and revitalization that is going on, people…deserve a right to stay here.” – Juanita McKenzie neighborhoods and whose willingness, and ability, to pay skyhigh prices for housing have left them wondering what they
Continued on A4
Zimbabwe on Path to Regain International Acceptance
INSIDE
By George E. Curry NNPA Editor-in-Chief HARARE, Zimbabwe (NNPA) – The United States has signaled that it is moving toward normalizing relations with Zimbabwe, the former White minority-rule nation once known as Rhodesia. In March, former United Nations Ambassador Andrew Young was dispatched by the Obama administration to meet with President Robert Mugabe. After the meeting, Young told reporters that the State Department had sent him to Zimbabwe to let Mugabe know the U.S. is interested in repairing its strained relations with the mineral-rich country of 13.1 million people. Last month, Jesse L. Jackson Sr., also held a meeting with Mugabe, 89, the oldest sitting president in Africa, calling for open and free elections. Jackson pledged to work for the removal of U.S. sanctions. “When there’s growth and investment, everybody wins,” Jackson told Mugabe. After controversial land reform and what the U.S. called flawed elections, the United States applied limited sanctions in 2003 against about 120 key individuals and
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NNPA photo by George E. Curry
Jesse Jackson (left) makes a point with Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe (center) and Chicago businessman Elzie L. Higginbottom
Howard Students Take STEM Skills to Africa
70 industries. Earlier this month, the U.S. Treasury Department announced that it was lifting sanctions against the Agricultural Development Bank of Zimbabwe (Agribank) and the Infrastructure Development Bank of Zimbabwe, provided no transactions are conducted with any person who remains on the sanctions list. The western media trumpeted stories about how unfair the White farmers were being treated under the new Black government. However, Joseph M. Made, the former minister of lands, said the Black farmers were the ones aggrieved. He said 6,000 White commercial farmers locked Blacks out of the prime agricultural areas until they gained the right to control their land. David Bruce Wharton, U.S. Ambassador to Zimbabwe, called the land reform effort a failure. “They have a sovereign right to do that, but there are consequences,” he said. “If you do it in a way that looks to the outside world like it’s chaotic, like the rule of law has been suspended, like there’s no real plan about making sure poor people get land as well as Continued on A3
Words of Wisdom
19 Kinyata Cooper, chemistry senior, completes a research project in Nairobi, Kenya. 7
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Special to AFRO from Howard University Thirty-two Howard University undergraduate students from science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields will travel to eight countries this summer to conduct research projects as participants in National Science Foundation-funded Global Education, Awareness and Research Continued on A3
First Lady Michelle Obama urged graduates to remember the importance that education played in the advancement of African Americans as she delivered the commencement address at Bowie State University on May 18.
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