November 12, 2016 - November 12, 2016, The Afro-American A1 PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 125 No. 36
APRIL 8, 2017 - APRIL 14, 2017
Inside
Baltimore
• AFRO Clean Block Campaign Returns
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Comedic Actress Michaela Coel Talks ‘Chewing Gum’ and Colorism
Prince George’s
C1 Commentary
Trump’s 360 Degree Assault on Your Health By Lisa Ashe
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AP Photo/John Locher
People protest against President Donald Trump and Supreme Court Justice nominee Judge Neil Gorsuch during a rally on April 1 in Las Vegas. Gorsuch is expected to be confirmed despite protests from civil rights groups.
• Ward 8 Stepping Up with the Arts
Analysis
Civil Rights Community Helplessly Watches Gorsuch Confirmation
By Charles D. Ellison Special to the AFRO
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The confirmation of President Donald Trump’s first Supreme Court nominee, federal appeals court judge Neil Gorsuch, will happen. Senate Democrats, despite winning a one week delay on the final vote, appear ready to let it move forward. A “nuclear option” threat from Senate Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell seemed like just enough to stall Senate Democrats’ hopes of a dramatic filibuster. And there isn’t much the Black political community can do about it. Of course, civil rights leaders and Black elected officials had exhausted all public channels in voicing adamant opposition to Gorsuch. Civil rights leaders all lined up to lodge their official opposition to the relatively young Gorsuch’s footprint on the Supreme Court. “If confirmed, Gorsuch’s lifelong appointment to the court would have serious consequences for all Americans, but especially African Americans and vulnerable communities,” wrote Congressional Black Caucus Chair Cedric Richmond (D-LA) in a last ditch and somewhat futile op-ed. “His judicial record on race and related matters and constitutional and equal Continued on A3
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William Coleman, Civil Rights Pioneer in Law and Life, Dies at 96 By J. K. Schmid Special to the AFRO William Thaddeus “Bill” Coleman, Jr., civil rights attorney, judge and United States Secretary of Transportation, died at Alexandria, Virginia home March 31. He was 96 and the cause of death was complications from Alzheimer’s disease. Coleman was born in Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania July 7, 1920. He attended Germantown High School where he was one of only seven Black students. A proficient swimmer, Coleman attempted to join his high school swimming team. Rather than be forced to admit him, the team disbanded while he was
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Cummings Looks to Take ‘Ban the Box’ National By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com
AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File
Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch is likely to be confirmed to the Supreme Court, despite protests by civil rights groups.
Two of the NFL’s biggest stars and an expert on policecommunity relations testified before the Congressional Black Caucus recently on how to address the cultural and sometimes racial divide between African Americans and local law enforcement. Philadelphia Eagles defensive back Malcolm Jenkins and former Detroit Lions’ wide receiver Anquan Boldin, along with Philip Atiba Goff, president and co-founder of the Center for Policing Equity, talked about tensions between Blacks and police officers before a Continued on A3
Roger W. Wilkins, the first Black assistant attorney general, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and a professor at George Mason University, died in Kensington, Md. on March 26 (see obituary on page A2). The below article profiles Wilkins right after he was sworn in by President Lyndon B. Johnson to be the new director of Community Relations Service in 1966.
AFRO Archived History ‘PEACEFUL PROGRESS IN CIVIL RIGHTS’
THIS IS WILKINS’ GOAL
AP photo
William Coleman, a life long Republican, was instrumental in the Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka Supreme Court case. a student and re-formed after he graduated. Coleman then attended the University of Pennsylvania
• WILKINS, the name, and Civil Rights • CHIEF of Community Relations Service • SWORN in by President Johnson • AIM: To help people to help themselves March 12, 1966 By Ruth Jenkins Roger W. Wilkins, 33, bears a surname already famous in civil rights annals, and his personal dedication as new director of the Community Relations Service is confirmation of the family’s dedication to the cause.
Continued on A4
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With Roger’s other proud relatives, his uncle, Roy Wilkins national NAACP executive director was on hand when Roger was administered the oath of office on Feb. 4, by the U.S. Secretary Continued on A4