Afro PG County 6-16-2017

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November 12, 2016 - November 12, 2016, The Afro-American A1 PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION

Volume 125 No. 46

JUNE 17, 2017 - JUNE 23, 2017

Inside

Baltimore

Commentary

History is on the Side of HBCUs By Kenneth O. Morgan

• Dr. Rosetta Stith, Pioneer in Alternative Education

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B1 Video Game Convention Makes Limited Progress on Diversity

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US Poet Laureate AP Photo/Jason DeCrow

Pulitzer Prize winning poet Tracy K. Smith is the country’s new poet laureate. On June 14, the Library of Congress announced Smith’s appointment to a one-year term. Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden, former CEO of Baltimore’s Enoch Pratt Library system, said in a statement that Smith “shows us through these poems how to think and feel our way through these big ideas. It’s wonderful that her poetry can be so big and sprawling in its themes, and at the same time laser-focused in its words.”

New Era of Hate Crimes Appears in the US Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com

in San Bernardino, Calif. recently found that among U.S. cities, New York reported the greatest number of hate

The idea of racial hatred and violence against people of color for millions of Americans were believed to be vestiges ofda tragic era in the nation’s history – long forgotten except for occasional Civil Rights anniversaries. However, since the presidential elections of Barack Obama and Donald Trump, social scientists have plotted an abysmal return to hate speech, violence, and intimidation. Most troubling according to researchers including the Southern Poverty Law Center, the New England Journal of Medicine, and Pew Research Center, is the prevalence of hate language and acts of violence among young people. The Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism at California State University

“I treat people like I want to be treated, but I am noticing lately that Black people are being rude, White people are being snarky, and no one is being polite anymore.”

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researched: New York; Washington; Chicago; Philadelphia; Montgomery County, Maryland; Columbus, Ohio; Seattle; Long Beach, California; and Cincinnati. Heidi Beirich, director of the Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center – a group that tracks extremist groups, files lawsuits and works with communities to advance civil rights, told National Public Radio (NPR) that social media and the ability to post hate rants on the internet, virtually unchecked, during the Obama-Trump elections, may be to blame.

– Anika Roseman

crimes at 380, a 24 percent increase from 2015, while Washington, D.C., had the largest percentage rise at 62 percent to 107 incidents. Overall, there were 1,037 incidents, a 23.3 percent increase from the previous year in the nine areas

• Father’s Day: Mega Church Pastor Derek Grier

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Amid Criminal Case, Cosby Fighting Lawsuits by 10 Women By The Associated Press As Bill Cosby awaits a verdict in his sexual assault case in Pennsylvania, the comedian’s civil lawyers are fighting lawsuits against him Continued on A4

Continued on A3

Was the Richard Collins UMD Murder a Hate Crime? bias, FBI agents must now determine if Collins’ death meets the legal criteria for a hate crime prosecution. The importance of proper

By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com

The AFROAmerican Newspaper Prince George’s County Edition is Published weekly as an E-edition. Notification is sent to you via email. You can opt-out of receiving this by selecting the unsubscribe option at the bottom of each email notice.

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In the wake of the fatal stabbing of, Richard Collins III, a Black student on the College Park campus of the University of Maryland, by an alleged White supremacist, confusion has grown over the legal classification of the murder as a ‘hate crime’. While to many communities of color across the nation the attack clearly constituted racial

prosecution, according to legal analyst Danny Cevallos, lies not only in securing additional prison Continued on A3

AP Photo/Matt Rourke, Pool

Bill Cosby is facing numerous lawsuits around the country in addition to his criminal case.

Fifty years ago on June 12 the Supreme Court ruled that laws banned interracial marriage were unconstitutional. In 1966 the AFRO covered the case closely. The below article recounts the couple’s appeal to the Supreme Court, which they ultimately won. Courtesy photo

Richard Collins was stabbed to death in May, days before his college graduation at Bowie State University.

Rodman’s N. Korea Trip Off to Uncharacteristic Low-Key Start By The Associated Press Dennis Rodman’s visit to North Korea has been uncharacteristically low-key so far. On the agenda? Bowling and a visit to the zoo. There is no clear sign that the former NBA bad boy will meet leader Kim Jong Un, as he did on previous visits to the isolated country. Such a meeting, though, typically wouldn’t be announced in advance. Rodman watched a women’s basketball team practice at a gym June 14 and visited the birthplace of North Korean

AFRO Archived History

Mixed Couple Fight for Right to Live Together Mixed pair wants to live as man and wife August 6, 1966

WASHINGTON

A white man and his colored wife Friday asked the Supreme Court to strike down a Virginia law making marriage between the two races a crime. The court is in summer recess now and cannot act on the appeal until October. If it accepts review, arguments will be heard later in the term followed by a written opinion. The appeal was brought by Richard Continued on A4

Continued on A3

Copyright © 2017 by the Afro-American Company


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