November 12, 2016 - November 12, 2016, The Afro-American
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PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 125 No. 28
FEBURARY 11, 2017 - FEBRUARY 17, 2017
Inside
Baltimore • Spotlight on
Black Educators: Baltimore County Superintendent S. Dallas Dance
Pat Cleveland Recounts Her Supermodel Life
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Prince George’s
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Commentary
Update from the Md. Legislative Black Caucus
No Thanks, Trump
By Andy Pierre
AP Photo/Patrick Semansky
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New England Patriots’ Dont’a Hightower became the third Patriot to refuse to go the White House for the traditional meeting of the Super Bowl winners and the president. He told ESPN, “Been there, done that,” a reference to his previous visit to the Obama White House with the championship winning Alabama team. Tight end Martellus Bennett and Pro Bowl safety Devin McCourty have also said they will not attend the meeting.
• Spotlight on Black
Educators: D.C. Public Schools Chancellor Antwan Wilson
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AFRO’s Moses Newson Remembers the Emmett Till Trial
As part of Black History month the AFRO is celebrating the life of Moses Newson, the former executive editor of the paper, who turned 90-years-old this month. In the Fall of 1955 Newson covered the trial of J.W. Milam and Roy Bryant in Sumner, Mississippi, two men who were charged with brutally killing Emmett Louis Till who was visiting relatives in Money, Mississippi, and throwing his body into the Tallahatchie River. Till was fourteen and his crime, such as it was, was that he had whistled at a White woman, Carolyn Bryant. A new book on the case discloses that Bryant made up the
charges against Till. Milam and Bryant, who are both dead, were acquitted by an all White jury. In 1956 they confessed to Look Magazine. Below Newson recounts how he and his editor L. Alex Wilson covered the trial for the Tri-State Defender, a Chicago based publication. As told to Kamau High, AFRO Managing Editor
“Most of what I did was pre-trial. I was there for the first day of the trial and not so much after that. One of us had to be in Memphis to get copy off to Chicago.
Chicago Sun-Times via AP
Mamie Till Mobley, mother of Emmett Till, weeps at the viewing of her son’s badly dismembered body in Chicago in 1955.
The AFRO Salutes the Life of Maj. Gen. John R. Hawkins By Maj.Gen. (Ret.) George A. Alexander Special to the AFRO After a lifetime of service to his country, Maj. Gen. John R. Hawkins, III passed away suddenly on Feb. 3 at his home in Silver Spring, Md. The cause of death was undisclosed. Continued on A3
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People held a kickoff for its annual convention at the Reginald F. Lewis
Carolyn Bryant, the woman who’s accusation against Emmett Till lead to his brutal lynching, recently recanted her allegations. The following article from 1955 details the beginning of the trial against J.W. Milam and Roy Bryant for Till’s murder. Milam and Bryant were ultimately found not guilty although they confessed their crimes several years later.
AFRO Archived History
Lynch Trial Begins
Courtesy photo
Maj. Gen. John R. Hawkins, III was an accomplished military man in addition to being a columnist for the AFRO.
NAACP Outlines July Baltimore Convention Plans By J. K. Schmid Special to the AFRO
First Impressions Sumner was a tiny little place back then. We had to walk through some silence from people going up to the courthouse. When we first heard about this case, someone whistling at a White woman in Mississippi, I got down to Money Continued on A3
Museum of Maryland African American History & Culture on Feb 3. Attendees at the news conference included NAACP Baltimore President Tessa Ashton-Hill, Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh and
Mother arrives with her pastor •Sheriff bars reporters from using courtroom press table
•‘Whistle-stop’ town smarting under the nation’s criticism September 24 1955 By James L. Hicks SUMNER, Miss.--The eyes of the nation were focused on this tiny little Mississippi town of 700 people, Monday, as it took up the task of trying to prove
to the world that justice in Mississippi is color blind and that the better people of the state frown on murder, even when the victim is a colored person. Mrs. Mamie Bradley of Chicago, mother of the
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Copyright © 2017 by the Afro-American Company
victim in this case, arrived here Monday accompanied by her pastor, Bishop Isiah Roberts of Roberts Temple Church, Chicago. The better people of the town, as I talked with them Friday, insisted that justice Continued on A5