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Who Killed Det. Sean Suiter? 155 Days and Counting B1 November 11, 2017 - November 11, 2017, The Afro-American
PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 127 No. 37
APRIL 21, 2018 - APRIL 27, 2018
Baltimore
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Meet the Black Candidates in the 40th District
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Maryland voter registration deadline: May 24 D.C. voter registration deadline: June 4
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Inside
Former NFL Great Michael Vick Doesn’t Dodge His Past
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HBCUs Continue to Fill a Major Void in Education
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Prince George’s Photo by Hamzat Sani
Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) was one of the speakers at the 2nd Annual Tax Day March in Washington, D.C. April 17.
March Vows to Fight Trump Tax Plan By Hamzat Sani Special to the AFRO Tax Day was not a good day for the Trump government to collect taxes. While the IRS.gov site crashed due to record numbers of late filers, activists and politicians across the country gathered for the 2nd Annual Tax Day March. About 200 protesters gathered on the East Front of the U.S. Capitol Building to call for a roll back of the Trump Tax Plan controversially voted in by Congress late last year. Speakers and protesters chanted
“Vote them out” referring to the mostly Republican backers on the Trump Tax plan. The first Tax March was held in 2017 to demand President Donald Trump release his tax returns and create a fairer tax system for all. Following the passage of what organizers call, “the Trump Tax scam,” the coalition of progressive and working class organizations mobilized to fight for a fair economy and repeal of the plan. Attendees included seasoned politicians like Minnesota Representative Keith Ellison and healthcare activists like
Amazing Black Woman
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How Kathleen Cleaver Conquered War With Love By Tilesha Brown Special to the AFRO Kathleen Neal started out as a painter. But by the time she graduated high school, she was on an entirely different path. She would enroll in Oberlin College in Ohio her freshman year, then Barnard College in New York before dropping out completely and joining the renowned Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) at its headquarters in Atlanta. And in April of 1967, at a SNCC student conference on the campus of Fisk University, her life took a dramatic turn. That was when she met Eldridge Cleaver, the only
Elena Hung whose child owes her life to the safety net created by programs on the Trump chopping block like Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act. Partner organizations for the Tax March covered a wide range of issues. Collaborators included Americans for Tax Fairness, Indivisible Guide, Center For American Progress Action Fund, Working Families Party, Public Citizen, CREDO Mobile, AFSCME, MoveOn. org, National Women’s Law Center, Economic Policy Institute, Patriotic Millionaires, UnidosUS, Take on Wall
As County Executive, Muse will Elevate InnerBeltway Areas
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Why Aren’t More Black Baltimoreans Working? By J. K. Schmid Special to the AFRO Black Baltimoreans remain dramatically behind Baltimore Whites across several key employment sectors, a new study reveals. The study, commissioned by Associated Black Charities (ABC), penetrated into traditionally generalized employment figures to determine just what jobs Black were working compared to Whites. While Blacks could be considered to be working in service industries or real estate and
finance; this study breaks down just what kind of jobs Blacks are doing compared to Whites in specific subfields. The full study will be published on ABC’s website by the end of the week, the organization says. But the preview is grim. Despite Baltimore being a majority minority city, there are few professions where Blacks predominate. This is borne out of other research that already reveals that a national Black unemployment rate-often touted as the highest in US history-remains double the Continued on A3
The Real Meaning of “California” is #BlackGirlMagic By Aya Elamroussi Special to the AFRO
Courtesy Photo
Senior Lecturer, Kathleen N. Cleaver, Emory University. speaker that had made it to this particular conference in the middle of a North Eastern snow storm that
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When you hear or read about California, do you think of a Black woman ruling one of America’s largest states? You probably don’t since every governor of the Golden State has been a White man. The name “California” has ancient Spanish roots that can be traced back to the 1500s, well before
America’s founding. The name first appeared in a Spanish fictional chivalric romance novel titled Las sergas de Esplandián, or The Adventures of Esplandián, by Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo published in 1510. “It is known that to the right of the Indies there exists an island called California very near the terrestrial paradise; and peopled by Black women among whom
there was not a single man since they lived in the way of the Amazons. They had Continued on A3
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Copyright © 2018 by the Afro-American Company
THE BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART
April 22–July 29, 2018
PURCHASE TICKETS AT ARTBMA.ORG This exhibition is organized by The Baltimore Museum of Art and The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Jack Whitten. Detail, The Afro American Thunderbolt. 1983-1984. Courtesy of the Artist’s Estate and Hauser & Wirth. Photography by Genevieve Hanson, NYC.