PG County 4-27-2018

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Who Killed Det. Sean Suiter? 162 Days and Counting

PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION

Volume 127 No. 38

APRIL 28, 2018 - MAY 4, 2018

From Slaveholding County To Tourist Attraction: Prince Georges County Celebrates 322nd Birthday To Register in Maryland: Go to Maryland.gov. or call 800-222-8683 To Register in Washington, D.C.: Go to vote4dc.com or call 202-727-2525 Maryland voter registration deadline: May 24 D.C. voter registration deadline: June 4

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Founded on April 23, 1696, Prince George’s County has had a dramatic shift in its 322 years of existence from being the biggest slave owning county in Maryland, to now becoming one of the most affluent, predominantly African American counties in the nation. By action of General Assembly, Calvert and Charles counties’ named the land after Prince George of Denmark, heir to the throne of England. They called it Street Georges Day, which is now known as Prince George’s County or affectionately P.G. County. With over 900,000 residents, a true Marylander would definitely see that the once country county that borders Washington, D.C. has grown tremendously.

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Congress and the President Must Respond to the Opioid Crisis

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Rev. Jesse Jackson spoke at Memorial Chapel on the campus of University of Maryland College Park as part of Social Justice Day.

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Alston Wants to Serve District 24 as a Senator By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com Tiffany Alston has served as a delegate representing the 24th Legislative District of Maryland and wants to go back to the General Assembly as a senator from the district. “There are a number of good candidates running for the House of Delegates and I have aligned myself with Marnitta King and D.J.

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Tiffany Alston is running as a senator from that district in the June primaries.

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Baltimore

Meet the Black Candidates for the 40th, 41st and 44th Districts

By Brianna Rhodes Special to the AFRO Civil rights figure, Rev. Jesse Jackson delivered the closing remarks at the University of Maryland, College Park second annual Social Justice Day event April 24. The campus-wide, daylong event allowed for students, faculty and staff to collaborate and share ideas on important causes. Jackson spoke on topics such as voting, diversity, civil rights and activism. At the beginning of his speech, Jackson took the time

Inside MPD’s Efforts to Teach Cops Black History

Bureau. Even though Blacks in Prince George’s County have come a long way since slave plantations, some of the artifacts still exist in some residents’ backyards.According to The Washington Continued on A3

Speaking at UMD, Rev. Jackson Vows to Continue the Fight

Ex-Players Open Up About Marijuana and the NFL

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.

Attractions like the National Harbor, MGM, Tanger Outlets and Bowie Town Center helped boost the county with now over five million tourists and counting and is set to reach 40 million tourists in the near future. The county is thriving daily with entertainment, shopping, restaurants and bars, business conferences and more. Once overruled by Whites, the location now has a population of 62.5 percent African-Americans and 26.5 percent Whites, according to the United States Census

By Charise Wallace Special to the AFRO

Washington

D1 Rushern L. Baker, county executive and gubernatorial candidate, recently announced a plan for Maryland to achieve 100 percent clean energy.

Williams Wants to take Skill Sets to Annapolis

2018 Election

Rushern Baker Introduces Clean Energy Plan By Brianna Rhodes Special to the AFRO Rushern Baker, a Democratic candidate for governor, announced a plan for Maryland to become the first state to achieve 100 percent clean energy and zero waste called the Baker Greenprint for Maryland. Baker announced the plan a few days before Earth Day, a worldwide celebration on April 22, created to acknowledge environmental protection. He told the AFRO that he found it important to introduce the plan around this time. “We tried in the [Prince George’s] county – and I want to do this throughout the state – to make Earth Day important every day of the week,” Baker said. “One of the things that we’ve done and I want to replicate this, is to have our department of environment work with our school systems on the ecosystem in each and every school. Not just in a few schools, but in all of our schools throughout Maryland so that when Earth Day comes, individuals can go out and see some of the things that Continued on A3

By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com Donjuan “D.J.” Williams has accumulated skills as a U.S. Army veteran, three-term mayor of Glenarden, and member of its city council. He wants to use those abilities to effectively represent residents of the 24th Legislative District of Continued on A3

New Podcast! Please join us every Monday and Friday at 5 p.m. EST for our new podcast, The AFRO First Edition w/Sean Yoes, on afro.com and the AFRO’s Facebook page.

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.


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