November 12, 2016 - November 12, 2016, The Afro-American A1 PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 125 No. 48
JULY 1, 2017 - JULY 7, 2017
Inside
Commentary
New Healthcare Bill – the Wrong Choice for African Americans By Majorie Innicent
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Broadway Vet Breaks Down Theater Etiquette
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Baltimore
Wish We Were There AP Photo/Slamet Riyadi
President Barack Obama and his family wrapped up their five-day vacation on Indonesia’s resort island of Bali and headed to the historic city of Yogyakarta on June 28 during a nostalgic trip to the country where Obama lived for several years as a child.
28 Maryland Lynchings Documented by New Report By J. K. Schmid Special to the AFRO
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Map of America depicting where lynchings took place, including in Maryland.
By Gloria Browne-Marshall AANIC Supreme Court Correspondent The U.S. Supreme Court is known to save its most controversial decisions for last, and the Court did not disappoint. On June 27 Chief Justice John Roberts delivered the opinion in two cases involving the Trump Administration’s travel ban. Although opponents are
The fight moves to the Court’s next term, with both sides gathering their forces for a fierce legal battle.
New ‘Green Book’ App for Black Travelers Starting in 1936, Victor Hugo Green, a letter carrier who lived in Manhattan, published the “Negro Motorist Green Book,” a listing of hotels, restaurants
Green Book App
Prince George’s • Sen. Muses Set to Run for County Exec
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By Lenore T. Adkins Special to the AFRO
Fight Over Travel Ban Taken Up By Supreme Court
By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com
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New Orleans Mayor Offers Advice on Removing Va. Confederate Monuments
George Armwood died October 18, 1933. He was killed by a lynch mob. The mob of 1,000 knocked down the jailhouse doors with battering rams before seizing Armwood. He was dragged from the jail by a noose around his neck, stabbed beaten and then hanged until dead. His body was returned to the courthouse, where it was hanged from a telephone pole and burned. While the savagery of Continued on A3
• Jury Finds Officers Negligent in Death of Baltimore Woman
and other businesses where Blacks would be welcome and safe in the era of Jim Crow. The Green Book became enormously popular and was published until 1966. More than 80 years later, the South Carolina African American Heritage Continued on A3
disappointed, neither side of the case received a clear victory. In 2016, Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump promised his constituents a ban on non-citizen Muslims travelling to the United States. Within 24 hours of his inauguration, Executive Order 13769 was signed, suspending for 90 days the “entry Continued on A3
“Stay the course,” New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu advised Charlottesville, Va. Mayor Mike Signer, as he faces resistance and ire from White supremacists over removing Confederate statues from that city. “If he believes that it’s the right thing to do and if he believes that it’s the just thing to do, then he ought to go ahead and do it because as my dad (former New Orleans Mayor Moon Landrieu) said to us, ‘You know if you don’t spend your political capital, what the hell do you have it Continued on A5
The National Newspaper Publishers Association held their annual convention June 21-24 at the National Harbor in Prince George’s County, Md. The below story recounts how in 1945 the NNPA, then known as the Negro Newspaper Publishers’ Association, held their annual meeting in Washington, D.C. At the end of it, the group released a letter to President Harry S. Truman asking him to help pass the Fair Employment Practice bill, which would have outlawed employment discrimination nationwide.
AFRO Archived History
NNPA Committee Talks to Truman Support for FEPC, AntiPoll Tax Urged CONVENTION SET Group Also Confers With House Leaders June 2, 1945
WASHINGTON The executive committee of the Negro Newspaper Publishers’ Association met three days in Washington last week and chose New York for the July Annual Convention. Members conferred with the House Democratic Majority Leader John W. Continued on A3
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