PG County 7-7-2017

Page 1

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

Volume 125 No. 49

JULY 8, 2017 - JULY 14, 2017

Inside

Commentary

Baltimore

Lives in the Balance

• Top Defense

By Rep. Elijah Cummings

A3 Man Charged in Road Rage Slaying

A2

Nothing’s Changed AP Photo/Gerald Herbert

In this June 27, 2017 photo, Abdullah Muflahi walks outside his Triple S Food mart in front of a mural of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge, La. Little has changed in this poverty-stricken neighborhood since Sterling was shot by police one year ago, a frustrating fact of life for residents and business owners who had hoped a national spotlight on their problems could erode racial tensions and improve police relations in Louisiana’s capital.

EMILY’s List Seeks Change in Outreach Strategy to Reach More Voters

Join

the over

685K

members of the AFRO Facebook Family

By Lauryn Hill Special to the AFRO

EMILY’s List, an organization dedicated to assisting Democratic women to run for public office, acknowledged that some of its strategies in mobilizing Black populations has been lacking. President Stephanie Shriock, at a June 29 press conference, said money spent on advertising candidates specifically through media outlets are “often” geared towards White suburban female voters who are considered more willing to swing their vote. Shriock told reporters the organization is changing their strategy regarding how candidates should focus their campaigns. “I don’t buy into this false choice of, are we going to go after persuasion of the working White class . . . Or are we gonna go do turnout in African American

Hazardous Construction

afro.com

Your History • Your Community • Your News

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.

Join the AFRO on Twitter and Facebook

communities in Philadelphia or do Hispanic turnout in Arizona?” Shriock said. “We have to do both, and we have to do it better.” Shriock said EMILY’s List is “thinking strategically” on how to improve their engagement with minority voters calling Black, Asian, and Latina women the

“We can do a whole lot better in recruiting across the board.” – Stephanie Shriock “backbone of our boat.” “Our growth opportunity in a lot of places is getting the 800,000 African American voting age population in Georgia registered and voting,” said Shriock. “In mobilizing and educating and energizing African Americans in Georgia is how

London Authorities Evacuated Nearly 4,000 Residents By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com Nearly 4,000 residents around the United Kingdom were forcibly moved from their apartments and into emergency shelters during the week of June 26 because the

cladding on their buildings was determined to be hazardous and potentially incendiary. The revelation came in the wake of the catastrophic Grenfell Tower fire on June 14, which left thousands homeless and at least 79 dead.

Continued on A4

Stanford Report: Years after Jim Crow, Black Folks Still Trapped in Bleak Racist Nightmare By Alexis Taylor Special to the AFRO The picture of Black life painted by Stanford University’s Center on Poverty and Inequality is bleak at best. Decades away from the Jim Crow Era ushered in by centuries of chattel slavery,

African Americans are still trapped in the nightmare born out of the American Dream. In the annual “State of the Union” report published in “Pathways,” the university’s magazine on “poverty, inequality, and social policy,” data once again found that Black citizens of the United

Stacy Abrams becomes the next governor of Georgia.” Abrams is currently a front runner in the Georgia election for governor, and if elected, would become the first Black woman nationwide to hold this position. During the last election cycle, Shriock said the organization was involved in the election of Kamala Harris to the U.S. Senate in California. EMILY’s List also supported other notable Black women such as Lisa Blunt Rochester, currently the at-large representative of Delaware, and Val Demings, a representative of Florida’s 10th district. These are districts “where we can run strong women of color and win in places where there is true diversity . . . and that means we can do a whole lot better in recruiting across the board,” Shriock said. Rather than recruiting members to target the specific minority populations, the organization has begun to target districts that have actively diverse populations. Shriock said the organization is not thinking “we have to go to this one district Continued on A4

Attorney, Police Spokesman lose Family Members to Violence

B1

Prince George’s • Teen Volunteers Change Hearts Through Service

D1

Emmett Till Marker Vandalized in Money, Miss. By Lenore T. Adkins Special to the AFRO For the second time in as many months, vandals in Money, Miss., have defaced a historical marker of Emmett Till, The Associated Press is reporting. The vandals, who remain at large, peeled off vinyl panels of the marker last week that displayed the Continued on A4

Kathryn Eastburn/The Greenwood Commonwealth, via AP

The damaged side of the Mississippi Freedom Trail.

With the recent celebration of Independence Day, July 4, there are still Black Americans who question if they have really gained all of the rights promised to citizens. The below story documents singer Ray Charles’ political statement to Congress in 1972 to advocate that Congressmen work on behalf of all people.

AFRO Archived History

Congressmen should cut outside ties, says group June 17, 1972 Congressional Record m-8 “Hey, Mister!” from Ray Charles’ new Tangerine album “A Message from the People” was read into the Congressional Record in May in a presentation by Dewey Duckett, executive director of the Midlands Community Action Agency of South Carolina, to a committee of the U.S. Senate chaired by Senator Allen Cranston of California. Duckett chose “Hey Mister!” to emphasize the theme of his presentation Continued on A4

Continued on A4

Copyright © 2017 by the Afro-American Company


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
PG County 7-7-2017 by AFRO News - Issuu