November 12, 2016 - November 12, 2016, The Afro-American A1 PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 126 No. 9
SEPTEMBER 30, 2017 - OCTOBER 6, 2017
Inside
Commentary
Living in the Eye of the Storm By Rep. Elijah Cummings
Prince George’s
City of Monumental Love
• Photos from the CBCF 47th Annual Legislative Conference
B4 AP Photo/Matt Rourke
Baltimore Actress Makes Mark on ‘The Deuce’
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Baltimore
Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney, center, and sculptor Branly Cadet unveil a statue of Octavius Valentine Catto at City Hall in Philadelphia on Sept. 26. Born in 1839, Catto led a civil rights movement in Philadelphia a century before the nation’s fight to end segregation. The 19th-century educator and organizer fought for better education for Black students, led efforts to desegregate the city’s street cars and pushed for equal voting rights — all before he was killed at age 32 by Irish-American ward bosses.
47th Annual Legislative Conference
• The Death of
Congressional Black Caucus Challenges Attendees to Fix Their Own Setbacks By Micha Green Special to the AFRO
Despite a year marked with natural disasters, White supremacists and political tension, the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s 47th Annual Legislative Conference challenged attendees to stand against resistance, be resilient and rise above tranquility to create solutions for age-old issues the Black community continues to face. The conference, sporting
Photo by Rob Roberts
Rep. Maxine Water (D-CA) is interviewed by journalist Jeff Johnson at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s 47th Annual Legislative Conference.
the theme of “And Still I Rise,” a phrase derived from the late poet-laureate Maya Angelou’s famous poem “Still I Rise,” was held from Sept. 20-24 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Northwest D.C. More than 8,000 people from various areas of the county attended the event. “The first reason we focus on rising is because there’s somebody trying to pull us down. We are told that we are a great people, but we
Continued on A3
Analysis
Trump Won’t Change. Neither Should Protesters By Kamau High AFRO Managing Editor khigh@afro.com What is it with Donald Trump? The President of the United States of America, a
person who historically unites Americans in times of trouble, seems physically incapable of not dividing the country every time he Tweets or is anywhere near a microphone. Leave aside the image
of the president castigating Americans (in this case primarily Blacks who happen to be well compensated for playing professional football) for exercising their
First Amendment rights by kneeling during the playing of The Star Spangled Banner in protest of racial injustice. What is truly disquieting is
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Tawon Boyd
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Smithsonian Museum Marks One-Year of Telling the Black Story By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com “I think what’s really clear is that people need to find a place where they can understand history, that they can get the facts, places where they feel free to have the conversations. We’ve noticed a great movement towards the museum in a way that’s made the museum both a symbol and a metaphor,” National Museum of African American History and Culture Director Lonnie Bunch told NPR host Michele Martin, on the eve of the Museum’s first anniversary. With more than one Continued on A3
This week marks 60 years since a group of African American students, known as the Little Rock Nine, integrated Central High School in Little Rock, Ark. At the same time, a group of students integrated Harry Harding High School in Charlotte, N.C. The AFRO spoke to two of the students, one from each school, to get their first hand accounts of what happened.
AFRO Archived History
AP Photo/Matt Dunham
Baltimore Ravens outside linebacker Terrell Suggs, from left, Mike Wallace, former player Ray Lewis and inside linebacker C.J. Mosley kneel down during the playing of the U.S. national anthem before an NFL football game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Ravens at Wembley Stadium in London, Sept. 24.
Possibility of Steve Bannon Addressing Black Summit Ignites AFRO Readers By LaTrina Antoine AFRO Washington D.C. Editor lantoine@afro.com After the AFRO reported White nationalist Steve Bannon and former Trump Campaign Manager Cory
Lewandowski would be leading a Black Entrepreneurs Summit on Sept. 26-27 in Washington D.C., AFRO readers took to the paper’s Facebook page, posting hundreds of comments, Continued on A3
Two Heroic Girls Tell what it’s like to face a mob Sept. 14, 1957 “What is it like to walk to school through a jeering, howling mob?” Two 15-year-old girls who emerged as heroines of the Southwide back to school controversy, one in Charlotte, N.C. and the other in Little Rock, Ark., told the AFRO of the turmoil and aguish of their ordeal. During an interview, the girl in Little Rock, Miss Elizabeth Echford, said: “It was a horrible experience, I don’t want to talk about it.” Continued on A4
Copyright © 2017 by the Afro-American Company
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