November 11, 2017 - November 11, 2017, The Afro-American A1 PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 127 No. 32
MARCH 17, 2018 - MARCH 23, 2018
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Inside
Prince George’s
Gun Violence Protests
Nation Wide Walkout
Wade Gets Key Endorsement in P.G.’s Sheriff’s Race
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Cancer Survivor and Amputee Details How She Overcame Adversity
Baltimore
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Commentary
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What Kind of Nation Have We Become When We Fail to Protect Our Children? By Rep. Elijah Cummings
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High school senior D’Angelo McDade, right, leads a march in Chicago’s North Lawndale neighborhood during a walkout to protest gun violence, Wednesday, March 14, 2018. Across the country, thousands of schools joined Wednesday’s National School Walkout Day as a sign of solidarity with students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., the scene of a recent school shooting in Florida in which 17 students and educators died.
Trump Blames Obama for School Shootings By Micha Green, The AFRO, Washington, D.C. editor mgreen@afro.com It’s been a month since the devastating school shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., and with the national gun debate heating up and major protests like the National School Walkout, conservative commentators and the Trump administration are looking for someone to blame. Now, The New York Times reports, Trump is pointing his finger at Barack Obama- or rather a guidance document created by the former president to reduce suspensions and expulsions of minority students. While nation shaking mass shootings have not been committed by Black students, Continued on A3
Mayor Pugh: ‘A City on the Rise’
D1 Anicca Harriot: Changing the Heart of Space Exploration By Tilesha Brown Special to the AFRO
AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File
This Feb. 19, 2018 file photo shows Denyse Christian, hugging her son Adin Christian, 16, a student at the school, at a makeshift memorial outside the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where 17 students and faculty were killed in a mass shooting in Parkland, Fla.
When Anicca Harriot went viral in 2016 for calculating the angle of her “dab,” she became a national sensation. But for the girl who knew she wanted to be an astronaut since she was nine years old, that was only the beginning. In 2018, she is standing on the campus of the University of Maryland’s School of Medicine realizing her dreams of, not only reaching space Continued on A4
Plight of Haitians, Mo’Nique Will Not Be Silenced Salvadorans Lost in DACA Debate AFRO Exclusive Interview: By Lisa Snowden-McCray Special to the AFRO
By now, the video has gone viral: in it, Randallstown, Maryland native, Academy Award winner, and comedian Mo’Nique is wrapping up an intense interview with Charlamagne Tha God and the rest of the crew on the syndicated radio show “The Breakfast Club.” She says goodbye to the other two hosts and then turns her attention to Charlamagne (who she refers to by his real name, Lenard). “We have to explain brothers like you,” she tells him. “And when we watch that movie ‘Birth of a Nation and we saw that man walk his wife into that master’s house, we watched him walk his wife in then we watched him go back in. You’re that brother.” The host doesn’t respond. What is there to say? Mo’Nique has been making the rounds lately, speaking out about what she calls racism and sexism in the entertainment industry. It started back in January, when she posted a video on her Instagram account detailing her beef with the streaming site Netflix: they had offered her $500,000 for a comedy special – much less than they’d offered white woman comedian Amy Continued on A3
More than 250,000 immigrants at jeopardy after losing Temporary Protected Status By Howard University News Service
Comedian and Academy Award winner, Mo’Nique, is speaking out about her experiences with racism and sexism in the entertainment industry.
Rony Ponthieux’s view of the future changes by the day. A Haitian immigrant living in Miami, Ponthieux has been working in the United States under the Temporary Protected Status,TPS, provision since 2010, when he, his wife and two children, then 3 and 10, left Haiti in the wake of the island’s devastating earthquake. Receiving it, he said, was “a miracle for my family.” Ponthieux now works as a nurse and hopes to eventually become a nurse practitioner. But the future changed last year for him and more
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than 250,000 Haitians and Salvadorans when President Trump decided to end the TPS that had been in place under former presidents George Bush and Barack Obama. Now, he and the others have until next year to get permanent status or leave. “Before [the revocation of his TPS], I was able to work, to go to school, to take care of my family,” Ponthieux said, “”and I was okay with that.” It is unclear, he said, what he will do if Congress doesn’t create a way for him and his family to stay in the United States, but he’s not giving up. “We’re still fighting,” he said, “I’m fighting. I feel that Continued on A3