Volume Volume 125 123 No. No.10 20–22
www.afro.com
October 8, 2016 - October 14, 2016, The Afro-American A1 $2.00
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OCTOBER 8, 2016 - OCTOBER 14, 2016
When Will It End?
Inside
Review: Birth of a Nation
Baltimore
• Santelises Vows to Raise Test Scores
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Washington
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Commentary: Elite Athletes and HBCUs
• Bowie President Talks Upcoming Retirement
By Mark F. Gray
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AP Photo/Denis Poroy
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Washington ‘Redskins,’ Racial Bias and a Divided High Court By Gloria Brown-Marshall AANIC Supreme Court Correspondent
By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com Howard County leaders are trying to oust the county sheriff after a scathing report accused him of racism, bigotry, and retaliating against staff that didn’t support his reelection. Heading law enforcement in one of Maryland’s wealthiest counties, Sheriff James Fitzgerald, insisted, despite Continued on A9
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Howard County Sheriff James Fitzgerald has been accused of using racial slurs in the workplace.
Racial justice tops the opening of the Supreme Court’s new term. When Justice Antonin Scalia was found dead in Feb. conservative Republicans vowed to stall President Barack Obama’s nomination of Judge Merrick Garland. The eightmember Court is limping forward with race questions involving the death penalty, voting districts, jury deliberations, and the
AFRO Coverage of the Emmitt Till Murder
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An avalanche of bitter protests from every section of the nation has forced Gov. Hugh White to promise a complete investigation and a full prosecution of persons responsible for the kidnap-murder of Emmett Louis Till, whose weighted body was found in the Tallahatchie River.
3rd Lynching of Year Shocks Nation
Witnesses discount motives cited for slaying of boy
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Sept. 10, 1955 GREENWOOD, Miss. -- The brutal lynching of a 14-year-old boy, the third act of mob violence to hit Mississippi within five months, has so shocked the nation that even the state’s governor has been moved to speak out.
Fourteen-year-old Emmitt Louis Till of Chicago, pictured here with his mother, became Mississippi’s third lynching victim in 5 months last week. Because he failed to say “yes ma’m” to a white woman, the Chicago-born youth was kidnapped, brutally beaten and shot through the head. His body, weighted with a heavy piece of metal, was thrown in the river.
Black Millennials Remain New Legislation Calls for Largely Uncovered by End to Hyde Amendment Health Insurance on 40th Anniversary Abortion
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Supreme Court
Howard County Sheriff Refuses to Step Down Despite Allegations of Racial Slurs
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Winnie Olango, center, sister of Alfred Olango, is consoled by two friends before a march Oct. 1 in reaction to the fatal police shooting of her brother, in El Cajon, Calif. Alfred Olango, a Ugandan refugee, was shot by an El Cajon police officer on Sept. 27.
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By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com
By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com In the 40 years since the Hyde Amendment was first passed by Congress, the discriminatory rider, which prohibits the use of federal funds to pay for abortions, has prevented millions of American women – mostly poor and AfricanAmerican – from exercising their Constitutional right to make their own healthcare decisions. On September 28, Congresswoman Barbara Lee (D-Calif), joined by 70 other members of Congress and more than 120 legislative co-sponsors, demanded the Hyde Amendment be officially and irrevocably removed from future bills.
Whether it is a sense of youthful invincibility or the cost of health care premiums and service charges, overwhelmingly, African-American millennials remain without health insurance; a reality that baffles health officials, especially in the wake of President Barack Obama’s Affordable Health Care platform. According to statistics from a recent Harris Poll survey, 1 in 5 adults ages 18 to 36 said they cannot afford routine healthcare expenses, with an additional 26 percent reporting they can afford routine health-care costs, but with difficulty. Even as Obama’s administration moves to target millennials more aggressively to ensure they received quality and affordable health care services, some young Americans, like
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Copyright © 2016 by the Afro-American Company Continued on A3
Jacqueline Ellis, Veteran Hill Staffer, Remembered By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com Jacqueline Ellis, a longtime Capitol Hill staffer who served as a mentor for many African Americans, died recently. She is being remembered by congressional leaders and her colleagues as dedicated to her work and passionate about Black issues. Ellis died Sept. 21 of a stroke, and as soon as word of Continued on A7