October 15, 2016 - October 21, 2016, The Afro-American A1 PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 125 No. 11
OCTOBER 15, 2016 - OCTOBER 21, 2016
Inside Commentary: Protecting Our Progress in 2016
Carolinas Under Water
Prince George’s
By Elijah Cummings
A6 • Prince George’s
County High School Football Wrap-Up
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Baltimore ‘Luke Cage’ Brings a Bulletproof Black Superhero into Frame
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Michael Pronzato/The Post And Courier via AP
A group of people cross through high water after Hurricane Matthew caused flooding on Oct. 8 in Charleston, S.C. Matthew continued its march along the Atlantic coast Oct. 8, lashing two of the South’s most historic cities and some of its most popular resort islands, flattening trees, swamping streets and knocking out power to hundreds of thousands.
Howard County Sheriff Agrees to Resign Following Outcry
AFRO Coverage of the Emmett Till Murder
UNBELIEVABLE
Jimmy Hicks’ Inside Story of Lynch Trial Oct. 8, 1955 By Jimmy L. Hicks
New York, N.Y. – Here for the first time is the true story of what happened in the hectic five day trial of two white men in Sumner, Mississippi, for the murder of 14-year-old Emmett Till of Chicago. This story has never been written before. I did not write it in
Mississippi, for fear of bodily harm to myself or my colleagues. No one else has written it because no one else in the capacity of a reporter lived as close to it as I did. Looking back at it now, I am ashamed I did not throw caution to the winds and at Emmett Till’s mother least try to get “…I have invested a son in freedom” out the story exactly as it was unfolding to me. I’m convinced, however that if I had tried this, I would not be here in New York to write this.
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What Does the Future Hold for Minority Voters?
Courtesy photo
James Fitzgerald will step down on Oct. 15 following allegations that he used racial slurs in the work place.
By Gloria Browne-Marshall AANIC Supreme Court Correspondent
By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com
Photo courtesy of builtstlouis.net
Howard County, Md. Sheriff James F. Fitzgerald has agreed to step down following allegations that he made racist, sexist and anti-Semitic remarks and bullied those who worked for him. Despite having previously insisted he would not vacate the post, Fitzgerald announced in a statement, Oct. 11, that he would end his tenure on Oct. 15. “The time for men like James Fitzgerald in civilized society has come to an end,” Dominick Sherman, a Columbia, Md.-resident told the AFRO. “Perhaps being forced to step down now, the state of Maryland will begin to see the end of an era of bigots and sexists in its leadership. There’s just no place for them anymore.” Fitzgerald, a Democrat, serving his third term as Continued on A3
• Sheila Dixon: “I’m Passionate About Change in this City” D1
Carter Carburetor Corporation in St. Louis is over a block long and three stories high. It closed in the 1990s.
America’s Changing Landscape
Loss of Manufacturing Hurt Blacks More, Report Finds By Briahnna Brown Special to the AFRO Black manufacturing workers suffer the effects of industrial flight more profoundly than their White counterparts, a report finds. The report, conducted by the Alliance for American Manufacturing (AAM), states that deindustrialization in cities like St. Louis, Detroit, Cleveland, Flint and Baltimore—cities that were once industrial powerhouses—over the last four decades has disproportionately negatively impacted African Americans. In addition to the direct and indirect job loss caused by these factories closing and moving operations overseas, lack of personal finances combined with housing discrimination left Black families unable to simply move away like White families could. White flight heavily contributed to the segregation of these cities, and the blacks left behind in those deindustrialized
People of color will be America’s majority by 2045, according to a U.S. Census report. Then, they should be in positions of political power. But, if America’s history is any indication, reaching that position of political power will mean legal landmines and bloody battles. The current Presidential election between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton may be a precursor to future political battles. The unstated message is America is not great in its current configuration. As America’s racial demographic changes, growing pains will be expressed in many ways. Political nationalism is one. Although political power can be linked to the majority racial or ethnic group it is not always based on population. The South Continued on A4
United Nations Group Calls for Black Reparations By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com The United Nations Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent urged the United States government to pay reparations to the descendants of enslaved Africans used by the nation as free, forced labor. Calling the legacy of enslavement “racial terrorism,” a report by the organization blamed enslavement for the systemic disenfranchisement that actively denies Black Americans full citizenship.
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Copyright © 2016 by the Afro-American Company
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