PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 123 No. 36
APRIL 11, 2015 - APRIL 17, 2015
Rev. Gardner Taylor, Maya Angelou Honored with Forever Stamp Civil Rights Icon and Great American Preacher, Dies at 96 By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO
The Rev. Gardner Taylor,
preachers while serving as pastor of Brooklyn, New York’s Concord Baptist Church of Christ for over 40
Photo by Rob Roberts
Son, Dignitaries, on Hand for USPS Unveiling By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO AP Photo
known as the dean of American preachers, died of an apparent heart attack on April 5, at the age of 96, according to various reports. Taylor grew up in Baton Rouge, La., the grandson of former slaves. He became a prominent figure in America’s struggle for civil rights during the 1960s as well as one of the nation’s preeminent
years. In 1961, Taylor, along with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other baptist preachers, formed the Progressive National Baptist Convention, which would be thoroughly committed to the fight for civil rights in a way that the National Baptist Convention was not at the Continued on A6
The U.S. Postal Service unveiled the Dr. Maya Angelou Limited Edition Forever Stamp recently at D.C.’s Warner Theater. The public event honored the late author, poet, actress, and champion of civil rights, as one of the world’s most dynamic voices in 20th-century American literature. In addition to her family members, including Angelou’s son writer, Guy Johnson, and grandson Colin Johnson, the unveiling brought out first lady Michelle Obama, poet Nikki Giovanni, Ambassador Andrew Young, and television mogul Oprah Winfrey. MSNBC political scientist Melissa HarrisPerry, who once worked as Angelou’s undergraduate assistant, served as the events master of ceremonies. Describing her relationship with Angelou on the eve of her Bill Clinton Inaugural poem delivery as surreal, Harris-Perry said it was
White S.C. Officer Charged with Murder in Black Man’s Death
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Angelou’s demeanor, her graciousness, that impressed her most. “At 18, I had a front-row seat on history as I watched this extraordinary Black woman step into a space unlike anything else I’d ever seen. It is one thing to be generous to other people who are among your peers, it is another to be generous to your dinky little undergraduate assistant,” Harris-Perry said. “She had an unparalleled generosity that was not tormented by sentimentality. She taught me how to live with integrity and to the extent that I do it is largely because of her lessons and to the extent that I fail at it, I try to remember that she thought it was okay for us to fail.” Ambassador Andrew Young met Angelou in 1961 while both were serving on the front lines of the civil rights movement. During the invocation, Young described the global community as “Maya’s rainbow children,” saying “When Continued on A6
By Bruce Smith and Jeffrey Collins The Associated Press
Muhiydin D’Baha leads a group protesting the shooting death of Walter Scott at city hall in North Charleston, S.C., April 8.
District Area Impacted by Mid-day Power Outage By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO
A firetruck passes the Metro Center metro stop in downtown Washington, April 7.
AP Photo
The D.C. metropolitan area came to a standstill Tuesday afternoon following AP Photo what Pepco representatives described as a possible “transformer explosion.” The incident tripped back-up circuits and caused an expansive blackout, interrupting power from The White House and State Department to several stations on the Metrorail system. Pepco, the D.C. electric services provider, initially said it had scattered reports of outages for “unknown” reasons, and that it was looking into the matter. Government officials later pointed to an explosion at a southern Maryland power facility in Ryceville the likely cause for the regional issue. Fire and rescue squads throughout Maryland were charged with helping evacuate people trapped in stalled elevators, including those on the University of Maryland’s College Park campus. The university closed shortly after the outage. More than 100 active outages and 2,179 customers were reportedly affected by the system going into back-up mode around 1 p.m. Pepco said there was “never any full loss of electricity and customers could resume use of street power whenever they wanted.” Traffic lights across the city and several museums under the Smithsonian Institute complex were impacted by the outage, as well as the National Theater building which loss power in the middle of Oprah Winfrey’s salute to Maya Angelou. Power was restored to most areas in slightly over an hour.
NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Dramatic video that shows a white South Carolina police officer shooting a fleeing black man after a traffic stop has led authorities to file a murder charge against the officer amid public outrage over a series of deaths of unarmed
black men at the hands of law enforcement agents. Protests were planned April 8 in North Charleston, led by a group formed after the fatal shooting of another black man in Ferguson, Missouri. The video, provided to the dead man’s family and lawyer by an unidentified person who shot the footage, shows North Charleston Patrolman Continued on A8
Former School Principal Dwight Jefferson Found Not Guilty of Charges By Linda Poulson Special to the AFRO After hours of deliberation for a verdict, the jury in the State v. Dwight Jefferson case found the former principal not guilty of child abuse and second-degree assault. The trial took place
“The facts don’t warrant a criminal charge.” – Attorney Leonard L. Long
at the Prince George’s County Courthouse in Upper Marlboro, Md. “My God is awesome,” Jefferson said. “God forgives us
Copyright © 2014 by the Afro-American Company
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