Posted inPrince George's County News

Power, profit and protection: Local advocates weigh risks of Landover data center

As demand for artificial intelligence grows, a proposed hyperscale data center in Landover, Md., has sparked concerns among residents about environmental, health and infrastructure impacts. Community advocates warn the project could disproportionately burden historically Black neighborhoods unless enforceable protections are put in place.

Posted inBlack History

Vernon AME Church absorbed the terror of the Tulsa Race Massacre. Now it will ‘teach truth.’

By Shaunicy MuhammadThe Oklahoma Eagle (NNPA Newswire) – More than a century after the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, members of Greenwood’s Vernon AME Church are determined to tell their own stories. Archivists, archeologists and elected officials lined the pews of the church Feb. 12 for the unveiling of The Vernon Witness, a multi-year project to […]

Posted inBaltimore News

Remembering Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. The man who stopped

By Dr. Frances “Toni” Murphy Draper More than forty years ago, in a crowded corridor in Nassau, Bahamas, I watched Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr. do something small that revealed something immense: he stopped. My mother, Frances L. Murphy II—then publisher of the AFRO-American Newspaper—and I were attending a conference where he was the keynote […]

Posted inPrince George's County News

Bowie State celebrates legacy of athletic leader Clyde ‘Cool Mac’ Doughty Jr.

The Bowie State University community gathered Feb. 13 to honor the life and legacy of Clyde “Cool Mac” Doughty Jr., the university’s vice president for Intercollegiate Athletics and Recreation and a respected leader within the CIAA. Remembered for his visionary leadership, mentorship and commitment to student-athletes, Doughty’s impact on Bowie State’s athletic success and campus culture was celebrated by colleagues, students and conference partners.

Posted inNational News

Video evidence undercuts ICE accounts in multiple recent shootings

Federal authorities are investigating two immigration officers accused of making untruthful statements under oath in a January 2026 Minneapolis shooting after video evidence contradicted their account. The case is the latest in a series of at least five incidents in which initial descriptions by immigration officials were later challenged or undermined by video footage, leading to dismissed charges and heightened scrutiny.

Posted inINTERNATIONAL

Caribbean governments agree to take U.S. deportees

Several Caribbean governments have begun signing agreements with the United States to accept third-country deportees, a move critics say followed U.S. visa restrictions on Dominica and Antigua meant to force regional compliance. Leaders in nations including Guyana, Grenada, St. Kitts, St. Lucia and Antigua insist the deals will exclude violent offenders and apply mainly to CARICOM nationals, while opposition groups demand greater transparency and warn about social and security impacts.

Gift this article