Volume Volume 125 123 No. No.23 20–22
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January 7, 2017 - January 7, 2017, The Afro-American A1 $2.00
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JANUARY 7, 2016 - JANUARY 13, 2017
Inside
Washington
• D.C. Residents Want Bowser to Address Housing, Jobs in 2017
Celebrating Black Women Engineers
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Baltimore
Commentary
The Clock is Ticking on Baltimore’s Consent Decree
Commander-in-Chief
By S. Todd Yeary
AP Photo/Susan Walsh
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President Barack Obama, second from left, is escorted by Army Col. Jason T. Garkey, left, as they review the troops during an Armed Forces Full Honor Farewell Review for the president, Jan. 4 at Conmy Hall, Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, Va.
• Rutherford Wants to Work with City
D1 Congressional Black Caucus
What Will the Black Political Agenda Look Like? New Head By Charles D. Ellison Special to the AFRO
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On Jan. 9, the remedial portion of litigation brought by a coalition of former and current HBCU students against the state of Maryland will begin. In October 2013, District Court Judge Catherine C. Blake ruled in favor of the Coalition for Equity and
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Excellence in Maryland Higher Education, saying Maryland had violated the U.S. Constitution by perpetuating a segregated higher education system through the practice of program duplication. Maryland’s willful disregard for the law violated the rights of students attending the state’s four HBCUs-Bowie State University, Coppin State University, Morgan Continued on A3
Md. Dermatologist Offers Tips to Avoid Winter Skin Damage
Join Host Sean Yoes Monday-Friday 5-7 p.m. on 88.9 WEAA FM, the Voice of the Community.
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Illinois State Rep. Carol Ammons, among others, is working to protect Black communities under the Trump administration.
HBCU ‘Equality Lawsuit’ Resumes Jan. 9 By Zenitha Prince Senior AFRO Correspondent zprince@afro.com
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First popping off the New Year with a brawling public bang over ethics, a new and much more robust Republican Congress, fully complimented by a Republican president, showed little shyness when presenting legislative priorities at the top of 2017: repeal “ObamaCare;” overhaul the tax code; roll back many of President Obama-era regulations; and figure out how it can accommodate President-elect Donald Trump’s ambitious
$1 trillion infrastructure investment plan. While Republicans seem fairly clear, if not completely unified, on what their policy goals will be, it’s still unclear what the Black political agenda will be. “The Black political agenda first and foremost needs to focus on wealth creation in our communities,” Democratic strategist Tara Dowdell told the AFRO. “Black leaders need to leverage their political power and platforms to ensure that our community has access to real economic opportunity,
By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com Dry skin occurs throughout the year, however, for many Blacks, it can become increasingly uncomfortable during winter months. Cold temperatures, low humidity, and strong, harsh winds, according to dermatologists, deplete the skin of its natural lipid layer,
which would normally help keep the skin from drying out. Black skin, as a result, can become very flaky, dry, and ashy in the winter. “Years ago, Black mothers might use anything from olive oil or cooking grease – later petroleum jelly – to keep skin soft and keep it from cracking, especially
contracts, and jobs.” Others are worried about what the next administration will bring. “More and more, I’m increasingly concerned about a Trump presidency,” former Obama administration appointee and former Colorado Senate president Peter Groff told the AFRO. “The random trolling Tweets, the attacks on needed government functions such as the intelligence community, the refusal to meet with the press, the appointment of radicals. The list goes on.” But Groff, one of the first major Black elected officials to endorse then candidate Obama in 2008, expressed worry about what role the Congressional Black Caucus will play in resisting that. “I’m anxiously waiting for the CBC legislative game plan and policy blueprint they will use to counter the radical rollback of the Obama legacy and decades of civil rights milestones. We have to do more than sit in and march.” Of course, there is no one consolidated Black political party or consolidated onestop-shop umbrella effort Continued on A3
AFRO Archived History
Jackson Announces Plans for Inauguration Day Protests Jan. 5, 1985 WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Rev. Jesse Jackson says he is organizing nationwide protests against unemployment and poverty, including a rally outside the White House two days before President Reagan takes his second oath of office. “This administration has refused to see the growth of poverty as a serious Continued on A6
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Promises to Stand-Up to Trump By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com Black lawmakers on Capitol Hill chose a chairman that made it clear he will confront the Trump administration or anyone else that seeks to Continued on A3
AFRO File Photo)
U.S. Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.) promises he will stand up for Black equality as new chairman of the CBC.