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Washington Informer August 2013 Health Wellness & Nutrition Supplement
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Serving More Than 50,000 African American Readers Throughout The Metropolitan Area / Vol. 48, No. 43 Aug. 8 - Aug. 14 2013
More than 250,000 people converged upon the Nation’s Capital to participate in the historic March on Washington in 1963 to demand civil rights, jobs and justice. /Courtesy Photo
Organizers Push to Finalize March Plans March on Washington 50th Anniversary Takes Shape By Barrington M. Salmon WI Staff Writer With the 50th anniversary of the historic March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom fast approaching, organizers in the District are gearing up for the stretch run. Some speakers at the Aug.1
planning meeting said they hope to mobilize 50,000 to 100,000 people from the Washington metropolitan area to come out on Saturday, Aug. 24, and as many as 100,000 to 200,000 people from around the country to commemorate the march. The 1963 march was an event that immortalized the Rev. Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr., and the civil rights movement, while crystallizing for the rest of this country just how serious African Americans and like-minded people were about securing a just society. The Rev. Lennox Abrigo, president and founder of the Washington, D.C. bureau of
the National Action Network (NAN), acknowledged the enormity of the project. But he said the coalition of clergy, unions, educational institutions, civic organizations and community groups that attended the twohour meeting were coalescing around the issue and committing to the march’s success.
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“Our primary challenge is to mobilize D.C. and the greater metropolitan area and get community leaders to get their people out for the march,” he said. “I think the march will be an expression of the individual effects that the various forms of
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