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November 26, 2016 - November 26, 2016, The Afro-American A1 www.afro.com $2.00 $1.00

Volume Volume 125 123 No. No.17 20–22

NOVEMBER 26, 2016 - DECEMBER 2, 2016

Inside

Washington

• Notables Honor Gwen Ifill

Ruth Negga, Star of ‘Loving,’ On Quietly Changing the World

C1 Commentary Can Blacks and the Police Find Inner Peace? By Howard Levine, David Shapiro and David Leffler

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Baltimore

Medal of Freedom

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Your History • Your Community • Your News

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What He Will, Should, Won’t or Maybe Do The domestic agenda facing President-elect Donald Trump will be a hefty one, political analysts and other experts said. “It’s huge,” said Hilary Shelton, the NAACP’s senior vice president for advocacy and policy, of the task awaiting Trump. Trump’s primary focus, many

experts agree, should be to begin mending the divisions in America that he himself helped to foment. “Trump’s first priority should be to allay the fears of a lot of groups in this country. Muslims—they’re afraid. The Southern Poverty Law Center said there has been a gigantic increase in hate crimes against Muslims since Donald Trump was elected. Undocumented aliens are afraid. Black folks

Trump’s Pick for A.G. Alarms Civil Rights Advocates By Zenitha Prince Senior AFRO Correspondent zprince@afro.com

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Atlantic Looks to Bring Back Thousands of Jobs

Trump’s Domestic Agenda: Few Pluses, Many Minuses – ‘Stay Woke’

President-elect Donald Trump’s intention to nominate Republican Sen. Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III to be the attorney general of the United States has set off alarm bells throughout the civil rights community, which notes the accusations of racism that have hovered around the Alabama lawmaker like an unshakeable cloud of flies for many decades. “If you have nostalgia for the days when Blacks kept

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President Barack Obama presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to former NBA basketball player Michael Jordan, left, during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House on Nov. 22 in Washington. Obama is recognizing 21 Americans, including Diana Ross, Kareem Abdul Jabbar and Cicely Tyson with the nation’s highest civilian award.

By Zenitha Prince Senior AFRO Correspondent zprince@afro.com

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are afraid….” Raymond Winbush, director, Institute of Urban Research at Morgan State University, said. “As a first step, Trump needs to calm everybody down.” But Trump’s cabinet appointments thus far are not helping to calm anxieties—picks such as Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., for attorney general,

a man denied a federal judgeship because of his racist history; and former Breitbart News executive chairman Steve Bannon to a senior advisory post. Congressional Black Caucus Chairman G. K. Butterfield (D-N.C.) was among those who sounded the Continued on A3

AFRO Archives Kennedy Assassination On Nov. 23, 1963 at 12:30 p.m. CST President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. The killing of the 35th president of the United States of America traumatized the nation, particularly African-Americans who saw Kennedy as an important advocate for civil rights. The AFRO editorial below was printed as the nation, in a state of shock, slowly began to come to grips with the arduous acceptance of the loss of its much loved young leader.

At the Height of his Powers (An Editorial)

Nov. 30, 1963

AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

Jeff Sessions became Congress’ leading advocate not only for a crackdown on illegal immigration, but for slowing all immigration.

At the death of President John F. Kennedy, we have lost the youngest President, the finest friend of the poor, the humble, and the disadvantaged this generation has known. The shocking and grievous thing is that a president of the mightiest country in the world could travel safely in many countries in Europe and South America and then come

home to be murdered by his own people. He was a martyr in the cause of human rights --- civil, political and social equality of colored people. His fate was the same as that other great President, advocate of freedom and emancipator, Abraham Lincoln, assassinated at the height of his powers and before the fulfillment of his dreams. Continued on A4

How to Shop Black on Black Friday Study Links Black Childhood Obesity By Urban News Service

This list is no simple collection of online stores. This one is focused on makers — African Americans entrepreneurs who have embraced the idea of creating change and community wealth by creating things with their own hands. We scoured the web to find those businesses whose products reflect some combination of originality, innovation, ingenuity and a commitment from the owners to investing in their own communities. When you shop at these places this holiday season, it’s more than a purchase, it’s support for a bright future filled with talent, great ideas and progress. Continued on A4

to Irregular Sleep, Skipping Breakfast

By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com Skipping breakfast and irregular sleep patterns have been identified as key reasons children may become dangerously overweight in research that sheds new light on the obesity epidemic. Particularly among Black children, lifestyle factors and the environment in which the child lives play significant roles in their Continued on A3

Copyright © 2016 by the Afro-American Company

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Lifestyle factors, such as lack of regular exercise, may contribute to childhood obesity.


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