November 12, 2016 - November 12, 2016, The Afro-American A1 PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION
Volume 126 No. 7
SEPTEMBER 16, 2017 - SEPTEMBER 22, 2017
Inside
Prince George’s
Commentary
Americans Want to Work – and Be Treated Fairly
• High Faces Stiff
By Rep. Elijah Cummings
Competition in Sheriff’s Race
B1
Baltimore ‘Copwatch’ Is an Uncomfortably Close Look at Police Brutality
C1
Meet Me in Chicago AP Photo/Michael Probst
Former President Barack Obama announced the inaugural Obama Foundation leadership summit will be held in Chicago, Ill. Oct. 31-Nov. 1. The summit “will be a place to gather and learn from one another, and then go back to your communities to lead others in the hard work of change,” he said in a video emailed to supporters.
Remembering 9/11
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D.C. Federal Worker Survived Terrorist Attack by Inches By Byron Scott Special to the AFRO It started out like many days for Aaron Cooper, who is now a budget analyst at Joint Base Anacostia Boilling Air Force base in D.C., told the AFRO about how he remembers Sept. 11, 2001. At the time, Cooper, who worked for the Department of Defense as a budget analyst was sitting in an office on the first floor of the Pentagon along with his co-
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At a time when part of the country is recovering from two deadly storms and another part of the country is trying to understand a President still determined to roll back decades of progress, the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation
Rep. Cummings is Back and Ready to Run Again By Hamil R. Harris Special to the AFRO
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is scheduled to host its 47th Annual Legislative Conference from Sept. 20-24 at the Walter E. Convention Center in Northeast Washington D.C. “We have to be the voice for the voiceless,” Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) told the AFRO. The theme of the 2017 conference is “And Still I
Rep. Elijah Cummings recently returned to Capitol Hill after undergoing a heart procedure three months ago.
Rep. Elijah Cummings (DMd.), after being away from Capitol Hill for 103 days, says that he is not only ready to return to Congress after undergoing a heart procedure, but he is also going to run for another term. “I will be filing to run for re-election,” he told the AFRO. “What happened to me has renewed my passion. Continued on A3
D1 Black Caucus Claims Trump’s GOP Budget Is Inhumane By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com
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Aaron Cooper, who survived the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon, recounts his experience on that tragic day.
Black Caucus Foundation to Hold 47th Annual Legislative Conference in N.E. Washington By Hamil Harris Special to the AFRO
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workers. He said word reached them that a plane had crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center. “A group of us was sitting in my boss’s office watching the monitor,” Cooper, now 62, told the AFRO. “Everybody was looking at it…we saw the second plane hit. And [we] began to wonder if the U. S. was under attack.” What they didn’t know was that another hijacked plane was heading their way. Continued on A3
• Will Annapolis Meeting on Baltimore’s Violence Problem Yield Results?
Rise.” The conference brings together leaders, citizens and legislators from across the country to engage on
economic development, civil and social justice, public health and education
Continued on A3
Representatives of the Congressional Black caucus overseeing the federal budget and the process of legislating it said the Congressional Black Caucus’ spending plan is more humane and fiscally sound in the long term than the GOP or Trump proposals. On Sept. 7, Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.) convened a roundtable of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Task Force on Budget, Appropriations and Taxation. Scott, co-chair of the task force with Rep. Danny Davis (D-Ill.), said the CBC’s Continued on A4
On Sept. 13 Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) introduced a bill to provide Medicare to every American, not just seniors, that garnered co-sponsors from many Democrats who are expected to contend in the next presidential election. The original Medicare bill, which took effect in 1964, was instrumental in phasing out segregation in many hospitals in the wake of the Civil Rights Act.
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Medicare to sway hospitals to desegregate Continued on A2 March 19, 1964 WASHINGTON—The U.S. Public Health Service is planning to use the Medicare bill that goes into effect July 1as a large factor in swaying those hospitals that have continued to discriminate because they have not been compelled to comply with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 since they have not been receiving direct assistance from the federal government. Surgeon General William H. Stewart said virtually all hospitals in the nation would Continued on A3
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