November 11, 2017 - November 11, 2017, The Afro-American
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PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY EDITION $1.00
Volume 127 No. 19
DECEMBER 16, 2017 - DECEMBER 22, 2017
To Our Readers
The AFRO will be closed for the holidays Dec. 22– Jan. 2. The first edition of the new year will be out on Jan. 6. Afro.com will continue to update during the break. Have a safe and happy holiday.
Baltimore
She Was Already in Our Hall of Fame
LBS Lays Out Policy Agenda For 2018
Inside
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Prince George’s Actress Shein Mompremier Joins Superhero Drama ‘Black Lightning’
C1 What No One Told Me About Being First to Go To College
AP Photo/Rene Perez, File
Singing legend Nina Simone will finally be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on April 14, 2018 in Cleveland, Ohio. The jazzy and soulful Simone, who died in 2003, was an activist in the Civil Rights Movement and influenced the likes of Alicia Keys and Aretha Franklin.
AP Photo/John Bazemore
Replace with attached. New caption: Black women were essential to electing Democrat Doug Jones to the U.S. Senate.
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CBC Silent on Trump’s Naming Omarosa: Israel’s Capital Jerusalem Resigned or
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Homeless Take Refuge from the Cold in Day Centers
Alabama Black Women Did It: No Moore! Democrat Doug Jones Snatches Senate Seat from an Extreme Conservative Republican
By Kamau High AFRO Managing Editor khigh@afro.com Blacks in Alabama, particularly Black women, helped deliver a stunning defeat to Judge Roy Moore, who once said Continued on A3
President Donald Trump’s changing of U.S. policy in the Middle East stirred a political frenzy when it happened Dec. 5, but the Congressional Black Caucus, including its key members who deal with foreign policy, have yet to say anything about the administration’s controversial position. Trump announced the U.S. was moving its embassy from Tel Aviv to the city of Jerusalem, which he declared the capital of Israel. The action sparked condemnation from world leaders, who said it would inflame tension among the Palestinians, who consider Jerusalem the future capital of an eventual Palestinian state, but not a word from the CBC. “Congressman Lewis has not commented on this issue to date,” a spokesman for U.S. Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), one of Israel’s strongest supporters in the U.S. House of Representatives, told the AFRO. The statement from the Courtesy photo Atlanta lawmaker’s said he will keep the AFRO informed when Rep. John Lewis is a strong or if Lewis makes a statement supporter of Israel but has on the issue. yet to say anything about Rep. Cedric Richmond (Dthe Trump administration’s La.) hasn’t issued a statement efforts to move the U.S. about the Jerusalem matter, embassy in Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem.
Continued on A3
AP Photo/Seth Wenig
Omarosa Manigault, one of the few high-profile African Americans in the Trump administration, no longer works for the White House. By LaTrina Antoine AFRO Washington Editor lantoine@afro.com Rumors are circling again around action from the White House, this time it’s about Omarosa Manigault Newman’s departure from the President Continued on A3
Pioneering civil rights journalist Simeon Booker died Dec. 10 at the age of 99. This article celebrates his accomplishments on the occasion of him winning the coveted National Press Club’s Fourth Estate Award in 1982.
AFRO Archived History Simeon Booker: Taking aim at injustice Dec. 25, 1982 By Carolyn DuBose For more than 40 years, Simeon Booker has been battling one cause after another. In the 1980s, as social and educational programs take a back seat to skyrocketing U.S. military spending, Booker—Washington Bureau Chief of Johnson Publishing Company—is still trying to influence policy. One year, he told a group of reporters, “I have always believed Continued on A3
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Simeon Booker, whose journalism career began at the AFRO, died Dec. 10 in Solomon, Md. He was 99 years old. AFRO file photo
In Memoriam: Life of Simeon Booker Jr. See p. A3