On The Cover Profiles
& Profiles In Excellence
Dr. Chuma G. Osuji – DoCare Clinics – (813) 878-2222 / (352) 345-4810
Dr. Osuji (West African); came to the U.S. at the age of 20. He graduated from Hillsborough Community College,
University of South Florida and Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine (PCOM). He completed his medical
internship and residency in Internal Medicine and Family Medicine at PCOM. Subsequently, he joined the US Air Force,
as Board Certified Medical Physician; also earned a Military Board Certification as a Combat Casualty Military Medical
Officer. He was honorably discharged in 2003 with the rank of Major, with numerous distinguished Military Leadership
accomplishments.
Presently, he is the Medical Director of DoCare Clinics. Also he is the President and Founder of the African Ambas-
sadors Organization (non-profit charity organization for the purpose of enhancing the integrity and respect, of less
fortunate and underprivileged towards obtaining Quality Preventative Health Care Service). The significance of the or-
ganization is to express and demonstrate his sincere and honest appreciation, for the American People and in memory
of those who continue to do Good, despite man’s ingratitude.
He believes in, “goodness that comes with love, respect, kindness, and mercy” and “To whom much is given, much is
equally expected.”
DoCare Clinics locations: Tampa, Spring Hill (US) and West Africa.
www.DoCareClinic.org
Dr
. Chuma G.
Osuji
Attorney General: Eric H. Holder
Holder is the first African-American to serve as Attorney General. Eric Holder is the veteran lawyer who became U.S.
Attorney General under President Barack Obama. Holder is a graduate of Columbia University (1973) and Columbia
Law School (1976). He joined the Department of Justice straight out of law school, working his way through the
ranks until becoming an Associate Judge on the Superior Court of the District of Columbia in 1988. He remained
a judge until appointed by Bill Clinton as U.S. District Attorney for the District of Columbia (1993-97), then served
as Deputy Attorney General under Janet Reno from 1997 until 2001, when Clinton left office. Holder's last days in
that post were tangled in controversy after he gave an opinion of "neutral, leaning toward favorable" for Clinton's
last-minute pardon of fugitive financier Marc Rich. The Rich pardon caused an outcry, and Holder was blamed for
his opinion and accused of being too chummy with Rich's lawyer, Jack Quinn. Holder then went into private practice
with the corporate legal firm of Covington & Burling in 2001 and remained there through 2008. In 2007 he became
a co-chair of Barack Obama's presidential campaign.
Holder’s wife, Dr. Sharon Malone, is an obstetrician. She graduated from Harvard (1981) and Columbia Medical
School. They have three children: Maya (born circa 1993), Brooke (b. circa 1996) and Eric (b. circa 1997). Holder's
father, Eric. Sr., was a native of Barbados who emigrated to the U.S. as a boy. His mother, Miriam, was born in New
Jersey. Visit
http://www.who2.com/ericholder.html for more information
Er
ic H. Holder
U.N. Ambassador: Susan E. Rice
She's a Washington, D.C. native and the first African-American woman named as U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Rice was
appointed by President Barack Obama.
• Her father, Emmett Rice, was a governor of the Federal Reserve System. Her mother, Lois Dickson Fitt, is an academic
scholar whose parents were born in Jamaica.
• She attended the prestigious National Cathedral School, an all-girls academy. She was a star point guard on the basket-
ball team and was known as "Spo," short for "Sportin'." She also lettered in two other varsity sports, and was president of
the student council and valedictorian of her class.
• She earned her bachelor's degree from Stanford University went on to earn a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Oxford,
where she got her master's degree and at age 25 she earned her Ph.D.
• In her mid-20s, she worked as a foreign policy aide to Michael Dukakis during his 1988 presidential run. She later worked
for John Kerry's 2004 campaign and was a senior foreign policy advisor to the Obama campaign.
• Rice was President Clinton's top Africa diplomat when al Qaeda bombed the U.S. embassies in Tanzania and Kenya.
Working for Clinton's National Security Council, she also dealt with issues related to the 1994 Rwandan genocide. In 1995,
she was appointed the NSA's lead Africa expert; she became pregnant with her first child while in the post and didn't take
leave until one day before her son was born. She later served as assistant secretary of state for African Affairs in her early
30s. After leaving the state department, she worked as a senior fellow for the Brookings Institution. ic
e
Susan G. R
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