La. man saved teen, couldn’t stop 6 from drowning
Written by Associated Press
Associated Press Writer
SHREVEPORT, La. (AP)—Christopher Patlan was hanging out with friends on the Red River when he heard the desperate screams coming from seven teenagers. One minute they were wading in shallow water, the next they plunged into a dropoff 25 feet deep.
Patlan bolted the 10 yards to the river and jumped in, saving 15-year-old DeKendrix Warner. By the time he had dragged the boy to safety, the six others from two families —all nonswimmers—had drowned. Family members, who also can’t swim, watched helplessly.
Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:28
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Saint Paul’s College receives largest gift in school history
Written by NNPA News Service
The $1.4 million endowment will be used to create a scholarship fund available to students pursuing a degree in any major area at the college.
“My mother was determined, compassionate, and a fighter for all people,” Carolyn Nicholas, Mason’s daughter, said in a statement.
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HILDA MASON
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Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:28
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This Week In Black History
Written by Robert N. Taylor
August 12
1890—This is generally considered the day that the systematic and nominally legal exclusion of Blacks from the political life of the South began. It was the day that the Mississippi Constitutional Convention began. Barred by the 14th and 15th amendments to the U.S. Constitution from excluding Blacks by race, the convention instead adopted a host of strategies including literacy or so-called “Education Tests” specifically designed to prevent Blacks from voting. The tests required reading and interpreting the Constitution. Blacks would be given difficult passages to interpret while Whites were either exempted or given easy passages. Soon, most Southern states adopted the so-called Mississippi Plan to exclude Blacks from voting. The racist plan was effective. In one Mississippi County, for example, there were 30,000 Blacks but only 175 were eligible to vote.
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OPHELIA MITCHELL, ERNEST E. JUST, MARCUS GARVEY
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Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:28
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Ky. girl’s letter shared with nation
Written by Associated Press
by William Croyle
The Kentucky Enquirer
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP)—Ten-year-old Na’Dreya Lattimore is not happy with the country’s education system, and she let President Barack Obama know it.
Last Thursday, the president shared her sentiments with the nation.
| SPECIAL LETTER—Na’Dreya Lattimore, 10, of Covington, Ky., holds a copy of the letter she sent to President Barack Obama, as well as his letter in response, July 28.
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Na’Dreya, a fifth-grader at Sixth District Elementary School, wrote the president a letter in December. She received a hand-written response from him in May, and he referred to her letter at the end of his education reform speech during the National Urban League Centennial Conference in Washington, D.C.
Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:28
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It’s over! People using social media to end relationships
Written by Courier Newsroom
For New Pittsburgh Courier
(INDIANAPOLIS, IN)—Once upon a time, when couples decided to end their relationship, they did so face-to-face. The break up rules and norms have somewhat changed. Today, some individuals are ending their relationships by using other, and arguably tactless, ways to say goodbye—social media.
Just ask Andrew Locke.
Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:28
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