This Week in Black History
Written by Robert N. Taylor
May 7
1800—On this date the founder of the settlement, which would grow to become the city of Chicago, Jean Baptiste Pointe Du Sable, sold his property and left the settlement. The Haitian-born frontier trader and businessman would die 18 years later in St. Charles, Mo.
1878—Black inventor, J.R. Winters, receives a patent for his designing of the fire escape ladder.
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ROBERT SMALLS
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Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:20
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Obama should appoint first Black woman for Supreme Court, jurists say
Written by NNPA News Service
WASHINGTON (NNPA)—President Barack Obama needs only to turn over in his bed to be reminded of all the Black women who are powerfully qualified to be U.S. Supreme Court justices.
If first lady Michelle Obama was not his wife, some legal scholars say she would be a clear and obvious candidate for the short list to replace retiring Justice John Paul Stevens.
Yet, when Stevens announced his retirement April 9, not one Black woman immediately surfaced as a so-called “short-list” candidate despite the fact that no Black woman has ever served on the high court. Now the name of former Georgia Supreme Court Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears began circulating as one that the president is seriously considering. The National Bar Association has put forth the name of Justice Ann Claire Williams, the first African-American ever appointed to the Seventh Circuit and the third African-American woman ever to serve on any United States Court of Appeals.
Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:20
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‘Mister, no!’ ...Alleged molestation victim, age 7
Written by NNPA News Service
by James Patterson
(NNPA)—K.L. is seven years old and here are the things that she is not responsible for:
Her mother is a prostitute.
She lives with her mother in a trailer park.
Her mother invites different men to their home.
Her mother, 22, is accused of using a social networking site on the Internet to proposition a strange man: sex in exchange for money.
Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:20
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Arkansas man sentenced to 10 years for Obama plot
Written by Associated Press
JACKSON, Tenn. (AP)—A White supremacist has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for conspiring to kill then-presidential candidate Barack Obama and dozens of other Black people.
U.S. District Judge J. Daniel Breen April 22 sentenced 19-year-old Paul Schlesselman of Helena-West Helena, Ark. He had pleaded guilty in January.
Twenty-one-year-old co-defendant, Daniel Cowart of Bells, Tenn., also pleaded guilty and is awaiting sentencing.
Authorities have described the pair as White supremacist skinheads who hatched a plan to go on a cross-country robbery and killing spree that would end with an attack on Obama in 2008.
Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:20
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This Week in Black History
Written by Robert N. Taylor
Week of April 30-May 6
April 30
711 AD—Tarik the Moor invades Spain with force of 7,000 troops, routs the Visigoths and establishes Moor domination of Spain. While there remains some dispute over Tarik’s race, the weight of the evidence is strong that he was a Black man. He was described in accounts of the time as having “brown skin and wooly hair.” His full name was Tarik al Gibral. The famed Rock of Gibraltar is named in his honor.
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SHAKA
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1828—Shaka, the great Zulu king and military leader, is killed. His innovative military strategies kept European imperialism at bay for years as he established Zulu dominance in large parts of Southern Africa. The Zulu nation grew to at least 250,000 with an army of over 40,000. But Shaka became increasingly dictatorial. Opposition to his dictatorship combined with jealousy led his two half brothers to assassinate him on this day in 1828.
Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:20
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