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02/24/22 03:13 PM #3202    

 

Kenneth Davis

Good afternoon Warrior Family!

     The campaign to renew our website subscription is off to an excellent beginning. Additional notification of pledges, have recently been received from Barbara Burks, Carl O'Neal, Robert Phifer and a donor who wishes to remain anonymous. Many thanks to all who have pledged. I'm forward looking to others, of whom we hope will do the same. Thank you Curtis for acknowledging Edward Johnson. William Arnold invited CB Jackson to the website and word of mouth is how we continue to grow. Although there may have been 400 plus listed as graduates on May 24, 1970, we are a much fewer number these days. It was CB who informed us about the transition of  Willie Washington. Now, Willie has been immortalized  "In Memory" on our wall. We should be about unity, clarity and conviction these days, as we dwindle in numbers. I say again, thank you to all who have contributed to our fundraiser this far....stay safe my friends......Let the Good Times Roll......



 

 


02/25/22 09:45 AM #3203    

 

Kenneth Davis

T H O U G H T   F O R   C O N S I D E R A T I O N 

Only one thing has to change for us to know happiness in our lives: where we focus our attention. The single overriding objective in wellness is creating constant personal renewal where we recognize and act on the truth that each day is a miraculous gift, and our job is to untie the ribbons. That's the Law of Esprit: living life with joy. 
~Greg Anderson~ 

MARIE MAYNARD DALY CLARK (1921-2003)

     Marie Maynard Daly, born in Queens, New York to Helen and Ivan Daly, was the first black woman to earn a Ph.D. in Chemistry. Her father, an immigrant from the West Indies, had hoped to earn a degree in Chemistry at Cornell University but was unable to continue because of financial constraints. Marie Daly’s parents were committed to her education and encouraged her interest in science. She attended Hunter College High School where her teachers persuaded her that she could do well in chemistry. Daly enrolled in Queens College so that she could live at home. She earned her B.S. in 1942 with honors. A fellowship and part-time job at Queens College allowed her to work on her master’s degree at New York University, which she completed in 1943. Because of the shortage of male scientists during World War Two, Daly was awarded funding for her Ph.D. program at Columbia University where she studied under a white female chemist, Mary L. Caldwell. She completed her dissertation in 1947.

     Daly earned an apprenticeship with Dr. A.E. Mirsky at the Rockefeller Institute but she was required to find her own funding source. She applied for and won a grant from the American Cancer Society and began working with Dr. Mirsky in 1948. The two worked together for seven years studying how proteins are built inside the body.  n 1955, she moved back to Columbia and worked with Dr. Quentin B. Deming researching the chemical mechanics of heart attacks. In 1960, the two moved to Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Yeshiva University where she taught biochemistry courses and studied the effects of age on the circulatory system. Daly was awarded tenure in 1971.  In 1961 Marie Daly married Vincent Clark. At Albert Einstein, Clark became a champion for diversity, working to increase the representation of minorities in science.  She retired in 1986. Dr. Clark was made a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and was named one of the Top 50 Women in Science, Engineering, and Technology by the National Technical Association in 1999.  Marie Maynard Daly Clark died in New York in 2003.

 

 

 


02/25/22 04:27 PM #3204    

 

Larry Milligan

Hey, guys hope everything is going well with you and your family, I have a question that I can't seem to find the answer to. What was the first year of classes at Georgia Ave School. I know it was built in 1961, but was that the first of classes? My first year attending was the fourth grade and I think that was1963. Help if you can. Thanks 

PS. Brain therapy (lol)


02/25/22 05:05 PM #3205    

 

Marsha McMillian (Sherrod)

The Georgia Avenue Elementary School was built in 1961
The school was merged with Alonzo Locke Elementary after the end of the last school year.

So maybe it was the following fall term of 1962 which would be the next school year. Don't know for sure

02/26/22 10:34 AM #3206    

 

Kenneth Davis

T H O U G H T   F O R   C O N S I D E R A T I O N 

Sometimes your joy is the source of your smile,

but sometimes your smile can be the source of your joy.

Because of your smile,

you make life more beautiful.

~Thich Nhat Hanh~

The theme for 2022 focuses on Black health and wellness. This year’s theme is also meant to address “the history of healthcare in the African American community” and is also a “historical examination of the financial and economic health and wellness of Africans Americans.”

JEWEL PLUMMER COBB (1924- )

     Jewel Plumber Cobb, a cell biologist and cancer researcher, was born in Chicago, Illinois on January 17, 1924 to Frank V. Plummer, a physician, and Carriebel (Cole) Plummer, a physical education teacher. An only child, Jewel Plummer began reading her father’s scientific journals to supplement her science training while in junior high school.  Plummer was a high school honor student where she focused on biology. Although Plummer began her college career at the University of Michigan in 1942, she left in her sophomore year because of the institution’s practice of requiring all African American students to reside in one house on campus. Plummer completed her B.A. in biology at Talladega College, Alabama in 1947. Plummer then decided to attend graduate school and applied for a fellowship but was initially rejected by New York University (NYU) because of her race. However she decided to visit the campus where she impressed the biology faculty who granted her the fellowship. Plummer earned an M.S. at NYU in 1947 and Ph.D. in 1950 in cell physiology with a dissertation titled Mechanisms of Pigment Formation. In 1949, while still in graduate school, Cobb was named an independent investigator for the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, Massachusetts. She then held prestigious postdoctoral fellowships at the Cancer Research Foundation of Harlem Hospital, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, and the National Cancer Institute.
     In 1954 Jewel Plummer married Roy Cobb, an insurance salesman. They had one son, Jonathon Cobb, who was born in 1957. The couple divorced in 1967. Jewel Cobb’s research focused on skin cancer and in particular the ability of melanin to protect skin from damage. She also examined how hormones, ultraviolet light, and chemotherapeutic drugs could cause changes in cell division. Much of that work was done while she was on the faculty at the University of Illinois from 1952 to 1954 where she directed the Tissue Culture Laboratory, as well as at New York University from 1956 to 1960, and Sarah Lawrence College between 1960 and 1969. In 1969, Cobb took the first of several administrative posts. She served as Dean of Arts and Sciences at Connecticut College between 1969 and 1976, where she was also a professor of zoology. From 1976 to 1981 she was a professor of biological sciences and Dean of Douglass College, a women’s college at Rutgers University in New Jersey. In 1981 Jewel Plumber Cobb became President of California State University, Fullerton.  While at Cal State, Fullerton she led a successful effort to obtain funding for the campus’s new science and engineering building and the new computer science building. She also initiated medical and pre-dental programs for minorities and women in the sciences. In 1990 Cobb relinquished the Presidency and became a California State University, Los Angeles Trustee Professor. In that capacity she worked with impoverished youth through Southern California Science and Engineering ACCESS Center and Network and the Science Technology Engineering Program (STEP) between 1991 and 2001. She also led California State University’s ASCEND projects promoting careers in science, math, and engineering.  The National Academy of Sciences gave Cobb its 1993 Lifetime Achievement Award for her work promoting the sciences as a career field for youth of color.

 


02/27/22 09:48 AM #3207    

 

Kenneth Davis

T H O U G H T   F O R   C O N S I D E R A T I O N 

Health and wellness does mean different things to different people.

For me, living a balanced life means nurturing the academic,

physical, and spiritual aspects of my life

so I can maintain a sense of well-being and self-esteem.

~Denise Morrison~




02/27/22 09:59 AM #3208    

 

Kenneth Davis

The theme for 2022 focuses on Black health and wellness. This year’s theme is also meant to address “the history of healthcare in the African American community” and is also a “historical examination of the financial and economic health and wellness of Africans Americans.”

KAMAL AL MANSOUR (1959- )

     Kamal Al Mansour is an African American artist and inventor who graduated from University of California Los Angeles in 1981 with a degree in Political science. He then attended law school and earned a Juris Doctorate degree from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco in 1984. Al Mansour started his career at NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL)in 1985 by working as a contract negotiator for Caltech and the Department of Energy (DOE). He worked with GTE Government Systems Division, which turned Air Force technology into what is now known as GPS navigation system. Al Mansour founded CPTimeOnline and developed AfroLink Software in 1988 after realizing that there was no Black representation in Software. These software programs included educational, historical, political, technical, and other information about African, Caribbean, and African American history and culture. Al Mansour became the face of Black software entrepreneurship in the 1990s, appearing in EMERGE, Black Enterprise, Seattle Times, Wall Street Journal, Windows magazine, MacWeek magazine, and a variety of other publications. He also made appearances on CNN, Headline News, and various local news organizations.
     AfroLink was marketed to K-12 schools, colleges, and universities, and clients throughout the United States, the Caribbean, Canada, Africa, and Europe for four years. Despite its initial success and numerous buyout offers to its founder, the software had a loyal but dwindling following as it competed with the competitors on the emerging Internet such as Netscape whose browser made information including data on Black history and culture freely accessible. Commercially sold software such as AfroLink became increasingly obsolete due to the web’s accessibility. Al Mansour returned to corporate America in 1998 and then transitioned from corporate law to IT. In 1998 he launched unVOZ.com in an attempt to repurpose AfroLink content. The site’s Afrocentric art, tee shirts, hoodies, and clip art were instant popular to a segment of the African American community. In 2003, Al Mansour decided to return to art after experiencing several life-changing events, including the death of close relatives. Between 2005 and 2007 he displayed his art in the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, Brand 35: Borders, the 35th Annual National Juried Exhibition of Works on Paper, the Brand Library Art Gallery (where he was awarded the Peggy Lund Hayek Donor Award), and other venues. With work on display at the 11th Annual Art of Living Black Exhibit co-sponsored by San Francisco Bay Area venues including the San Pablo Art Gallery, Richmond Art Center, and Prescott-Joseph Center, the Joyce Gordon Gallery in downtown Oakland, the Esteban Sabar Gallery in Oakland, and Stanford University. By the end of the first decade of the 21st century, Al Mansour had established himself as a notable Bay Area artist. In 2020, Al Mansour published his first book Divine Consciousness: From a Dystopian Diaspora to Afrofuturism. His artwork work was featured in the Storied References exhibition at the Northern Illinois University Art Museum in 2021. Al Mansour’s early career as the founder and president of AfroLink Software continues to influence his work, he continues centers his art on uplifting Black culture and history



 

 

 

 

 

 


02/28/22 09:15 AM #3209    

 

Kenneth Davis

T H O U G H T   F O R   C O N S I D E R A T I O N 

People suffer because they are caught in their views. As soon as we release those views, we are free and we don't suffer anymore. If you have the chance to be exposed to a loving, understanding environment where the seed of compassion, loving kindness, can be watered every day, then you become a more loving person. 
~Thich Nhat Hanh~

The theme for 2022 focuses on Black health and wellness. This year’s theme is also meant to address “the history of healthcare in the African American community” and is also a “historical examination of the financial and economic health and wellness of Africans Americans.”

VANESSA NORTHINGTON GAMBLE (1953- )

     Vanessa N. Gamble is the first African American woman to teach as a professor of medical humanities, health policy, and American civilization at the George Washington University. Dr. Gamble additionally serves as a professor of bioethics at the College of Veterinary Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health at Tuskegee University as well as an adjunct professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing. As a physician, medical historian, and activist, Dr. Gamble has focused her work toward addressing racial disparity and advocating for equity in health care. Dr. Gamble’s most notable role played out in 1997 as she led the Tuskegee Syphilis Study Legacy Committee and succeeded in receiving a formal apology from the United States government.

     Dr. Gamble was born in 1953 in West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and raised by a single mother with the help of her grandmother. After graduating summa cum laude from Philadelphia High School for Girls in 1970, she continued her education at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in medical sociology and biology. Her senior thesis discussed the tragedies of the Tuskegee syphilis study, a U.S. government medical experiment conducted in 1932 in which the six hundred Black men involved were not aware of being in the study. Ever since Gamble was a child, her grandmother envisioned her becoming a doctor and in 1983, her grandmother’s dreams came to fruition as she earned her medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania. Then in 1987, Dr. Gamble pursued a Ph.D. in history and sociology of science, also at the University of Pennsylvania. Since obtaining her Ph.D., Dr. Gamble has published many works exploring the history and implications of racism in medicine and health care.

     The Tuskegee Syphilis Study Legacy Committee was established in 1997 with Dr. Gamble as its chair. The committee’s objectives were to obtain an official apology from the U.S. government and devise a plan to navigate the lasting effects of the study on the Black community. On May 16, 1997, the efforts proved to be effective as President Bill Clinton issued an apology while condemning the role of the U.S. government in the original study. Three years after the success of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study Legacy Committee, Dr. Gamble served as the head of the Association of American Medical Colleges’ Division of Community and Minority Programs. She has also served as a committee member on many other health and scientific projects.

 

 

 

 

 


02/28/22 09:32 AM #3210    

 

Kenneth Davis

 

EXTENDING CONDOLENCES TO ROSA GREER

     Notification was received yesterday that Jean Greer, the sister of Rosa, transitioned February 12, 2022. A copy of the obituary was obtained from Charles Hill, a member of the BTW Class of 1968. Rosa has not joined our website and there is no additional information available. Should you see Rosa or have her contact information, please extend condolences on behalf of our class.







 

 


02/28/22 09:39 AM #3211    

 

Kenneth Davis

 


02/28/22 11:31 AM #3212    

 

Kenneth Davis

     Greetings and Salutations to you Marsha and Larry! That was a great trivia question. Thank you for this Black History lesson. My family moved into Claiborne Homes, onto Brown Mall Street when I was in the fifth grade. My younger brothers and I attended Alonzo Locke and actually lived next door to James Moten. Leath, Walker Elementary and Georgia Avenue were considered out of our district. 

     While trying to answer your question along with Marsha, I asked around and several individuals  told me that there was once a Porter Elementary and Middle School. That knowledge was amazing, because I only knew of Porter Junior High School. The middle school was in the vacinity of the girls gym and band room.

     It was comfirmed Georgia Avenue's first year was 1960 or 1961, causing students to enroll there and the rest is history. Maybe other classmates have additional information to share. Thanks again for your trivia question. To close out Black History Month 2022, here's another blast from the past for you....










 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


03/01/22 10:35 AM #3213    

 

Kenneth Davis

T H O U G H T   F O R   C O N S I D E R A T I O N 

We are wiser than we know. Friendship, like the immortality of the soul, is too good to be believed. Write it on your heart that every day is the best day in the year. It is not length of life, but depth of life. Getting old is a fascination thing. The older you get, the older you want to get. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson~

     Greetings to you Esquire Tilton Fossett. Daffodils are one of the earliest spring-blooming flowers and is the birth flower for the month of March! Among those born this month, you're number one! There are so many of you, that I've decided to separate and divide the gang. The Spring Equinox mix (March 1-2) and the Daylight Savings Time mix (March 16-29) becomes my cakewalk. Each of you are such a bundle of cheerfulness to family and friends, regardless of the state you presently reside in. The aptitude of  mademoiselle Linda Brown plus the distinguished reputations of messieurs Ricky Garrett and James Stone, complete the first keepsake bouquet of Spring Equinox friends. An ancient Indian polymath, who was active as a teacher, author, strategist, philosopher, economist, jurist, and royal advisor was known by the name Chanakya.

     He simply stated: "The earth is supported by the power of truth; it is the power of truth that makes the sun shine and the winds blow; indeed all things rest upon truth. The fragrance of flowers spreads only in the direction of the wind. But the goodness of a person spreads in all directions". The truth of the matter is, you've been a great friend to many and your goodness as an individual has continued to spread in all directions. Thanks again for your assistance, by providing information on Evelyn and Dornell. Many were blessed due to your diligence and were supported by the power of truth. As you celebrate today , or choose not to, may the power of truth be an ever present force in your life. May you be blessed to receive the rays of sunshine in the days ahead of you, as the wind blows to remind you of your mortal prosperity. I wish you a George Benson type of day. As you continue your walk of prosperity, may you experience numerous Songs and Stories along the way. May your days reflect the goodness of a person spreading in all directions, when combined with the power of Living In High Definition...enjoy your day....stay safe my friend....



 

 

 


03/01/22 11:13 AM #3214    

 

Kenneth Davis


“Women Providing Healing, Promoting Hope”

     The 2022 Women’s History theme, “Providing Healing, Promoting Hope,” is both a tribute to the ceaseless work of caregivers and frontline workers during this ongoing pandemic and also a recognition of the thousands of ways that women of all cultures have provided both healing and hope throughout history. Women as healers harken back to ancient times. Healing is the personal experience of transcending suffering and transforming it to wholeness. The gift of hope spreads light to the lives of others and reflects a belief in the unlimited possibilities of this and future generations. Together, healing and hope are essential fuels for our dreams and our recovery.

     This year, in particular, we are reminded of the importance of healers and caregivers who are helping to promote and sustain hope for the future. The NWHA encourages communities throughout the country to honor local women who bring and have historically brought these priceless gifts to their families, workplaces, and neighborhoods, sometimes at great sacrifice. These are the women who, as counselors and clerics, artists and teachers, doctors, nurses, mothers, and grandmothers listen, ease suffering, restore dignity, and make decisions for our general as well as our personal welfare.

     Women have long advocated for compassionate treatments and new directions in public health and in women’s mental and physical health. Women have also historically led the way in mending divisions, healing wounds, and finding peaceful solutions. This timeless work, in so many ways and in addition to so many other tasks, has helped countless individuals in our communities recover and follow their dreams. The 2022 theme proudly honors those who, in both public and private life, provide healing and promote hope for the betterment of all.

“Women Providing Healing, Promoting Hope”

 


03/01/22 11:39 AM #3215    

 

Kenneth Davis

      With sadness of heart, notification was received that another Warrior, William Barker has transitioned. Although a member of the Class of 1971, William was well known and appreciated among members of the Class of 1970. Additional information concerning final arrangements hasn't become available to date. Upon receipt, it will be posted for those interested in attending his services.

 

 

 


03/01/22 05:29 PM #3216    

 

Kenneth Davis

WARRIORS - WAR-RIORS - WAR-RI-ORS

 

     Somewhere within my memory, there seems to have been a by-line from articles written in the Washingtonian, either from Joycelyn or Margie, acknowledging Warriors On The Move. Well, the campaign for renewing the website subscription has gained momentum, as we strive to extend our beloved venue of communication. Physical hard copies of pledges were received over the weekend and yesterday. Deposits were made into a separate account at my credit union and slips will be available for review. New pledges from Gerald Best, Ruby Burks, Marino Hardy, Liz Marzette and Estella Mayhue-Greer have been expressed. As fundraisers progress, it's always the ladies who step forward to the challenge. As the sun shines and the wind blows, the truth simply can't be concealed.
     You may not listen to rap music, but perhaps you've heard of DMX, who asked the question; "Where My Dogs AT"??? That's the question of the day. I know y'all reading silently, but it's a fundraiser from and for the class and not a benefit for Ken Davis. William Arthur Ward, an American Writer once stated that "Opportunities are like sunrises. If you wait too long, you miss them. The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the realist adjusts the sails". Today I'm adjusting my sails as we continue to approach the April 16th renewal date. And just like William Ward, I give thanks to everyone who has mailed their pledges and those I've yet to receive. Feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it (William Arthur Ward). Stay safe my friends.....


03/02/22 10:16 AM #3217    

 

Kenneth Davis

T H O U G H T   F O R   C O N S I D E R A T I O N 

You may not always have a comfortable life and you will not always be able to solve all of the world's problems at once but don't ever underestimate the importance you can have because history has shown us that courage can be contagious and hope can take on a life of its own. ~Michelle Obama~

MAMPHELA RAMPHELE (1947- )

     Mamphela Ramphele is a South African political leader and physician known for her anti-apartheid activism. Ramphele was born on December 28, 1947, in Uitkyk, located in North West province of South Africa, but spent her childhood in Kranspoort, Limpopo province. In 1962, she attended Bethesda Teacher College, a prestigious secondary boarding school in the northern section of South Africa, where she once used a class assignment to protest the living conditions. Experiences of discrimination based on race and gender at Bethesda were formative to Ramphele’s decision to become a medical doctor, from which she was dissuaded by teachers and family alike. However, a few teachers, including one who became her principal at Setotolwane High School, supported her by arranging tutoring classes and advising her on university admissions. In 1967 she entered the University of the North and in 1968 transferred to Natal Medical School on scholarships. In 1972, she earned her medical degree at Natal University, and the following year found a job at Mt. Coke Hospital in Eastern Cape province.

     In January 1968, Ramphele was introduced to Steve Biko, the soon-to-be leader of the Black Consciousness movement, at Natal University where he founded the South African Students’ Organization (SASO). Biko in turn introduced Ramphele to Black activism on and off campus and pursued a romantic relationship with her at the expense of both their marriages. In 1973, Ramphele became pregnant by Biko and in May 1974 gave birth to Lerato Biko, who died from pneumonia at only two months old. She later gave birth to Hlumelo Biko in January 1978. In 1976, Ramphele along with Biko and their compatriots were arrested for their anti-apartheid activism in King Williamstown (now Qonce). Ramphele was detained for almost five months, and exiled back to Limpopo province, where she spent her childhood. She remained there until 1984. While there, she continued community organizing and established health services, as well as earned Bachelor of Commerce in administration from the University of South Africa and later postgraduate diplomas in Tropical Health and Hygiene and Public Health from the University of the Witwatersrand.

     After her exile was lifted in 1984, Ramphele left for Cape Town to become a researcher with the South African Labour and Development Research Unit at the University of Cape Town. In 1991, she earned a Ph.D. in Social Anthropology and was appointed deputy vice-chancellor of the university. In 1996 she was promoted to vice-chancellor and became the first woman and Black African to hold a vice-chancellor position at a South African university. In 2000, She also became the first African to serve as the Managing Director of the World Bank, holding that position until 2004. In 2013 Ramphele founded Agang SA, a political party that stood on principles of a corruption-free government and democratic processes. In May 2014 elections, Ramphele’s Agang SA won two party seats in the Nation Assembly but less than one percent of the national vote. Controversy around leadership and finances ensued, creating factions in the party, one of which suspended Ramphele as the party’s leader. On July 8, 2014, Ramphele stepped down as the leader of Agang SA and announced that she was retiring from politics, though she would continue to support community and humanitarian campaigns for change.

 

 

 

 


03/02/22 11:10 AM #3218    

 

Kenneth Davis

Without a heart transformed by the grace of Christ,

we just continue to manage external and internal darkness. ~Matt Chandler~

     Heri ya siku ya kuzaliwa wishes to you Linda, Ricky and James! What a blessing it is for us to be considered your friends on your special day and always. Each of you are a good friend and an even better person to us all. May God bless you with wonderful times ahead. An unknown author once said; Make your life a house your heart can live in. With a door that is open to receive friends and a garden full of memories of many good things. The doors of the John Gaston nursery were opened and closed a few years ago. Who would have thought a garden full of memories and good things would still exist today. I hear that two of you attended life long school together and even earned money while employed together. Euripides stated that  prosperity is full of friends. The trio that you all compose, is a blessed miracle of provident design. Much like your birth month flower which symbolizes rebirth and new beginnings.
     Society tends to always make multiples - whether it's twins or triplets or whatever - one person. And it's not always fair. I encourage multiples to embrace their individual uniqueness because, just as you are an amazing unit together, that can only happen when you are strong individually (Tia Mowry). You all were not born twins or triplets, but you are an amazing unit of unique strong individuals as retirees and a landlord. The Easy to Read version of Proverbs 22:24 tells us; Don’t be friends with people who become angry easily. Don’t stay around quick-tempered people... As a devout symbol of your character, it's no wonder you've conquered the best part of the art of living, that is, knowing how to grow old gracefully. Old age equalizes — we are aware that what is happening to us has happened to untold numbers from the beginning of time. When we are young we act as if we were the first young people in the world (Eric Hoffer). 

     For a young person, it is almost a sin, or at least a danger, to be too preoccupied with himself; but for the ageing person, it is a duty and a necessity to devote serious attention to himself (Carl Jung). We are all ageing and eventually we are all going to end up in the same place. It is okay to get older and look older. It doesn't make you any less of a human being or any less beautiful (Stacey Solomon). Linda, Ricky and James, as you celebrate today, or choose not to, may the gracious blessings of His grace and mercy abound within you always. May you continue to exemplify Proverbs 22:24. Here's wishing you all a Marion Meadows type of day. It's Twice As Nice to share the same birth anniversary, nursery and class rooms. I guess the only thing left to do is to grab your Lunch Box and go on a picnic, out in a field of daffodils....enjoy your day...stay safe my friends..... 



 

 

 


03/02/22 02:07 PM #3219    

 

James Stone

Thank you for the birthday tribute and song. Happy birthday to my Birth sister Linda,and my Birth brother Ricky,I can only imagine if we three were born at John Gaston Hospital me,Linda and Ricky side by side in a row, we never know our destinys. God is good. Blessing to all.

03/02/22 07:36 PM #3220    

 

Kenneth Davis

  Funeral arrangements for William Barker  

VISITATION
March 10, 2022
4 - 6PM

R. S. Lewis Funeral Home
2944 Walnut Grove Road
Memphis, Tennessee , 38111
(901) 235-8169

FUNERAL SERVICES
March 11, 2022
12 Noon

New Bethel Missionary Baptist Church
907 S Parkway East
Memphis, TN 38106
(901) 942-3903

 


 

 


03/03/22 10:31 AM #3221    

 

Kenneth Davis

T H O U G H T   F O R   C O N S I D E R A T I O N 

We learned about gratitude and humility - that so many people had a hand in our success, from the teachers who inspired us to the janitors who kept our school clean... and we were taught to value everyone's contribution and treat everyone with respect.

~Michelle Obama~

KIMBERLEY MOTLEY (1978?- )

     An international human rights and civil rights attorney since 2003, Kimberley Chongyon Motley is well known for her legal practice in both the United States and Afghanistan, as well as her research regarding juvenile justice. Motley is the founder of Motley Legal Services, co-founder of Motley Consulting International, and since 2008, the first Westerner to litigate in Afghanistan. In 2004 she was the winner of the Mrs. Wisconsin America pageant. Her dedication and resilience in the male-dominated courts of Afghanistan in addition to her breakthrough work in the U.S. have rightfully earned her the reputation as one of the most respected human rights lawyers in the world. Kimberley Motley and her brother were raised in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, by their African American father and mother from rural North Korea, who had met one another when their father was in the U.S. military. She graduated with an associate of arts and sciences degree from Milwaukee Technical College in 1997. Three years later, she received her bachelor’s degree in criminal justice with a minor in political science from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. In 2003, Motley graduated from Marquette University Law School, where she also earned a master’s degree.

     After graduating from law school, Motley worked with the Wisconsin State Public Defender’s office as an attorney. For five years, she worked in Racine and Milwaukee until the summer of 2008, when she quit her job and joined a nine-month-long legal education program funded and run by the U.S. State Department in Afghanistan to train and mentor Afghan lawyers. After a year with the program and having trained hundreds of Afghan lawyers, Motley quit the program and began directly representing clients in Afghanistan, earning herself the position of the first foreign lawyer to litigate in Afghanistan’s civil and criminal courts. Among her many legal successes in Afghanistan, which include obtaining an early release for a client through the presidential office, one notable case involved a British citizen within the anti-corruption courts. In 2010, the Afghan District Attorney’s office threatened to arrest Motley if she were to return to Kabul as a result of her criticism of the country’s judicial system. Despite the risk of arrest as well as rape and death threats, Motley returned without hesitation to serve her clients.

     Over the 12 years of her professional career, Motley has achieved many successes and has developed a seemingly bottomless well of knowledge concerning international human rights and civil rights. Her research and legal work are extensive, extend globally, and have been featured in the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, and on CNN and the BBC. She has been a guest speaker for the U.S. State Department, Marquette Law School and UNICEF. Most prominent among Motley’s many publications is her 2019 book, Lawless: A Lawyer’s Unrelenting Fight for Justice in a War Zone. With the recent takeover of Afghanistan by the Taliban on Sunday, August 15, the future of Attorney Motley’s work in that nation is uncertain. Away from Parliament, Forsgrén lives with a roommate in Helsinki and thoroughly enjoys cooking for friends. She said she hopes to visit Ethiopia someday but does not feel compelled to track down her biological parents.

 

 

 


03/03/22 10:35 AM #3222    

 

Kenneth Davis




03/04/22 11:35 AM #3223    

 

Kenneth Davis

T H O U G H T   F O R   C O N S I D E R A T I O N 

     Any time women come together with a collective intention, it's a powerful thing. Whether it's sitting down making a quilt, in a kitchen preparing a meal, in a club reading the same book, or around the table playing cards, or planning a birthday party, when women come together with a collective intention, magic happens.

~Phylicia Rashad~

RITA GERTRUDIS BOSAHO (1965- )

     Rita Gertrudis Bosaho is the first person of color, male or female, to be elected to a seat in the Spanish Parliament. She was born Rita Gertrudis Bosaho on May 21, 1965, in Malabo, the capital city of the coastal central African nation of Equatorial Guinea, a former colony of Spain. Upon the death of her birth parents at age 4 she was brought to Spain with a relative to escape political turmoil in the country. She next lived with a white military foster family in Cadiz before finally settling in the southeastern port city of Alicante. Though her foster parents were compassionate and helped her to feel pride in her African heritage, Bosaho avoided questions about her early life which she characterized as “a bit traumatic.” Being the only black in every class she took until she reached the University of Alicante, she was repeatedly asked by police to prove her identity, a practice that she says encouraged a certain “Afroconciencia” (African consciousness) noticed by everyone around her.
     For more than two decades Bosaho supported herself and her son as a nurse’s aide and as a media technician at the University General Hospital of Alicante during which time she earned a bachelor’s degree in history, a master’s degree, and worked toward a doctorate at the University of Alicante. The start of the world economic downturn in 2008 spurred the Spanish government to resort to austerity measures which particularly distressed working-class citizens and drew her into political and social activism. In 2014 Bosaho helped found the left-wing populist political party, Podemos, in her town. Her reputation as an advocate for human rights, equal rights for women, and racial and ethnic minority groups were critical when party leaders concerned with diversity both in the party and in government scrutinized candidates for elected office. A failed run for a seat in Parliament in May 2015 was followed by a successful campaign seven months later that put her in the Congress of Deputies, the lower house of Parliament. In January 2020, Bosaho was appointed Director of Equal Treatment and Ethnic-Racial Diversity in the Ministry of Equality headed by Irene Montero. She has been affiliated with such socially conscience groups as the Culture and Solidarity Project, the Association of Mediators, Social and Tropical Social Affairs of the Valencian Community, and the Feminist Platform of Alicante.
     Roughly 12 percent of Spain’s population are immigrants, and though not known for the kind of blatant racism evident in other European countries, occasional incidents involving people of African ancestry have made headlines. Said Bosaho: “I feel humbled and proud and hope I can empower minorities. . . There are lots of people who don’t understand that I’m Spanish. They see that I’m Black and think those two things can’t go together.” She continues to maintain a keen interest in African affairs and for many years has collaborated with the NGO called Proyecto Cultura y Solidaridad (Culture and Solidarity Project) which does humanitarian work in Africa and Latin America. Bosaho has visited her native Guinea and has reiterated: “I am Hispanic-Guinean and I am interested in the problems of the people on both shores.”

 


03/04/22 05:53 PM #3224    

 

Kenneth Davis

     Greetings Warrior Family. An additional pledge has been received from Jacqueline Franklin. As acknowledged previously, transparency will always be my objective. Here's the update, as promised, on funds received. You've donated enough to renew 3 years at the Premiun level and just shy of the 3 year Platinum level. I anticipate additional receipts prior to the next update on Friday March 11th. Thank you to all who have contributed to this noble effort and also to those who have mailed their contribution.

 WEBSITE SUBSCRIPTION RENEWAL LEVELS 

                  Monthly    1 Year    3 Years    5 Years    10 Years     
  Premium   $16         $165       $385        $495          $825
  Platinum   $21         $220      $495        $660         $1099

 FUNDS RECEIVED TOWARD RENEWAL 

  AS OF MARCH 4, 2022 -  A GRAND TOTAL OF $450.00

 


03/04/22 10:54 PM #3225    

 

Audrey Johnson (Johnson)

Thanks Kenneth for helping me get back on the website.I have a lot of catching up to do.

 


03/05/22 12:05 PM #3226    

 

Kenneth Davis

 T H O U G H T   F O R   C O N S I D E R A T I O N 

Loving oneself isn't hard, when you understand who and what 'yourself' is. It has nothing to do with the shape of your face, the size of your eyes, the length of your hair or the quality of your clothes. It's so beyond all of those things and it's what gives life to everything about you. Your own self is such a treasure.

~Phylicia Rashad~

KEDIST DELTOUR (1997- )

     Kedist Deltour was a most unlikely winner of the 2021 Miss Belgium beauty pageant. At the time she was 24 and a native of East Africa. Born in Ethiopia’s capital city of Addis Ababa on July 29, 1997, Deltour was the oldest of three children. When Kedist was 8, cancer claimed her mother who was soon replaced by a cruel stepmother who beat and barely fed her. Family dysfunction quickly led to her father dropping Deltour and her siblings off at an orphanage. Abandoned, she struggled to assume the responsibility of parenting her younger siblings. Fortunately, at age 10, she, her 7-year old brother Haile, and 3-year-old sister Tsion were adopted by Peter Deltour and Nadège Debeer, a couple from Belgium who, not wanting to separate the children, adopted all three and took them to their home in Westhoek in Dutch-speaking West Flanders. When she became an adult Deltour moved to Nazareth, East Flanders, Belgium where she trained and worked as a hairdresser. It was here she entered her first beauty pageant and was picked Miss East Flanders in early 2021. When she relocated to Harelbeke in West Flanders she entered the Miss Belgium contest, held at Proximus Theatre in Adinkerke, De Panne. The pageant was held without an audience due to COVID-19 restrictions.

     Deltour, age 23, standing 5 feet 8 inches, was first selected Miss Model before winning the main event over 33 contestants to be crowned Miss Belgium on March 31, 2021. Her victory prize was a new pink Volvo, and she earned the opportunity to participate in the upcoming Miss Universe contest in September in Manila, Philippines, and possibly becoming the first Belgian ever to win the international tournament. Three weeks later after becoming Miss Belgium, Deltour visited Sint-Truiden at the invitation of European Parliament member and alderman Hilde Vautmans. Due to the pandemic their traditional meeting at the European Parliament in Brussels was postponed. Instead, she toured the city renowned for its fruit tree blossoms. In early July 2021 she participated in the Miss Belgium For Children Fund, established by the Pelicano Foundation with the mission of combating childhood poverty in her country. Afterward she became the ambassador for the Foundation and agreed to show up at venues and assist in fundraising.


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