Showing posts with label Walter White. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Walter White. Show all posts

November 13

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Augustine of Hippo (November 13, 354 – August 28, 430), also known as Saint Augustine or Saint Austin, was an early Christian theologian and philosopher whose writings influenced the development of Western Christianity and Western philosophy. He was the bishop of Hippo Regius (present-day Annaba, Algeria) located in the Roman province of Africa. He is the patron saint of brewers, printers, theologians, the alleviation of sore eyes, and a number of cities and dioceses. Many Protestants, especially Calvinists, consider him to be one of the theological fathers of the Protestant Reformation due to his teachings on salvation and divine grace. In his writings, Augustine leaves some information as to the consciousness of his African heritage. For example, he refers to Apuleius as "the most notorious of us Africans," to Ponticianus as "a country man of ours, insofar as being African," and to Faustus of Mileve as "an African Gentleman."

Birthdays

John Jordan "Buck" O'Neil (November 13, 1911 – October 6, 2006) was a first baseman and manager in the Negro American League, mostly with the Kansas City Monarchs. After his playing days, he worked as a scout, and became the first African American coach in Major League Baseball with the Chicago Cubs. In 1990, O'Neil led the effort to establish the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum (NLBM) in Kansas City, and served as its honorary board chairman until his death and was featured in Ken Burns' 1994 documentary, Baseball. In 2007 he was posthumously given a Lifetime Achievement Award named after him. He had fallen short in the Hall of Fame vote in 2006; however, he was honored in 2007 with a new award given by the Hall of Fame, to be named after him.

Georg Olden (born George Elliott Olden, November 13, 1920 - February 25, 1975) worked during World War II as a graphic designer for the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), forerunner of the CIA. After the war his supervisor in the OSS, Col. Lawrence W. Lowman, became Vice President of CBS's television division and recommended Olden to the agency's Director of Communications. In 1960 he left CBS to work for BBDO and other advertising agencies. He designed the Clio award as well as willing seven himself. In 1963, he designed a postage stamp for the United States Postal Service commemorating the centennial of the declaration of the Emancipation Proclamation, the first African-American to do so.

Benny Andrews (November 13, 1930 - November 10, 2006) served as a Staff Sergeant in the U.S. Air Force during the Korean war and later earned a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He had his first New York City solo art show in 1962. In 1969, he co-founded the Black Emergency Cultural Coalition to protest the fact that no African Americans were involved in organizing the Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibit “Harlem on My Mind.”
From 1982 to 1984, he was director of visual arts for the National Endowment for the Arts and in 1983 he was instrumental in forming the National Arts Program which is the largest coordinated visual arts program in the nation’s history. From 1968 to 1997, Andrews taught at Queens College, City University of New York and created a prison art program that became a model for the nation. In 2006, he went to the Gulf Coast to work on an art project with children displaced by Hurricane Katrina.

John Hill Westbrook (November 13, 1947 - December 17, 1983) was the first African American to play varsity football for the SWC, entering a game for the Baylor Bears on September 10, 1966, one week ahead of SMU's Jerry LeVias. Due to early injuries, Westbrook didn't have the outstanding college career that LeVias had and was not as well known. After graduating with a degree in English, Westbrook taught at Southwest Missouri State and Wiley College, and pastored Baptist churches in Tyler and Houston. He ran for Lieutenant Governor of Texas in 1978, placing second in the Democratic primary. He died at the age of 36 due to a pulmonary embolism.

Whoopi Goldberg (born Caryn Elaine Johnson, November 13, 1949) has been nominated for 13 Emmy Awards for her work in television, and is one of the few entertainers who have won an Emmy Award, a Grammy Award, an Oscar, and a Tony Award. Her first major film role was as Celie in The Color Purple (1985), for which she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress. She won the Best Supporting Actress Award five years later in Ghost, becoming the second African American to do so after Hattie McDaniel in 1940.


Events

On November 13, 1940, the U.S. Supreme Court in Hansberry v. Lee invalidated a racial covenant, ruling in favor of an African American man, Carl Hansberry, who bought a house in a formerly whites-only neighborhood. the justices reversed the Supreme Court of Illinois’ decision on the basis of the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process rights, arguing that it was unfair to allow the 54 percent of the neighborhood landowners who had signed the covenant to represent the 46 percent who had not. Carl Hansberry was the father of author Lorraine Hanberry.

On June 4, 1956 the federal district court ruled that Alabama's racial segregation laws for buses were unconstitutional. However, an appeal kept the segregation intact, and the Montgomery boycott continued. On November 13, 1956, the Supreme Court upheld the district court's ruling, leading to a city ordinance that allowed black bus passengers to sit virtually anywhere they wanted. The boycott officially ended December 20, 1956, after 381 days.

Photo Gallery

Walter White to James Weldon Johnson concerning the Ossian Sweet case, November 13, 1925. Typed letter. NAACP Records, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress (063.00.00) Courtesy of the NAACP [Digital ID # na0063]

President Obama and the U.S. delegation toast with Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama
 and the Japanese delegation at a dinner at the prime minister's official residence
following their bilateral meeting and joint press conference in Tokyo, November 13, 2009.

Publications

Jet Magazine, November 13, 1952

Thousands Attend Funeral for Hattie McDaniel - Jet Magazine, November 13, 1952

Blue Rage, Black Redemption: A Memoir by Stanley Tookie Williams.
$16.00. Publisher: Touchstone (November 13, 2007). 

The Beatitudes: From Slavery to Civil Rights by Carole Boston Weatherford. $11.56. Author:
Carole Boston Weatherford. Publisher: Eerdmans Books for Young Readers (November 13, 2009).
36 pages. Publication: November 13, 2009. With the text of the biblical Beatitudes as an
undercurrent, the story of the civil rights movement is told in lyrical text and stirring illustrations. 

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October 23


William Alexander Leidesdorff, Jr. (October 23, 1810 – May 18, 1848) was one of the earliest mixed-race U.S. citizens in California and a highly successful, enterprising businessman.  He became a United States citizen in New Orleans in 1834 and migrated to California in 1841, then under Mexican rule, settling in Yerba Buena (now San Francisco), a village of about 30 European-Mexican families. He served as US Vice Consul to Mexico at the Port of San Francisco beginning in 1845. and was President of the San Francisco school board and later elected as City Treasurer. Shortly before Leidesdorff's death, vast amounts of gold were officially reported on his Rancho Rio De los Americanos. By the time his estate was auctioned off in 1856, it was worth more than $1,445,000, not including vast quantities of gold mined upon his land.


Birthdays

Oliver Law (October 23, 1900 – July 9, 1937) fought for the Republic in the Spanish Civil War. He was the commander of the entire Abraham Lincoln Brigade for several days and commander of its Machine Gun regiment for much longer, becoming the first African American to lead an integrated military force in the history of the United States. He was killed on July 9, 1937, while leading an attack on Mosquito Ridge during the Battle of Brunete. He had previously served with the US Army from 1919 to 1925 in the 24th Infantry Regiment along on the Mexican border.

Samuel Harold "Sam" Lacy (October 23, 1903 – May 8, 2003) was a pioneering African American and Native American sportswriter, reporter, columnist, editor, and TV/radio commentator who worked in the sports journalism field for parts of nine decades. Credited as a persuasive figure in the movement to racially integrate sports, Lacy in 1948 became the first black member of the Baseball Writers Association of America.

Edson Arantes do Nascimento (born 23 October 1940), known as Pelé, is a retired Brazilian professional footballer (soccer player) who played as a forward. He is widely regarded as the greatest player of all time. Pelé has also been known for connecting the phrase "The Beautiful Game" with football. In 1999, he was voted World Player of the Century by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics (IFFHS). That year, France Football asked their former Ballon d'Or winners to choose the Football Player of the Century; they selected Pelé. In 1999, Pelé was elected Athlete of the Century by the IOC. (Photo by Patrick Lichfield)

Martin Luther King III (born October 23, 1957) is the oldest son and the oldest living child of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. He is the only one of his siblings to enter politics, and served as an elected county commission member in Fulton County, Georgia, the county encompassing most of Atlanta, from 1987 to 1993. In February 2009, King and his wife traveled to India, fifty years after his father and mother made the trip. During his stay in India, he led a delegation which included John Lewis and Andrew Young.

Michael Eric Dyson (born October 23, 1958) is an American academic, author, and radio host. He is a professor of Sociology at Georgetown University. Described by Michael A. Fletcher as "a Princeton Ph.D. and a child of the streets who takes pains never to separate the two", Dyson has authored or edited 18 books dealing with subjects such as Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr., Marvin Gaye, Nas's debut album Illmatic, Bill Cosby, Tupac Shakur and Hurricane Katrina. He became an ordained Baptist minister at 19 years of age and serves on the board of directors of the Common Ground Foundation, a project dedicated to empowering urban youth in the United States.


Katoucha Niane (October 23, 1960 - February 2, 2008) was a highly successful French model born in Guinea of Fula heritage. She hosted the TV show France's Next Top Model and starred in the film Ramata. She retired from modeling in 1994 to devote herself full-time to the fight against female circumcision, including writing her autobiography Dans ma char (In My Bones).



Events

On October 23, 1945, Jackie Robinson signed with the Class AAA Montreal Royals of the International League, a minor league team in the Dodgers' farm system. Robinson had played the 1945 season with the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro League and was signed for $600 a month, Dodgers General Manager Branch Rickey did not offer compensation to the Monarchs, believing all Negro League players were free agents due to the contracts' not containing a reserve clause.

On October 23, 1947, the NAACP sent a petition to the United Nations written by W.E.B. DuBois, Waalter White, and  others,  titled “An Appeal to the World.” The document stated, “We appeal to the world to witness that this attitude of America is far more dangerous to mankind than the Atom bomb; and far, far more clamorous for attention than disarmament or treaty.” It also included facts about lynching, segregation, education, health care, voting rights, and inequalities but was not considered for further action.

On October 23, 1951, the NAACP picketed the Stork Club in support of Josephine Baker, who had been refused admission to the club a week earlier. After a city-convened special committee called Baker’s charges unfounded, Thurgood Marshall called the findings a “complete and shameless whitewash of the long-established and well-known discriminatory policies of the Stork Club.”

On October 23, 1989, "M" Street High School in Washington DC was added to the National Register of Historic Places. It was founded in 1870 as the Preparatory High School for Negro Youth, moving to the 128 "M" Street NW location in 1890; in 1916 the name was changed to Dunbar High School in honor of poet Paul Lawrence Dunbar. The school was one of the most academically rigorous segregated high schools in the country for African Americans. Francis Cardozo and Anna Julia Cooper were two of its principals, and Carter G, Woodson was among the faculty. It closed shortly after the integration of the DC schools in 1954 and is now the Perry School Community Services Center. The building was designed by Thomas Entwistle.

Photo Gallery

On October 23, 1886 Wiley Jones operated the first streetcar system in Pine Bluff, Arkansas.

 Concert featuring the Four Tops, Stevie Wonder, the Temptations, and Martha and
the Vandellas at Veterans Memorial Auditorium, Columbus, Ohio, October 23, 1965

Koko Taylor and The Blues Machine, taken October 23, 1978 at a club called Sprangkullen
 in Gothenburg, Sweden. Bob Anderson is seen on bass. Photo © 1996 by Torsten Stahlberg.

The Official Portrait of the First Family, October 23, 2009. President Barack Obama and first lady
Michelle Obama are pictured with their daughters Sasha, 8, (left) and Malia, 11, (right).

Publications

Jet Magazine, October 23, 1952

President Truman in Harlem - Jet Magazine, October 23, 1952

Life Magazine, October 23, 1970 - Muhammad Ali

The October 23, 2013 cover of the NY Daily News

Rolling Stone, October 23, 2014

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