Montgomery SGA Civil Rights Tour
Walking In Black History Trailer and PR
Join 40 teens and young adults from Erie on a journey of discovery to the landmarks of the American Civil Rights movement -- Birmingham, Tuskegee, Selma, Montgomery and more -- in WQLN-TV's premiere presentation of Walking In Black History, a film by Tom Weber, Thursday, Feb. 8, at 8 p.m.
June 2017 marked the 25th anniversary of the yearly bus trip, founded by Rev. Herlies Murphy, Pastor of Community Baptist Church in Erie, in 1992. Students from Erie area schools apply to go on the trip, which is free of charge to those who are selected. Weber rode along from start to finish, filming everything with a small handheld camcorder.
Gary N. Horton, Executive Director of the Urban Erie Community
Development Corporation, picked up the torch from Rev. Murphy and has led the annual trip for more than two decades. Mr. Horton is Executive Producer of the film.
One of the highlights of the film is a tree-planting ceremony in memory of Rev. Murphy at Canaan Hill Primitive Baptist Church, a significant point on the Selma-Montgomery Historic Trail.
On the first day, we visit the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham,
where four young girls lost their lives in a racist bombing in September 1963, as well as the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, a dramatic museum of the civil rights movement.
On the second day, we drive through Montgomery in the rain, briefly
visiting Alabama State University's sprawling campus and the Rosa Parks Museum and spending more time at the Southern Poverty Law Center. We then visit Canaan Hill and its sister congregation at Beulah Land, a few miles away, where we hear an inspiring sermon by Elder Tom Gardner and feast on roasted corn and Alabama-style barbecue.
We spend most of the third day in and around Tuskegee University, visiting school founder Booker T. Washington's residence, built from bricks made on campus by Tuskegee students. We also spend time at the George Washington Carver Museum, on campus, and at Moton Field, home of the world-renowned Tuskegee Airmen of World War II. A reception follows in the munipal building, with song and dance performances by some of the Erie students.
Leaving Tuskegee on the fourth day, we travel to Atlanta, where we visit the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change. This large complex includes Dr. King's birth home as well as the Ebenezer Baptist Church where he ministered, a comprehensive museum and library, and Dr. King and Mrs. Coretta King's crypt.
On the final day, we drive overnight to Washington, D.C., where a visit to the Martin Luther King Memorial on the National Mall provides a moment to reflect on what we have seen. The students strike up a rousing version of When The Saints Go Marching In over the final few miles back home to Erie.
The Dreamer, a song about Dr. King by the late Texas songwriter Tim
Henderson, is used throughout the film by permission of Henderson's widow Marian. The song is part of the permanent collection of the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis.
Weber is an Erie native with numerous independent films to his credit. His films that have previously aired on WQLN include A Few Things About Artists (2018), an exploration of visual arts and artists in the Erie area; 1000 (2017), a collaboration with Abdullah Washington that features local people striving for excellence; and The Trouble With Poets (2014), a performance documentary featuring locally based poets such as Washington, Sean Thomas Dougherty,
Monica Igras and Chuck Joy.
Walking In Black History, A film by Tom Weber
Join 40 teens and young adults from Erie, PA, on a journey of discovery to the landmarks of the American Civil Rights movement -- Birmingham, Tuskegee, Selma, Montgomery and more -- in Walking In Black History, the newest documentary by filmmaker Tom Weber. The film premiered Feb. 8, 2018, on WQLN-TV54 in Erie.
June 2017 marked the 25th anniversary of the yearly bus trip, founded by Rev. Herlies Murphy, Pastor of Community Baptist Church in Erie, in 1992. Students from Erie area schools apply to go on the trip, which is free of charge to those who are selected. Weber rode along from start to finish, filming everything with a small handheld camcorder.
Gary N. Horton, Executive Director of the Urban Erie Community Development Corporation, picked up the torch from Rev. Murphy and has led the annual trip for more than a decade. Mr. Horton is Executive Producer of the film.
One of the highlights of the film is a tree-planting ceremony in memory of Rev. Murphy at Canaan Hill Primitive Baptist Church, a significant point on the Selma-Montgomery Historic Trail.
On the first day, we visit the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, where four young girls lost their lives in a racist bombing in September 1963, as well as the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, a dramatic museum of the civil rights movement.
On the second day, we drive through Montgomery in the rain, briefly visiting Alabama State University's sprawling campus and the Rosa Parks Museum and spending more time at the Southern Poverty Law Center. We then visit Canaan Hill and its sister congregation at Beulah Land, a few miles away, where we hear an inspiring sermon by Elder Tom Gardner.
We spend most of the third day in and around Tuskegee University, visiting school founder Booker T. Washington's residence, built from bricks made on campus by Tuskegee students. We also spend time at the George Washington Carver Museum, on campus, and at Moton Field, home of the world-renowned Tuskegee Airmen of World War II. A reception follows in the munipal building, with song and dance performances by some of the Erie students.
Leaving Tuskegee on the fourth day, we travel to Atlanta, where we visit the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change. This large complex includes Dr. King's birth home as well as the Ebenezer Baptist Church where he ministered, a comprehensive museum and library, and Dr. King and Mrs. Coretta King's crypt.
On the final day, we drive overnight to Washington, D.C., where a visit to the Martin Luther King Memorial on the National Mall provides a moment to reflect on what we have seen. The students strike up a rousing version of When The Saints Go Marching In over the final few miles back home to Erie.
The Dreamer, a song about Dr. King by the late Texas songwriter Tim Henderson, is used throughout the film by permission of Henderson's widow Marian. The song is part of the permanent collection of the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis.
Weber is an Erie native with numerous independent films to his credit. His films that have previously aired on WQLN include A Few Things About Artists (2018), an exploration of visual arts and artists in the Erie area; 1000 (2017), a collaboration with Abdullah Washington that features local people striving for excellence; and The Trouble With Poets (2014), a performance documentary featuring locally based poets such as Washington, Sean Thomas Dougherty, Monica Igras and Chuck Joy.
Voting rights in the United States
The issue of voting rights in the United States has been contentious throughout United States history. Eligibility to vote in the United States is relevant at both the federal and state levels. In the absence of a specific federal law or constitutional provision, each state is given considerable discretion to establish qualifications for suffrage and candidacy within its own respective jurisdiction.
Originally, the U.S. Constitution did not define who was eligible to vote, allowing each state to determine who was eligible. In the early history of U.S., most states allowed only Caucasian males—who either owned property (i.e., at least 50 acres of land), or, had taxable incomes—to vote. Women could vote in New Jersey (provided they could meet the property requirement) and in some local jurisdictions, in other northern states. Non-white Americans could also vote in these jurisdictions, provided they could meet the property requirement. Freed slaves could vote in four states. Initially, unpropertied men and women—white citizens, slaves, and ex-slaves, alike—were largely prohibited from voting; however, by the time of the U.S. Civil War, most white men had been allowed to vote regardless of property ownership. Literacy tests, poll taxes, and even religious tests were some of the state and local laws used in various parts of the United States to intentionally deny immigrants (including legal ones and newly naturalized citizens), non-white citizens, Native Americans, and any other locally undesirable groups from exercising any voting rights that the federal government had granted them.
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Top Tourist Attractions in State Alabama: Travel Guide USA
Top Tourist Attractions in State Alabama: Travel Guide USA
Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham Zoo, Cheaha State Park, Civil Rights Memorial, Gulf Shores, Huntsville Botanical Garden, McWane Science Center, Mobile Bay, Point Mallard Park, Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail, US Space & Rocket Center, USS Alabama Battleship Memorial Park
Myron C. Fagan - Les Illuminati et le CFR (1967)
- S'abonner à la chaîne:
Il s'agit d'un enregistrement de 1967 de Myron Coureval Fagan, pour lequel j'ai mis des sous-titres en français. J'ai moi-même corrigé la traduction jusqu'à 23 minutes, ensuite c'est une traduction automatique. Aussi, ce qui serait bien c'est que vous m'aidiez à finir la traduction des sous-titres ; )
ici:
Myron Coureval Fagan (31 octobre 1887 - 12 mai 1972) est un dramaturge, réalisateur et producteur de cinéma américain. Il fut également essayiste de théories du complot, anticommuniste fervent et l'un des premiers à parler du complot Illuminati.
Myron Coureval Fagan fut le mari de Minna Gombell.
Il fut inspiré par John Thomas Flynn pour ses essais conspirationnistes.
Voici une liste de ses oeuvres:
Films :
1926 Mismates (scénariste)
1929 The Great Power (scénariste et réalisateur)
1931 Smart Woman (scénariste, adapté de sa pièce Nancy's Private Affair)
1931 A Holy Terror (scénariste)
Livres et articles :
1932 Nancy's Private Affair, A comedy in three acts
1932 Peter Flies High, A comedy in three acts
1934 The Little Spitfire, A comedy-drama in three acts
1948 Red stars in Hollywood: Their helpers, fellow travelers, and co-conspirators
1948 Moscow over Hollywood (published by R.C. Cary, Los Angeles)
1949 Moscow marches on in Hollywood (News-bulletin/Cinema Educational Guild)
1950 Reds in the Anti-Defamation League (Cinema Educational Guild. News-bulletin, May 1950)
1950 Reds in crusade for freedom! (News bulletin)
1950 Hollywood reds are on the run!
1950 Documentation of the Red stars in Hollywood.
1950 Reds in the Anti-Defamation League.
1951 What is this thing called anti-semitism? (News-bulletin / Cinema Educational Guild)
1951 Saga of Operation Survival (News-bulletin / Cinema Educational Guild)
1953 Hollywood backs U.N. conspiracy
1954 Red Treason on Broadway (Cinema Educational Guild)
1956 United Nations on trial in Washington, D.C (News-bulletin)
1962 Must we have a Cuban Pearl Harbor? (News-bulletin / Cinema Educational Guild)
1964 How Hollywood is brainwashing the people (News-bulletin / Cinema Educational Guild)
1964 Civil rights, most sinister tool of the great conspiracy (News-Bulletin)
1965 How greatest white nations were mongrelized, then negroized: That is the fate planned for the American people (News-bulletin)
1966 The UN already secret government of U.S.!: Our recall project can smash it! (News-bulletin)
1966 The complete truth about the United Nations conspiracy! (News-bulletin)
1967 You must decide fate of our nation!!!: The Negro (CFR) plot is our greatest menace! (News-bulletin)
1969 Proofs of the great conspiracy and how to smash it!!! (News-bulletin / Cinema Educational Guild)
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2017 University Commencement - California State University, Fresno
The 106th University Commencement at California State University, Fresno was held on May 20, 2017, at the Save Mart Center.
Exposing the Illuminati, Freemasonry and CFR - 1967 Recording
I know it's over 2 hours but it's worth listening to the whole thing and it applies to EVERY NATION in the world 2019.
This is a full historical account of the Illuminati, the Council of Foreign Affairs, the House of Rothschild, every political family in the Western World, and the reasons for various wars.
1967-1968 Fagan recorded The Illuminati and the Council on Foreign Relations, three LP records documenting the activities of the house of Rothschild known as The Illuminati which were produced by Anthony J. Hilder.
The full history of the Illuminati, how it started and what they want from us. He gives an account of all the lies we have been duped into believing as well as what they are planning for the future - some of which has already come true since he recorded it 51 years ago. - INCLUDING THE WAR ON TERROR AND THE MUSLIM THREAT.
Here is a link to the written transcript:
Biographical Info: And
here at Wikipedia:
Third Rail Series Lecture: Michael Waldman on The Fight to Vote
n his new book, The Fight to Vote, Waldman takes a succinct and comprehensive look at a crucial American struggle: the drive to define and defend government based on “the consent of the governed,” offering a current, readable history of voting rights in the United States. Waldman traces the full story from the Founders’ debates to today’s challenges: a wave of restrictive voting laws, partisan gerrymanders, and the flood of campaign money unleashed by Citizens United. Amid this topsy turvy election season, Waldman’s book is a needed reminder that voting rights have never been – and are still not – a guarantee. Michael Waldman is the President of the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law.
As CSREA's annual signature event, the Third Rail Series aims to address some of the most thorny and contentious social, political and cultural issues related to race and ethnicity in contemporary society.
Cosponsored by the Office of Institutional Diversity, the Swearer Center for Public Service, and the Center for Prisoner Health and Human Rights.
April 21, 2016
Brown University
Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America (CSREA)
For more information:
An Evening with Rev Jeremiah Wright
Fresno State's Africana Studies Program and the 2015 Black Popular Culture Lecture Series and Online Research Archive present...
An Evening with Rev. Dr. Jeremiah Wright
March 2, 2015
The event was an oral history project and a free event attended by students, staff, faculty, and the Fresno community. This was a not-for-profit event.
2018 Martin Luther King Jr. Commemoration
Duke University’s 2018 Service of Celebration, at 3 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 14, will include a keynote speaker, music and dance.
President Obama Honors the 2014 Medal of Freedom Recipients
President Obama honors the 16 recipients of this year's Presidential Medal of Freedom -- the Nation’s highest civilian honor, presented to individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors. November 24, 2014.
The Talsky Center 2018 Lecture Series: The Half-Life of Freedom: Race and Justice in America Today
This lecture is presented by Jelani Cobb, Ira A. Lipman Professor, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism; staff writer at The New Yorker where he has penned many articles including “The Anger in Ferguson” and “Murders in Charleston”; recipient of the Writer’s Guild of America award for his TV series “Policing the Police” airing on PBS Frontline.
The Lori E. Talsky Center for Human Rights of Women and Children
Educates students and the broader community about international human rights and humanitarian law. Find out more at:
Evil runs this Satanic earth, 1967 Mr. Fagan describes truth about the CFR & Illuminati
This 3x LP record set from 1967 documents the activities of a secret society known as The Illuminati, and their New World Order. Mr. Fagan describes with documentary evidence how the ILLUMINATI became the instrument of the House of Rothschild to achieve a One World Government. Mr. Fagan relentlessly uncovered plots for major historical events. Myron Fagan is considered to be the archetype for the PCT (Paranoid Conspiracy Theorist) This Recording is one of the most interesting and yet horrifying, factual stories of some of the most sensational plots in the history of the world. The findings by Mr. Fagan were split into 6 parts, between these 3 records and are presented to you here, in full. Each record has some descriptive notes on the back of each jacket such as... *Eliminate the Illuminati...see that this message is heard!!! * Play this for the unaware, uninformed and well meaning people who desire to hear the truth. Don't waste your time on the hard core socialists who have already repudiated principle. * Buy Air-time with your club or organization! Get free time! No station is too small! * Use at coffees - Luncheons - meetings - everywhere and often. We must succeed - Our children's liberty is at stake - Freedom has no substitute - America no equal!
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DISCLAIMER: Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal.
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For Educational Purposes only!!
I am not putting this out as to make any money off this information. I am putting this out to educate others of the atrocities of the past, because we live in a time where history is not being taught in schools, and schools are filling the heads of hundreds of thousands of young children, and young adults with revisionist history, instead of real history. If this continues we are set to have history repeat its self and all of the death that follows. Thank you for your time.
This is a wake up call!!!
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Malcolm & Martin: Intersecting Visions of Justice
On Tuesday, September 17, 2019, the Muslim Students' Association, in collaboration with 33 campus units and 11 student organizations, hosted Imam Omar Suleiman for a keynote speech at the MLK symposium event, Malcolm & Martin: Intersecting Visions of Justice. Imam Omar was joined by UM's own Drs. Su'ad Abdul Khabeer and Stephen Ward for a dialogue and Q&A session. The focus of this event was advocacy, allyship, and the intersectionality and global nature of social justice.
The event program can be viewed at bit.ly/mxmlkprogram
A Conversation with Danny Lyon
“I am left feeling the people I photograph are the best people in America. I leave to the future the only thing I saw worth leaving.” –Danny Lyon, 1967
Danny Lyon once described the writer James Agee as, “a romantic who adored reality,” an epithet equally apt to characterize him. The photographer made a name for himself in the 1960s with an embedded style of reportage, capturing a compelling beauty in the places and people he befriended across the country, from student leaders of the civil rights movement to convicts in Texas prisons. Subsequently, Lyon turned to non-fiction film as a means to further explore the narrative strands of living reality. He has also continued to make photographs, expanding his focus beyond the United States to work in Colombia, Mexico, Haiti, and China, among other places, as well as turning the lens on himself and his family.
Lyon has described himself as having a short attention span and it is perhaps this that has driven him to explore such different worlds, from the emptiness of condemned buildings to the adventure of the open road. But the diverse subjects are united through his attentive respect; he gets to know his subjects as they really are—the good with the ugly—falls fleetingly in love with some, makes heroes of others. There is power in such attraction and, as Lyon has explained, fact can be discovered, “through forms and beauty. In the most beautiful pictures the truth is easiest seen.”
Drawn from the David Winton Bell Gallery collection, the exhibition presents photographs from four of Lyon’s most significant series—Memories of the Southern Civil Rights Movement (1962–1964), The Bikeriders (1963–1966), The Destruction of Lower Manhattan (1966–1967), and Conversations with the Dead (1967–1968)—supplemented by films. Disparate though their subjects are, the photographs engage in dialogue with each other across time, space, and circumstances.
The Only Thing I Saw Worth Leaving is organized around five such shared principles that Lyon has referred to time and again in discussing his work: empathy, freedom, history, destruction, and narrative. Each section of the exhibition brings together photographs from different bodies of work that engage one of these principles with particular sensitivity, alongside a core group of images from one of the series. This pairing was, to a certain degree, random; each of the series could have been matched with any term. This is the strength of Lyon’s vision, and the vital insistence of his subjects to be seen.
Brown University
November 1, 2018
African American Art Curator Talk
Virginia Mecklenburg, senior curator, explores the work of Jacob Lawrence, Norman Lewis, Lois Mailou Jones, Melvin Edwards, and other artists featured in the exhibition African American Art: Harlem Renaissance, Civil Rights Era, and Beyond. These artists participated in ongoing dialogues about art, black identity, and individual rights that engaged American society in the twentieth century. Using documentary realism, painterly expressionism, and the postmodern assemblage of found objects, they rewrote American history and its art.
Bending Toward Justice
Senator Doug Jones, author of Bending Toward Justice: The Birmingham Church Bombing that Changed the Course of Civil Rights, and William Baxley, former Attorney General of Alabama, discuss the decades-long efforts to prosecute the 16th Street Baptist Church bombers. Margaret Burnham, professor and founder and director of the Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Project at Northeastern University, moderates.
Civil Rights in Wichita
The newest Smithsonian museum recognizes Wichita’s role in the Civil Rights movement. How much do you know about that history? Hear from Dr. Gretchen Eick, a history professor at Friends University, who researched and wrote a book about this important time in our city’s past.
(We apologize, the first few moments of her presentation were cut off due to technical issues.)
Martin Luther King, Jr.: Life, Loss, Legacy
A Hutchins Center Symposium
Keynote Address by
Danielle Allen
James Bryant Conant University Professor at Harvard University
Director of Harvard's Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics