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Showing posts with label The Emeral Quill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Emeral Quill. Show all posts

Nov 14, 2014

"A Raisin in the Sun"-A Bit of History

 
On this day, Nov. 12, 1940, the Supreme Court ruled on a case that would inspire one of the seminal plays of the 20th Century, “A Raisin in the Sun.” The parents of Lorraine Hansberry, Carl and Nannie, a real estate broker and a schoolteacher, had left the Jim Crow South only to discover hostility in the North.
 
It was in 1937 that they tried to move into the all-white Washington Park section of... Chicago. Neighbors filed a lawsuit forcing the family out on the basis of restrictive covenants. Lorraine, the youngest of the couple’s four children, was eight years old at the time and witnessed violence against her family as her parents tried to stand their ground. The Hansberrys went to court to challenge the restrictive covenants and to return to the house they bought.

The case, Hansberry v. Lee, culminated in a 1940 Supreme Court decision that helped strike a blow against segregation, though the hostility continued. Neighbors surrounded their house at one point, throwing bricks and broken concrete, narrowly missing Lorraine’s head, and neighborhood children ganged up and attacked her at school.

 The experience would plant the seed for the 1959 play and later the film, “A Raisin in the Sun,” starring Sidney Poitier, Claudia McNeil and Ruby Dee. The play was based on the author's personal experiences in the Washington Park Subdivision of Chicago's Woodlawn neighborhood. It also stems from the  the poem "Harlem" by Langston Hughes:
What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a Raisin in the sun? 
 
It would not be until 1968 that the landmark Fair Housing Act (Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968) would officially prohibit housing discrimination in the United States. It also created the Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity.
 
 
Lorraine Hansberry reflected upon the litigation in her book To Be Young, Gifted, and Black:
"25 years ago, [my father] spent a small personal fortune, his considerable talents, and many years of his life fighting, in association with NAACP attorneys, Chicago’s ‘restrictive covenants’ in one of this nation's ugliest ghettos. That fight also required our family to occupy disputed property in a hellishly hostile ‘white neighborhood’ in which literally howling mobs surrounded our house… My memories of this ‘correct’ way of fighting white supremacy in America include being spat at, cursed and pummeled in the daily trek to and from school. And I also remember my desperate and courageous mother, patrolling our household all night with a loaded German Luger (pistol), doggedly guarding her four children, while my father fought the respectable part of the battle in the Washington court."

Her father would not live to see that day nor his daughter's Broadway triumph. Carl Hansberry, a Mississippian who had journeyed to Chicago during the Great Migration, never recovered from the family's housing ordeal. He died at age 50 in 1946 of a cerebral hemorrhage in Mexico, where he was planning to move his family out of disillusionment. Their house at 6140 South Rhodes is now a Chicago landmark and the beloved play their family's legacy.

Jun 8, 2013

Creating A Living Will: A Healthcare Directive


A living will is a legal document that a person uses to make known his or her wishes regarding life prolonging medical treatments. It can also be referred to as an advance directive, health care directive, or a physician's directive. A living will should not be confused with a living trust, which is a mechanism for holding and distributing a person's assets to avoid probate. It is important to have a living will as it informs your health care providers and your family about your desires for medical treatment in the event you are not able to speak for yourself.
Generally, a living will describes certain life prolonging treatments. You, the declarant, indicate which treatments you do or do not want applied to you in the event you either suffer from a terminal illness or are in a permanent vegetative state. A living will does not become effective unless you are incapacitated; until then you'll be able to say what treatments you do or don't want.

Jan 24, 2013

Wage Gap Crushing African American Women


There's so much negative trash being written in this country's media about African American women that it allows many Americans, Black and White, to look down their noses at my sisters of color. You've all heard the hype about the "angry Black woman" who's undesirable to most men. You've been told that Black women are lazy, promiscuous, and failures as parents. All in all, there's some efforts afoot to paint all of society's ills on the backs of African American women. Unfortunately, the propaganda has taken root in the psyche of some Black women, lowered their self esteem and wounded them deep within their souls. In view of all of this, I'm not sure whether to be violently mad or soulfully sad about this month's analysis on African American Women and the Wage Gap from the The National Partnership for Women and Families.

Jan 15, 2013

A Thinner Me in 2013-A Personal Journey



Like many of you, I've struggled with my weight for years and years.  I've tried every imaginable diet-high carb, low carb, high protein, low fat.Yes, I've tried Jenny Craig, Nutri-System and Weight Watchers.  I've lost a few pounds on each one, but fell off the diet, resumed my old eating and wound up heavier than when I started. But along the way, I learned a thing or two that helped me make important changes.

I'm lucky. About three weeks ago, I celebrated my 70th birthday surrounded by family and friends. My efforts over the past several years have resulted in a weight loss of eighty pounds. Now, I'm just "overweight" and no longer "obese". Ain't that grand.  I still have twenty more pounds to lose to reach my personal goal. I'm not alone...my entire family is committed to losing weight. It's not that we just want to look better, although that would be nice. We all want to be more healthy and avoid complications that accompany being overweight. Some family members have diabetes, and one has survived breast cancer. Some struggle with Lupus and others just feel the burden of carrying extra weight around every day. Some are young, or middle age or seniors...all of us plan to make dietary and lifestyle changes this new year.

Let's sift through some well-known and lesser know facts about obesity. Did you know that 70 percent of the over 60 population in America is overweight?  More than 40 percent of those 65 to 74 are classified as obese. Complications from obesity cost the United States $190 billion dollars in medical expenses every year. We all know that obesity shortens lives: An Oxford University study found that an obese person's life span is three to ten years shorter than that of someone age weight.about the same loss of life associated with smoking. Knowing all these things should give motivation to resolve to  the problem.

We know that losing weight gets harder as we grow older. Slowing metabolism, a loss in muscle mass and declining hormones...all of these things cause your body to store fat more easily. Did you know that adding to the challenge, our body actually sabotages our efforts to lose weight and keep it off. A recent New England Journal of Medicine study examined overweight adults who lost an average of thirty pounds by reducing the number of calories they consumed. Here's what they found. Two hormones that suppress appetite, Leptin and peptide YY, dropped significantly  after the weight loss and stayed low for a year. This isn't good- we need more leptin and peptide YY so we don't get hungry. Researchers found also that ghrelin, a hormone that increases hunger, rose and remained high for up to a year. Decline in appetite suppression and and an increase in hunger...talk about making things harder.

So what's a midlife dieter to do? Personally, I say forget about dieting and focus on changing your dietary and lifestyle choices. The thought of dieting makes one feel that this is something you'll do for a while, achieve your goal and return to past habits. I had to realize that I needed to make changes that I would embrace for a lifetime. In short, we need to know how certain food choices affect our bodies, so we can adjust our dietary choices accordingly to stay healthy and lose weight.


I'm looking forward to sharing information in future posts that will help steer us all to making better choices and lead us to a thinner me" in 2013. I hope my family will join in with personal stories that might prove helpful. If you have a story to tell, feel free to jump in and share your journey with us.
Watch for posts that continue my personal journey.

Movie Money Madness-Top 20 in 2012


The movie industry is making money, including a donation from Congress during the fiscal cliff psycho-drama.  The list of the highest grossing movies of 2012 held a few surprises.Despite the fact that certain movies won the disdain of critics, they won a spot in the top twenty money makers of 2012:

  • "Promethus" (20)        $126,477,084
  • "Lincoln"     (19)         $132,039,000
  • "21 Jump Street" (18)  $138,447,667
  • "Taken 2" (17)             $138,594,063
  • "Hotel Transylvania" (16) $143,923,820
  • "Snow White and the Huntsman" (15) $155,136,755
  • "Ice Age-Continental Drift" (14) $161,075,066
  • "Wreck It Ralph" (13) $175,665,000
  • "Men in Black 3" (12) $179,020,854
  • "Dr. Seuss' The Lorax" (11) $214,030,500
The top ten highest grossing films are a bit more predictable:

"Madagascar 3 -Europe's Most Wanted"" ranked number 10 grossing $216,319,482, followed by "Ted" at number 9, which pulled in $218,665,740. "The Hobbit- An Unexpected Journey", newly released in December, garnered the number eight spot with $222,703,000. Based on the record box office attendance, many more dollars are expected to boost the film's ranking in 2013. Many failed to notice the potential of the computer-animated film "Brave", produced by Pixar and distributed by Walt Disney Pictures. It took the number seven spot, grossing $237,236,938 in 2012. "The Amazing Spider-Man" tells a different side of the story of superhero Peter Parker. In this film, the Marvel Comics character wowed the audience and took spot number six with box office receipts of $262,030,663.

Now, with all that information behind us, I'm sure you've been waiting for the top five grossing films of 2012. I thought four of the five were already expected and only one surprise in the bunch.  Here's how they shook out:


Some say that "Breaking Dawn-Pt. 2" could be the worst movie of 2012 and the film made the worst picture list for the Razzies. The romantic fantasy tells the story of Bella beginning a new life after being brought back from near-death after the birth of their daughter. The film ranks number five on the highest grossing list with $283,023,753 in receipts. Not to shabby, for a worst picture candidate.

To my surprise the latest installment in the James Bond franchise "Skyfall" ranked number four on the list,  $289,600,000. The movie is the twenty third film in the series and stars Daniel Craig in his third role as Bond. Despite criticism from "Pulp Fiction" Director Quentin Tarrintino, Rumors of an Oscar nomination abounded and adding receipts from early 2013, the film has exceeded the billion dollar threshold. Adele's "Skyfall" is the critics choice for best song. "Skyfall" was nominated for five Oscars by the Motion Picture Academy.

"The Hunger Games", based on a New York Times Best selling trilogy written by Suzanne Collins, landed the number three spot. The science adventure blockbuster was victorious at the People's Choice Awards winning favorite movie, action movie, and movie franchise, along with favorite movie actress and favorite on screen chemistry awards. The film grossed $408,010,092 and the second book Catching Fire is scheduled for release in November 2013.

As expected, "The Dark Knight Rises" won high honors, taking the number two spot by banking $448,139,099 in receipts. It's eight years after Batman has been branded an enemy of Gotham, that he returns to face a new terrorist leader, the evil Bane, and save the city from doom. The movie is the final installment of the three part

Marvel's "The Avengers" took the number one spot in the race for highest grossing movie of 2012, raking in $623,357,910. Produced by Marvel Studios and distributed by Walt Disney Pictures, the film showcases Marvel Comics superheroes Iron Man, the Hulk, Thor, and Captain America who come together to save the earth.

Jul 14, 2012

Swaying Elections: If Felons Could Vote...

According to a Daily Beast report, a record 5.85 million convicted felons aren’t allowed to vote, according to a report out today (PDF) by The Sentencing Project, a criminal justice research and advocacy group. That’s about 500,000 more than were disenfranchised in 2004—and potentially enough to decide this year’s tightly-contested presidential election.

By some estimates, the election could be decided by a margin of roughly two points, or a mere 2.5 million people. The disenfranchised felon voting block is “absolutely enough” to swing an election, says Sasha Abramsky, author of Conned: How Millions Went to Prison, Lost the Vote and Helped Send George W. Bush to the White House.

May 10, 2012

Pundits Galore-Part One




You can call them pundits, commentators, analysts, contributors, strategist, or whatever, but there are many new faces in the media being paid to give their opinions, insights, projections and assessments on a variety of issues. Sweet Nothings spotlighted Black Journalists Max Robinson and Bernard Shaw for "Breaking Barriers" and paving the way for many of the people showing up on your news programs today.

With the 2012 Presidential Campaign in full swing, meet some of the media personalities addressing today's political issues.

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