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» History For Sale
After lots of familial in-fighting, a probate judge has ordered an New York-based auction house to sell valuable Rosa Parks memorabilia, preferably to a museum or university. The auction will include a number of handwritten letters as well as "her presidential and congressional medals, a post card from Martin Luther King Jr. and the hat Parks is believed to have been wearing on Dec. 1, 1955, when she refused to give up her bus seat to a white man, cementing her spot in civil rights history." [MSNBC] |
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Don't You?
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Look! Black soldiers! In a World War II movie! Something tells me Clint Eastwood won't be invited to the premiere. Luckily, Spike Lee's Miracle at St. Anna is coming out before George Lucas's Tuskegee Airmen film. |
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Clint Eastwood Strikes Back
A guy like Spike Lee is never going to shut his face. Just so Clint knows. |
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Despite getting a good amount of press, the eBay auction of Bill Cosby's old Cosby Show sweaters, the proceeds from which will go to the Hello Friend/Ennis Cosby Foundation (a good cause!), was without a single bidder as of 8:45 this morning. It is because they are unspeakably ugly? Or maybe it's that $5 grand minimum bid? Its a small price to pay for a piece of television history. The bidless auction gets put out of its misery on June 12. [NYM] |
![]() History In The Making
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![]() These are trying times for the music industry. No one knows that better than Sony execs, who have recently begun to sell the classic photos taken by Columbia Records staff photographers in the 50s, 60s, and 70s to the highest bidder. The New York Times got its hands on a few, including one of Sly Stone in 1973, above, as well as a shot of Muhammad Ali recording "I Am The Greatest," and in-studio shots of Miles Davis and Billie Holiday. |
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R.I.P.
![]() Henderson joined the case when the NAACP asked 13 local black parents (including Oliver Brown), whose children were being bused to an all-black school across town, to join the case. The rest is history. “None of us knew that this case would be so important and come to the magnitude it has,” Henderson told the Dallas Morning News in 1994. “What little bit I did, I feel I helped the whole nation.” |
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Should They Continue To Be Banned?
They have names like "Jungle Jitters," "Coal Black and the Sebben Dwarves," and "All This and Rabbit Stew (see left)," and feature cartoon images of blacks that would get an animator at the Disney Channel fired before you could say "Sambo" if he or she tried to produce them now. But these Warner Bros. shorts were made in the 30s and 40s and a part of a group of cartoons dubbed the Censored 11. None of us are supposed to be able to see them (hence, the Censored 11). Yet, many of them can be found on YouTube. What gives? According to the New York Times, reps from Warner Bros. are sending out cease and desists as fast as they can, but it's really hard to keep a video off of the internet once it's already gone up. Does it matter, though? How harmful are these old, racist images in a modern world? CONTINUED » |
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Not to be outdone by CNN and its new documentary series about being black in America, MSNBC is airing a documentary Friday called Meeting David Wilson. It's about a young black man named David Wilson who, in the course of researching his family's history, finds the descendant of the white family that owned his ancestors. The man's name is also David Wilson. The documentary airs Friday at 9pm, and it will be followed by a 90-minute "conversation" about race moderated by Brian Williams. |
![]() CNN will launch a four-month-long on-air and online series called CNN Presents: Black in America tonight with Eyewitness to Murder: The King Assassination, a two-hour documentary commemorating the 40th anniversary of MLK's death. Two more documentaries, one about black women and the other about black men, will air in July. |
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So Florida's sorry. Does that heal race relations any? Not really. But as long as the legislature feels good… Next up, Florida should apologize for screwing their residents out of a primary vote. [NYT] |