• Civil Rights

    Civil Rights Movement Events

    April 1948 Gladys Noel Bates, a teacher in the Jackson Public School system, filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court against the Jackson Public School Board for its refusal to pay black teachers and administrators salaries equal to those paid to whites with similar experience and educational background. May 17, 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas The Supreme Court, led by Chief Justice Earl Warren, ruled unanimously that segregation in public schools was unconstitutional. The court argued that segregation hurt both black and white students by instilling in each group false feelings of inferiority and superiority, respectively. The court added that the damage segregation did to blacks…

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    A Letter Arrives 66 Years Late

    The U.S. Postal System , established on Jul 26, 1775, doesn’t have a clue why the letter to Miss R.T. Fletcher was lost for so long. The postmark on this long lost WWII-era letter is Aug. 9, 1944. It was sent to Station Hospital, Camp Roberts which ranked, at that time, as one of the world’s largest military training facilities. But since the hospital is no longer there, having been torn down, it was instead delivered to Camp Roberts Historical Museum. Read more:  Letter arrives in California 66 years after it left Alabama

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    Largest Drought Areas in the U.S.

      We are in the largest U.S. drought area since 1954. Two larger area droughts were during the Dust Bowl in the years of 1934 and 1939. Extended wide covering droughts are disastrous in many ways: ruining crops, shrinking water supplies and exacerbating wildfires. Read more:   Areas in worst drought categories rise by 50 percent, US says

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    Time Travel in 1971

    Time magazine covered the historic flight made in October of 1971 that proved Einstein’s notion of Time dilation, an effect of Einstein’s theory relativity, takes place during everyday activities Abstract from Time article To most of the passengers on Pan American Flight 106 from Washington’s  Dulles  International Airport, it was simply a routine trip to London.  But for  Physicist Joseph C. Hafele and his companion, Astronomer  Richard Keating, it  was the beginning of a journey into the most  esoteric realms of modern science.  Occupying four seats in the big  747’s tourist compartment—two for themselves  and two for their  scientific gear—they were setting off on an extraordinary  round-the-world odyssey: an expedition to…

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    The Discovery of Machu Picchu in Dispute

    July 24, 1911 marks the day of Machu Picchu’s discovery by American archeologist Hiram Bingham. He wrote, “Surprise followed surprise until there came the realization that we were in the  midst of as wonderful ruins as any ever found in Peru,”. Yet there has been controversy over who actually discovered this ancient Inca settlement in Peru. Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/Binghams-List-In-Dispute.html#ixzz21MXGyhM7

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