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Extracted with permission of the author.
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Note 157.0 Black History Events in New England 4 replies
REGPRO::LAW 37 lines 28-JAN-1988 22:17
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Black History Events In New England
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F Y I AND AWARENESS
PLEASE PASS THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION ONTO FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS
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Subject: BLACK HISTORY MONTH EXHIBIT IN NASHUA
As part of its tribute to Black History Month, Digital is pleased to
sponsor a month-long Smithsonian Museum exhibit entitled "Black Women:
Achievement Against the Odds." The Business and Professional Women's
Heritage Association is organizing the exhibit.
A reception will kick off the exhibit at 2 p.m. on February 7 at the
Nashua Center for the Arts located at 14 Court Street. The exhibit
chronicles the accomplishments of black women in history. Among the
distinguished achievers featured are civil rights activist Rosa Parks,
author Maya Angelou and singer Bessie Smith. For additional
information about the exhibit, call (603) 424-6513 or (603) 883-9740.
DICK GREGORY
Will be speaking at the Shrewsbury
facility on Wednesday, February 24, 1988
at 11:00 in the Amphitheater.
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Note 157.1 Black History Events in New England 1 of 4
REGPRO::LAW 62 lines 29-JAN-1988 12:03
-< Black History Calendar >-
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BLACK HISTORY MONTH SCHEDULE (APO/CTC)
FEBRUARY 1988
+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| | Movie: King | | Movie: King | |
| | Montgomery to| | Montgomery to| |
| | Alabama | | Alabama | |
| | Part I (APO) | | Part II (APO)| |
| | 11:45 - 12:45| | 11:45 - 12:45| |
+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+
| 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
| | | Black History| * | * |
| | | Trivia Game | | |
| | | (CTC) | | |
| | | 11:45 - 12:45| | |
| | | First | | |
| | |Encounter C/R | | |
+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+
| 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 * | 19 |
| * | Movie: | * | Movie: | * |
| | Mandela | | Mandela | |
| | Part I (APO) | | Part I (APO) | |
| | 11:45 - 1:00 | | 11:45 - 1:00 | |
| | | | | |
+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+
| 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |
| Selected | | * | Discussion: | Soul |
| Poetry | | |"State of | Food |
| Reading (CTC)| | | Being Black | Lunch |
| 11:45 - 1:00 | | | in the U.S."| (APO/CTC) |
| First | | | (APO) | Cafeteria |
| Encounter C/R| | | 11:45 - 1:00 | |
+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+
Additional Activities:
o Red, Black, & Green ribbons and display.
o Message tents, Black history facts, cafeteria tables.
o Other facilities *
- Luncheon, February 12, Parker Street, 11:30 - 1:00.
- Speaker: Dick Gregory, February 24, SHR - Amphitheater, 11:00a.m.
- Movie Series: Eyes On The Prize, February 11, 12, 15, 17-19,
CHM - Whittier C/R, 11:45 - 1:00.
For Additional Information Contact:
APO - Kevin McFall, HAZEL::MCFALL, DTN 289-1803
Karen Wharton, KELVIN::WHARTON, DTN 289-1882
CTC - Lorna Anderson, CADSE::LANDERSON, DTN 287-3377
Loretta Williams, CADSE::WILLIAMS, DTN 287-3396
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Note 157.2 Black History Events in New England 2 of 4
FDCV11::SMITH 50 lines 29-JAN-1988 13:14
-< BLACK HISTORY EVENTS IN THE BOSTON AREA >-
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Multimedia event sponsored by the Mass. College of Art, the Jazz
Coalition and Roxbury Community College "A CELEBRATION OF BLACK
AMERICAN AND SOUTH AFRICAN POETRY AND MUSIC", features an
international program of poets and musicians.
Feb. 3, 7:30 p.m. at the Tower Auditorium, Mass College of Art,
621 Huntington Ave. Tickets $4, student and elder discounts.
Telephone 232-1555, ext. 504
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The Underground Railway Theater of Cambridge presents "ARE YOU
READY MY SISTER?" a multimedia program about Harriet Tubman and
a Quaker woman who helped fugitive slaves.
Feb. 2, 7:30 p.m. Villa Victoria Cultural Center, 85 West Newton
St., Boston. Tickets $8 adults, $4 children. Telephone 497-6136.
Feb. 4, 3:00 p.m. Lower Mills Library, 27 Richmond St., Dorchester.
Free. Telephone 298-7841.
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MAYA ANGELOU, author of the acclaimed autobiography "I KNOW WHY
THE CAGE BIRD SINGS," speaks on "Civil Rights," Feb. 7 at Regis
College.
Feb. 7, 7:oo p.m. Lower Student Union at Regis College, 235
Wellesley St., Weston, Mass. Free. Telephone 893-1820,
ext. 2039.
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Rhode Island storyteller LEN CABRAL, who uses mime, poetry and
song in his telling of tales of the Caribbean, Cape Verde
Islands and Africa, is one of the many special performers
celebrating Black History Month at the Boston Children's Museum,
300 Museum Wharf, Boston, Mass.
Feb. 17, 1 and 2 p.m. Free with admission: adults $4.50, ages
2-15 and elders $3.50. For a complete schedule, telephone
426-6500.
***************************************************************
THE ART OF BLACK DANCE AND MUSIC, performed by the Cambridge-based
dance and music performance company led by director De Ama Battle.
The perform East African music and dance with traditional costumes
and instruments.
Feb. 20-21 at 1 and 2 p.m. in Cahners Auditorium at Boston Museum
of Science, Boston, Mass. Free with admission. Telephone 723-2500.
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Note 157.3 Black History Events in New England 3 of 4
FDCV11::SMITH 35 lines 29-JAN-1988 13:32
-< BLACK HISTORY EVENTS IN THE BOSTON AREA >-
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THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE, a cabaret-style collection of music poetry
and literate, of the 1920's developed by artistic director
Bart Mc Carthy. The program includes music by Cab Calloway and
Bessie Smith, writings by Langston Hughes and Zura Neale Hurston,
and biographical setch of W.E.B. Dubois.
Feb. 25-27 and March 3-5 8 p.m. at the Cambridge Muticulture Arts
Center, 41 Second St. Tickets $10. Telephone 577-1400.
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The late Dr. Martin Luter King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech will
be screened Feb. 7 at the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum,
at Columbia Point, during a month-long film series on the civil
rights movement.
The films show at 2:30 p.m. daily; free with admission. Adults
$2.50, elders $1.50, children under 16 free. Telephone 929-4500.
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The Museum of Afro-American History and Boston Arfican American
National Historic Site hosts the annual SOJOURNER TRUTH LECTURE
SERIES, at the African Meeting House, 8 Smith Court, Beacon Hill.
"Voices of the Community: Poetry and Historical Readings,"
opening reception, 3:30 p.m., Jan. 31. "The History of Black
Journalism," with speaker journalist Ethel L. Payne, Feb. 2;
The Power of Television in the Making of Black History,"
co-sponosred by the School of Journalism at Northeastern University
Feb. 9; "Presidential Politics and the Black Vote: Promises Made
and Promises Broken," panelists include representatives of the
Presidential candidates, moderated by the Harvard Law School
Professor Charles J. Ogletree, Feb. 16. Lectures begin at
6:30 p.m.; light refreshments.. Free
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Note 157.4 Black History Events in New England 4 of 4
FDCV11::SMITH 18 lines 29-JAN-1988 13:40
-< "EDUCATION AND EMPOWERMENT OF BLACK WOMEN >-
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The challenges faced by Black Professional Women are addressed in
two programs. At Simmons College, Gail Snowden, vice-president
of the Bank of Boston moderates a panel discussion of "BLACK
WOMEN IN BUSINESS,".
Feb. 10 7:30 p.m. at the Graduate School of Management, Case
Room Building, 451 Marlborough St., Boston. Telephone 738-2124.
Free.
******************************************************************
Jehnnetta Cole, the first black woman president of Spelman College,
speaks on "EDUCATION AND EMPOWERMENT OF BLACK WOMEN: Necessity
for a New Era," at the Faculty Lounge, Healey Library, 11th Floor,
UMass-Boston Harbor Campus.
Feb. 11 3:30 p.m. Telephone 929-8631. Free.
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| EARNINGS AND INCOME BY RACE AND SPANISH ORIGIN
White Black Spanish Origin (3)
Median Income (1)
Male 12,357 7,745 9,236
Female 4,394 4,023 4,161
Median family income 20,502 11,644 14,569
% of families earning:
less than 10,000 17.7 43.1 31.7
15,000--25,000 30.2 22 27.9
25,000 and over 36.7 17.1 20.7
% of persons below
the poverty line: (2) 8.0 26.6 21.6
(1) For all persons over 15 years old who had an income.
(2) Figures include only people 15 years and older
(3) ... the vast majority of Hispanic-Americans are from groups with
established communites in this country. This fact helps to account in part
for the statistics in the table that indicate higher income for people
of Spanish origin than for blacks. In recent years, however, the incredible
growth in the number of illegal aliens from Spanish-speaking countries
(especially Mexico and Cuba) have made such income figures suspect at best.
Source: Bureau of Census, Population Characteristics: Population Profile
of the United States, (1980)
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The figures are not up-to-the-minute but doubtless the pattern still
holds true. Why such an "old" table? Because after three hours of combing
the library, this was the only large scale, reliable set of figures I could
find relating to sex, race, and income. Perhaps one of the statisticans
among us might comment on this or cite a more recent source.
Blacknotes has a discussion concerning women's liberation, the civil rights
movement, and which are of political use to black women, the question that
prompted me to dig up this info. What I really want are stats on:
sex, race, last year of education (8th grade, high school, BA, Ph.D
Meigs
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