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Showing posts with label holiday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holiday. Show all posts

Monday, January 30, 2012

Hail to the Chief: Little Known Facts on our Nation's Leaders

by Keith Wagner
Every president has something to hide. In honor of Presidents’ Day, here are some intriguing facts.
George Washington was the only president ever to win office with no opponent. He also had only one real tooth, at times wearing dentures of various materials such as human teeth, animal teeth, ivory, or lead. Never wood. Guess his dentist had to draw a line.
Andrew Jackson, from Tennessee, was the only president to have been a prisoner of war, and was wounded in a duel at age 39. Beat a would-be assassin to death in the Capitol Rotunda after the assailant’s gun failed to fire.
Chester Arthur, a man about town, entertained lavishly and enjoyed going to nightclubs. “I may be President of the United States,” he once said, “but my private life is my own damn business.”
Teddy Roosevelt had the teddy bear named after him. He lost his sight in one eye while boxing at the White House.
Ronald Reagan was the first president to be divorced.
Barack Obama’s mother was from Kansas, his father from Kenya. Does not like ice cream because he worked in an ice cream shop as a teenager. Collects Spiderman and Conan the Barbarian comic books.
If you would like to read the rest: then follow this link http://www.littleknownfactsshow.com/presidents.html

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Who Was Martin Luther King, Jr.?


By Ajae Tyler
  
In the early ‘60s and even before that, there was no unity among races.  If it was not for Martin Luther King, Jr. we would still be going to different schools based on our skin color.

King was a strong leader, a person who believed in peace and justice to win more freedom for African Americans. We honor his birthday on the third Monday in January.

Dr. King was born on January 15, 1929. Early in his adult life, he became pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, AL. He soon became a member of the NAACP and led the bus boycott that ended segregation in public transportation.

From 1957-1968, he traveled six million miles and spoke over 25,000 times, with one massive protest in Birmingham, AL.

King is most famous for his seventeen-minute “I Have a Dream” speech that he delivered on August 28, 1963 at the Lincoln Memorial. In it he called for “racial equality and an end to discrimination.”

Dr. King died from an assassin’s bullet on April 4, 1968 in Memphis, TN while standing on the balcony of his hotel room.  Even though his life came to an abrupt end, he died fighting for what and who he believed in.

The legacy of Dr. King lives in each of us, and we are responsible to promote, teach and live the American dream he envisioned.