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ABORTION & FAMILY PLANNING

AFRICAN-AMERICAN

AIDS

AMERICAN INDIAN

ANIMAL PROTECTION

ASIA & ASIAN-AMERICAN

BLIND & VISUALLY IMPAIRED

CANCER

CHILD PROTECTION

CHILD SPONSORSHIP

CIVIL RIGHTS & ADVOCACY

CONSUMER PROTECTION & LEGAL AID

CRIME & FIRE PREVENTION

DISABLED

DRUG & ALCOHOL ABUSE 

ENVIRONMENT

HEALTH – GENERAL

HISPANIC

HOMELESSNESS & HOUSING

HUMAN RIGHTS

HUMAN SERVICES

HUNGER

INTERNATIONAL RELIEF & DEVELOPMENT

JEWISH & ISRAEL

LITERACY

MENTAL HEALTH & RETARDATION

PEACE & INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

POPULATION PLANNING

PUBLIC POLICY

SENIOR CITIZENS

TERMINALLY OR CHRONICALLY ILL

VETERANS & MILITARY

WOMEN’S RIGHTS

YOUTH DEVELOPMENT

YOUTH – RESIDENTIAL CARE

 

Why We Serve: Military Service!

Saturday, 21 February 2009 17:52
 
Why We Serve
The Book & Movie!

WhyWeServe.com was conceived January 5, 2006 by US JAYCEES Ten Outstanding Young American, Christopher Herring.  He currently has a book in development and a film documentary in production.  Why We Serve, the book, is an open project with inputs being received daily by military warfighers and their families who account of their deployments in Iraq, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and world hot spots.  Please continue to visit www.WhyWeServe.com and recommend it to Sailors, Soldiers, Airmen, and Marines who have a story to tell.

Sign up to receive special offers, advance notices of new Why We Serve books, the opportunity to be involved with select research projects, marketing offers of selected products and more!

Joy Keeper Announces Spring 2009 Fundraiser

Saturday, 21 February 2009 14:41

Executive Director of Joy Keeper, Barbara Campbell announced Resurection Baptist Church of Cibilo, Texas agreed to host a benefit concert to support Joy Keeper, breast cancer patient treatment services , and Students for Christ, annual fund drive.  The gospel concert will be on April 4, 2009 -- featuring Resurrection's winning choir who recently dropped their first CD.  Rosylyn Harris, Executive Director for Students for Christ, stated, "I am proud of the opportunity my board of directors provided making this dream concert a reality."

Resurrection's church has served the Cibolo and San Antonio worshippers in grand fashion.  The church has earned its stellar reputation facilitating the agendas of non-profit organizations as  a part of its' overall outreach. 

Following the concert, Joy Keeper will host it's 2nd Annual Golf Tournament on April 16, 2009 at the Silver Horn Golf Course.  The tournament will feature 144 Who's Who of San Antonio as they raise money for Breast Cancer Patients in San Antonio.  Christopher Herring, current Chairman for Joy Keeper, indicated the tournament will draw players who would prefer to drive the golf ball to raise money versus walking or running.  The event should be a blessing for the breast cancer patients who will benefit from the fund drive.  "We are hopefull the overall awareness to the seriousness of breast cancer will hopefully be conveyed so the peoiple will see the importance of supporting this organization" says Herring. He added "the Joy Keeper organization will seek support from local businesses and political leaders to make a difference." 

Immediately following the golf tournament, Joy Keeper will host the Second Annual Joy Keeper Ball at the Silver Horn Golf Course.  "Silver Horn has been very benevolent to be the 2009 host site."  Campell commeted, "After looking at the beautiful pictures and the weddings they host, I knew our "Pink after 5pm" affair would be eloquent and serve the purpose of recognizing the cause.  I am very excited about this year's possibility!"   

Joy Keeper has a $50,000 target for fundraising.  "We believe the combination of a benefit gospel concert, the golf tournament and the annual ball should produce the oportunity to raise the money and distribute the proceeds immediately to breast cancer patients in need" says Campbell.    "Last year's event was super...we expect the audience to be equally impressed this year."    For more information about Joy Keeper, email findacure23@joykeeper.org or visit their website at http://www.joykeeper.org/

 

 

Pictured Joy Keeper National Spokesperson:  Chantal Campbell

African American Heros

Sunday, 25 January 2009 00:00

Dr. Charles R. Drew

The American Red Cross called upon the leading experts in the field of blood collection and preservation, including Dr. Charles R. Drew, who had taught at Howard University's College of Medicine. The project Dr. Drew supervised paved the way for a national blood program that operated throughout World War II, providing 13 million pints of blood and plasma to wounded U.S. soldiers.

W. E. B. Du Bois

 

William Edward Burghardt Du Bois (pronounced /duːˈbɔɪz/) (February 23, 1868 – August 27, 1963) was an African American civil rights activist, leader, Pan-Africanist, sociologist, educator, historian, writer, editor, poet, and scholar. He became a naturalized citizen of Ghana in 1963 at the age of 95.

David Levering Lewis, a biographer, wrote, "In the course of his long, turbulent career, W. E. B. Du Bois attempted virtually every possible solution to the problem of twentieth-century racism—scholarship, propaganda, integration, national self-determination, human rights, cultural and economic separatism, politics, international communism, expatriation, third world solidarity."

W. E. B. Du Bois was born on Church Street on February 23, 1868, in Great Barrington, at the south-western edge of Massachusetts, to Alfred Du Bois and Mary Silvina Burghardt Du Bois, whose February 5, 1867, wedding had been announced in the Berkshire Courier. Alfred Du Bois had been born in Haiti. W. E. B. Du Bois detailed his French Haitian background in his autobiography:

Of grandfather's life in Haiti from about 1821 to 1830, I know few details. From his 18th to his 27th year he formed acquaintanceships, earned a living, married and had a son, my father, Alfred, born in 1825. I do not know what work grandfather did, but probably he ran a plantation and engaged in the growing shipping trade to the United States. Who he married I do not know, nor her relatives. He may have married into the family of Elie Du Bois, the great Haitian educator. Also why he left Haiti in 1830 is not clear. It may have been because of the threat of war with France during the Revolution of 1830 and the fall of Charles X.

Their son was born 5 months before the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, and added to the U.S. Constitution. Alfred Du Bois was descended from free people of color, including the slave-holding Dr. James Du Bois of Poughkeepsie, New York, a physician. In the Bahamas, James Du Bois had fathered three sons, including Alfred, and a daughter, by his slave mistress. Du Bois was also the great-grandson of Elizabeth Freeman (“Mum Bett”), a slave who successfully sued for her freedom, laying the groundwork for the eventual abolition of slavery in Massachusetts.

Althea Gibson

Born in Silver, South Carolina, Gibson was the daughter of sharecroppers and was raised in Harlem, New York City. She and her family were on welfare. Gibson had trouble in school. She ran away from home quite frequently. She excelled in horsemanship but also competed in golf, basketball, and paddle tennis.

Her talent for and love of paddle tennis led her to win tournaments sponsored by the Police Athletic League and the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. Musician Buddy Walker noticed her playing table tennis and introduced her to tennis at the Harlem River Tennis Courts. Dr. Walter Johnson, a Lynchburg, Virginia, physician who was active in the black tennis community, helped with her training.

With the assistance of a sponsor, Gibson moved to Wilmington, North Carolina in 1946 for tennis training, and in 1947 at the age of 20, she won the first of 10 consecutive national championships run by the American Tennis Association, the then-governing body for black tournaments. Forced to play in what was basically a segregated sport, at age 23 Gibson was finally given the opportunity to participate in the 1950 U.S. Championships after Alice Marble had written an editorial for the July 1, 1950, edition of American Lawn Tennis Magazine.

Marble said, "Miss Gibson is over a very cunningly wrought barrel, and I can only hope to loosen a few of its staves with one lone opinion. If tennis is a game for ladies and gentlemen, it's also time we acted a little more like gentlepeople and less like sanctimonious hypocrites.... If Althea Gibson represents a challenge to the present crop of women players, it's only fair that they should meet that challenge on the courts." Marble said that if Gibson were not given the opportunity to compete, "then there is an uneradicable mark against a game to which I have devoted most of my life, and I would be bitterly ashamed

 


 

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Observance Resources

Martin Luther King, Jr. Federal Holiday (15 Jan)
    Department of Defense Tribute
    King Center
    MLK Day of Service
    King Institute
    Nobel Prize Organization (Biography) 

      Randolph AFB's 2009 Program



Black History Month (Feb)
    Aboard the Underground Railroad
    African American Freedom Fighters Soldiers for Liberty
    African American History and Culture at the Smithsonian
    African American Mosaic
    Association for the Study of African American Life and History
    Carter G. Woodson, Father of Black History Month
    From Slavery to Freedom: The African American Pamphlet Collection 1822-1909
    Slavery and the Making of America
    The African American Migration Experience
    Tuskegee Airmen, Inc.
    The African American Yearbook



Irish American Heritage Month (Mar)
    American Irish Historical Society
    American Foundation for Irish Heritage



Women's History Month (Mar)
    Library of Congress
    National Park Service
    National Women's History Museum
    National Women's History Project
    Powers of Persuasion - Women's Posters
    Women in Military Service for America Memorial
    Women in the Armed Forces
    Women in the U.S. Army
    Experiencing War - Women of Four Wars



Greek Independence Day: A National Day of Celebration of Greek and American Democracy (Mar 25)
    American Hellenic Educational Progressive Association
    Center for Greek American Heritage



Holocaust Remembrance Day/Days of Remembrance (May)
    American Jewish Historical Society
    Anti-Defamation League
    Jewish American Heritage Month
    Jewish War Veterans
    National Museum of American Jewish Military History
    Planning Observances for Military Audiences
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum



Asian Pacific American Heritage Month (May)
    Asian Nation
    Asian Pacific American Heritage Association
    Asian Pacific Islanders in the US Army
    Federal Asian Pacific American Council
    Filipino American Centennial Commemoration
    National Museum of American History
    The Asian American Yearbook



Caribbean American Heritage Month (Jun)
    Caribbean American Heritage Month
    Caribbean Amerindian Centrelink
    Institute of Caribbean Studies
    U.S Rep. Barbara Lee (sponsor of Caribbean-American Heritage Month legislation)



Women's Equality Day (Aug 26)
    Library of Congress: American Memory Project: Votes for Women
    Not for Ourselves Alone (PBS)
    Rutgers University



Hispanic Heritage Month (Sep 15 - Oct 15)
    Assimilation Trajectories for Mexican American Families
    DOD Observance of Hispanic Heritage Month
    Hispanic Americans in Congress
    Hispanic Americans in the U.S. Army
    Hispanic Employment Program
    National Council of Hispanic Employment Program Managers
    National Council of La Raza
    National Park Service: Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month
    PEW historical Center
    Smithsonian Latino Center
    The Hispanic Youth Symposium
    The Hispanic Yearbook



National Disability Employment Awareness Month (Oct)
    Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
    Famous People with Disabilities
    Federal Employment of People with Disabilities
    Office of Disability Employment Policy Publications
    Presidential Task Force on Employment of Adults with Disabilities



German American Day (Oct 6)
    German American Day



American Indian Heritage Month (Nov)
    American Indian Heritage Month (DOD)
    American Indians in the United States Army
    Bureau of Indian Affairs (Dept. of the Interior)
    Indian Health Service
    Indians.org
    National Native American Veterans Association
    Native Americans in the U.S. Military
    Society of American Indian Government Employees



Miscellaneous
    U.S. Census Bureau - Minority Links
    Presidential Proclamations
    The Arab American Yearbook

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