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    WingzOnaPlane: Wakem Up Mixtape Sample

    en-usMay 18, 2012
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    About this Episode

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    Recent Episodes from Street Money Radio

    Write-in Shawn Eckles US House District 9

    Write-in Shawn Eckles US House District 9
    This past Monday (July 21) I was shocked by the words of Mooresville constituent. I was collecting the last of my required signatures to be an official “write-in” candidate for Congressional District Nine, and this young man wanted to talk a minute about issues. Well, halfway through that he says, “I would not send my kids to heroin high school.” He was referring to Lake Norman High School. I had already learned, since coming home to enter politics after my education, that serious narcotics were replacing alcohol and weed among Iredell County high schoolers. But for a school in my home county to be called “heroin high” really troubles me. From day one of my campaigns, I have said the right to liberty is the right to education. How can North Carolina or America claim either to love liberty or to love children and be cutting off their support of public education and many other resources to nurture and guide youth. Kids and young people generally are going to be looking for lots of interesting and fun activities, and if we the people do not help provide positively constructive activities, in schools, after school, and beyond, the terrible drugs are today so available, that the most ignorant or worst kids will lead our other children because we stopped doing our part. There's no excuse for this. In Raleigh and Washington there are politicians working to do anything other than help the people with government. They have only bogus reasons to cut, cut, cut; anybody who still buys the national debt panic is not paying attention. When you cut education and other community development activities, our kids are going to do more drugs and commit more crimes and ruin more lives. Other campaign news Supporters and friends, I am glad to announce that as of yesterday (July 22) the Election Board has certified me as fulfilling the signatures requirement to receive your vote in November as a write-in candidate. You recall some months ago I had to abandon my effort to obtain over 20,000 signatures (plus address, birthdate) to have my name appear on the November ballot as “unaffiliated.” So now I have completed an easier task by gathering a smaller number of voter signatures. And that frees up more time to campaign. More importantly, I made my first campaign speech at a public event Saturday (July 19). Though there was drizzle from the sky, the Inglewood Community Reunion at the ESC-Troutman Park was well attended, and I believe they liked my talk. I emphasized how Inglewood neighborhood was a very important part of my growing up because I learned many permanent lessons about friends, family and real community life. Tony Davenport, a teacher at North Iredell, was in the crowd, and Tony was in my speech. I knew Tony coming up in my hometown; after high school he took a college degree and came back home to become a teacher. I worry about the decisions in Raleigh and Washington to cut education funding maybe causing us to lose a good teacher and a good coach. “I always respected Tony's work and progress, and feel as though people should increase and not decrease the respect we have for men and women who work hard and succeed,” I said Saturday.
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    en-usSeptember 29, 2014

    Amelia Boynton Speaks About Trayvon Martin

    Amelia Boynton Speaks About Trayvon Martin
    Amelia Boynton Robinson (1911- ) is a leading civil rights activist who played a key role in efforts that led to passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. She is best known for her work in Selma, Alabama, where she helped Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. establish his headquarters and helped plan and lead the march from Selma to Montgomery that came to be known as "Bloody Sunday." She continues to work for civil and human rights with the Washington, D.C.-based Schiller Institute. One of 10 children, Robinson was born August 18, 1911, in Savannah, Georgia. Both her mother and father were of African, German, and Native American descent. Robinson's father, George Platts, was born in Brunson, South Carolina, in 1866, and her mother, Anna Eliza Hicks Platts, was born in 1874 in Beaufort, South Carolina. In her autobiography, Robinson describes her family life as "sheltered," an environment where church and biblical teachings were emphasized. Amelia Boynton Robinson (1911- ) is a civil Amelia Boynton RobinsonRobinson started her college education at Georgia State College (now Savannah State) and after two years transferred and graduated from Tuskegee Institute (now Tuskegee University), in Tuskegee, Alabama, earning a degree in home economics. (She later studied at Tennessee State, Virginia State, and Temple University.) She had two teaching jobs in Georgia before she took a position with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) in Selma as the home demonstration agent for Dallas County. Robinson educated the county's rural population about food production, nutrition, healthcare, and other subjects related to agriculture and homemaking. While in Selma, Robinson met Samuel William Boynton, the county extension agent, in 1930. She shared Robinson's passion for improving the lives of their African American neighbors, many of whom still worked on white-owned plantations as sharecroppers. Robinson and Boynton married in 1936 and had two sons, Bill Jr. and Bruce Carver, whose godfather was family friend George Washington Carver, the famed inventor and head of Tuskegee's school of agriculture. The couple would work side by side for more than 30 years to bring voting rights, property ownership, and education to African Americans in poor, rural areas of Alabama. In the mid-1930s, during the Great Depression, Robinson conceived the idea of building a community center for African Americans, as the local Selma community center excluded African Americans. When her efforts to secure government funding failed, she wrote a play, Through the Years, to bring Through the Years is a musical drama written Through the Years by Amelia Boynton Robinsonhope to the local African American community and raise the funds for the center. The play tells the fictional life story of Joshua Terrell, a man born into slavery who overcomes his difficult life circumstances to eventually become a U.S. congressman. The character was inspired by the half-brother of Robinson's father, Robert Hicks Smalls, a slave who later bought his freedom and became one of the first African American members of Congress, representing South Carolina during Reconstruction. Through the Years uses the African American spiritual, an unaccompanied style of song in the tradition of American slaves, to tell its story. The play was first performed in Selma at Hudson High School in 1936 and is still performed today across the world. In 1933, Robinson and Rev. Frederick Reece founded the Dallas County Voters League (DCVL). From the late 1930s through the 1950s, Robinson continued to conduct African American voter registration drives in Selma with little success. Despite her tireless efforts, it took nearly 30 years to achieve any measurable success in getting blacks registered to vote. In 1954, Robinson met Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife, Coretta Scott King, in Montgomery at the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, where King served as pastor. Her sister-in-law was a member at the church and invited her to meet King. She respected and followed the work King was doing, but it was not until January 1964 that they began working together. By 1964, the civil rights movement had gained momentum, and Robinson was at the forefront of the effort in Selma, despite the death of her husband the previous year. With violence and human rights abuses against African Americans escalating in Dallas County, Robinson and other members of the DCVL invited King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) to Selma to help secure the right to vote for African Americans. Robinson then invited King and other civil rights leaders to set up the SCLC headquarters in her home and office, where they planned the Selma to Montgomery marches. That same year, on February 29, Robinson entered the Democratic race for a seat in the U.S. Congress. She hoped her participation would increase the number of African Americans registered to vote in her district, which at that time totaled five percent. She was the first woman, white or black, to run on the Democratic ticket in Alabama, and the first African American woman to run for Congress in the state. She won 10 percent of the vote. The following year, Robinson helped organize and lead the aborted Selma to Montgomery march on March 7, 1965, that became known as Bloody Sunday. She also was one of 17 marchers hospitalized after police and Alabama State Troopers met the approximately 600 marchers with tear gas and billy clubs at the Edmund Pettus Bridge, only six blocks into the march. A photograph of Robinson after she was gassed and beaten appeared on the cover of several prominent newspapers and news magazines, drawing national and international attention to the civil rights movement. When the Voting Rights Act was signed into law August 6, 1965, President Lyndon Johnson invited Robinson to attend as a guest of honor. In 1969, Robinson married Bob W. Billups, a musician who later became an electronics technician. The couple lived in New York City a short time before returning to Selma. After only four years of marriage, he drowned in a tragic boating accident. Robinson then reconnected with Tuskegee classmate and fellow choir member, James Robinson. Once they were married, she moved to Tuskegee, a place and institution she has called important in her personal life. Since James Robinson's death in 1988, Robinson has remained in Tuskegee and continues her work in civil and human rights on a national and international level. She is Vice Chair of the Schiller Institute, a non-profit, international organization that bases its views on the writings of German philosopher Friedrich Schiller (1759-1805). In 1990, Robinson received the Martin Luther King Jr. Freedom Medal in honor of her life's work for the advancement of human rights. The Schiller Institute published Robinson's autobiography, Bridge Across the Jordan, in 1991.

    Amelia Boynton Speaks About Her Home at 1315 Lapsley in Selma Alabama

    Amelia Boynton Speaks About Her Home at 1315 Lapsley in Selma Alabama
    Amelia Boynton Robinson (1911- ) is a leading civil rights activist who played a key role in efforts that led to passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. She is best known for her work in Selma, Alabama, where she helped Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. establish his headquarters and helped plan and lead the march from Selma to Montgomery that came to be known as "Bloody Sunday." She continues to work for civil and human rights with the Washington, D.C.-based Schiller Institute. One of 10 children, Robinson was born August 18, 1911, in Savannah, Georgia. Both her mother and father were of African, German, and Native American descent. Robinson's father, George Platts, was born in Brunson, South Carolina, in 1866, and her mother, Anna Eliza Hicks Platts, was born in 1874 in Beaufort, South Carolina. In her autobiography, Robinson describes her family life as "sheltered," an environment where church and biblical teachings were emphasized. Amelia Boynton Robinson (1911- ) is a civil Amelia Boynton RobinsonRobinson started her college education at Georgia State College (now Savannah State) and after two years transferred and graduated from Tuskegee Institute (now Tuskegee University), in Tuskegee, Alabama, earning a degree in home economics. (She later studied at Tennessee State, Virginia State, and Temple University.) She had two teaching jobs in Georgia before she took a position with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) in Selma as the home demonstration agent for Dallas County. Robinson educated the county's rural population about food production, nutrition, healthcare, and other subjects related to agriculture and homemaking. While in Selma, Robinson met Samuel William Boynton, the county extension agent, in 1930. She shared Robinson's passion for improving the lives of their African American neighbors, many of whom still worked on white-owned plantations as sharecroppers. Robinson and Boynton married in 1936 and had two sons, Bill Jr. and Bruce Carver, whose godfather was family friend George Washington Carver, the famed inventor and head of Tuskegee's school of agriculture. The couple would work side by side for more than 30 years to bring voting rights, property ownership, and education to African Americans in poor, rural areas of Alabama. In the mid-1930s, during the Great Depression, Robinson conceived the idea of building a community center for African Americans, as the local Selma community center excluded African Americans. When her efforts to secure government funding failed, she wrote a play, Through the Years, to bring Through the Years is a musical drama written Through the Years by Amelia Boynton Robinsonhope to the local African American community and raise the funds for the center. The play tells the fictional life story of Joshua Terrell, a man born into slavery who overcomes his difficult life circumstances to eventually become a U.S. congressman. The character was inspired by the half-brother of Robinson's father, Robert Hicks Smalls, a slave who later bought his freedom and became one of the first African American members of Congress, representing South Carolina during Reconstruction. Through the Years uses the African American spiritual, an unaccompanied style of song in the tradition of American slaves, to tell its story. The play was first performed in Selma at Hudson High School in 1936 and is still performed today across the world. In 1933, Robinson and Rev. Frederick Reece founded the Dallas County Voters League (DCVL). From the late 1930s through the 1950s, Robinson continued to conduct African American voter registration drives in Selma with little success. Despite her tireless efforts, it took nearly 30 years to achieve any measurable success in getting blacks registered to vote. In 1954, Robinson met Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife, Coretta Scott King, in Montgomery at the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, where King served as pastor. Her sister-in-law was a member at the church and invited her to meet King. She respected and followed the work King was doing, but it was not until January 1964 that they began working together. By 1964, the civil rights movement had gained momentum, and Robinson was at the forefront of the effort in Selma, despite the death of her husband the previous year. With violence and human rights abuses against African Americans escalating in Dallas County, Robinson and other members of the DCVL invited King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) to Selma to help secure the right to vote for African Americans. Robinson then invited King and other civil rights leaders to set up the SCLC headquarters in her home and office, where they planned the Selma to Montgomery marches. That same year, on February 29, Robinson entered the Democratic race for a seat in the U.S. Congress. She hoped her participation would increase the number of African Americans registered to vote in her district, which at that time totaled five percent. She was the first woman, white or black, to run on the Democratic ticket in Alabama, and the first African American woman to run for Congress in the state. She won 10 percent of the vote. The following year, Robinson helped organize and lead the aborted Selma to Montgomery march on March 7, 1965, that became known as Bloody Sunday. She also was one of 17 marchers hospitalized after police and Alabama State Troopers met the approximately 600 marchers with tear gas and billy clubs at the Edmund Pettus Bridge, only six blocks into the march. A photograph of Robinson after she was gassed and beaten appeared on the cover of several prominent newspapers and news magazines, drawing national and international attention to the civil rights movement. When the Voting Rights Act was signed into law August 6, 1965, President Lyndon Johnson invited Robinson to attend as a guest of honor. In 1969, Robinson married Bob W. Billups, a musician who later became an electronics technician. The couple lived in New York City a short time before returning to Selma. After only four years of marriage, he drowned in a tragic boating accident. Robinson then reconnected with Tuskegee classmate and fellow choir member, James Robinson. Once they were married, she moved to Tuskegee, a place and institution she has called important in her personal life. Since James Robinson's death in 1988, Robinson has remained in Tuskegee and continues her work in civil and human rights on a national and international level. She is Vice Chair of the Schiller Institute, a non-profit, international organization that bases its views on the writings of German philosopher Friedrich Schiller (1759-1805). In 1990, Robinson received the Martin Luther King Jr. Freedom Medal in honor of her life's work for the advancement of human rights. The Schiller Institute published Robinson's autobiography, Bridge Across the Jordan, in 1991.
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