Go ahead, wear many hats. September is National Hat Month!

With September leading into cooler days (the 22nd is the first day of fall) it’s only fitting that it be dubbed National Hat Month.

Headwear- caps, hats, wraps- has always been in style and this season will be no different from seasons passed. After all, hats are the go-to accessory on bad hair days plus  Continue reading Go ahead, wear many hats. September is National Hat Month!

This Day In History- Hurricane Katrina

What: Hurricane Katrina

When: August 29, 2005

Where: Gulf Coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama

Most Devastated Area: New Orleans, LA

Death Toll: More than 1,300

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Stats: Category 4 hurricane and the third most powerful of 2005, Hurricane Katrina was the worst natural disaster in U.S. history. Though classified as a category 4, Katrina briefly reached category 5 status. Winds reached 145 miles per hour and 80% of New Orleans was flooded to rooftop levels.

Controversy: Former President George W. Bush was criticized for slow and disorganized response to the catastrophe, especially in the flooded lower 9th ward of New Orleans which is predominately black. Former New Orleans Mayor Nagin was also criticized for lack of preparedness and for not fully implementing his evacuation plan for the city.

Famous Quote: Kayne West says “George Bush doesn’t care about black people” during the September 2, 2005 live broadcast of A Concert for Hurricane Relief on NBC. Watch the video.

In honor of those lost: Bush declares September 16 a national day of remembrance for Katrina’s victims.

More: Check out the related links below.

25 haunting photos from Katrina.

History Channel on Katrina.

Lower 9th Ward Still Struggling after Katrina.

 

Photos taken from My Modern Met article posted by Alice Yoo

Glorious Flight of Futurebirds

I’m no Roman general, however, I predict that when Futurebirds swoops down on any stage everyone within earshot will have a good time. Hailing from Athens, GA, Futurebirds has a sound that has been described as indie rock, Americana, and alternative country, but if you ask the band, their eclectic sound is best summed up as chonkyfire spliced with rock ‘n roll, a nod to the song “Chonkyfire” by Atlanta-based hip hop duo Outkast.

Continue reading Glorious Flight of Futurebirds

Quick Look: Jackson R&B Fest

Screenshot from festival's official website.
Screenshot from festival’s official website.

What:  Second Annual Jackson Rhythm & Blues Festival

Hashtag: #jxnrandbfest

Crowd pullers:

  • Ziggy Marley
  • Boney James
  • Fantasia
  • Chrisette Michele
  • Bell Biv Devoe
  • Bobby Rush
  • Marc Broussard
  • Estelle
  • Dorothy Moore

When: Friday August 15, 2014 and Saturday August 16, 2014

Where: Mississippi Ag and Forestry Museum (1150 Lakeland Drive, Jackson, MS 39211)

Cost: $31.45 for one day or $57.05 for a 2-day pass

Goodies: food, drinks, VIP packages, souvenirs etc…

Relevant links:  Tickets         Complete line-up, schedule, and venue map

Are you going?

Still Time to View Derby Exhibit at JSU

In an exhibit titled “Women: Agents of Change in the American Civil Rights Movement,” Jackson State University offers a glimpse into the documentary photography of Dr. Doris A. Derby. “Dr. Doris Derby was an active member of the civil rights movement and she used her photography to document work, particularly in the Delta, but throughout Mississippi during the civil rights movement,” Angela Stewart, the archivist at the Margaret Walker Center, says. “So the exhibit highlights women who, while they may not be nationally known, are local icons.”

Among those local icons are Myrlie Evers, Fannie Lou Hamer, and Margaret Walker Alexander. But refreshingly, most of the frames, which wind around the room like a black and white filmstrip in a silent movie, show images of common folk (primarily women) simply carrying on.

The exhibit, on display through August 1, was unveiled April 11 as part of the opening ceremony for Jackson State University’s eighth annual Creative Arts Festival.

The theme for this year’s Creative Arts Festival, “The Legacy of Freedom Summer,” befit Dr. Derby’s exhibit, which chronicles the mood following the summer of 1964 in photos that date roughly from 1967 to 1978.

People consider the summer of 1964, known as Freedom Summer and sometimes referred to as the Mississippi Summer Project, he climax and turning point of the Civil Rights movement. That summer, the largest number of northerners penetrated the closed society of Mississippi and heightened the media coverage, thrusting the Deep South under the watchful eye of the nation. The projects of that summer focused on several issues, most notably increasing voter-registration for African Americans and creating national awareness for the injustices that were a way of life in the south.

Derby’s photographs capture other aspects of the movement from senior citizens quilting and literacy classes being taught to activities at Liberty House Handicrafts Cooperative and the Black Power Convention to name a few.

Derby Collage by Nedd
Compilation of events in Dr. Derby’s life by Rupert Rukuumba Nedd.

During her time as a member of the Civil Rights organization called the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Derby documented persons and events that testify to the grassroots efforts dedicated to the cause. It was while she was a member of this organization that Derby helped organize 1963’s March on Washington. In 2013 Time commemorated the 50th anniversary of the march and Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech in a five-part documentary in which Dr. Derby is among 17 activists featured. SNCC co-founder Julian Bond is also featured in the series and is one of the few men celebrated in Derby’s exhibit at JSU.

A ten-year veteran of the civil rights movement, Derby’s exceptional photographs are included in “Hands on the Freedom Plow,” a book recognizing the contributions made to the movement by the women of SNCC.

In 1990 Derby became the founding Director of African American Student Services and Programs at Georgia State University where she served until her retirement at the end of 2012. In a video clip published by Georgia State University, Derby talks about her photographs.

“I would say that my photographs are both from the perspective of a photo journalist and an artistic perspective,” she says. “So some of my photographs reflect the activities that were going on at different events and then others are studies of people … their persona …”

A total of 41 photographs are in the exhibit, 40 by Derby and the 41st by artist Rupert Rukuumba Nedd as a salute to Derby. Nedd’s is a compilation of outstanding events in Derby’s life from the 1960s and 1970s. The collage includes some handwritten well wishes to Derby, and among them is the clear signature of Rosa Parks.

Women: Agents of Change in the American Civil Rights Movement is housed at Johnson Hall Art Gallery at JSU while a complementary exhibit is on display across the plaza at Ayer Hall

This article first appeared in June 11-17, 2014 issue of Jackson Free Press (vol 12 no 40).

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