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  • Delaware Online | The News Journal

    Hurricane Katrina, MLK leads D.C. civil rights march: News Journal archives, Aug. 25-31

    By Ben Mace, Delaware News Journal,

    2024-08-24

    “Pages of history” features excerpts from The News Journal archives including the Wilmington Morning News and the Evening Journal.

    Aug. 26, 1939, Journal-Every Evening

    Available talent indicates Wilmington High’s year in football

    With nary a scholastic grid tog donned as yet, nevertheless it looks like Wilmington High School’s “year” in football. ...

    The Cherry and White eleven has seen some dismal campaigning the past two years but a glance at the available material at the Delaware Avenue institution, Pierre S. DuPont High, Brown Vocational and Alexis I. DuPont High, shows the Red Devils much better off than their rivals of this locale.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0ByfTq_0v8hVDYC00

    J. Harmer Donalson, coach of football at Wilmington High, will have 10 Red Devils of last year’s squad back, the majority of whom had considerable varsity experience last year. In addition to the holdovers, his squad will be bulwarked by the addition of Al Tribuani, Joe Dellose and Bill McGonegal, who transferred from Salesianum High School last year. ...

    Aug. 29, 1963, Wilmington Morning News

    200,000 jam March for Freedom; Dr. King’s speech highlights rally

    This archival story uses language that was common at the time.

    WASHINGTON – More than 200,000 Negroes and white friends yesterday staged a giant, orderly “march for jobs and freedom” – a demonstration they hoped would lead to a breakthrough on all civil rights.

    In balmy 84-degree weather and a friendly breeze, the hosts walked from the Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial, enshrining the marble statue of the man who freed the slaves 100 years ago.

    Softly, as they went, they chanted the familiar civil rights hymn: “Deep in my heart, I do believe … some day we shall overcome.”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4XqqGg_0v8hVDYC00

    And a forest of placards moved with them. Some placards struck a religious note: “God of wisdom, God of power, can America deny freedom in this hour?” Others were more down-to-earth and slangy: “No U.S. dough to help Jim Crow!”

    The estimate of more than 200,000 participants came from the Washington chief of police, Robert V. Murray. He made the assessment in mid-afternoon and added: “Up to now it’s been a very orderly crowd, a very orderly gathering.”

    …..At the memorial, they heard many speeches, many songs and spirituals. They heard speakers demand passage of President Kennedy’s civil rights bill. ...

    Of all the speeches … the one that drew the strongest applause was made by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, who said:

    “I still have a dream, a dream deeply rooted in the American dream – one day this nation will rise up and live up to its creed, ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.’ I have a dream that one day in Alabama little black boys and little black girls will be able to go hand in hand together with little white boys and little white girls as brothers and sisters.”…

    Aug. 30, 2005, The News Journal

    Hurricane Katrina: ‘Devastating hit’

    Announcing itself with shrieking, 145-mph winds, Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast just outside New Orleans on Monday, submerging entire neighborhoods up to their roofs, swamping Mississipi’s beachfront casinos and killing at least 55 people.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3l3Snn_0v8hVDYC00

    Jim Pollard, spokesman for the Harrison County, Miss. emergency operations center, said 50 people were killed in his county, with the bulk of the deaths at an apartment complex in Biloxi. Three other people were killed by falling trees in Mississippi and two died in a traffic accident in Alabama, authorities said….

    In New Orleans and elsewhere along the coast … scores of people had to be rescued from rooftops and attics as the floodwaters rose around them. An untold number of other people were feared dead in flooded neighborhoods, many of which could not be reached by rescuers because of high water. ...

    Aug. 31, 1967, The Morning News

    Thurgood Marshall gets nod in Senate for Supreme Court

    This archival story uses language that was common at the time .

    Thurgood Marshall, the first Negro nominated to the Supreme Court, won solid Senate confirmation yesterday, 77 days after President Johnson named him to the high tribunal.

    The vote was 69 to 11 with all of the opponents being from the Deep South except Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W. Va. All 11 are Democrats except Republican Strom Thurmond of South Carolina. ...

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4Y3jWE_0v8hVDYC00

    After the vote, Marshall declared, “I am greatly honored.”

    “Let me take this opportunity,” his statement said, “to affirm my deep faith in this nation and its people, and to pledge that I shall be ever mindful of my obligation to the Constitution and to the goal of equal justice under law.”

    The senators who opposed Marshall said they did so because he is an “ultra liberal” and “a judicial activist” in his constitutional philosophy. But supporters said they are confident Marshall will make a great justice on the basis of his record as U.S. solicitor general, his current job, and a U.S. circuit judge before that.

    After the vote, Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said, “This is a shining hour for Mr. Marshall, President Johnson, the Senate and the United States of America.”…

    Reach reporter Ben Mace at rmace@gannett.com.

    This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: Hurricane Katrina, MLK leads D.C. civil rights march: News Journal archives, Aug. 25-31

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    Shuveet Upuhazz
    08-25
    Hurricane Katrina was almost 20 years ago. WTH? It’s like people who were around when Hurricane Hazel blew through in 1954.
    View all comments
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