If you're struggling with insurmountable debt, you might be wondering - should I file for bankruptcy? Bankruptcy is a legal process, handled by the federal courts, where debts can be eliminated, or re(...)
US Representative John Lewis, Selma, Alabama March Story
US Rep. John Lewis recalls the march across the Edmund Pettis Bridge at a ceremony in Roxbury (Boston), MA on the 40th anniversary of the passage of the Voting Rights Act. Background: Selma, Alabama, 1965 Of the 15000 African Americans in Selma, Alabama in 1965, less than 350 were registered to vote. Jim Clark, the sheriff, did not shy away from using violence to control African Americans in Selma. Knowing that Clarks response to civil rights protests would brutal, Martin Luther King helped organize a protest in Selma. After the shooting of a black teenager in the nearby town of Marion, members of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference announced a march from Selma to the state capital, Montgomery, a distance of some 50 miles. Once there, they would present a list of grievances to Governor George Wallace. The governor, however, immediately banned the march. Despite the ban, some 600 protesters gathered on Sunday, March 7, 1965, and began the march. When they reached the Edmund Pettis Bridge, the marchers found their way blocked by state troopers and citizen deputies led by Sheriff Clark. Violence quickly followed as the troopers and deputies used clubs and tear gas to drive the protesters back. Film crews captured the chaos and images of the Selma march appeared on television screens throughout the nation. President Johnson capitalized on the public outrage to advance a voting rights bill through Congress. Protected by court order and National Guardsmen, King and ...
Both women remain in Etowah County's jail without access to computers ... Steven Hobbs, a law professor at the University of Alabama, said attorneys don't generally have a duty to police comments by relatives and friends of people involved ...
King later received the rank of major general in the Alabama Militia. King moved to Perry County in Alabama in 1816. He became a Marion businessman ... Gospel was central to all activities. On center court, CU graduate assistant Logan Hazelwood spoke ...
They left Alabama ... Perry Oliver Hooper, Sr. Hornsby sued Alabama in court and defiantly remained in office for more than a year before finally giving up the seat after losing in court. This ultimately would lead to a collapse of support ...
I dont& wont never understand why or how someone could ever harm or hurt a little child, what did he or she or that little person ever do to the ones that(...) 02 14, 2012 | 01:18
this letter is for judge William rhey ,you sentenced my sister Lilla Patterson to prison on 5-14-2009 for 25 years ,i am asking you to please reconsider(...) Report Abuse
FROM: Allen Davis
TO: steve.clouse@alhouse.org
jennifer.ardis@governor.alabama.gov
askdoj@usdoj.gov
CC: Glenn@GlennSacks.com
Saturday, De(...) Report Abuse
I have a story to tell you and I'm hoping that you can help me with it. My daughter, 10 years old, has been on the Etowah PeeWee cheerleading squad for fo(...) Report Abuse
Mr. Jones can you please withdraw yourself from being the Judge on this case with John Shirley Aultman against myself as I was his wife for nine years Toni(...) Report Abuse
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