A MASTER ALCHEMISTS TIME TRAVELING CONNECT AYAM$ APPROVED GET MONEY BUY TISHIE'S 6.8 MILLION DOLLAR NAIL
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Thursday, September 25, 2014
Sunday, September 21, 2014
The role of the Dark Goddess is both simple and complex. She depotentiates toxicity wherever it is found and creates new spaces for life-affirming, fuller expressions of reality. She is Dark because she can speak of that which we don’t want illuminated: injustice, inequity, inequality, inappropriateness. She is Dark because the Dark is what humanity has generally subjugated, one people to the next. She is Dark because she reveals our secrets. She gives voice to the voiceless, creates room for the marginalized and oppressed, opens our eyes and moves us to greater depths of soul…if we are willing to struggle with Her and move mountains.
Chamunda - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
MOONDATE NOTE NOW- WRITE A COMEDY SKIT ABOUT HAINTTOWN MAKE IT FUNNY INCLUDE ALL THE SHIT THAT "DISSAPEARED WAS LOST OR STOLEN" DONT 4GET YOUR AMERICAN EXPRESS CARD
Saturday, September 20, 2014
Friday, September 19, 2014
From Sky2Sea
SKYWRITING IN THE HAUNTED HEALER SPIRIT BONES OF SLAVETIME ANCESTORS 2LAURENCE FISHBURNE- yes sir I really do need U 2help me do this FRANKLIN FURNANCE SHOW CUZ I DUNNO WHATS GOIN ON BUT WHITEFOLKS KILLIN UP THEY WHOLE GENERATIONS JUST AINT A GOOD SIGN OF CARING ABOUT ANYTHING FUTURISTICALLY AND THAT TORE UP 2PAC TSHIRT All out the blue AND MIKE MIKE And FERGUSON AND BUFFALO SOLDIERS AND KWAME DID NUTHIN WRONG TURNIN BLACKS INTO PUPPETS TO HIDE UM DURING SLAVERY AND MYLA GONE BIGGER WHEN SHE WAS THE ONE WHO I COULD REALLY ARTICULATE MY IDEAS TO IN A COHERENT FASHION AND IT JUST SEEMS LIKE SOMEBODY REALLY HATE PLANET EARTH IN A POWERFUL WAY AND I DONT UNDERSTAND NONE OF IT CEPT DERRIN AND FARRAH AND NOW THAT RAINA BABY AND HER DADDY LIVING NEXTDOOR REALLY GOT A LOT AND HAINTTOWN AND I MISS NEW YORK SOOO MUCH I AM NOW WONDERING IF ALL EVERYTHING GOT SOMETHING2do WITH ALL THAT WORK I DID THERE AND ITS MISSING ME SO MUCH
ANYWAY U KNOW MY NUMBER CALL ME SO WE CAN JUST DO THIS SHOW AND U KNOW GROW IN HARMONY TOWARDS THE FUTURE
Thursday, September 18, 2014
This letter has as much occult meaning as the book Which was my grandmother's and is extra special cause ya know all the fires and stuff
IDESON, JULIA BEDFORD (1880–1945). Julia Bedford Ideson, pioneer librarian and civic activist, daughter of John Castree and Rosalie (Beasman) Ideson, was born on July 15, 1880, in Hastings, Nebraska. She moved to Houston as a child and later attended the first program in library science offered by the University of Texas. She was appointed librarian of the new Houston Lyceum and Carnegie Library in 1903 and held this position for more than forty years. By the time of her death in 1945, the collection had increased from 13,228 to 265,707 volumes, and annual circulation had risen from 60,000 to 600,000. Her efforts to improve physical facilities had resulted in the addition of five branches, a new Central Library in Spanish Renaissance style, and the first municipal bookmobile in the state.
Julia Ideson served as secretary (1907–09) and president (1910–11) of theTexas Library Association, president of the Southwestern Library Association (1932–34), and first vice president of the American Library Association (1932–33). She served on the Legislative Committee of the Texas Library Association, where she helped to prepare an amendment to the County Library Law of 1915 and opposed a bill that would have abolished the Texas State Library in 1933. Providing library services for blacks in the South was the topic of her address at the American Library Association meeting at Hot Springs, Arkansas, in 1923.
Throughout her career, she remained an active supporter of various civic causes and organizations. As a member of the Women's Political Union, she spoke at the first open-air woman suffrage rally in Texas in 1915 and helped to arrange a reception for the visiting Emmeline Pankhurst. Like many suffragists, she turned her attention to the war effort; she campaigned for Liberty Bonds and served eight months at a field library in Brest, France. In later years she was active in such groups as the League of Women Voters, the Houston Open Forum, the Foreign Policy Association, and the Texas Interracial Commission. Her professional and civic achievements brought her recognition in 1929 as the Torchbearer of the Year and in 1932 as the first Houston woman included in Who's Who in America.
Julia Ideson died on July 15, 1945, while on a visit to Pennsylvania. The Central Library building, erected in 1926 and later named in her honor, was renovated and reopened in 1979 to house the archives, special collections, and Texas Room of the Houston Public Library.
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Monday, September 8, 2014
4MIKEMIKE
maybe when that police man shot MikeMike 6times and they aint let nobody sea bout him for 4hours maybe he was the one shot Mr. Jonahs them 3times but aint kill him cause what happened was in about a weeks time he grew way tall Miss Kornah say it was children's medicine when she told us to spit on the fish and she put it on his wounds thats what made him come back growing wings and when he grew tall tall he left and then about 2full moons passing we got word that a plantation had burnt down and nobody survived but they found in a hidden celler heads and guts in jars teeth laid out like all kinds of evil nasty stuff that had been done to them slaves was in that cellar and then they saw a whole big fish that had been neat wrapped up in some cloth the cloth made from our plantation and then we knew it was Mr. Jonahs saying he was free.
You know lady its something about whats going on in Ferguson makes me think thats them same blacks got tortured on that slave farm back when Mr. Jonahs grew from fish medicine.