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Dennis Donovan

Dennis Donovan's Journal
Dennis Donovan's Journal
December 25, 2019

Notre Dame cathedral has just 50% chance of being saved, rector says

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/notre-dame-cathedral-fire-50-percent-chance-paris-landmark-can-be-saved-rector-said-today-2019-12-25/



DECEMBER 25, 2019 / 8:15 AM / AP

The rector of Notre Dame Cathedral says the Paris landmark is still so fragile that there's a "50% chance" the structure might not be entirely saved, because scaffolding installed before this year's fire is threatening the vaults of the Gothic monument.

Monsignor Patrick Chauvet said restoration work isn't likely to begin until 2021 — and described his "heartache" at not being able to celebrate Christmas services inside Notre Dame this year, for the first time since the French Revolution.

"Today it is not out of danger," he told The Associated Press on the sidelines of Christmas Eve midnight Mass in a nearby church. "It will be out of danger when we take out the remaining scaffolding."

"Today we can say that there is maybe a 50% chance that it will be saved. There is also 50% chance of scaffolding falling onto the three vaults, so as you can see the building is still very fragile," he said.

</snip>


Damn...
December 25, 2019

68 Years Ago Today; early Civil Rights leaders Harry and Harriette Moore are assassinated

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Harry_and_Harriette_Moore


The home of the Moores after the Christmas Day bombing

Harry T. Moore and his wife Harriette V. S. Moore were pioneer activists and leaders of the early civil rights movement in the United States, becoming the first martyrs of the movement. On the night of Christmas, December 25, 1951, a bomb that had been planted under the Moores' bedroom floor exploded. They had celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary earlier that day. Harry died in the ambulance in transit from the attack, and his wife Harriette died from her injuries nine days later, on January 3, 1952. Their murder was the first assassination of any activist to occur during the civil rights movement, and the only time that a husband and wife were murdered during the history of the movement.

Background
Harry Moore and Harriette Simms married in December 25, 1926 and moved into the Simms' family home the following fall. Harry was an educator, and Harriette was a former teacher turned insurance broker. In 1927, Harry was promoted to the position of principal at the local Titusville Colored School. The city's school system was racially segregated, like many in the country at the time. While Harry taught the school's ninth grade (the school taught grades one through nine), he also supervised the team of teachers at the school. The school was closed early his first year by the local school board just 6 months into the year, as part of the local school system's systemic discrimination against black children. The Moores had their first daughter in 1928, and moved into their own home with an acre of land given to them by Harriette's parents. They gave birth to their second daughter in 1930. Harriette returned to her career in education the following year, and later began working as a teacher for the same school as Harry.

In 1934, Harry founded the Brevard County, Florida, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) chapter. He later served as the NAACP's first Executive Secretary in the state of Florida. The NAACP chapter worked towards achieving equal pay for equal work for teachers of any race, fought to get lynchings prosecuted, attempted to register black voters in the region.

The activism of Moore was highly controversial in the local white-dominated county. In 1946 this resulted in the firings of Harry and Harriette from their teaching jobs by state authorities. Afterwards, Harry became a full-time employee of the NAACP.

Murder
On the night of December 25, 1951, the Moores finished celebrating Christmas and their 25th wedding anniversary. When they later retired to their bedroom for the evening, a bomb exploded, injuring Harry and Harriette but leaving their daughter (who was at home at the time—the other was in a different location) unharmed. The improvised explosive device, which was made from dynamite, had been placed directly under the Moores' bedroom floor. The Moores were rushed to the nearest hospital that would treat African-Americans in Sanford, Florida, a 29.8 miles (48.0 km) drive by car. Harry died in the ambulance; his wife Harriette lived to see her husband buried, before dying nine days later from her injuries.

Investigations and motive
Over the years, a number of motives have been suggested for the Moores' murders. All of them share a common theme — retribution against Harry Moore for his civil rights activities. — Charlie Crist, 35th Attorney General of the State of Florida


Since the night of the explosion in 1951, five separate criminal investigations have been initiated and completed. The first investigation was headed by the FBI beginning on the night of the explosion and concluding in 1955. The second investigation was a joint investigation by the Brevard County Sheriff's Office and Brevard County State Attorney's Office in 1978. The third investigation took place in 1991 by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE). In 2004, a fourth investigation was commenced by the Florida Attorney General's Office of Civil Rights. In 2008, the FBI again investigated the Moore homicides as part of the Department of Justice's "Cold Case Initiative".

In total, the five criminal investigations revealed evidence implicating four subjects in the bombing. The four subjects were known to be high ranking members within the Ku Klux Klan in the central region of Florida. The first of the four, Earl J. Brooklyn, was a Klansman with a reputation for being exceedingly violent and described as "a renegade" after being expelled from a Klavern of the Ku Klux Klan in Georgia for engaging in unsanctioned acts of violence. Brooklyn reportedly was in possession of floor plans of the Moore home, and was said to be recruiting volunteers to assist in the bombing. The second subject, Tillman H. "Curley" Belvin, was also reported to be a violent member of the Klan and a close friend of Brooklyn. Joseph Cox, another Klansman, was implicated in the bombing by a fellow Klansman, Edward L. Spivey. Spivey implicated Cox in a deathbed confession while suffering in the late stages of cancer in 1978. Cox committed suicide in 1952, one day after being confronted by the FBI.

The investigation revealed that Harry's civil rights advocacy made him a known target of the Klan. No arrests were ever made in the case. All four of the subjects are now deceased. The Department of Justice Civil Rights Division closed the file on the federal investigation in 2011.

Public reaction
During the early morning hours of the following day, December 26, 1951, angry men in Titusville's black neighborhoods were in the streets spreading word of the bombing. Within the following hours men and women, from Brevard County, still in their nightclothes walked and rode towards Mims to protest in the streets. Most of the people knew Moore personally, some via his job in education, some via the NAACP, and others through his registration drives.

The assassination triggered nationwide protests, with rallies, memorials, and other events held following the news of the bombing. President Harry S Truman, and Governor Fuller Warren both received a high volume of telegrams and letters in protest of the murder of the civil rights activists in Mims, Florida. In New York City, a few weeks later on January 5, 1952, Jackie Robinson held a memorial service drawing approximately 3,000 mourners. The NAACP later held a memorial service, in March 1952, in the Madison Square Garden; their memorial was attended by 15,000 people, where speakers like Langston Hughes had come to give their respects.

And this he says, our Harry Moore
As from the grave he cries
No bomb can kill the dreams I hold
For freedom never dies!"

— Langston Hughes, (1951)


Awards and tributes
In 1952, the year following the Moore's murders, Harry was posthumously awarded the NAACP's Spingarn Medal. In 1999, the site of the Moore's home in Mims, Florida, where the bombing occurred became an Historical Heritage Landmark of the State of Florida. Five years later Brevard County's local government christened the "Harry T. and Harriette Moore Memorial Park and Interpretive Center".

</snip>


Murdered by the Klan on Christmas AND on their 25th wedding anniversary...
December 25, 2019

Chuck Todd admits he's not good at his job in Rolling Stone interview

https://twitter.com/jayrosen_nyu/status/1209699582793441280
Jay Rosen ✔ @jayrosen_nyu

This is a remarkable interview with Chuck Todd. He admits several times he has been naive about the Republicans' commitment to disinformation.

https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/how-disinformation-spreads-according-to-chuck-todd-interview-929912/
Chuck Todd
How Disinformation Spreads, According to Chuck Todd
Chuck Todd has had a front-row seat for the spread of disinformation, here’s how he sees it spreading and the media’s role in it.
rollingstone.com


11:57 PM - Dec 24, 2019


Chuck, your WHOLE job as a journalist is to ferret out truth. Get off your ass and RESEARCH what dumb things they're saying elsewhere before they land on your show. Do some prep...
December 25, 2019

Afghan official says Taliban abducted 26 peace activists

Source: AP

By TAMEEM AKHGAR
10 minutes ago

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The Taliban ambushed a peace convoy in western Afghanistan and abducted 26 activists, members of a peace movement, a police spokesman said Wednesday.

The insurgents staged the ambush in the district of Bala Buluk in Farah province on Tuesday. The Taliban forced the six-vehicle convoy to a halt, then got into the cars and drove them and the activists to an unknown location, said the provincial police spokesman Mohibullah Mohib.

According to Mohib, a police operation is underway to locate and free the activists whose convoy was going village-to-village to rally for peace.

However, Bismillah Watandost of the People’s Peace Movement of Afghanistan, to which the activists belong, said that 27 of their members were abducted by the Taliban in the Farah assault. The different figures could not immediately be reconciled.

</snip>

Read more: https://apnews.com/de99fe0efa6a858b41bf624d4858623e



This would be the same Taliban that Trump invited to spend the 9/11 anniversary at Camp David...
December 25, 2019

Riley Howell, hero student in UNCC shooting is being honored as a 'Star Wars' Jedi

https://edition.cnn.com/2019/12/25/us/star-wars-character-riley-howell-trnd/index.html



By Madeline Holcombe, CNN

Updated 0742 GMT (1542 HKT) December 25, 2019

(CNN) A hero of this galaxy is now also a hero of one far, far away.

The makers of Star Wars have created a character in honor of Riley Howell, according to CNN affiliate WLOS.

Howell was a 21-year-old ROTC cadet and student at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. He died in April while tackling a gunman on campus.

Authorities have said that Howell saved the lives of others when he charged the shooter who had opened fire with a pistol in a classroom.

A spokesperson from Lucasfilm said a family from his hometown told them about Howell and this was their way of helping, according to WLOS.

The character -- named Ri-Lee Howell -- is described in the Star Wars fan site as a Jedi Master and historian of the Jedi Order who collected accounts of explorations of the Force. His character was first mentioned in a 2019 reference book that accompanied this year's film "Star Wars: Episode IX - The Rise of Skywalker," the site said.

"That's what everybody was saying. He's a Jedi master and he's a hero," Lauren Westmoreland, who was Howell's girlfriend, told WLOS.

</snip>


What an awesome gesture!
December 25, 2019

Caption 1874 Santa



I saw this graphic on the twitter box this am and thought it needs captions. Here's mine:

"Santa smoking kush while crapping down a chimney".
December 25, 2019

Grammy, Emmy and Tony winning songwriter Allee Willis dies; composed Friends theme & September

https://variety.com/2019/music/news/allee-willis-dead-dies-songwriter-1203451705/



Songwriter Allee Willis, famous for her work with Earth, Wind & Fire as well as the “Friends” theme and the “The Color Purple” Broadway song score, died Tuesday in Los Angeles. She was 72. The cause of death was cardiac arrest.

Prudence Fenton, the animator and producer who is described by a family friend as Willis’ “partner and soulmate,” was described as being “in total shock” over her best friend’s sudden death, which occurred just after 6 p.m.

Willis was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2018 for a catalog that also included hits like the Pointer Sisters’ “Neutron Dance,” the Pet Shop Boys’ and Dusty Springfield’s “What Have I Done to Deserve This?,” Patti LaBelle’s “Lead Me On,” EWF’s “September” and “Boogie Wonderland” and the theme from “The Karate Kid,” “You’re the Best.”

“I, very thankfully, have a few songs that will not go away,” Willis told the New York Times, “but they’re schlepping along 900 others.”

</snip>




December 24, 2019

Colorado Springs man reportedly robs bank, throws money into the air and yells, "Merry Christmas"

https://www.denverpost.com/2019/12/24/bank-robbery-colorado-springs-christmas/

David Oliver, 65, was arrested Monday afternoon at a coffee shop next to the bank

By SAM TABACHNIK | stabachnik@denverpost.com | The Denver Post

December 24, 2019 at 12:26 pm

A 65-year-old man was arrested Monday after robbing a bank in downtown Colorado Springs, before reportedly walking outside, throwing the money into air and yelling, “Merry Christmas!”

Around 12:27 p.m. Monday, David Oliver allegedly threatened employees of the Academy Bank at 1 South Tejon Street with a weapon, leaving the bank with an undisclosed amount of cash, according to the Colorado Springs police blotter.

A witness told KKTV that Oliver then walked outside, threw the bills into the air and shouted his festive message. Sgt. Jim Jeffocat, a Colorado Springs police spokesman, would not confirm that money was thrown into air or that Oliver yelled “Merry Christmas.”

Oliver then sat on the patio of the Starbucks coffee shop next door, where police arrested him without conflict, police said. A Starbucks manager who answered the phone Tuesday said Oliver didn’t order a drink and nobody in the store seemed to pay him any mind.

Some of the money was retrieved but thousands of dollars remain missing, Jeffcoat said. The witness told KKTV that people walking down the street stopped to pick up the flying bills to return to the bank tellers.

Officers found no indication that Oliver was armed with a weapon, Jeffcoat said.

</snip>


Favorite Christmas Story ever!

Updated: Police release pic of man accused:


Kinda... looks... like... eh! Can't be.

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