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On this day in 1964

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-07-25 07:00:00

On this day in 1964

JULY 25, 1964

Credit: Wikipedia

Unita Blackwell became the Issaquena County delegate for the Mississippi Democratic Party, which fought to replace Mississippi’s all-white delegation at the 1964 Democratic National Convention. 

โ€œWe had no idea that we were changing the whole political future of America,โ€ she said. โ€œWe were going because we didn’t have shoes for our and decent houses to stay in and just the everyday that we wanted.โ€ 

Born during the Depression in the impoverished Mississippi Delta, her parents were sharecroppers, and they searched across the South for that would pay them enough to feed them. When Freedom Summer came, she joined the civil rights movement and became a field secretary for SNCC. She was one of only eight Black who tried to register to vote in Mayersville โ€” only to get turned away. 

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โ€œBecause we didn’t have nothing,โ€ she told the โ€œEyes on the Prizeโ€ documentary, โ€œwe couldn’t lose nothing. But we wanted something for ourselves and for our children. And so we took a with our lives.โ€ 

After she and her husband, Jeremiah, attempted to register to vote, they were fired from their plantation jobs, and the Ku Klux Klan tossed Molotov cocktails at her home. 

In 1965, she filed litigation challenging the suspension of 300 , her son, Jerry, for wearing SNCC’s โ€œFreedomโ€ pins. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld her case, in which also called for school desegregation. In 1976, she was elected of Mayersville โ€” the first African-American woman to serve as a mayor in Mississippi’s history. Within a few years, the town boasted paved streets, a sewer system and streetlights. 

In 1990, she was elected president of the National Conference of Black Mayors. Two years later, she received a MacArthur โ€œgeniusโ€ grant for her creative work as mayor. In 2006, she published her memoir, “Barefootin’: Life Lessons on the Road to Freedom”. A decade later, the honored her with a Mississippi Freedom Trail marker.

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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Mississippi Today

AT&T, union reach deal ending strike

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mississippitoday.org – Debbie Skipper – 2024-09-16 09:27:36

AT&T, union reach deal ending strike

AT&T workers are back on the job after the company reached a tentative agreement with the Communications Workers of America to end a month-long strike in the Southeast.

The new deal includes a 19.33% pay increase for all workers, and more affordable premiums.

Wire technicians and utility operations employes get an extra 3% pay increase.

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In a statement, CWA president Claude Cummings Jr. praised the solidarity of the striking workers. 

โ€œI believe in the power of unity, and the unity our members and retirees have shown during these contract negotiations has been outstanding and gave our bargaining teams the backing they needed to deliver strong contracts,โ€ he said.

CWA district president Jermaine Travis told that he and his coworkers are happy to be back at work.ย 

โ€œIt’s been a long month, so everybody is to get back to work and get back to taking care of business,โ€ he said.

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Travis also noted the significance of the strike, the longest telecommunications strike in the Southeast. 

โ€œI think we’re gonna look back at this strike, at this moment in history, and see it was really important for workers to stand up for the rights and force companies to do right by them, so I think we did a good thing,โ€ he said.

AT&T has also reached a tentative agreement with the CWA in the .

“As we’ve said since day 1, our goal has been to reach fair agreements that recognize the hard work our employees do to serve our customers with competitive market-based pay and that are among the best in the nation — and that’s exactly what was accomplished,โ€ AT&T said in a released statement. โ€œThese agreements also our competitive position in the broadband industry where we can grow and win against our mostly non-union competitors.

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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

On this day in 1925

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mississippitoday.org – Debbie Skipper – 2024-09-16 07:00:00

Sept. 16, 1925

Credit: Wikipedia

โ€œThe King of the Bluesโ€ was born Riley B. King on a plantation near Itta Bena, Mississippi, the son of sharecroppers. 

While singing in the church choir, he watched the pastor playing a Sears Roebuck guitar and told the preacher he wanted to learn how to play. By age 12, he had his own guitar and began listening to the blues on the radio. After playing in churches, he went to Memphis to pursue a music career in 1948, playing on the radio and working as a deejay who was known as โ€œBlues Boyโ€ and eventually โ€œB.B.โ€ 

Within a year, B.B. King was recording songs, many of them produced by Sam Phillips, who later founded Sun . In 1952, โ€œ3 O’Clock Bluesโ€ became a hit, and dozens followed. 

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While others sought to bring change through the courts, King did it through music. The songs that he and other blues artists created drew many listeners across racial lines. One of the biggest fans walked into the studio one day and called him โ€œsir.โ€ His name? Elvis Presley, whose first big hit was the blues song, โ€œThat’s All Right, Mama.โ€ 

King explained that music was like โ€” something โ€œfor every living person and every living thing.โ€ His smash hit, โ€œThe Thrill Is Gone,โ€ made him an international star and led to collaborations with some of the world’s greatest artists. 

He survived a fire that almost burned up his beloved guitar, โ€œLucille,โ€ and won 18 Grammys as well as a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. In 1987, he was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Both Time and Rolling Stone magazines ranked him as one of the greatest guitarists of all time. 

In 2006, he received the Presidential Medal of , the greatest civilian honor. Two years later, his hometown of Indianola honored him by opening the B.B. King and Delta Interpretive Center. After he died in 2015, thousands flocked to the Mississippi Delta for the wake and funeral. 

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โ€œHands that once picked cotton,โ€ the preacher told the crowd, โ€œwould someday pick guitar strings on a national and international stage.โ€ He performed till the end, telling Rolling Stone in 2013 that he had only missed 18 days of performing in 65 years. He died two years later at 89 after battling diabetes for decades.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

Podcast: Sen. David Blount discusses tax cuts, retirement system, mobile sports betting

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mississippitoday.org – Adam Ganucheau and Bobby Harrison – 2024-09-16 06:30:00

Sen. David Blount sits down with Mississippi Today’s Bobby Harrison and Adam Ganucheau to discuss the push for income tax elimination and how that would affect the state’s budget. He also talks about needed for the state’s troubledย retirement system and whether Mississippi will soon adopt mobile betting.

READ MORE: As lawmakers look to cut taxes, Mississippi mayors and county leaders outline infrastructure needs

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