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Advocate Barbie: When devotion turns disturbing

Advocate Barbie: When devotion turns disturbing

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Joplin Rotary Club supports 7 nonprofit groups with Community Fund
Joplin Rotary Club supports 7 nonprofit groups with Community Fund

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Joplin Rotary Club supports 7 nonprofit groups with Community Fund

The Joplin Rotary Club handed out awards from its Community Fund on Thursday to seven nonprofit organizations involved in local causes. Scott Belden, chairman of the Rotary Club's Community Fund Board, said this meeting was the one that he makes sure not to miss every year. 'It's fun to just give away money but especially for the nonprofits that are really invested in our community,' Belden said after the noon meeting at the Joplin Elks Lodge. 'It's a wide range of things we're able to support, and it's fun to be able to do that.' Rotarians gave away $20,300 to seven groups: • Area Agency on Aging Region X, represented by Kacy Lankford, received $2,000 for its food delivery service to homebound seniors. 'This goes to our homebound meal program, where we have a rural area and sometimes this is the only food seniors on the route are able to get,' Lankford said. 'They are very dependent on it. This goes toward those emergency meals that we're able to put together when we're not able to reach them.' • A $2,000 award went to the Aspire Grant Program, represented by Crowder College Joplin Campus director Melissa Smith. 'This will allow us to fund several scholarships for part-time and full-time students and help reduce barriers to education,' Smith said. • The Children's Center of Southwest Missouri received $2,000 to remodel one of two interview rooms at the center. 'It's a space for them to share their story and for us it's very important that that space is comfortable and age appropriate,' said Betsy Mense, representing the center. 'This will allow us to remodel one room." • Rotarians gave $10,000 to the Community Clinic of Southwest Missouri, represented by Director Stephanie Brady. 'We know how much the support of the Rotary Community Fund does for us and this is going to help us with our clinical needs,' Brady said. 'We appreciate the support.' • The Creative Learning Alliance, represented by Neely Myers, received an $800 grant for a new playground kit. 'I want you to know Rotarians that by investing in this transformative play system you have invested in our future builders, tinkerers, architects, engineers, etc.,' Myers said. • Joplin NALA, or Neighborhood Adult Literacy Action, received $1,500 to replace an outdated testing system. 'This program is going directly to really make sure that all of our students get the best education possible,' said Kaden Propps, representing NALA. • The Life Choices Network, represented by Karolyn Schrage, received $2,000 for new software that helps educate new parents. 'I love the fact that you all are investing not just in Life Choices but in the young families across our communities,' Schrage said.

Murals in Miami's Overtown, defaced by vandals, restored just in time for Juneteenth
Murals in Miami's Overtown, defaced by vandals, restored just in time for Juneteenth

CBS News

time26 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Murals in Miami's Overtown, defaced by vandals, restored just in time for Juneteenth

On this Juneteenth, residents in Miami's Overtown are remembering the past while celebrating its future. They are grateful two murals defaced a few weeks ago are now restored. The swastikas and racist language are gone and on Thursday, people have come from all over to celebrate Overtown, the community and its art. Alex Douyon is the artist who restored the murals. "We felt the need to take this opportunity to come together as a community once again to help restore the history that the community is very proud of it," he said. Douyon gathered at the murals along with people from around Overtown to celebrate. "The progress is not just within the community but how so many individuals across Miami-Dade, across the country, across the world have come in to help revitalize and bring this back," said Anthony Robinson, the executive director of the Children and Youth Coalition. At 12 years old, Tyrell Morris came out with his mom. He said he appreciates opportunities to learn about Black history and seeing the mural of "Jackie Robinson, famous baseball player." "It's very nice, it's like a nice addition to the neighborhood," Morris added. "Makes it look very pretty." The murals were blessed and the late sports heroes honored. Juneteenth commemorates the end of slavery. June 19 is the day when those enslaved in Texas discovered they were free, two years after emancipation happened. For Nicole Crooks, an Overtown community organizer, seeing murals of ancestors defaced is a reminder of work that still needs to be done. "We start telling our story, we start telling our narrative, we start coming together around that, and so there's a joy in the liberation and there's a pain that the work is still necessary," she said. Miami Police said no one has been arrested, but in the meantime, the investigation continues and so does an increased police presence.

St. Paul's Rondo neighborhood celebrates Juneteenth, honoring families' resilience
St. Paul's Rondo neighborhood celebrates Juneteenth, honoring families' resilience

CBS News

time39 minutes ago

  • CBS News

St. Paul's Rondo neighborhood celebrates Juneteenth, honoring families' resilience

On Juneteenth, the Rondo neighborhood in St. Paul, Minnesota, gathered to honor a history of resilience. "They had a rhythm in Rondo, it had a different vibe than any other place in the city of St. Paul," said Marvin Anderson, director of the Rondo Center of Diverse Expression. Once home to a thriving Black community, Rondo was upended by the construction of Interstate 94 in the late 1950s. Hundreds of homes and businesses were demolished to make way for the freeway, displacing countless families. "I-94 totally destroyed the Rondo community. It was a complete and utter devastation of the businesses, the social institutions and cultural institutions," Anderson said. "A lot of our stories, our journeys, are filled with pain." Anderson's family was directly impacted by the construction. "It was a devastating event for my family, and when I left here I had never gone back to the home I grew up in," he said. For Allison Williams, her parents witnessed first-hand what it was like to watch the construction. "I remember stories of my mom, when she was a newly-wed. They came out and stood and watched the bulldozers tearing up what used to be their neighborhood," Williams said. WCCO But this year's Juneteenth celebration was a reminder that Rondo's spirit could never be broken. "Our values in Rondo were timeless, just like the values that people learned on the plantation. They've lasted for 400 years," he said. "How did we survive in America unless we had a set of values that we were able to transmit to each other? That's what sustained us here, our sense of who we are and where we came from." The event featured speakers from four Rondo families, reminding the next generation what their families had to go through and how they have stayed resilient over time. "With memories of the elders of Rondo, they are translated to the imaginations of the youth of Rondo," he said. The event was an opportunity for those in attendance to reflect on how far the neighborhood has come since the I-94 construction. Anderson hopes the Rondo neighborhood can grow with the proposed plan to build a land bridge over I-94 to reconnect the neighborhood that was torn apart by the construction. If you would like to be a part of preserving this rich legacy, there are plenty of upcoming events in the neighborhood, like Rondo Days in July. Click here for a list of Juneteenth events in the Twin Cities.

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