Monday, November 23, 2009

November 22, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History

The answers to last issue’s questions are: Charles Diggs; England; King of Rhythm; Nate Archibald; George Davis; and Zina Garrison.

This column will be going under construction and may return in a new format. The writer is getting ready to go into fulltime ministry, helping churches and helping communities solve problems.

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game

What is November known for? All Saints Day? American Indian Heritage? Families Stories Month? Military Family Appreciation? National Adoption? AIDS Awareness? National Peanut Butter Lovers? National Scholarship? Sweet Potato Awareness? Vegan Month?

Credit: http://www.brownielocks.com/NOVEMBER2009.html

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History

November 21, 2009

Dr. Charles Drew, Ike Turner,

“Coming Home” , and More!

The answers to last issue’s questions are: 1868; Maryland; Junior Walker and The All-Stars; Alvin Garrett; William Melvin Kelley; and George Baker.

Questions for today:

1. What Northern Congressman was known as “Mississippi’s Congressman-at large?

2. What government asked Dr. Charles Drew to set up a blood bank in its country?

3. What was Ike Turner’s DeeJay Air-name?

4. Who was the first African American basketball player to lead the NBA in scoring and assists in the same year?

5. Who wrote the book, “Coming Home”? and

6. Who is the African American female tennis player who won the Junior title at the U.S. Open in 1981?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game

Next time: Barbara Jordon; Benjamin Banneker; Fred Sanfod; Elvin Hayes; Richard Gilman; and Patti LaBelle.

What is November known for? All Saints Day? American Indian Heritage? Families Stories Month? Military Family Appreciation? National Adoption? AIDS Awareness? National Peanut Butter Lovers? National Scholarship? Sweet Potato Awareness? Vegan Month?

Credit: http://www.brownielocks.com/NOVEMBER2009.html

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History: November 20, 2009

“Chicken George,” Junior Walker,

Father Devine, and More!

The answers to last issue’s questions are: 1775; Mass production; Leslie Uggams; University of Texas; Rudolph Fisher; and NAACP.

Questions for today:

1. In what year was the 14th Amendment ratified? 1866, 1868 or 1870?

2. “Chicken George” fast food restaurants are owned by an African American firm based in what state?

3. Junior Walker was the lead vocalist for what group?

4. What African American athlete did Howard Cosell call “a little monkey” on national television?

5. Who wrote the novel, “A Drop of Patience”? and

6. What was Father Devine’s given name?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game

Next time: Charles Diggs; Charles Drew; Ike Turner; Nate Archibald; George Davis; and Zina Garrison.

What is November known for? All Saints Day? American Indian Heritage? Families Stories Month? Military Family Appreciation? National Adoption? AIDS Awareness? National Peanut Butter Lovers? National Scholarship? Sweet Potato Awareness? Vegan Month?

Credit: http://www.brownielocks.com/NOVEMBER2009.html

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History

November 19, 2009

Eli Whitney, Lena Horne,

Earl Campbell, and More!


The answers to last issue’s questions are: 1867; The Air Force; Jerry Butler and The Impressions: Eleven; Kristin Hunter; Mary McCleod Bethune.

Questions for today:

1. In what year was the first abolitionist society formed: 1775, 1783, or 1892?

2. What manufacturing concept did Eli Whitney and Jan Matzeliger have in common?

3. Who replaced Lena Horne in the show “Hallelujah Baby” and became an instant star?

4. What university did Earl Campbell attend?

5. Beside Chester Himes what other African American author during the 1940’s and 1950’s wrote detective stories? And

6. Clarence Darrow, Louis Marshall and Felix Frankfurther served on the first legal redress committee of what African American organization?


Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game

Next time: The 14th Amendment; “Chicken George”; Junior Walker; Alvin Garrett; William Melvin Kelley: and George Baker.


What is November known for? All Saints Day? American Indian Heritage? Families Stories Month? Military Family Appreciation? National Adoption? AIDS Awareness? National Peanut Butter Lovers? National Scholarship? Sweet Potato Awareness? Vegan Month?

Credit: http://www.brownielocks.com/NOVEMBER2009.html

Today’s Information On African American History: November 18, 2009

First Reconstruction Act, Jerry Butler

Everson Walls, and More!

The answers to last issue’s questions are: The answers to last issue’s questions are: 1866; True; Hot Buttered Soul; Everson Walls; Gordon Parks; and Fox Movie Company.

Questions for today:

1. What year did Congress pass the First Reconstruction Act allowing for military rule in the South? 1867? 1871? Or 1883?

2. The United States Department of Defense awarded a $32 million dollar contract to Sonicraft to supply equipment to which military service?

3. Jerry Butler was the lead vocalist for what group?

4. How many interceptions did Everson Walls have in 1981?

5. Who wrote the novel, “The Landlord”? and

6. What woman was appointed to President Franklin Roosevelt’s “Black Cabinet”?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game

Next time: The first abolitionist society; Eli Whitney and Jan Matzeliger; Leslie Uggams; Earl Campbell; Rudolph Fisher; and the first legal redress committee.

What is November known for? All Saints Day? American Indian Heritage? Families Stories Month? Military Family Appreciation? National Adoption? AIDS Awareness? National Peanut Butter Lovers? National Scholarship? Sweet Potato Awareness? Vegan Month?

Credit: http://www.brownielocks.com/NOVEMBER2009.html

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History: November 17, 2009

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“Slip Away,” Timmie Brown,

Thurgood Marshall, and More!

The answers to last issue’s questions are: February; The System and Applied Science Corporation; Clarence Carter; Most touchdowns on kickoff returns; Black Enterprise; and 1967.

Questions for today:

1. In what year did Fisk University open? 1866, 1868, or 1892?

2. Wallace and Wallace Fuel was the nation’s second largest African American-owned business in 1984. True or False?

3. What was the name of the group that sang with Issac Hayes?

4. Who led the NFL in interceptions in 1981?

5. Who wrote the novel, “The Learning Tree”? and

6. What movie company released the first African American talking movie?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game

Next time: The First Reconstruction Act; Sonicraft; Jerry Butler; Everson Walls; Kristin Hunter; and Mary McCleod Bethune.

What is November known for? All Saints Day? American Indian Heritage? Families Stories Month? Military Family Appreciation? National Adoption? AIDS Awareness? National Peanut Butter Lovers? National Scholarship? Sweet Potato Awareness? Vegan Month?

Credit: http://www.brownielocks.com/NOVEMBER2009.html

You need to check out this web site…it may blow your mind: http://www.freemaninstitute.com/RTGseminar.htm

And, here are some more:

www.Black101.com

www.BlackChurchMissions.org

www.RosettaStoneReplicas.com

DID YOU KNOW?

There is another resource to help you learn more about Black History?

Check out: www.yenoba.com

And another? Check out: http://www.blackhistorypages.net/index.php

GREAT NEWS!!!:

Leave a legacy for future generations by helping to restore an armory for the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum in 2010. Less than $3 million is needed for the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum to restore the historic Houston Light Guard Armory (1925). Buy a brick for $100 or $500 or $1,000 or $2,500 or $5,000. Have your name added in their “Legacy of Fame” hall. Get your NFL, NBA, or other professional sports relative to invest $1 million or more and thus give back to future generations by having a hall or room named after them. Get your relative in entertainment to donate $1 million or more and thus leave a legacy that will outlive them by having space dedicated to them.

Contact Ed Udell @ 832-216-7786 for your next speaker at your church conferences, youth meetings, community events, or for diversity programs, teaching writing grant writing, and/or teaching others about health/nutrition, and help for senior citizens.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History: November 16, 2009

November 16, 2009

The answers to last issue’s questions are: New York State Library; Lawson National Distributing Company; AT&T; Columbus; Go Down Moses; and Debbie Allen.

Questions for today: What month is African American History month?

2. What firm is considered the forerunner in development of aerospace and computer technologies among minority contractors?

3. What male vocalist recorded the hit “Slip Away”?

4. What record does football player Timmie Brown hold?

5. What African American magazine is devoted strictly to African American business, labor and employment? And

6. When was Thurgood Marshall nominated as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game


Next time: Fisk University; the nation’s second largest African American African American-owned business in 1984; Issac Hayes; Everson Walls; Gordon Parks; and the first African American talkie.


What is November known for? All Saints Day? American Indian Heritage? Families Stories Month? Military Family Appreciation? National Adoption? AIDS Awareness? National Peanut Butter Lovers? National Scholarship? Sweet Potato Awareness? Vegan Month?


Credit::

http://www.brownielocks.com/NOVEMBER2009.html

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History: November 15, 2009

B.B. King, “Ragtime,“Let My People Go”, and More!



The answers to last issue’s questions are: Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks; Dr. Ulysses Grant Dailey; Lionel Ritchie; George Dixon; Dr. Carter G. Woodson; and one day.

Questions for today:

1. Where is the original daft of the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln?

2. What was the largest minority-owned bus supply company in the United States in 1983?

3. B. B. King wrote a jingle for what corporation?

4. Where was the first Peach Blossom Classic played?

5. The verse, “Let my people go” is taken from what song? and

6. What African American actress played the wife of Howard Rollins in the movie “Ragtime”?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game

Next time: February; The Systems and Applied Science Corporation; Clarence Carter; Most touchdowns on kickoff returns; Black Enterprise; and 1967.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History: November 14, 2009

November 14, 2009

Love Will Find A Way,” “The History of the

Negro Church,” Jackie Robinson, and More!


The answers to last issue’s questions are: Congressman Charles C. Diggs, Jr.; Progress Plaza; Luther Vandross; St. Louis Cardinals; Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD; and Six cents.

Questions for today:

1. In 1973, what group rescheduled a 105-year-old rule of restricting membership to ‘Whites only”?

2. What African American doctor traveled internationally under the sponsorship of the International College of Surgeons?

3. Who recorded the song, “Love Will Find A way”?

4. Who was the African American bantamweight boxing champion?

5. What historian wrote, “The History of the Negro Church”? and

6. How long after his signing did Jackie Robinson play his first game?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game

Next time: New York State Library, Lawson National Distributing Company, AT&T, Columbus, GA, Go Down Moses, and Debbie Allen.

You need to check out this web site…it may blow your mind:

http://www.freemaninstitute.comRTGseminar.htm

And, here are some more:

www.Black101.com

www.BlackChurchMissions.org

www.RosettaStoneReplicas.com

DID YOU KNOW? There is another resource to help you learn more about Black History?

Check out: www.yenoba.com

And another? Check out: http://www.blackhistorypages.net/index.php

SPECIAL NOTE:

Leave a legacy for future generations by helping to restore an armory for the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum in 2010. Less than $4 million is needed for the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum to restore the historic Houston Light Guard Armory (1925). Buy a brick for $100 or $500 or $1,000 or $2,500 or $5,000. Have your name added in their “Legacy of Fame” hall. Get your NFL, NBA, or other professional sports relative to invest $1 million or more and thus give back to future generations by having a hall or room named after them. Get your relative in entertainment to donate $1 million or more and thus leave a legacy that will outlive them by having space dedicated to them.

Contact Ed Udell @ 832-216-7786 for your next speaker at your church conferences, youth meetings, community events, or for diversity programs, teaching writing grant writing, and/or teaching others about health/nutrition, and help for senior citizens.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History: November 13, 2009

The Congressional Black Caucus, Joaquin Anduiar,

Benjamin Quarles, and More!

The answers to last issue’s questions are: Eighty-three, Dr. Percy L. Julian, New Orleans, LA, 1912, John Hope Franklin, and Smokey.

Questions for today:

1. Who was the first leader of the Congressional Black Caucus?

2. What was the name of the African American-owned and operated shopping center that was established in Philadelphia?

3. Who recorded the song, “Promise Me”?

4. What team was Joaquin Andujar on when he was named “Comeback Player of the Year?”

5. Benjamin Quarles was a history professor at what college? And

6. Alonzo Wright became a millionaire after arriving in Cleveland with what amount of money?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game

Next time: Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Dr. Ulysses Grant Dailey, Lionel Richie, George Dixon, Carter G. Woodson, and One day.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History: November 12, 2009

color: green;">Lynchings, “Fats Domino”, Joe Palooka, and More


The answers to last issue’s questions are: Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, William J. Knox and J. Ernest Wilkins, Fats Domino, The Harlem Globetrotters, “Black Bourgeoisie,” and Lt. Flap.

Questions for today:

1. How many lynchings were recorded in the United States in 1918?

2. Who developed the active ingredient used in foam fire extinguishers used in WW II?

3. Where was “Fats Domino” born?

4. What year was the Colored Intercollegiate Athletic Association formed?

5. What African American historian wrote the book “From Slavery to Freedom”? and

6. What was the name of “Joe Palooka’s” African American valet?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game

Next time: Congressman Charles C. Diggs, Jr., Progress Plaza, Luther Vandross, St. Louis Cardinals, Morgan State College, Baltimore MD., and Six cents

You need to check out this web site…it may blow your mind: http://www.freemaninstitute.com/RTGseminar.htm

And, here are some more:

www.Black101.com

www.BlackChurchMissions.org

www.RosettaStoneReplicas.com

DID YOU KNOW? There is another resource to help you learn more about Black History?

Check out: www.yenoba.com

And another? Check out: http://www.blackhistorypages.net/index.php

SPECIAL NOTE:

Leave a legacy for future generations by helping to restore an armory for the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum in 2010. Less than $4 million is needed for the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum to restore the historic Houston Light Guard Armory (1925). Buy a brick for $100 or $500 or $1,000 or $2,500 or $5,000. Have your name added in their “Legacy of Fame” hall. Get your NFL, NBA, or other professional sports relative to invest $1 million or more and thus give back to future generations by having a hall or room named after them. Get your relative in entertainment to donate $1 million or more and thus leave a legacy that will outlive them by having space dedicated to them.

Contact Ed Udell @ 832-216-7786 for your next speaker at your church conferences, youth meetings, community events, or for diversity programs, teaching writing grant writing, and/or teaching others about health/nutrition, and help for senior citizens.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History: November 11, 2009

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., E. Franklin Frazier, and More!

The answers to last issue’s questions are: A. Phillip Randolph, Cortisone, Piano, Moses Fleetwood Walker, “From Slavery to Freedom,” and “On Stage.”

Questions for today:

1. At which church did Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. begin his ministerial career?

2. Name one of the two African American scientists who worked on developing the first atomic bomb.

3. Who was the singer known for saying “They call me the Fat Man because I weight 200 pounds”?

4. What team was known as “The Savoy Big Five”?

5. What is the name of the book written by E. Franklin Frazier on the African American middle class? And

6. What is the name of the African American officer in “Beetle Bailey”?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game


Next time: Lynchings, Dr. Percy L. Julian, Fats Domino, the Colored Intercollegiate Athletic Association, John Hope Franklin, and Smokey

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History: November 10, 2009

The answers to last issue’s questions are: Elijah Muhammad, Dr. James Derham, Richard Penniman, Cleveland Indians, Shirley Graham, and California.

Questions for today:

1. Who organized the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters in 1925?

2. What critical hormone was synthesized by Dr. Percy L. Julian for commercial use?

3. What instrument did “Fats Domino” play?

4. What barehanded catcher played for Toledo in the old major league American Association?

5. For what classical analysis of American history is John Hope Franklin responsible? And

6. What was the first comic strip to feature an African American in a major role?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:

The BlacFax Trivia Game

Next time: Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, William J. Knox and J. Ernest Wilkins, Fats Domino, The Harlem Globetrotters, Black Bourgeoisie, and Lt. Flap.

You need to check out this web site…it may blow your mind: http://www.freemaninstitute.com/RTGseminar.htm

And, here are some more:

www.Black101.com

www.BlackChurchMissions.org

www.RosettaStoneReplicas.com

DID YOU KNOW? There is another resource to help you learn more about Black History?

Check out: www.yenoba.com

And another? Check out: http://www.blackhistorypages.net/index.php

Monday, November 9, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History: November 9, 2009

Black Muslim Movement, Little Richard,
Benjamin Banneker, “Famous Amos”, and More!

The answers to last issue’s questions are: 1943; Dr. Earl Shaw; Tick Tock Club; Willie Wood; The New York Drama Critics Circle Award; and New York, NY.

Now some questions for you:

1. Who succeeded W.D. Fard as leader of the Black Muslim movement in the United States.
2. Who was the first recognized Black doctor in America?
3. What is Little Richard’s full name?
4. What team hired the first Black manager in major league baseball?
5. Who authored “Your Most Humble Servant”, a biography of Benjamin Banneker? And
6. In what state did “Famous” Amos first start selling his cookies?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:
The BlacFax Trivia Game


Next time: The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; Dr. Percy L. Julian; “Fats Domino”; a barehanded catcher; John Hope Franklin; and a comic strip.!

You need to check out this web site…it may blow your mind: http://www.freemaninstitute.com/RTGseminar.htm

And, here are some more:
www.Black101.com
www.BlackChurchMissions.org
www.RosettaStoneReplicas.com

DID YOU KNOW? There is another resource to help you learn more about Black History?
Check out: www.yenoba.com

And another? Check out: http://www.blackhistorypages.net/index.ph
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SPECIAL NOTE:
Leave a legacy for future generations by helping to restore an armory for the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum in 2010. Less than $3 million is needed for the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum to restore the historic Houston Light Guard Armory (1925). Buy a brick for $100 or $500 or $1,000 or $2,500 or $5,000. Have your name added in their “Legacy of Fame” hall. Get your NFL, NBA, or other professional sports relative to invest $1 million or more and thus give back to future generations by having a hall or room named after them. Get your relative in entertainment to donate $1 million or more and thus leave a legacy that will outlive them by having space dedicated to them.


Contact Ed Udell @ 832-216-7786 for your next speaker at your church conferences, youth meetings, community events, or for diversity programs, teaching writing grant writing, and/or teaching others about health/nutrition, and help for senior citizens.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Today’s Information On African American History: November 8, 2009

The answers to last issue’s questions are: 1943, Microbiology, Little Richard, 118, Raisin in the Sun, and Chicago.

There were a lot of Civil Right’s and African American (black) groups during the 1960’s. Some were led by ministers and somewhat reserved African Americans; others were led by militants and more demonstrative individuals. Sometimes, they balanced each other; sometimes they brawled with each other; and sometimes they backed each other. Some groups had been growing since 1909 (NAACP); others developed and grew in the 1950’s and 1960’s.

One of the more militant-type groups was one called CORE---the Congress On Racial Equality, founded on the campus of the University of Chicago. This group was not only focused and energized; they were made up mainly of university students of various ethnic groups, notably Anglo Americans. What started at one campus soon grew to many more campuses across America and now CORE is in Africa, Latin America, Asia, Europe, and Canada. They have one of the most interactive web sites of the civil right’s groups and can be visited at http://core-online.org/index.htm. In what year was CORE founded?

This person was called has been described as the "Henry Ford of Free Electron Laser Technology." Although he grew up in poverty, like many other great achievers of his time, Earl D. Shaw didn’t let his father’s rebellious ways hinder him. He didn’t stop having a dream because his mother and father were sharecroppers. He didn’t give up just because he school “had just three rooms, and his teachers did not have degrees.” He did the best he could by using what little education he was given, and he achieved, going on to “Crane Technical High School in Chicago, Illinois, at the age of twelve due to excellent achievement test grades.” He didn’t stop. He received a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Illinois; a Master of Arts degree from Dartmouth College; and earned his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkley. “Dr Shaw had an extensive and fulfilling education in the field of physics even though his school aptitude files stated, "This student should be discouraged from studying physics." He became the first African-American research scientist for Bell Labs in Morristown, New Jersey. He spent 10 years developing the “fist free electron laser. In 1985 he patented something but lost the patent in 1993 “due to failure to pay maintenance fees. What was it called?

Another quick tidbit about Little Richard to give your mind a break from the heavy scientific stuff in the previous paragraph. Like most performers, Little Richard had to begin performing in some club to get his break. What was the name of that club? Hint: it goes with time!

This person was a football coach who “spent 56 years as the head college football coach at” an HBCU. He became established “as the winningest coach in college football history, becoming the first coach to record 400 wins. Maybe he didn’t get picked to get a big contract at a larger college or university due to an “era of segregation in the American South,” his talent was “praised by many white coaches especially by that of Alabama coach Bear Bryant.” Who was he?

Since that one was pretty easy, here is one a little harder: Who was the first African American coach in the Canadian Football League? Yea, thank you Canadians!

Okay, some of you know about Lorraine Hansberry and her play Raisin in the Sun, but what award did she receive due to that play?

The last person I will mention in this “tidbit” left a legacy that involved the Pullman porters and many other workers who worked hard but received little pay. This man left an institute that even helped me when I ran for the school board in Bakersfield. In what city is The Phillip Randolph Institute located?

Look for the answers in the next issue of: “Today’s Information on African American History!”

Credits:
The BlacFax Trivia Game
http://www.core-online.org/
http://en.wikipedia.org/
http://www.millville.org/lakeside/afamsci/mikej.html

Next time: Elijah Muhammad, Dr. James Derham, Richard Penniman, Cleveland Indians, Shirley Graham, and “Famous Amos”!

You need to check out this web site…it may blow your mind: http://www.freemaninstitute.com/RTGseminar.htm

And, here are some more:
www.Black101.com
www.BlackChurchMissions.org
www.RosettaStoneReplicas.com

DID YOU KNOW? There is another resource to help you learn more about Black History?
Check out: www.yenoba.com
And another? Check out: http://www.blackhistorypages.net/index.php

SPECIAL NOTE:
Leave a legacy for future generations by helping to restore an armory for the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum in 2010. Less than $4 million is needed for the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum to restore the historic Houston Light Guard Armory (1925). Buy a brick for $100 or $500 or $1,000 or $2,500 or $5,000. Have your name added in their “Legacy of Fame” hall. Get your NFL, NBA, or other professional sports relative to invest $1 million or more and thus give back to future generations by having a hall or room named after them. Get your relative in entertainment to donate $1 million or more and thus leave a legacy that will outlive them by having space dedicated to them.

Contact Ed Udell @ 832-216-7786 for your next speaker at your church conferences, youth meetings, community events, or for diversity programs, teaching writing grant writing, and/or teaching others about health/nutrition, and help for senior citizens.