Page 8 B la c k February 9, 2000 H M istorv onth continued popularity o f the “Dam N ew s” outside its home in Harlem. Pittsburgh Courier. A man who made his living as a security guard, Edwin Nathaniel Harleston, started this paper in January 1910. Before the year was out, however, he pulled out o f the enterprise. The Courier’s new chief was the attorney who had handled its incorporation, Robert L. Vann, who made this newspaper the smart and extremely popular had been a catcher in the American Baseball League in 1884, Jackie R obinson was the first Black baseball player in modem baseball. He was an outstanding player and the first Black player in the white Baseball Hall o f Fame. Other Black baseball players and fans followed Jackie to the white baseball leagues. Within a few years. Black baseball leagues and teams disappeared. Black America had traded away its baseball leagues, teams, hundreds o f players, equipm ent, support staffs, buildings, and hundreds o f thousands o f fans just to get one Black onto a white team. songs o f the day. The presence of a strong dance rhythm distinguished the work o f R&B artists from the styles played by blues and jazz musicians. Rhythm and blues also had a d istin c tly u rb an sty le , reflecting the desire o f many young African A m ericans to distance th e m se lv e s from th e ru ral associations o f the traditional blues. Successful performers emerging from this tradition included the saxophonist and band leader Louis Jordan and “blues shouters” such as Big Joe Turner, La V em Baker, Ruth Brown, Big Mama Thornton, and W ynonie Harris. R. l^>for Rosewood Massacre p -“ S P a ris in th e R o arin g Twenties. Life between the wars, when Black was in and hot, “when people with money but no talent helped people with with talent but no money,” when European nobility hobnobbed with American royalty - the Kings and Dukes and Earls o f jazz - and life was a “beautiful thing” for the stylishly bored, rakishly disenchanted, and Blacks who had known better and lived far worse in the USA. When the stock market crashed, it ushered in the Great Depression o f the 1930s. It was the moment that brought the dancing, glory days o f the Paris Noir Black chic to an end. It was grand while it lasted. Before long, Hitler had invaded Poland, and Paris night life saw the light o f day. In 1939, a new play by white playwright William Saroyan, The Time o f Your Life, was the toast o f New York. Paris had been that. For now it was done. C 'est la vie. for Scottsboro Boys B y T onya B olden On March 25, 1931, a scruffle broke out among some young men copping a ride on a freight train bound for Memphis, Tennessee. It was a black-white thing, back o f which was probably B y C lalp A nderson . E d .D, for Professional Black Baseball Bv C laud A nperson . E p .P , On April 10, 1947, Jackie Robinson broke the color-barrier when he left the K ansas C ity Monarchs to join the Brooklyn Dodgers, an all-w hite National League team. A lthough Moses Fleetwood Walker, a Black man. Rhythm and Blues, also known as R&B, is a catchall phrase used to describe several styles of m u sic p ro d u ced by A frican American musicians and intended mainly for an African American audience. The term came into vogue during the 1940s as an alternative to the term race music. At this time, the main practitioners o f R&B were small combos that often added jazz and blues elements to the popular African Americans were excludedfrom the professional basketball leagues that sprang up during the 1920s and / 930s, but Black teams were able to barnstorm against Whites throughout the country. Though Jackie Robinson (shown above) is properly credited with breaking the color line in modern major-league baseball by join in g the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, he was not the first African A merican to play in the major leagues. That distinction belongs to M oses Fleetwood "F leet" Walker, a college educated catcher. Som ething terrible had happened in the little Black Florida town o f Rosewood in 1923. A mass murder o f Blacks took place. The m assacre started with a lynching and ended with the entire town burned to the ground, its middle-class Black residents killed or chased into the swamps. Nearly a century ago, Rosewood was a town o f about 200 B lack peo p le. T he massacre o f Blacks started when a white woman in a nearby town claimed to have been raped by a Black man. A mob o f arm ed w hite men headed straight for Rosewood. T hey knew th at because o f gun control laws, most Black communities were unarmed and defenseless. For a week the white men ravaged and burned the Black town of Rosewood. Newspaper reports from the time listed eight dead, six Blacks and two Whites. But reports o f mass graves fille d w ith B lack bo d ies persisted through the years. Som e so u rces charged that more than 100 Blacks were slain. No one will ever know the true number of the dead. But the property records could not be clearer. Land that had been owned by Black men and women was confiscated and sold for taxes to White buyers. The Black families o f Rosewood lost all they had spent their lifetime earning. O regon S ïmfhonï James DcPrcist, Music Director & Conductor A C O N C E R T FOR LO VERS R o m a n t ic M u s i c o f V i e n n a ” Valentines Special Monday, Feb. 14 at 7:30 pm Norman Leyden, conductor Larissa Shahmatova, violin « Treat your sweetheart to an evening o f romantic Viennese music, including such clas­ sics as The Blue Danube Waltz, Vienna City o f My Dreams, Tales o f the Vienna Woods, The Pizzicato Polka and beautiful violin music. Tickets $18.75 - $50 Call 5 0 3 -2 2 8 -1 3 5 3 (1-800-228-7343) Mon.-Sat. 9 am- 5 pm or order tickets at: www.orsymphony.org L a ris s a S h a h m a to v a Sponsored by the Andrianoff Family Supported by KI03 and II ilia mette Week A H I I \ l S< IIM T Z .L H ( <»\< t H I HALL S\V M ain & HrinitlwuY • I’ orll.ind t emer lor the I’e rlorm iiig Arts