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AframNews
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VOL. 22 ISSUE 33
AframNews
African-American News and Issues Newspaper
Did You Know? Benjamin Banneker
Greater Houston Area - Labor Day Special Edition
OPERATION RECOVERY
“As the clouds pass and the sun shines, all of us needed to see it. Regardless of clouds or rain, the sun will shine in this city.” -Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner
Benjamin Banneker was born on in 1731. He was a self-taught, Black astronomer and mathematician. Banneker and his sisters were born free and grew up on a self-sufficient, 100-acre tobacco farm in Ellicott, MD. Growing up, he spent much of his free time devising and solving mathematical puzzles. It was not until after his retirement from farming at the age of 59 that Banneker began to study astronomy through borrowed books, becoming a man of science and mathematics through unassisted experimentation and close observation of natural phenomena.
SEE PAGE 4 Storm photo by: Randy Bresnik/NASA Center Picture: Volunteers and first responders work together to rescue residents from rising flood waters from Hurricane Harvey in Houston, August 29, 2017 AP
Houston United, Strong & Poised To Bounce Back From Harvey
!!! ALERTHOUSTON !!!
CURFEW IN EFFECT IN THE CITY OF HOUSTON FROM MIDNIGHT - 5AM
In the interest of public safety, including to protect evacuated property following the devastating flooding that has occurred in our city, Mayor Sylvester Turner will sign an executive order that imposes a curfew from 12:00am (Midnight) - 5:00am until further notice. An individual who is found in public areas during the curfew period is subject to citation and arrest under the City of Houston Code of Ordinances. This curfew does not apply to: Emergency responders; Late shift workers; Employees of Media Organizations; Disaster workers and volunteers; and those seeking shelter; This order will remain in effect until further notice. Another AlertHouston will be issued when the curfew is lifted.
At the age of 22, Benjamin Banneker created a working clock from wood after studying the watch of a friend. It took him two years to finish the clock, which kept accurate time in hours, minutes, and seconds until his death. Banneker became interested in astronomy through a local surveyor named George Ellicott, who loaned him astronomy books. In 1791, George Washington commissioned George Ellicott and French engineer Pierre L’Enfant to help plan the construction of the nation’s capital on a ten-square-mile area of land. Ellicott asked Banneker to be his assistant. A dispute between some Americans and Frenchmen led L’Enfant to abandon it and take the drafted plans with him. Over the course of two days, Banneker reproduced the intricate plans from memory, preventing a major delay. Shortly after returning to his farm in April 1791, Banneker issued his first of some ten annual almanacs, which were published by several printers and sold widely in both England and the United States. Banneker charted the movement of heavenly bodies and successfully predicted several solar eclipses. TO CONT. READING VISIT US ONLINE @ WWW.AFRAMNEWS.COM