Week of February 8, 2017 Vol 28 • No 11 • www.thechicagocitizen.com
BUSINESS
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BUSINESS PARTNERSHIP GIVES ACCESS TO CULTURALLY RELEVANT BOOKS +P4
Hyde Park
Audit Bureau of Circulation ABC AUDITED
HIDDEN FIGURES HIGHLIGHTS STELLAR ACHIEVEMENTS OF BLACK WOMEN
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FOCUSON BLACKHISTORY
“The point of the book is to see what we’re going to do about this type of injustice and violent news,” Tyson said. “The question isn’t how bad [injustice] is, but the question is when and what we’re going to do about it.”
By Safiyyah P. Muhammad
Since Hidden Figures hit the box office last December, there is a buzz of excitement in the air from audiences everywhere who’ve flocked to theaters to see the true story of three highly intelligent black women who helped launch John Glenn into orbit. As African Americans celebrate Black History Month, it’s a story fit for people of all ages and races, and is a movie that successfully documents the achievements of black women in the STEM fields. Although a well-kept secret at NASA until now, the story highlights the outstanding achievements black women made in NASA’s space program at the height of the Civil Rights era. The film is about three women employed at NASA, assigned to perform complex mathematics by hand, thus earning the name “human computers.” Katherine Johnson (Taraji Henson), Dorothy Vaughn (Octavia Spencer) and Mary Jackson, (Janelle Monae) were NASA’s human computers. Their gifted and talented mathematical skills as math geniuses and coders afforded them the ability to calculate by hand, mathematical calculations that dealt with lift-off, propulsion, and trajectories. Reports suggest that dozens of women served as computers during NASA’S space program.
AUTHOR SAYS NEW BOOK SPEAKS ON THE
SUFFERING OF TILL AND BLACK SOCIETY By Chris Shuttlesworth Award winning Author Timothy Tyson releases his fourth book, “The Blood of Emmett Till,” Jan. 31, 2017 to highlight the suffering of Till, black culture and white supremacy. In the image, Emmett Till is pictured at 13.
A
ward-Winning Author Timothy Tyson released his third book, “The Blood of Emmett Till,” on Jan. 31, 2017, which was published by Simon & Schuster. According to the Root, Tyson is the only writer to conduct an interview with Carolyn Bryant Donham, the woman who allegedly accused the 14-yearold boy, Emmett Till of “grabbing and verbally threatening her,” in August 1955 in Money, Mississippi.
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FASHION
CHURCH
CIVIL RIGHTS ATTORNEY CHARLES F. COLEMAN JR. NAMED HARVEST MALE “SWAG MAN OF THE YEAR”+ P6
AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY MONTH PROGRAMS COMING TO SOUTH SUBURBAN COLLEGE + P12
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