Pretty funny stuff: https://www.facebook.com/share/r/HUSqMVunVm3rpuxH/
Pretty funny stuff: https://www.facebook.com/share/r/HUSqMVunVm3rpuxH/
That is just hilarious. I never knew.
Reformed Californian. She’s got some funny stuff out there.
I have been following her for a while. I think she is in Tennessee. Haven't been able to figure out if she really is from California or she is a Tennessee native spoofing people from California. Every now and then her southern accent pops out
The Ole Miss sticker thing is a hoot.
I would guess it was filmed there because Easy Rider is based on Steinbeck's Travels with Charlie. You may remember our former VP, Steve Landry, and his wife who was a nurse in the clinic, Paula. Paula's mom was the nurse for the MD in the book, an old friend of Steinbeck's in the Houma-Thibodeaux area. Paula can still remember Steinbeck visiting when she was a child.
And of course, Travels ends in New Orleans, just as Easy Rider (almost) does. But instead of visiting during Mardi Gras, Steinbeck was there in time to document the 'Cheerleader Protests,' when a tiny little girl, Ruby Bridges, became the first person to desegregate New Orleans public schools.
Not a pleasant part of Louisiana's history. Norman Rockwell, who had previously avoided political issues, broke that tradition and depicted innocent Ruby in this painting 'The Problem We All Live With':
And BTW, what was the first school in the nation to desegregate after SCOTUS ruled on Brown v Board/Topeka, and the 1st historically white school in the South to desegregate in any meaningful way?
Yes. A scant 3 months after the ruling, UL (SLI) admited, not a token one or two black students, but 80.
The story goes that black leaders were pushing for a black college in Breaux Bridge. President Joel Fletcher was hardly a liberal, but he didn't think another local public college would be good for SLI. So, as I heard it, he was watching Brown v Board go through the courts, and thought the plaintiffs would prevail; he called in the local leaders pushing for the college and told them, "Sue us. We will put up a token resistance, and if the Supreme Court rules as it looks like they will, we will admit your sons & daughters here."
It was hardly perfect, but the administrators and the black students met weekly to head off any problems early. And the administration kept the media out, which is why almost no one has ever heard about it. But we were badly beaten up by the Legislature, the Boards, and the other schools.
Soon after, however, McNeese & Nicholls joined us, and also desegregated.
Next question: Who were the attorneys representing the plaintiffs in the lawsuit against SLI?
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