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so the catalytic event for the event in tulsa in 1921 began on may 30th, 1921. dick roland 19 years old and black crossed paths in an elevator with a 17-year-old white girl named sarah page. history books offer us one version of events. something happened on the elevator. we don t know exactly what, but it s likely that dick either bumped into, brushed up against or stepped on the foot of sarah page. she overreacted. she began to scream and he was frightened and ran from the elevator. family lore. the man was not a black man attacking a woman. what he saw was two people kissing. sarah page and dick roland were lovers. he was accused of attacking her and sarah from what we understand tried to tell him no, no, no. we re in love. we re getting married. she refused to cooperate with
December 18, 2020
Need an idea on how to up your Southern pantry game? We asked seven chefs around the South from a pitmaster in Florida to an Indian American entrepreneur in Nashville to a Gullah historian and cook to tell us the items they always have on hand, come hell or high water. Here are their collected responses, including a special chaat masala, Hellmann’s mayonnaise (gasp), a stand-out peanut butter, and some universal classics (here’s to you, Hunt’s tomatoes).
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You won’t catch the Kentucky chef
Ouita Michel of Holly Hill Inn without Crystal Hot Sauce for shrimp and grits or a gumbo, and she’s always got a bottle of Lea and Perrin’s Worcestershire sauce on hand, her secret-weapon ingredient in sauces, soups, and marinades. “It can’t be beat for depth of flavor,” she says. Michel is also a Ro-tel gal and a lover of Hunt’s fire-roasted tomatoes for wintertime salsas, pastas, or beans. And if it’s an on-the-fly lunch she’s after, she’s still l
i m not a citizen of a tribe. were there any benefits to that? no. boston globe did a full investigation. kind of like the original rachel dolezal, a little bit. a white woman pretending to be black. this is what i learned from my family. okay. we re back around the table. nia, we were talking about this during the break. i thought the rachel dolezal comparison was a real lo blow. this is a woman who painted her skin, darkened her skin and got a perm and passed ford black and was completely white and elizabeth warren, you know, i sort of put it in the context of elizabeth warren, from oklahoma, a southern state. a lot of people claim native ancestry, are bill clinton did, johnny depp did as well, billy ray coronavirus. that s what the family lore. is that does remind us of an issue that had been dogging elizabeth warren. the president obviously has
it is. it s up on the screen. the state bar of texas. that was back in 1986. she has been dogged by this story for a while. does this change anything for her, you think? i think it does somewhat. she didn t handle it well at all, not that you can handle things that oughtn t to have been there in the first place. she had family lore that she probably had some ancestry there. let s assume she was telling us the truth when she said i wasn t trying to do anything special. i just was proud of it. but she kept on and kept on, and people have the right to wonder about that. were you just using it for your political advantage? and then when she didn t immediately renounce it and say, you re right. i shouldn t put this because i can t prove this, she doubles down. she tries to prove it. no. she comes up with something that s terrible, and she digs herself a deeper hole. yeah. so you can think if you want that she wasn t quite coming clean with us to begin with or not, but she didn t handl