5-1 (06) release dates: January 28-February 3 TM TM Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. By BETTY DEBNAM From Slavery to Education from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. Booker T. Washington Booker T. Washington, one of the most important educators in American history, was born as a slave 150 years ago. Twenty-five years later, he helped build Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, one of the first schools for AfricanAmericans. The Mini Page celebrates Black History Month with a story about this man and his university. Booker T. Washington works in his office at the Tuskegee Institute. He built this college from the ground up. It became an important college. Growing up in slavery Booker Taliaferro Washington was born into slavery in 1856 in Hales Ford, Va. It was illegal for slaves to learn to read and write at that time. When he was about 5 years old, he had to carry the books of his owner’s children to school for them. He would look through the windows and watch them in school, longing to learn himself. He later wrote: “I had the feeling that to get into a schoolhouse and study would be about the same as getting into paradise.” The owner’s daughters taught him to read and write, although this worried his mother. If slaves were caught reading, they could be punished, sold or even killed. But his desire to learn was so strong that he braved those threats. photo by Frances Benjamin Johnston, Library of Congress LCJ694-1, courtesy National Park Service After the Civil War Going to college When Booker was about 9, the Civil War ended and the U.S. government freed all the slaves. His family moved to Malden, W. Va., where his stepfather worked in the salt mines. Booker began working in the salt mines as well. School was still very important to him. He began going to school for the first time. He went to work in the salt mines at 4 a.m., worked there all morning, went to school in the afternoon, and went back to work in the mines until about 10 at night. When he was about 17, Booker T. Washington traveled to Hampton Normal School, a school for black students in Hampton, Va. The main purpose of Hampton was to train students for future jobs. Part of Washington’s entrance exam was to sweep the floor. He had to do it over about five times, until the instructor thought he got it right. This was part of the way Hampton taught. The school wanted students to be clean in every way, and to do everything they did well. Booker later carried many of those beliefs over to Tuskegee. He worked his way through school by working as a janitor at Hampton Normal School. Please include all of the appropriate registered trademark symbols and copyright lines in any publication of The Mini Page®. ® 5-2 (06); release dates: January 28-February 3 Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. The Tuskegee Institute photo by Frances Benjamin Johnston, Library of Congress LC J694-39, courtesy National Park Service Tuskegee University in Tuskegee, Ala., is a highly respected university today, 125 years after it was founded as Tuskegee Institute. It began in 1881 with 30 students, and today has about 3,000. It is best known for its programs in agriculture, veterinary medicine and aerospace science. The beginning Lewis Adams, a former slave, was an important businessman and leader in the Tuskegee area. W. F. Foster, a white man, asked Adams to help him get the black vote for his election to the state legislature. Adams said he would if Foster helped start a school for black students in his county. Foster kept his promise and helped persuade the state of Alabama to start the school. The state gave money for teachers’ salaries, but gave no money for land or buildings. When Booker T. Washington became the first principal, he had to raise this money himself. One of the main purposes of the Tuskegee Institute was to train teachers. At this time there were not enough teachers trained to teach black students. from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. Mini Spy . . . Students attend classes in one of the first buildings of Tuskegee Institute in 1902. This college was not only one of the most advanced schools for teaching African-Americans, but it was advanced in women’s education as well. Men and women attended classes in the same classroom, which was unusual at that time. Learning trades Tuskegee grows When Washington led the school, he thought it was most important that African-American students learn a trade. He wanted them to be independent. Students learned many trades such as construction, farming, bricklaying and cooking. Students learned their trades by doing them, helping to build Tuskegee from the ground up. The first students cleared the land, made the bricks, built the buildings, planted the crops to feed the students and cooked the food. After Booker T. Washington died, the second principal, Robert Russa Moton, added other classes so that Tuskegee could offer regular fouryear college degrees. During World War II, Tuskegee began training pilots. The all-black squadrons of the Tuskegee Airmen received many medals for their brave service during the war. After the war, many of these airmen and others became leaders in the civil rights movement. TM The Mini Page gang and their friends are visiting a library to read about Booker T. Washington. See if you can find: • letter A • carrot • cat • word MINI • sailboat • pencil • letter B • snake • lips • kite • bell • letter U • letter L Brown Basset ws The Ned’s Houn TM from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. Booker T. Washington TRY ’N FIND Words that remind us of Booker T. Washington are hidden in the block below. Some words are hidden backward or diagonally. See if you can find: SLAVERY, EDUCATION, PRINCIPAL, TUSKEGEE, SCHOOL, READ, WRITE, BOOK, STUDENTS, MINE, EXAM, TEACH, BUILD, CLASSES, PRESIDENTS, JOB, FREE, RIGHTS, SEGREGATION. S T U S K E G E E E M I N E S EDUCATION IS R C J O B L A P I C N I R P L SO IMPORTANT! I F H V P R E S I D E N T S A G E R O K S E S S A L C T L V H X U E O V S T N E D U T S E T A L N E L G H H H C A E T R S M N U E T I R W D L I U B Y N O I T A G E R G E S D A E R N V N O I T A C U D E K O O B Please include all of the appropriate registered trademark symbols and copyright lines in any publication of The Mini Page®. ® 5-3 (06); release dates: January 28-February 3 Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate TM Go dot to dot and color this important educator. Rookie Cookie’s Recipe Cheesy Potato Casserole • 1 (2-pound) bag frozen hashed-brown potatoes • 8 ounces shredded sharp cheese • 1 (8-ounce) container sour cream • 2 (10-ounce) cans potato soup • dash salt and pepper • 1/4 cup butter, sliced • 1/2 cup parmesan cheese What to do: 1. Butter a large casserole dish and set aside. 2. In a large bowl, mix the first five ingredients together. 3. Pour into casserole dish and spread evenly. 4. Place butter slices on top. 5. Sprinkle with parmesan cheese. 6. Bake in a preheated 350-degree oven for 50 minutes. Makes 10 servings. Note: You will need an adult’s help with this recipe. from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. You’ll need: Meet Oprah Winfrey ©2004 Harpo Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved Photographer: Matthew Rolston Many know Oprah as a talk-show host, but she has many more talents. She is a producer, educator and magazine founder. She is also a philanthropist, which means she has started and supports many charities worldwide. Oprah was born in Kosciusko, Miss. Her career began when she was hired by a local radio station to read the news in Nashville, Tenn. Then, at 19, she became a TV news anchor. Later, she moved to Chicago and became known to many as the talk-show host of “The Oprah Winfrey Show” in 1985. That same year, she played the part of Sofia in the movie “The Color Purple,” one of her biggest film successes. It is now a musical on Broadway. Oprah also has produced and starred in TV movies. She is very interested in literacy and started Oprah’s Book Club, the largest in the world. She currently lives in Chicago. On Jan. 29 she will be 52. from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. The Mini Page® TM Flags of Our States Poster Alabama • Full-color flags from all 50 states • Date each state entered the union Missouri TO C K R IGH T ES M IN All the following jokes have something in common. Can you guess the common theme or category? IL To L GRA IN 1869 O To From ES S EQUA L IV 1890 Wyoming • Display size is 221/2 inches by 281/2 inches • Ideal for the classroom or home To order, send $4.95 plus $2.75 postage and handling (folded and mailed flat) or $4.95 plus $4.25 postage and handling (rolled in a tube). Send check or money order (U.S. funds only) payable to: Andrews McMeel Universal, P.O. Box 6814, Leawood, KS 66206. Please send _________ copies of The Mini Page Flags of Our States poster (Item #5637-0) at $7.70 each (folded) or $9.20 each (tube). (Bulk discount information available upon request.) Toll-free number: 1-800-591-2097. www.smartwarehousing.com Name: _____________________________________________________________________________________ Address: ___________________________________________________________________________________ City: ____________________________________________________ State: ___________ Zip: ____________ Ted: What is a good name for an unidentified flying cow? Tina: A Moo-F-O! Terrence: What did the astronaut see in his pan while he was cooking? Tami: An unidentified frying object! Thomas: What did the detective discover when he looked up? Tim: A Clue-F-O! Please include all of the appropriate registered trademark symbols and copyright lines in any publication of The Mini Page®. ® 5-4 (06); release dates: January 28-February 3 Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. Booker T. Washington Building Tuskegee Institute photo by Frances Benjamin Johnston, Library of Congress LC J694-260, courtesy National Park Service Booker T. Washington studied to become a teacher, and began teaching American Indian students at the Hampton Normal School. When people in Alabama wanted to start a school for black students, they wanted to hire an older white man as the first principal. But the principal of the Hampton Institute convinced them that Booker T. Washington would be the best man for the job. When he took the job as the first principal of Tuskegee, he was only 25. He was the principal of a school that had not been built yet. There was not even one building built or another teacher hired. He began teaching classes in a chicken coop outside a church. He raised funds to build the school and bought an orchard that had been burned during the Civil War. The first students and teachers in the school built the first buildings for the institute. He searched throughout the country for the top African-Americans in their fields and brought them in to teach. One of those people was George Washington Carver, one of the top scientists in the U.S. photo by Frances Benjamin Johnston, Library of Congress LC J694-107, courtesy National Park Service Becoming famous Students at Tuskegee Institute build the roof on one of the first buildings. Although most women learned trades such as cooking and basket making, many also helped build the first buildings. Booker T. Washington had one daughter and two sons, shown here. His first wife, Fannie Smith, a teacher, helped him build the Tuskegee Institute. They had one daughter. When Fannie died, he married a teacher, Olivia Davidson. They had two sons. After she died, he married again, to Margaret Murray. She ran the women’s program at Tuskegee. Supporting his cause As principal of Tuskegee Institute, At first, Washington believed that Booker T. Washington became wellwhite and black people could work known. He became an important together, but stay separate at other adviser to some of the most powerful times. He did not fight segregation. people in the country, including This made many people angry. Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and But when he saw that segregation William Howard Taft. policies were hurting black people, he Then he wrote a book about his began supporting civil rights causes. He own life, “Up From Slavery.” When supported several newspapers for the this was published in 1901, he African-American community. He began became even more famous. speaking out against discrimination. At that time, He died in 1915 when he was only many once59. He had suffered from many enslaved people physical problems, including did not know any exhaustion, after a life of working to trades except better the lives of black people what they had through education. learned on the farms or in the fields. The Mini Page thanks Tyrone Brandyburg, The only jobs they could find were as chief of interpretation and resource farm laborers. This kept them poor and education, Tuskegee National Park Service, dependent on the white landowners. for help with this issue. Washington thought that black Site to see: www.nps.gov/tuin people needed to believe in themselves and own property before Look through your newspaper for stories and pictures about schools and students’ they could be really free. To achieve this, he thought they needed to learn achievements. trades, or how to do many jobs. Next week The Mini Page is about the He believed that once Africansports of the Winter Olympics. Americans owned property, they would have power in society and would gain The Mini Page is created and edited by all their rights, such as the right to vote. Betty Debnam Many other black leaders thought Associate Editors Staff Artist he was giving in to powerful white Tali Denton Wendy Daley people and not moving fast enough. Lucy Lien Please include all of the appropriate registered trademark symbols and copyright lines in any publication of The Mini Page®. photo by Frances Benjamin Johnston, Library of Congress LCJ694-1, courtesy National Park Service Read all about Booker T. Washington in ® Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate by Betty Debnam Appearing in your newspaper on ____________. from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. (Note to Editor: Above is cameraready, one column-by-41/4-inch ad promoting Issue 5.) release dates: January 28-February 3 5-5 (06) from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The MIni Page Publishing Company Inc. ® Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate Standards Spotlight: Booker T. Washington TM from The Mini Page by Betty Debnam © 2006 The Mini Page Publishing Company Inc. Mini Page activities meet many state and national educational standards. Each week we identify standards that relate to The Mini Page’s content and offer activities that will help your students reach them. Supersport: Shelden Williams This week’s standards: • Students understand how democratic values came to be, and how they have been exemplified by people, events and symbols. (History) • Students understand and appreciate the contributions made by significant individuals in the country’s history. (Social Studies) Activities: 1. Draw a picture of Booker T. Washington during an important time in his life. Write a sentence explaining your picture. 2. Use newspaper words and pictures to make a poster that shows Booker T. Washington’s contributions to our country. 3. Write six headlines that tell the story of Booker T. Washington’s life. 4. Find three people in the newspaper whom you think Booker T. Washington might like to meet. Explain your choices. 5. Pretend you are Booker T. Washington and are just beginning the Tuskegee Institute. You need the support of the community to build your school. Write a letter you could send to business and community leaders explaining why your school is important and what they could do to help. Height: 6-9 Birthdate: 10-21-83 Weight: 250 Hometown: Forest Park, Okla. To win a national championship, basketball teams normally need a tough, talented big man. Top-ranked Duke has that man — All-American Shelden Williams. Shelden is a Blue Devils senior and nicknamed “The Landlord” because of his dominance in the lane. He won National Defensive Player of the Year honors last season. He set a school record for blocked shots with 122 and also averaged a double-double in scoring (15.5 points per game) and rebounding (11.2). Shelden grew up in Oklahoma. He starred in basketball and was a National Honor Society student. He comes from a basketball family. His dad, Bob, played at Oklahoma Christian College, and his brother, Quincy, is currently playing for North Texas. Shelden is a sociology major. One of his favorite hobbies is fishing. But at the moment, he wants to reel in that big national championship trophy for Duke. (standards by Dr. Sherrye D. Garrett, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi) (Note to Editor: Above is the Standards for Issue 5.) (Note to Editor: Above is copy block for Page 3, Issue 5, to be used in place of ad if desired.) Please include all of the appropriate registered trademark symbols and copyright lines in any publication of The Mini Page®.
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