Monday, April 16, 2012

Did Louis Farrakhan Threaten Obama?

Rush presented a soundbyte from Farrakhan:
RUSH: Calypso Louie, ladies and gentlemen, was in Memphis Tennessee Saturday at Lemoyne-Owens College, the Nation of Islam leader, and we have a brief portion of the remarks of Minister Farrakhan.

FARRAKHAN: Leadership is nothing to play with. 'Cause people tomorrow, maybe in a few days, are gonna kill their leaders who've been selling them out. That's why we in this shape that we're in right now, because we had corrupt people, or people who started off good and got corrupted.

RUSH: Now, who is Calypso Louie referring to here, when he warns that people in a few days are gonna kill their leaders who've been selling them out? That's Minister Farrakhan. Will the Secret Service leave Cartagena and come home to investigate this? Is the whole Secret Service down there? Well, I mean this is serious stuff. This is the Nation of Islam leader, he's in Memphis on Saturday, and he's saying, "'Cause people tomorrow, maybe in a few days, are gonna kill their leaders who've been selling them out." He doesn't identify which leaders have been selling out who. But I just wanted you to hear it.

And the student body of this college was his audience:
LeMoyne-Owen College is a fully accredited, four-year private historically black college located in Memphis, Tennessee, affiliated with the United Church of Christ. It was founded in 1862 to provide freedmen an education.

History
LeMoyne-Owen College was formed through the 1968 merger of LeMoyne College and Owen College, both private, historically black, church-affiliated colleges.[1]

LeMoyne Normal and Commercial School traces its history to 1862 when the American Missionary Association (AMA) sent Lucinda Humphrey to open an elementary school at Camp Shiloh for freedmen and escaped slaves. This was one of more than ten schools founded by the AMA, an integrated organization led by black and white Congregational and Presbyterian ministers.

This was soon after the occupation of Memphis by Federal troops during the Civil War. First known as Lincoln Chapel, the school relocated to Memphis in 1863. In 1866 it was destroyed during race riots that followed the withdrawal of federal troops. The school was rebuilt and in 1867 it reopened with 150 students and six teachers.

In 1870, Francis Julius LeMoyne (1798-1879), a Washington, Pennsylvania doctor, donated $20,000 to the American Missionary Association to build an elementary and secondary school for prospective teachers. LeMoyne, who was a notable abolitionist, traveled from his Pennsylvania home to visit the new school. He donated a clock for the school's tower. The Memphis yellow fever epidemic started in 1873 and took a toll on many school personnel.

Under the leadership of the third principal, Andrew J. Steele, the institution experienced three decades of growth and development.

In 1914 the school moved from Orleans Street to its present site on Walker Avenue. Steele Hall, the first building on the new campus, was erected that same year. LeMoyne became a junior college in 1924 and then a four-year college in 1930. The LeMoyne College was chartered by the State of Tennessee just four years later.

Owen College traces its history as a junior college to 1947, when the Tennessee Baptist Missionary and Educational Convention bought property on Vance Avenue. S. A. Owen Junior College opened at that location in 1954.

Athletics
The college sponsors athletic teams that participate in the Division II level, in the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SIAC) conference of the NCAA. The Lemoyne-Owen College Department of Athletics sponsors men's intercollegiate baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, and tennis along with women's intercollegiate softball, basketball, cross country, volleyball and tennis.

In 1975, the Lemoyne-Owen College men's basketball team won the NCAA Men's Division III Basketball Championship. The school was then a member of Division III level of the NCAA. Up to this day, Lemoyne-Owen has been the only HBCU to win a national championship at that level.

Recent debt and accreditation issues
According to a 2007 AP article, LeMoyne-Owen has suffered from management, debt and accreditation issues. Its accreditation has been in jeopardy, with Southern Association of Colleges and Schools placing it on probation for the last two years.

In August 2007, in a controversial move, the City of Memphis ensured the college would open for the fall 2007 semester by pledging $3 million in taxpayer funds to be added to other substantial pledges that came from the United Negro College Fund, Cummins Inc., radio host Tom Joyner and the United Church of Christ.

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