EY WADE~ Entertaining Your World And Designing Eternity


BEADS ON A STRING-America's Racially Intertwined Biographical History book. The first to include Sarah Collins Rudolph,the 5th and forgotten little girl in the Birmingham Church Bombing, into the pages of history.

WADE-IN PUBLISHING.COM Fiction and non-fiction that expounds on topics we all discuss within the comforting tight circles of our closest friends. Topics such as race, children books, family, personal relations, the welfare system, old school child rearing and childcare. E-book publications. Novels that make you ask.... AM I REALLY THE PERSON I CLAIM TO BE?

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"Y" You Should Read This Post-Celebrating Americans From Z to A


February-29 short days this year & only 26 letters. We have a lot of people to applaud.

 Today's history celebration is brought to you by the letter  ''Y" and the great American Melting Pot.

1.Yoyo (Inventor)
PEDRO FLORES, father of the yo-yo (Donald Duncan purchased the company and renamed it Duncan Yo-Yo Co.) Pedro Flores was an immigrant to the United States from Vintarilocos Norte, Philippines.  He came to the United State in 1915. Attended the High School of Commerce in San Francisco 1919-1920 then he took up the study of Law at the University of California Berkeley and the Hastings College of Law in San Francisco. Flores worked as a bellhop at a Santa Monica hotel. Carving and playing with wooden yo-yos was a traditional pastime in the Philippines, but Pedro found that his lunch break yo-yo playing drew a crowd was the first appearance of the name "yo-yo," which means "come-come". Mr. Flores was the singular most important person in introducing the word "yo-yo" to the United States. Although the yo-yo as a toy (known as a bandalore) has been used for centuries, even existing in the United States for years prior to Mr. Flores, as one astute observer noted in the late 1920's "we've all done the yo-yo before but we never had a name for it." Although Pedro Flores was frequently described as the inventor of the yo-yo, Mr. Flores never personally claimed to have invented the yo-yo, and he always mentioned its past history as a centuries old Philippine game.
2. Chemist
YFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuan_Tseh_Lee,,UAN TSEH LEE (Chinese: 李遠哲  pinyin: Li Yuanzhé, Wade-Giles: LiYüan-che; pe?h-oe-ji: Lí Oán-tiat) (born November 19, 1936) is a famous chemist. He was the first Taiwanese-born Nobel Prize laureate, who, along with the German-Canadian John C. Polanyi and American Dudley R. Herschbach won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1986 "for their contributions to the dynamics of chemical elementary processes." 
3.Educator
 YFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamato_Ichihashi,,AMATO ICHIHASHI, Ichihashi was born in Nagoya, of the Aichi prefecture of Japan in 1878.Yamato Ichihashi was one of the first academics of Asian ancestry in the United States. Ichihashi wrote a comprehensive account of his experiences as an internee at the Tule Lake War Relocation Center where he was imprisoned in World War II along with other relocated Japanese Americans.
4.Governmental Leader
JFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Yoo,,OHN YOO, born 1967 is Korean-born American legal scholar and a professor of law at the University of California, Berkeley (Boalt Hall), and is best known for his work from 2001 to 2003 in the United States Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel.
5. Activist
JFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Yee,,AMES J. YEE (Chinese: 余百康 or 余优素福) is an American former United States Army chaplain with the rank of captain. He is best known for being subject to an intense investigation by the United States, but charges were later dropped. Yee, a Chinese American, was born in New Jersey. All court-martial charges against Yee were quietly dropped on March 19, 2004, and he was released to resume his duties. 
6.Authors
YOLANDA CORNELIA "NIKKI" GIOVANNI (born June 7, 1943, in Knoxville, Tennessee) is an American poet and author. Nikki Giovanni was born in Knoxville, Tennessee into a family of mixed African American and Italian ancestry. Giovanni is a breast cancer survivor who contributed an introduction to the book “Breaking the Silence: Inspirational Stories of Black Cancer Survivors.” 
 LFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lois-Ann_Yamanaka,,OIS-ANN YAMANAKA (born September 7, 1961 in Ho'olehua, Molokai, Hawaii) is a Japanese American poet and novelist from Hawaii. Many of her critically acclaimed literary works are written in Hawaiian Pidgin, and some of her writing has dealt with controversial ethnic issues. In particular, her works confront themes of Asian American families and the local culture of Hawaii.
7.Activist: 
YFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yung_Wing,,UNG WING (Chinese: 容闳 Pinyin: Róng Hóng) was born November 17, 1828 in Zhuhai in Guangdong province. He persuaded the Qing Dynasty government to send young Chinese to the United States to study Western science and engineering.With the U.S. government's eventual approval, he organized what came to be known as the Chinese Educational Mission.
8. Sports:
KFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Kristi_,,RISTI TSUYA YAMAGUCHI (born July 12, 1971 in Hayward, California) is an American figure skater. Yamaguchi was the first woman to have won both the U.S. Senior pairs and ladies figure skating titles.
9. Media/Entertainment:
READABOUT MORE GREAT AMERICANS IN THE BOOK
YFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yo-Yo_Ma,,O-YO MA (Chinese: 馬友友; simplified Chinese: 马友友; Ma Youyou) (born October 7, 1955) is a French-born Chinese-American cellist, considered one of the finest in the world.



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Celebrating America (History) One Letter at a Time

I believe in America's Multi-racial History
Now that February is approaching the advent of Black History Month is upon us. I thought I would blog America's history by the alphabet. Short month-26 letters....I think I can squeeze quite a few people in. Do you know what's worse than being forgotten in American history? It's having your name start with the letter Z. Last in history, last in line. Not here.


 

I thought I would share a little more of America's multi-racial history--The Z's have the stage:

1. Author
ZFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zora_Neal_Hurston,,ORA NEALE HURSTON (born January 7, 1891) was an American folklorist and author during the time of the Harlem Renaissance, best known for the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God. 
 2. Artist:
KFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korczak_Ziolkowski Sven,,ORCZAK ZIÓLKOWSKI (born September 6, 1908, in Boston) was an American sculptor of Crazy Horse Memorial. Ziolkowski, a Polish American, was born exactly 34 years after the death of Crazy Horse on September 6, 1908.
3.Scientist
PFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Zimbardo,,HILIP G. ZIMBARDO (born March 23, 1933) is an American psychologist, best-known for his Stanford prison experiment and bestselling introductions to psychology. he conducted the famed Stanford prison experiment, in which 24 normal college students were randomly assigned to be prisoners or guards in a mock prison located in the basement of the psychology building at Stanford . The students quickly began acting out their roles, with "guards" becoming sadistic and the "prisoners" showing extreme depression and passivity.The experiment led to theories about the importance of the social situation in individual psychology that are still controversial today.
4.Inventor 
FFLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Zamboni,,RANK JOSEPH ZAMBONI, JR. (January 16, 1901 in Eureka, Utah to Italian immigrants) was a U.S. inventor whose most famous invention was the Zamboni machine for resurfacing ice rinks. In the 1970s, he invented machines to remove water from outdoor artificial turf surfaces, remove paint stripes from the same surfaces, and roll up and lay down artificial turf in domed stadiums. 
5. Activist 
HELEN ZIA,(FLOWTEXTLINK ,WEB,HTTP:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Zia,,謝漢蘭 pinyin: Xiè Hànlán)  born in 1952  is a second generation Chinese American and an award-winning journalist and scholar who has covered Asian American communities and social and political movements for decades. She was born in New Jersey to first generation immigrants from Shanghai She was also a vocal anti-war activist, voicing her Opposition to U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, and a firm believer in feminism. She has appeared in numerous news programs and films; her work on the 1980s Asian American landmark civil rights case of anti-Asian violence is documented in the Academy Award nominated film, "Who Killed Vincent Chin?" and she was profiled in Bill Moyers' PBS documentary, "Becoming American: The Chinese Experience."

Okay world that concludes our American history lesson for today. 

WAKING TO THE DREAM

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FREE DOWNLOAD OF COMPLETE (Multi-Media)BOOK In honor of MLK Day.  I for one am and always have been in line with Martin Luther King's Dream as you can tell from my statement of belief. I continually chase the dream.
“I feel that we as Americans are all equal and held together by a common thread. Like a treasured beaded necklace of different colors held together on a string, we are held together by our necessities and our circumstances and our humanity. Every color helps to make the necklace beautiful. We can never be a totally separate entity! Americans of all colors are so integrated that if we hurt one, we hurt all. Just like that necklace of treasured beads, leave one out and the gap is seen. Break the chain and many of us are lost.”
King's dream and the fact I was a home-schooling parent wanting a history book applauding contributions of all races are the reasons I put together Beads on a String America's Racially Intertwined Biographical History. It is amazing to me how long it took some people to agree to recognize a holiday for such a person Controversy over having MLK Day.

For Your E-reader
If each of our histories were celebrated everyday and our children were taught to value all histories, contributions, and differences we wouldn't have to wonder what Dr. King would think about us today. His dream....my dream would be fulfilled. We live in different times and we now play on a different game field from or ancestors and we need different tactics to fight the causes of today. Beads on a String chooses not to be about a certain color, but about a certain Nation. Learn more about the book.

America as a nation has many problems and yet what other country in the world can attest to the fact that people or dying to be here? There is a dream in their heart to be a part of this great nation and to live in the land of good and plenty as a member of one body. So why do we keep the line of separation as a constant reminder? The hyphenation, which line that separates all races and the word American.

The elimination of the hyphenation that is placed to distinguish White Americans from African (Black), Chinese, Arab, Indian, Japanese and every other race would be an immense triumph for Americans. That hyphenation continues to put a space between the races that are naturally born and the races that have chosen to become Americans. And we are that, Americans that have contributed enormously to the growth of the great United States.

Why is all of the hyphenation and hatin' going on in America? Why is such a distinction made before we are labeled Americans? African (sorry I don't come from Africa.) Arab, Asian, Black, Chinese, Hispanic, Native. I don't see anything about White-American or European-American. Who made this 'hyphenation' up and why are we accepting a line that separates us? I feel that we as Americans are all equal and held together by a common thread. Like a treasured beaded necklace of different colors held together on a string, we are held together by our necessities and our circumstances and our humanity. Every color helps to make the necklace beautiful. We can never be a totally separate entity! Americans of all colors are so integrated that if we hurt one, we hurt all. Just like that necklace of treasured beads, leave one out and the gap is seen. Break the chain and many of us are lost.

I believe that there are no pure races in America. Once Africans loved and integrated with Native Americans and the White man brought the first boat of Black slaves to America and raped their women, the 'pure' races were put to an end because nine months later, some woman had the first mixed baby. This integration happened again and again within all races. We are such a mixed breed in America that it has become hard to distinguish one race from another just by looking in a face. Some Blacks were so light skinned that they married into the White race and no one knew and may never know. Light to White skinned babies were being born and no one knew if they were Black or White and it did not and does not matter because they were born into the human race. Once free, they became American citizens. As does anyone born into this country, or anyone that chooses to come into this country and become an American. How many pure races are living here? From what we see, love among the races is flowing freely. Don't forget what happened to our fore-parents. Let us not repeat it. Let go of what happened in the past. I am not saying that there is not prejudice in the world. What we are saying is that when we are fighting for a 'cause' we must remember we are fighting the system and not a person. We have to be diligent in collecting facts, have an unbreakable, unbeatable plan, and remember that all of our foes may not be of one color.

Pay attention to the present. What we consider 'small things' is happening daily in the schools; on the jobs; in the government. Pay attention so that we don't step back in time. Stop trying to benefit from the past. Everyone that was involved in the mayhem and destruction of the families and the souls of the slaves are dead. We cannot charge nor punish them with anything and if we attack we may hurt our own. We take a chance of destroying an uncle, aunt, cousin, brother because roots run deep. We cannot change the past hurts, but we can change the present laws. The heart of man has to be dealt with by God. We should not dwell on the past. It stirs up hatred in young hearts that should only know peace. We know what happened to our fore-parents. Let us not repeat it.

It is time for America to let go of the past and heal itself. The grieving period should have been over and the healing started. But every year, old wounds are torn open by the words Black History Month. Why don't we teach the children about America's History with everyone included? To me it seems as if only a few Black people are pulled out of the closet, dusted off the shelves and paraded in front of America as if to say, 'this one wasn't worthless', this one wasn't stupid'. Why is it that the 'black' is in capital letters? Is it to point out that a person of color has a brain or is it to pronounce to the world that we have pride? If there is so much pride in America for Native, African, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Iranian-Americans and other 'hyphened Americans, drop the hyphen and pull together and teach our children that every bead has a purpose and should be celebrated.
Let's wake and live the dream.

Year Has Changed-Direction the Same

My goal in life is to not accept 'no' as the only answer, plant my feet on the path I have chosen and learn from every achievement and mistake. In this I will be the winner.
So, yesterday I was on Smashwords trying to tweak the files to the picture books I have decided to publish when I came to a surprising halt. Didn't know how to find my previously published books on Apple's site and now I know.  I am so excited. I can now be on the  iPad of millions, woot! I haven't been able to figure out where the 'artist' page is for one listing on Apple, but in the mean time: Beads on a String has a page over here, The Fishing Trip hangs out here and The Perfect Solution is here, 


Now, back to the picture books. You'll be hearing more about them soon from  In the Chair

I am a writer. In essence my sanity is always in question.
Try not to look at life as blurry, but as passing you by because you're sitting still! Get up and do something.