National & InternationalTop StoriesNPR Topics: World NPR Topics: Nation Art & Culture NPR Topics: Business Metro & StateCindy Crawford: Magic City MarketplaceCarsen Talks "AAA" And More On Capitol Journal Poverty on the Rise in Suburbia Don Dailey: Capitol Journal Update John Archibald: Some things go fast, some things go slow WBHM Seeks News Director Kyle Whitmire: Delay for Alabama Accountability Act? Capitol Journal Update Tanya Ott's final day at WBHM John Archibald Kyle Whitmire: How was the Collapsed Airport Display Designed? John Archibald: Unrest at the Jefferson County Commission Kyle Whitmire: Jefferson County Top Attorney Job Reopens Healing the Hurt in Hurtsboro Black School, White School: Teaching The Civil Rights Movement The Postman's March I Was Told I Couldn't Be a Feminist Because I'm Black Hostess to the Civil Rights Movement 1963 Church Bombing Seeks Compensation John Archibald: Why Jeffco Is Paying Attorney $393K To Do Nothing Common Core, Part 3: More Writing May Be A Challenge Common Core, Part 2: Implementation a Challenge Commissioners Question Decision on County Attorney Jeff Sewell Diane McWhorter on Civil Rights 50th Anniversary News Features Archive |
September 3, 2012, Morning News![]()
U.S. Steel and the United Steelworkers have reportedly reached a tentative agreement on a three-year contract covering more than 16,000 workers at domestic facilities, including one in Fairfield, Alabama. U.S. Steel says the talks covered health care for retirees and other issues. The union says members will vote after reviewing details over the next few weeks. The two sides had been negotiating since June on a contract to replace the existing pact, which expired Saturday. It’s been 81 years since nine black teenagers were convicted of raping two white women, one of whom later recanted her story. But only one of the nine Scottsboro Boys (pictured above) was pardoned of his rape convictions before the men died. Now a push is on by the Scottsboro Boys Museum and others to make sure that happens for the other eight. Governor Robert Bentley says he would like to see a pardon, but state law doesn't allow him to issue them. The state parole board says its rules don't allow posthumous pardons. Two legislators are working on resolutions saying the state considers the names of the Scottsboro Boys cleared. Visitors to some Civil War anniversary events are hearing another long-silenced sound amid the cannon fire. It's music from 19th-century minstrel shows, performed not in blackface but in uniform. Some re-enactors have formed camp bands to play music that soldiers enjoyed hearing around battlefield campfires. Groups such as the 2nd South Carolina String Band pride themselves on their accurate impressions — right down to the exaggerated black dialect of songs with inescapably racist overtones. The musicians say they don't mean to offend. Critics say they should help listeners understand how the demeaning songs also helped popularize the banjo, an instrument with African roots. Photo Credit: |







A group of Bessemer residents wants their courthouse to stay open. The Birmingham News reports that the group called "Saving Bessemer" plans to meet tomorrow morning on the steps of the local justice center to let their views be known. Jefferson County officials are considering the possibility of moving the courthouse to an empty mall. But the group wants the courthouse to remain in downtown Bessemer. 