A wife was furious because her husband forgot their wedding anniversary.
She crossed her arms and yelled, “Tomorrow morning, I want something in the driveway that goes from 0 to 100 in under five seconds!”
The husband said nothing.
The next morning, the wife walked outside and found a small wrapped box sitting in the driveway.
Confused, she opened it.
Inside was a brand-new bathroom scale.
According to hospital staff, the husband is expected to make a full recovery.
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On this day, 28 April 1898, two brave Zimbabweans were hanged to death by the minority settler regime, fronted by the owners of the British South Africa Company, for radically resisting colonialism. The two spirit mediums, Mbuya Charwe (spirit medium of Nehanda) and Sekuru Gumboreshumba (Kaguvi/Murenga), remain important and sacrosanct figures of our nation's history. The prophetic words by Nehanda, "Mapfupa angu achamuka," came true when the brave sons and daughters of the soil successfully dismantled colonialism in the late 1970s. Lest we forget!
ZIMBABWE COMMEMORATES CHINHOYI SEVEN ANNIVERSARY
Zimbabwe today marks the anniversary of the Chinhoyi Seven, the liberation fighters who ignited the Second Chimurenga following a confrontation with Rhodesian forces on April 28, 1966.
The cadres engaged the enemy in a prolonged exchange of fire, in a battle that became a defining moment in the country’s armed struggle for independence.
#ZBCNews #Zimbabwe #ChinhoyiSeven #LiberationStruggle #SecondChimurenga #Heritage #Independence
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In 1934, Dr.Kwame Nkrumah applied to the Lincoln University for an admission to study. One year past and he had not received an offer or a response.
He then wrote an emergency letter to the Dean of Students at the University in 1935 reminding him of his request for an admission to study at the university.
Kwame Nkrumah arrived in Philadelphia in 1935 to begin undergraduate study at Lincoln University. After completing a bachelor’s degree in Sociology magna cum laude, Lincoln admitted him to its Theological Seminary in 1939 for an additional degree in Sacred Theology.
It was at this time, however, that Nkrumah began concurrent enrollment at the University of Pennsylvania in the hopes of acquiring multiple degrees simultaneously. Supporting himself through a precarious combination of scholarships and seasonal work in the segregated shipyards of Philadelphia, Nkrumah regularly visited Harlem and Washington to speak on anti-imperial themes in churches, on street corners, at political rallies, and in classrooms. In so doing, he managed to meet such prominent intellectuals of the African diaspora as C.L.R. James, Nnamdi Azikiwe, and Marcus Garvey. As he later recalled in his autobiography, “Life would have been so much easier if I could have devoted all my time to study. As things were, however, I was always in need of money.”
After receiving his Master’s degree from Penn’s Graduate School of Education in 1941, Nkrumah began another program of study with the Department of Philosophy on a University Scholarship. His advisor Glen Morrow noted that he satisfied the requirements for a Master’s degree in Philosophy in 1943, and by 1944 it appears that he had passed his preliminary exams for a doctorate. He then began working as a Twi instructor for Zelig Harris in a new African Studies graduate group, and in 1945 he left the United States for London and Manchester. He finally returned to the Gold Coast in 1947.
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