Monday, May 7, 2018

Red Spectral Moon - Spectral Serpent Moon of Liberation, Day 5






11 Muluc



Red Spectral Moon



Red Moon –
Gibbous Globe
Dissolving into Bliss

Pure universal 
 Water planetary
 Evolving into Unity

Earth’s incandescent Sister –
Great silver Crown of Night
Wide flowing gown of Light.  



©Kleomichele Leeds


Anna V. Brown




Anna V. Brown (1914-1985) was an African American advocate for the elderly who assisted Mayor Carl Stokes in developing programs for the elderly in Cleveland in the 1970's. She was inducted into the Ohio Department of Aging Hall of Fame and served as the president of the National Council on Aging.

Biography

Anna V. Brown was born in 1914 in Vivian, West Virginia to physician Joseph E. Brown and his wife Hattie. In 1938, she graduated from Oberlin College and following graduation went on a tour of India. She was the recipient of the Juliette Derricotte Scholarship in 1939, which awarded her the trip, as part of a program initiated by Sue Bailey Thurman to honor outstanding students. After her trip abroad, she and her family moved to Cleveland, where she began working in 1941 for the Phillis Wheatley Association (PWA). The Association offered recreational facilities for social events and youth programs, such as dance and music lessons, as well as a day care facility for working mothers. Brown began as an auditor and worked her way up to the assistant executive secretary of the organization.

In addition to her work at PWA, she began managing her father's physician practice in 1946. There, she became aware of issues which faced aging patients. In February, 1971, she was appointed by Cleveland Mayor Carl Stokes as the executive of the Commission on Aging. She began by organizing a list of services for the elderly, developed heating and transport response programs, programs to check on elders living alone, and many other innovations. In 2 years she generated in $2 million in revenues. In 1981, the Commission became a Department of the City Government.

Brown participated in the White House Conferences on Aging between 1971 and 1981. In 1977, she was inducted into the Ohio Department of Aging Hall of Fame. In 1984, she became president of the National Council on Aging and served as a consultant to the Congressional Black Caucus Brain Trust. A member of many local organizations, Brown was recognized for her advocacy. She received honorary degrees from Oberlin College and Miami University (1985).

Brown married Elmer Brown, on June 7, 1943. Her husband was an artist. He painted the Freedom Mural at the City Club of Cleveland and worked for American Greetings as an artist. She died on November 12, 1985 in Cleveland.*




MULUC




Kin 89: Red Spectral Moon



I dissolve in order to purify
Releasing flow
I seal the process of universal water
With the spectral tone of liberation
I am guided by my own power doubled.


In order to understand your own mind, you must become skilled at critical thinking or exercising the power of discrimination.*


*Star Traveler's 13 Moon Almanac of Synchronicity, Galactic Research Institute, Law of Time Press, Ashland, Oregon, 2017-2018.








 The Sacred Tzolk'in





Visshudha Chakra (Alpha Plasma)






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