Talk:Stephanie St. Clair

Activities
While Arthur Flegenheimer was laying on his death bed in the hospital in October, 1935, after being shot in the Chop House in Newark, and his every word, drifting in and out of consciousness, was being transcribed by a police stenographer, Madame St. Clair sent a telegram to him at the hospital which read: "What goes around comes around",  or "As you sow so shall you reap": something along that line, as a spiteful message to him of sour grapes for the troubles and financial loss she suffered when he moved in on her numbers racket in Harlem. He was not able to read it or hear it and died soon after without revealing any information to the police. Her confidence in sending this message to him showed she was not afraid of being implicated in his assassination, which was still under investigation, and probably would have been proud to have been a part of it, but unfortunately she was not a consideration at all in the orchestration of Dutch's murder. ~FFE97.76.210.2 (talk)newspaper reports —Preceding undated comment added 17:03, 4 November 2015 (UTC)

Class Project Work
== Today my Black women's history class is going to try to clean this page up a little bit by focusing on adding sources, and using more historical secondary sources instead of literary source material. Let us know if you notice something we should add or work on! Thx.Umichquiche (talk) 14:47, 16 February 2021 (UTC) Umichquiche (talk) 14:46, 16 February 2021 (UTC)

In popular culture warning of Dec 2021
This has gotten me thoroughly confused. There isn't anything in the article's list of popular culture references that looks or reads any different than a thousand other "In popular culture" references on a thousand other Wikipedia pages. All the ones listed are easily tracked down; I really don't know what the editor, or would-be editor, is expecting here! 142.165.188.30 (talk) 11:29, 19 January 2023 (UTC)