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Tuesday, August 17, 2021
Monday, August 16, 2021
These Colleges Cover 100% of Your Financial Aid
From Go Banking Rates -
12 Colleges That Cover 100% of Your Financial Aid
You can graduate debt-free from these schools.
By Gabrielle Olya
SpVVK / Getty Images |
This Looks Delicious!
From Taste of Home -
North Carolina Sonker Is the Dessert Recipe You Haven’t Tried Yet
By Tiffany Dahle
TIFFANY DAHLE FOR TASTE OF HOME |
Love blueberry pie but don't want to fuss over a complicated crust? This step-by-step blueberry sonker recipe will be your new go-to summer dessert!
Sonker is North Carolina’s most popular dessert that most people have never even heard of, let alone baked at home. It was invented to feed a hungry crowd, and a wide variety of sonker recipes are handed down from generation to generation in Surry County, North Carolina. The bakeries, diners and home cooks there use the best fruit from each season to bake sonkers throughout the year.
To taste the real deal, stop at several local spots on the Surry Sonker Trail and experience the many flavors of the Carolina sonker for yourself. No road trip in your future? Make this blueberry sonker recipe at home and you’re an hour away from blueberry heaven!
https://www.tasteofhome.com/article/north-carolina-sonker-recipe/
Aretha Franklin - So Swell When You're Well
How Does He Do That?
A collection of me turning into random objects. pic.twitter.com/ValPdPNJIj
— Kevin Parry (@kevinbparry) July 13, 2021
Congratulations!
An excerpt from Black Enterprise -
28-YEAR-OLD WINS VIRAL WINE CONTEST; RECEIVES $10,000 MONTHLY SALARY AND FREE RENT FOR A YEAR
by Charlene Rhinehart
(Image Credit: Instagram) |
Austin-based wine connoisseur Lindsay Perry was recently selected as a new employee of Murphy-Goode Winery. The 28-year-old will move to California this fall to pursue her dream job. As a contest winner, she will receive a salary of $10,000 per month and live went free for a year while indulging in some of the best wines.
Perry participated in the company’s “A Really Goode Job” viral competition. According to Inside Edition, Perry beat out over 7,200 other applicants who submitted videos for the Sonoma-based Murphy Goode Winery wine competition.
Friday, August 13, 2021
Our Ancestors' Wildest Dreams
We are our ancestors’ wildest dreams.✨
— R.J. Ledet, Ph.D. #MentalHealth4DaHood (@drrussellledet) December 14, 2019
In the background, an original slave quarter.
In the foreground, original descendants of slaves and medical students. #whatatimetobealive #yeahwecandoboth pic.twitter.com/INOUMmc1cx
Jason Arena pissed off at #antivaxxers #antimask people he’s got a point...
Who Do You Want to Wake Up With?
From Bored Panda -
21 Women Before And After Their Bridal Makeup By Arber Bytyqi (New Pics)
By Rokas Laurinavičius and Greta Jaruševičiūtė
Wednesday, August 11, 2021
Cute & Conscientious: A Winning Combination
Michael B. Jordan launches basketball showcase for HBCU athletes
By Jaelen Ogadhoh
Michael B. Jordan attends the 51st NAACP Image Awards, Presented by BET, at Pasadena Civic Auditorium on February 22, 2020 in Pasadena, California. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images) |
Basketball as we know it today may not exist without the contributions of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and their alumni, such as Howard University graduate Edwin Henderson, who earned the nickname “The Father of Black Basketball” in the early 20th century when he introduced the game to African Americans in Washington D.C., catalyzing the sport’s rapid growth in popularity among Black communities nationwide.
Today, largely thanks to Henderson’s contributions, basketball is not only one of the most popular sports among HBCUs, but among Black Americans across the country. Despite the current popularity, only one five-star-ranked high school basketball player has opted to play for an HBCU since ESPN began ranking players in 2007.
Actor and producer Michael B. Jordan is among the high-profile public figures making efforts to further amplify HBCUs and their student-athletes in 2021. The Black Panther and Just Mercy star is launching the “Hoop Dreams Classic,” a basketball showcase featuring the nation’s top Division 1 HBCU men’s and women’s basketball teams.
Edwin Henderson (November 24, 1883 – February 3, 1977), widely recognized as the "Grandfather of Black Basketball." pic.twitter.com/TGk5jEbKjx
— BeverlyBlack (@gumboforthesoul) September 8, 2016
https://news.yahoo.com/michael-b-jordan-launches-basketball-215059107.html
Great! You First.
An excerpt from the Metro -
‘You can’t call yourself a hairdresser unless you can do Afro hair,’ says white salon owner
By Natalie Morris
Anne says there needs to be significant changes in the beauty industry (Pictures: Anne Veck) |
Last month it was announced that all UK hairdressers would have to learn to cut and style Afro hair as standard – in an update to beauty regulations.
The move was welcomed by many who called it long-overdue, particularly people with Afro hair who don’t live in diverse areas and would have to travel long distances to find a salon that could cater to their needs.
Anne Veck is a white hairdresser, originally from France, and the owner of Anne Veck hair salon in Oxford. She believes that the changes to training standards are of course welcome, but within salons there is still lots more to do.
The 58-year-old is on the hair committee for the British Beauty Council and was also a finalist at the British Hairdressing Awards 2021 with an all Afro hair collection.
I'm Not a Baseball Fan, But This Batgirl is My Hero!
Here’s some video sent that was sent to me. pic.twitter.com/9hICgcVdR5
— Fabian Ardaya (@FabianArdaya) August 8, 2021
The Impact of Racism
An excerpt from Market Watch -
‘Males, particularly white males, are persistently overrepresented’: Many kids of color don’t see themselves in the books they read
Researchers used artificial intelligence technology to analyze imagery in children’s books
By Andrew Keshner
A new study looks at the images looking back at kids in children's books (PHOTO BY GEORGE FREY/GETTY IMAGES) |
The researchers were not attempting to offer any suggestions on the right amount of demographic and race representation in kids’ books, they said.
Instead, they noted the study showed that with the help of technology, it’s possible to quantify the amount of race and gender representation in children’s books.
“By providing research that expands our understanding about the diversity in content, we can help to contribute to work that aims to overcome the structural inequality that pervades society and our daily lives,” they wrote.
The study comes amid a debate on the presence of critical race theory in the classroom. The theory says race is a social construct. The theory is pointing out that social institutions like the criminal justice system, housing market, healthcare system and more can treat races differently, according to observers like Rashawn Ray, a fellow at the Brookings Institution.
The “scholars and activists who discuss [critical race theory] are not arguing that white people living now are to blame for what people did in the past,” Ray wrote. “They are saying that white people living now have a moral responsibility to do something about how racism still impacts all of our lives today.” (Highlighted by Faye)
'A Journal for Jordan' trailer starring Michael B. Jordan, directed by D...
Sunday, August 8, 2021
She Was a Pioneer in WWII
An excerpt from Time -
This Pioneering Officer Led an All-Black Women’s Army Corps Battalion in a Daunting World War II Mission: Saving Soldiers' Mail
BY MARI K. EDER
Maj. Charity Adams, commanding officer of the WAC Postal Battalion serving in England Bettmann Archive/Getty Images |
Charity Adams was already on her way to the European theater in January 1945, and there was a sealed envelope on her lap. It was time to find out where she was going. She tore open the sealed orders and gasped. It was the job every officer coveted: command, troop time, and being in charge. Adams, who had been the highest-ranking Black officer at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, had commanded a training company, which was a good experience, but to be selected to command a battalion—a brand-new unit—overseas during wartime was a tremendous vote of confidence in her abilities. It was every opportunity she could have hoped for.
Adams had been born in 1919, at a time when the U.S. was celebrating victory in World War I. The next year, the 19th Amendment was passed, and women were given the right to vote. It was a time of change in the country. A feeling of optimism was in the air, and it felt like new possibilities were open for women—unless you were Black. Then it was still a fight, all the way. Growing up in Columbia, S.C., the oldest of four children of a minister and a teacher, she’d been first in many things in her life, including being first in her high school class, valedictorian, and she continued that streak in 1942, becoming part of the first officer class of the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC, later simply WAC).
By the time she reached Fort Des Moines for basic officer training, she’d already gotten her first taste of racism in the Army. A white lieutenant had insisted and made certain that Black recruits didn’t sit with the white women on the bus headed for the camp. In that first officer class, there were 400 white women. There were also 40 Black women—the “ten percenters.” While their training was integrated, their living conditions were not.
The Army had scrambled to assemble Adams’ new unit, the 6888th Central Postal Battalion. By 1944, there was a two-year backlog of mail for troops, members of the Red Cross and civilians serving in Europe. There simply weren’t enough postal units. The all-Black WAC unit, known as the “Six Triple Eight,” was the only Black WAC unit to be deployed—another first, with an impossible mission.
The Six Triple Eight’s 855 women were sent to Birmingham, England. When the first contingent arrived, Adams was there to meet their ship. Many had been seasick on the trip over. After being chased by submarines, others were glad to be on land. Their arrival came with a message about the danger of their work—a German V1 rocket, the “Buzz Bomb,” came screaming in just as the women were heading down the ramp. They ran for cover as it hit the dock close to where they were disembarking. No one was injured, but it was a definite reminder that they had arrived in a war zone.
https://time.com/6085055/charity-adams-world-war-ii/
They Got the Last Laugh
An excerpt from the Mirror -
People who have had the last laugh with funny messages on their tombstones
Here are our favourite picks of some of the most entertaining, comical, light-hearted and even slightly questionable gravestones out there
By Olivia Rose Fox
Merv certainly must have had a sense of humour as demonstrated by his light-hearted gravestone at the Pierce Brothers Westwood Village Memorial Park, Westwood, California (Image: ©Joseph P. McKenna) |
You can't exactly say that this one didn't get straight to the point ( Image: Diane Diederich) |