From Black Enterprise -
THESE 3 BLACK WOMEN DOCTORS CREATED A PODCAST DEDICATED TO GETTING TO KNOW YOUR PHARMACIST
by BLACK ENTERPRISE Editors
3 Friends Talk |
From Black Enterprise -
THESE 3 BLACK WOMEN DOCTORS CREATED A PODCAST DEDICATED TO GETTING TO KNOW YOUR PHARMACIST
by BLACK ENTERPRISE Editors
3 Friends Talk |
From NPR -
Meet The First 2 Black Women To Be Inducted Into The National Inventors Hall Of Fame
By RACHEL TREISMAN
National Inventors Hall of Fame |
An excerpt from Essence -
21 Black Podcasts We're Listening To This Fall
BLACK PEOPLE ARE CREATING AUDIO CONTENT THAT CELEBRATES OUR GENIUS, GATHERS OUR COINS, HELPS BUILD OUR VILLAGES, REVIEWS OUR CONTRIBUTIONS, AND AMPLIFIES OUR HISTORY.
BY KEYAIRA BOONE · UPDATED SEPTEMBER 28, 2021
Black podcasts offer a place for kindred spirits, idea collectors, and nonsense lovers to come together virtually.
From movies to murder, if you’re interested in it there’s a podcast about it hosted by your that new best friend you’ve been waiting to appear in your head. Black people are creating audio content that celebrates our genius, gathers our coins, helps build our villages, reviews our contributions, and amplifies our history.
Independent and corporate podcasts featuring Black voices telling the stories of our sports champions, single moms, prolific scammers, broadway babies, tinder conquests, and music icons are increasing in numbers.
An excerpt from Black Enterprise -
MEET 3 BLACK WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS WHO BECAME MILLIONAIRES IN THEIR 20S
by Charlene Rhinehart
Image Credit: Instagram) |
An excerpt from Black Enterprise -
This Couple Spent 60 Years Developing Animated Content For Black Children Around the World
By Black Enterprise Editors
Leo Sullivan and Ethelyn O. Stewart Sullivan (BlackNews) |
An excerpt from Readers' Digest -
How to Respond When Someone Says “All Lives Matter”
By Lorna Grisby
DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/GETTY IMAGES |
An excerpt from LoveWhatMatters -
This Teacher’s 3-Word System To Help Students Through ‘Bad Days’ Is Empathy At It’s Finest
Edited By Sophia San Filippo
No matter how big or small, there are just some moments where we could use a little grace. Fourth-grade teacher Rachel Harder recognizes this, and she found an amazing way to help out both her students and their families.
A few years ago, the Kansas teacher attended a trauma conference. She learned that some police stations partner with schools so they can let teachers know when one of their students has a police encounter, something that could cause them to need extra care or attention.
“We loved this idea and figured there had to be a way to make this work within our own classroom community,” Rachel said.
A year after the conference, Rachel had a student with autism who frequently had tough days. To support her, Rachel told the student’s mom to simply text her “handle with care” to let her know when it was going to be one of those days.
An excerpt from Essence -
This Black Woman Master Captain Created A Paint, Sip and Sail Boating Experience
IT’S NO SURPRISE THAT A BLACK WOMAN FILLING A NICHE IN AN OVERWHELMINGLY WHITE LEISURE BOATING MARKET IS MAKING WAVES — LITERALLY.
BY KIMBERLY WILSON
CREDIT: NASHAWN TAYLOR |
From the LA Times -
Bruce’s Beach can return to descendants of Black family in landmark move signed by Newsom
BY ROSANNA XIA
In a history-making move celebrated by reparations advocates and social justice leaders across California, Gov. Gavin Newsom has authorized the return of property known as Bruce’s Beach to the descendants of a Black couple that had been run out of Manhattan Beach almost a century ago.
Senate Bill 796, signed into law Thursday by Newsom before an excited crowd that had gathered on the property, confirms that the city’s taking of this shorefront land — on which the Bruces ran a thriving resort for Black beachgoers — was racially motivated and done under false and unlawful pretenses.
“The land in the City of Manhattan Beach, which was wrongfully taken from Willa and Charles Bruce, should be returned to their living descendants,” the legislation declares, “and it is in the public interest of the State of California, the County of Los Angeles, the City of Manhattan Beach, and the People of the State of California to do so.”
An excerpt from the Montgomery Advertiser -
Harold Franklin broke through racist barriers as Auburn University's first Black student
By Derryn Moten
Harold Franklin graduated from Alabama State College, now University, in the spring of 1962. In the fall of 1963, he made history becoming the first Black student ordered admitted to Auburn University by a federal court. Franklin is to Alabama State University and Auburn University what Autherine Lucy is to Miles College and the University of Alabama.
~~~~~
U.S. Assistant Attorney General Burke Marshall and the U.S. Justice Department joined the complaint against Auburn on behalf of Franklin. This was the administration of U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy.
Middle District Court of Alabama Judge Frank M. Johnson Jr. handed down his opinion on November 5, 1963, three days after Harold Franklin’s thirtieth birthday. Judge Johnson wrote, “. . . the State of Alabama is as much to blame for the plaintiff’s inability to satisfy Auburn’s requirement for admission to its Graduate School as if it had deliberately set out to bar the plaintiff from Auburn because he is a Negro.”
On November 6, 1963, a headline in The Burlington Free Press read, “Wallace Calls Admitting Negro to Auburn ‘A Tragic Decision.’” Governor George Wallace made those remarks at Dartmouth College.
An excerpt from Comicsands -
Pastor Gives Christians Who Claim 'Religious Exemption' From Masks And Vaccines An Epic Bible Lesson
By Mike Walsh
https://www.comicsands.com/pastor-marshall-christian-religious-exemption-2655075172.html
An excerpt from Black Enterprise -
MEET THE FORMER HOUSEKEEPER WHO IS NOW THE OWNER OF A 5-STAR LUXURY HOTEL
by BLACK ENTERPRISE Editors
Souadou Niang (BlackBusiness.com) |
Meet Souadou Niang, a serial entrepreneur and the owner of Palms Luxury Boutique Hotel in Dakar, Senegal, who used to work as a housekeeper at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in the United States.
“I started out cleaning toilets. Today, I am the manager of my own five-star boutique hotel with 60 employees,” Niang told BBC Africa.
Born and raised in Dakar, Niang moved to the U.S. at the age of 18. She went from New York to Washington, DC, where she applied for work at the Ritz-Carlton to help pay for her education.
For 10 years, Niang worked cleaning rooms at the hotel while also studying. Throughout those years, she always kept in mind that she would someday become more successful in the field. Sure enough, she eventually got a job with the management team at the same hotel she started working as a housekeeper.
“I rose through the ranks and that’s where I got the passion. I said one day I will go back to my country and show that luxury and quality of service can be achieved there,” Niang said.
An excerpt from Black Enterprise -
Former Goldman Sachs Executive Edith Cooper Elected As Amazon’s Only Black Board Member
By Jeroslyn Johnson
Edith Cooper (Amazon) |
An excerpt from Defense One -
Racial Division, Troops’ Role in Protests Has Hurt Minority Recruiting, Air Force Says
Black interest in military service plummeted after the George Floyd protests. Can the Pentagon undo the damage?
By Tara Copp
U.S. Air Force basic military graduation Apr. 16, 2020, at the 320th Training Squadron’s Airman Training Complex on Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas. U.S. AIR FORCE / JOHNNY SALDIVAR |
Years of racial tension, and the use of National Guard troops last June after the death of George Floyd, have hurt the military’s ability to recruit minorities, the head of Air Force recruiting said Wednesday.
That drop is part of a worrisome long-term trend that the military is fighting against: that fewer recruitment-age youth show an interest to serve.
According to the Defense Department’s latest twice-a-year Futures Survey, released in August, the share of eligible youth who reported they have an interest in military service has dropped about two percent overall in the last couple of years, said Maj. Gen. Ed Thomas, commander of the Air Force Recruiting Service.
Most concerning, Thomas said, was that “the biggest drop in propensity to serve is from Black males, Hispanic males, and females.”
The percentage of Black respondents who reported an interest in military service dropped from 20 percent in summer 2019 to 11 percent in summer 2020, according to the data. By fall 2020, the percentage of Black respondents interested in military service had dropped to 8 percent.
The percentage of Hispanics reporting an interest in military service dropped from 18 percent to 14 percent over the same time. Interest from recruitment-eligible whites remained steady, from 8 percent in summer 2019 to 9 percent in summer 2020.
“The last couple of years has done damage, there’s no doubt,” Thomas said. “The data shows us that the racial division in our nation has done damage to our recruiting efforts.”
An excerpt from AOL Sports -
J.R. Smith's HBCU journey is a shining example of Black excellence
By SHALISE MANZA YOUNG
J.R. Smith is a two-time NBA champion and a former Sixth Man of the year who earned millions of dollars over the course of his 16 seasons.
When he retired after his second title, with the Los Angeles Lakers in 2020, he could have done just about anything. Smith had enjoyed a long basketball career, had picked up a serious love of golf, and presumably had the means to travel the world pursuing that passion.
Instead, the 36-year-old, who jumped straight from Newark's famed St. Benedict's Prep to the NBA, entered college.
And not just any college, the largest HBCU in the country: North Carolina A&T.
What's more, he joined the Aggies golf team.
Best of all for the rest of us, he's basically live-tweeting his experience.
https://www.aol.com/sports/j-r-smiths-hbcu-journey-212019497.html