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@justin_agustin Technique to falling asleep in 2 minutes! Insp. AsapSCIENCE on YT #sleep #fallasleep #insomnia #insomniac #learnontiktok #howto ♬ You - Petit Biscuit
An excerpt from Fast Company -
On Route 66, a family is restoring the only gas station built for Black travelers
The Threatt Filling Station offered refuge for Black travelers driving through Oklahoma. Now, the Threatt family hopes to turn it into a historical center.
BY KRISTI EATON
[Photo: courtesy of the Threatt family, National Register of Historic Places/ NPS, Rhys Martin/courtesy Oklahoma Route 66 Association] |
If you were to travel on Route 66 in the early 1900s, you probably passed the Threatt Filling Station, a family-owned gas station for Black travelers traversing the famous route from Chicago to Southern California.
But after closing in the 1970s, the station eventually fell into disrepair. Now the Threatt family is looking to revitalize and preserve it.
The Threatt Filling Station, located near Luther, Oklahoma, was a place where Black travelers could fill up their tanks and grab something to eat. The property, which was originally 160 acres, eventually expanded to also include a farm, a field for Negro League baseball games, an outdoor stage, and a bar for those wanting to dance the jitterbug. Allen Threatt Sr. built the station around 1915, and it continued to operate until it closed in the 1970s, according to Ed Threatt, one of Allen’s grandsons. Ed Threatt and other relatives are now working to restore the historic property.“It’s a part of Black history within the state of Oklahoma,” Ed Threatt said. “For him to acquire 160 acres of land in the Jim Crow era, that’s no small feat.”
An excerpt from Reader's Digest -
If You See a Dog with a Red Collar, This Is What It Means
By Wendy Rose Gould
TOM MEAKER/GETTY IMAGES |
Red is the universal sign for “stop.” We see it on stop signs and stoplights around the world. It’s a prominent color for police sirens and fire trucks, and we even use the color when talking about “red flags.” Red gives us reason to pause and be cautious, and it’s why some pups wear red dog collars or bandanas or use red leashes.
“Red is the signal that this pet is aggressive and needs space from both people and other animals,” explains Dr. Brian Evans, veterinarian and medical director of virtual vet care company Dutch. “These are pets that have been known to snap or bite at passersby, attack other dogs, or lunge at people. These pets may be perfectly fine at home with their owner but become overly protective of them when they are out.”
In some cases, red dog collars might also be worn by service or working dogs that shouldn’t be pet. Usually, they’ll have on a vest that says “service dog” or “emotional support,” which is often accompanied by a phrase like “Do not pet.”
An excerpt from Conde Nest Traveler -
What to Know If An SSSS Code Shows Up on Your Boarding Pass
The mysterious code means a passenger is flagged for additional—and sometimes invasive—TSA screening.
BY ASHLEA HALPERN
For travelers lucky enough not to know, SSSS stands for Secondary Security Screening Selection. It’s the Transportation Security Administration’s way of flagging airline passengers for “enhanced” screening. An SSSS code stamped on your boarding pass overrides pre-approval through a Trusted Traveler Program such as TSA PreCheck and can add 15 to 45 minutes (or more) to your boarding process.
Unfortunately, there are many groups of travelers who are no strangers to being flagged repeatedly for invasive TSA screenings. But for fliers privileged enough to have a usually smooth process through security, the SSSS codes can come as a shock.
https://www.cntraveler.com/story/what-to-know-if-an-ssss-code-shows-up-on-your-boarding-pass
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Credit: CRUXGG |
An excerpt from the NY Times -
1,000 New People Arrive in Texas Every Day. Half Are Newborns.
A surge in births in Texas comes amid a declining birthrate nationwide.
By Edgar Sandoval
All across Texas, the cry of newborn babies has become a common sound at hospital maternity wards. Credit...Matthew Busch for The New York Times |
SAN ANTONIO — Every three minutes, a child is born somewhere in Texas.
At one hospital in North Texas, 107 babies were delivered over 96 hours this summer, shattering local records. At a hospital in San Antonio, more than 1,200 babies have been born this year, up nearly 30 percent since 2018.
Across one of the nation’s fastest-growing states, an average 1,000 new Texans arrive every day. Half of them are newborns.
“Our population is going up. So just with that, I would expect our birthrates to increase,” said Shad Deering, a department chair with the Children’s Hospital of San Antonio. “We will become very busy.”
We spent a day last month with Dr. Deering and his staff and witnessed the arrival of several new residents to the Lone Star State.
~~~~~~~~~~
Between 2010 and 2020, the state’s population grew by four million — or the entire population of neighboring Oklahoma. Babies made up the largest number of new arrivals to Texas (about 48 percent), with migrants from other states (31 percent) and countries (21 percent) rounding out the rest.
And hospitals are trying to keep up.
“It has not slowed down,” said Michelle Stemley, vice president of patient care at Baylor Scott & White All Saints Medical Center in Fort Worth, which broke its four-day delivery record this summer.
The surge in births comes amid a declining birthrate nationwide. Couples have waited longer to have children, a trend that continued during the coronavirus pandemic and an uncertain economy, Mr. Potter said.
But a spike in sales of pregnancy tests — a 13 percent increase since June of last year — may signal that a so-called millennial baby boom may be on the horizon, according to Nielsen’s data and Bank of America’s research.
Many longtime Texans are contributing to the uptick in tiny new residents.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/26/us/texas-newborns-birthrate.html
From the Bitter Southerner -
A Letter From Home
By President Jimmy Carter
President Jimmy Carter. Photo by Dustin Chambers |
https://bittersoutherner.com/a-letter-from-home/jimmy-carter
From mymajicdc.com -
10 Black Women Who Made History In 2021
By BreAnna Holmes
Source:Getty
Michaela Coel is the first Black Woman to win an Emmy for ‘Limited Series Writing’!
Beyoncé Makes History As The Most Grammy Awarded Artist Ever!
https://mymajicdc.com/playlist/black-women-who-made-history-in-2021/item/2
An excerpt from WXii12.com -
North Carolina A&T student helps design HBCU clothing line for Urban Outfitters
By Louie Tran
Ulia Hargrove - North Carolina A & T State University |
GREENSBORO, N.C. —
A North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University student helped design an HBCU clothing line for Urban Outfitters.
U'lia Hargrove, a native from Henderson, North Carolina, is a junior at North Carolina A&T. She's double majoring in fashion merchandising and design and supply chain management.
Hargrove finished a 10-week internship with Urban Outfitters in Philadelphia. It took place from June to August.
During her experience, Hargrove said she had the chance to work as a buying intern and in a summer class where she was able to work alongside four other HBCU students to help design an HBCU collection line.
Each intern was responsible for designing the outfits, including the colors, style, material, accessories, etc., she added.
Hargrove helped design a clothing line that represented North Carolina A&T. The collection included sweatpants, sweatshirts, tote bags, varsity jackets and playing cards.
From CNN -
This Cake May Change Your Mind on Critical Race Theory
An excerpt from Slate -
Why Isn’t Kenny Washington an American Icon?
The forgotten story of the man who broke the NFL’s color barrier—before Jackie Robinson got to Major League Baseball.
BY JOSHUA NEUMAN
Washington at UCLA, where he played in the late 1930s. Courtesy of Kirk Washington |
If you were able to go back in time and tell sports fans of the late 1930s and early 1940s that a young Black athlete would become an American icon for breaking a color barrier, they’d likely think you were talking about Kenny Washington. Few would imagine you were describing Jackie Robinson, who followed Washington at UCLA as a football and baseball player. In 1940, a Los Angeles Times sports writer worried that Washington was irreplaceable on the gridiron. “It is going to take a piece of doing,” he wrote, “for Jackie Robinson to fill his shoes.”
Today, it’s Washington who’s been engulfed by Robinson’s shadow. In the decades since Washington broke the NFL’s color barrier in 1946—the year before Robinson got to the Brooklyn Dodgers—the league has hardly acknowledged his importance, especially compared with the way Major League Baseball has burnished Robinson’s legend. A 2006 exhibition at the Pro Football Hall of Fame called “Breaking Through: The Reintegration of Pro Football” focused on the Cleveland Browns’ Marion Motley and Bill Willis—half of the sport’s “forgotten four” of pioneering Black players, along with Washington and Woody Strode (who signed with the Los Angeles Rams two months after Washington). In 1946, Motley and Willis integrated the All-America Football Conference, a newly formed league that launched without a color barrier. Washington, meanwhile, was the first of the four to integrate pro football.
This year is the 75th anniversary of Washington’s groundbreaking season, and he’s barely a footnote in the annals of sports history. During the lead-up to this past Super Bowl, a CBS segment at last acknowledged his singular breakthrough—calling it a “Jackie Robinson moment.” So why, all these decades later, don’t we talk about Jackie Robinson’s debut as a “Kenny Washington moment”? Why did America forget Kenny Washington?