April 06, 2021

Photo courtesy of Dave Pickoff
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HBCU Basketball Spotlight: Culture, Legends, and Legacy

HBCU basketball and its impacts on American culture were featured April 4 during the NCAA’s Final Four Sunday. Three hour-long documentaries explored what HBCU basketball means to both the game and American life, showcasing HBCUs on college basketball’s biggest weekend. The first two featured HBCU legends Earl Monroe and John McLendon while the third, hosted

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Photo courtesy of Monkey Business Images
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Meharry Receives $1.1M Grant for COVID-19 Minority Outreach

Meharry Medical College recently announced it received a $1.1 million grant from the Truist Foundation. This grant will help develop a national model for Covid-19 contact tracing. The goal is to help limit the spread of the virus, particularly among minority populations who have been most impacted by Covid-19. The project aims to trace the

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Photo courtesy of the Office of the Clerk, U.S. House of Representatives
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Congressman Alcee Hastings Dies at 84 After Cancer Battle

Congressman Alcee Hastings has passed away at the age of 84 after battling pancreatic cancer.  A democrat, Hastings represented Florida’s 20th Congressional District, including areas around Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach. He announced in 2019 that he had pancreatic cancer but said he planned on remaining in Congress. The dean of the Florida congressional

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Photo courtesy of Artem Onoprienko

Howard University Launches HU/COL Avanza to Connect Diaspora

HBCUs are increasing outreach to other countries of the African Diaspora. On March 26th, Howard University launched HU/COL Avanza with the country of Colombia. Five years in the making, this will be a reciprocal effort to form networks and boost both HBCU and Colombian students economically and culturally. “In 2018, I traveled to Colombia to

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Phylicia Rashad on Alpha Kappa Alpha & “Twenty Pearls”

By Lisa Respers France Phylicia Rashād pledged Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority at Howard University in Washington, DC in 1968, yet it took narrating a new documentary about the organization before she learned some of its earliest history. “When you pledge a fraternity or a sorority, you learn the names of the founders and the year

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Biden Balances US Vaccine Supply and Global Sharing Plans

By Kevin Liptak, Kylie Atwood and Priscilla Alvarez President Joe Biden, well on his way to reaching a new goal of vaccinating 200 million Americans by the end of April, is taking initial steps toward helping other nations ramp up shots, including by boosting global manufacturing and appointing a top global health expert who previously

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Vice President Kamala Harris, with California Gov. Gavin Newsom, visits the Upper San Leandro Water Treatment Plant in Oakland, Calif., Monday, April 5, 2021. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Biden White House Rallies Behind Gov. Gavin Newsom Recall

By Maegan Vazquez Top members of the Biden White House have appeared with California’s embattled Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, twice over the last week — a signal of support for a politician who is likely to face a recall election. Newsom accompanied Vice President Kamala Harris on a tour of a water treatment plant in

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Biden’s $2 Trillion Infrastructure Plan Sparks GOP Clash

Analysis by Stephen Collinson The meaning of the word “infrastructure” suddenly depends on your politics. President Joe Biden is using a sleight of hand by crafting a bill that might be traditionally associated with repairs to potholed highways to instead be his latest effort to reshape the US economy and social safety net. His move

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