April 19, 2021

Photo courtesy of Eric Glenn
/

Howard University’s Project REFOCUS Tackles Health Inequity

Howard University received a $1.7 million grant from the CDC Foundation. Designed to reach historically marginalized and disadvantaged populations during public health crises, the endeavor has been dubbed Project REFOCUS. Project REFOCUS takes a closer look at the intersecting pandemics of racism and Covid-19 and provides information to the communities most directly impacted. The project

More
Photo courtesy of vsu.edu
/

Virginia State U Receives $1M for Future STEM Teachers

Virginia State University (VSU) is getting $1 million to help train future science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) teachers. Students completing a STEM major will be able to get their secondary teaching certifications at no additional cost or time in school. Selected by Gov. Ralph Northam, the university will take part in HBCUTeach, a nationwide

More
Photo courtesy of desu.edu
/

DSU Aviation Graduates Gain Fast-Track Jobs with United Airlines

Delaware State University (DSU) has partnered with United Airlines to offer aviation graduates streamlined job opportunities with the airline.  The partnership reflects United Airlines’ renewed commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion. As the only major airline in the U.S. to have an aviation school, United Airlines’ Aviate Academy plans to train 5,000 new pilots by

More
/

Biden Must Act Now on Racialized Police Violence Reform

By Julian Zelizer Over the past few weeks, the nation has seen another series of horrific videos documenting both violent treatment and deaths of Black and brown people at the hands of police. Even as the world was reliving the killing of George Floyd — as videos of his death under the knee of former

More
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA: In this image released on March 14, Mickey Guyton performs onstage during the 63rd Annual GRAMMY Awards at Los Angeles Convention Center in Los Angeles, California and broadcast on March 14, 2021. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

Mickey Guyton First Black Woman to Host ACM Awards

By Alexis Benveniste Country music singer Mickey Guyton will make history Sunday when she hosts the Academy of Country Music Awards with Keith Urban. The 37-year-old singer from Arlington, Texas, will be the first Black woman to host the awards ceremony. And this isn’t Guyton’s first time making history in the country music world. In

More
Dasia Taylor is a 17-year-old from Iowa City, Iowa who used beet juice to create color-changing sutures. She's now seeking a patent for the invention after receiving national attention for it.

Teen Scientist Dasia Taylor Develops Infection-Detecting Stitches

By Anjali Huynh and Michelle Krupa Dasia Taylor didn’t expect to become a nationally recognized scientist at 17 years old. The Iowa student has dedicated her life to equity work, from serving as one of her school district’s diversity equity leaders to participating in her high school’s Black History Game Show club. But when her

More

Biden Faces Hurdles in Passing $2T Infrastructure Plan

By Paul LeBlanc and Phil Mattingly, CNN Washington is staring down a bumpy road to infrastructure consensus. The Biden administration’s roughly $2 trillion proposal focused on infrastructure and the climate crisis enters a critical week on Capitol Hill as congressional Republicans wrestle with what a scaled-down counter offer might look like. Complicating the already winding

More

Shirley Jackson & Lisa Gelobter: Science and Justice Pioneers

Shirley Ann Jackson and Lisa Gelobter are both pioneers of science as well as advocates for social justice. An American physicist, Jackson has been involved in several organizations such as the National Society of Black Physicists and the New Jersey Commission on Science and Technology. President Clinton appointed her to the chair of the Nuclear

More
/

Why the U.S. Needs a Truth and Racial Healing Commission

Opinion by Mitch Landrieu Racism remains this nation’s Achilles’ heel. If we do not face it and fix it, we will continue to suffer. The news in the past few weeks, from the police shooting of Daunte Wright to the debate about voter suppression, underscores once again that we have a long way to go

More

Morris Brown College Regains Accreditation After 20 Years

By Skylar Mitchell It is no secret that at some point, something went very wrong at Morris Brown College. It was a disappointing, though not unfamiliar story. A school with a dedicated faculty and loyal students had run into financial challenges that eventually made it impossible to operate. On April 13, the historically Black college

More

Never Miss A Story

Covering HBCUS
and The African American Community