Wellness News 8-3
Spring is right around the corner to please our senses through the sight of floral buds, green grass, birds singing, sunshine and warmer temperatures.
News For, By and About People
Spring is right around the corner to please our senses through the sight of floral buds, green grass, birds singing, sunshine and warmer temperatures.
Choosing wine is really a lot simpler than you think, as long as you know what’s important.
“What’s important is there is no right and there is no wrong. If you like a wine, whatever you taste in the wine is there. It doesn’t have anything to do with what anyone else says,"
"Think of the worst wine you ever tasted in your life. Someone loves it and buys it," he adds.
Q: I’ve been struggling with how to get the word out about my small business. I have a website and it seems like I don’t get much traffic. Do you have any suggestions or books I could read to help me?
LANSING, MI — The Michigan Senate passed legislation recently that will encourage public schools at the middle and high school levels to focus on the advanced kingdoms of Pre-colonial Africa during world history instruction, instead of the most primitive Africans who did not represent the continent.
Above: Charles Six, President, Ending Stereotypes for America; Representative Mike Nofs (R-Battle Creek) and former Representative Brenda Clack (D-Flint). Courtesy photo
Another Defining Black History Moment – Pittsburgh Steelers’ NFL Super Bowl Championship – African American Head Coach, Youngest Ever, and MVP Takes Top Honors –
Workers at Moncure Plywood, in Moncure, North Carolina, are steadfast but weary as they have walked the picket line through three seasons of weather. Workers voted near-unanimously last July 20 to strike.
"We are standing on the word of God that we can see through this, and we are gratefully receiving support from all over the state," said Lewis Cameron, president of Machinists Local Lodge W369. Workers receive $150 a week strike pay.
(BPRW) In a year of such firsts as Jamaican-decent pilot Barrington Irving’s trek around the world in a single-engine airplane, and the Tuskegee airmen earning a Congressional Gold Medal; perhaps it is fitting to go a little further back into aviation history to discuss the premier African American woman of flight. Bessie Coleman was born in a small town in northeastern Texas in 1892, the 10th of 13 children and would ultimately become the world’s first licensed black pilot.
Lawrence Taylor also among cast of new hoofers for ABC’s competition series
President Obama Announces More Key White House Staff Names Three More Members of Intergovernmental Affairs Staff