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LONDON — The Caribbean island nation of Barbados announced this week that it is time to remove Queen Elizabeth II as its head of state and become a republic. Barbados, a former colony of Britain, achieved independence in 1966 and is today a parliamentary democracy and a constitutional monarchy, with the queen as its mostly symbolic…

Read More Barbados a Republic?

TUNE IN: Tuesday, September 22nd @ 7:30 – 8:30 p.m. ETJazz Standard‘s Facebook Live Regina Carter is a lot of things: She’s a pioneering jazz violinist. She’s a MacArthur Genius. She’s the artistic director of New Jersey Performing Arts Center’s (NJPAC) Geri Allen Jazz Camp for young women. And on Tuesday, September 22, she will appear online to talk about her…

Read More An Exclusive Talk with Violinist Regina Carter Discussing Her Latest Album Swing States: Harmony in the Battleground

Constitution Day is an American federal observance that recognizes the adoption of the United States Constitution and those who have become U.S. citizens. It is normally observed on September 17, the day in 1787 that delegates to the Constitutional Convention signed the document in Philadelphia. OMG WTF Does the Constitution Actually Say?: A Non-Boring Guide…

Read More Happy Constitution Day!

BY GOODBLACKNEWS ON SEPTEMBER 12, 2020 (Photo of high school students by AP/Jaime Henry-White via Creative Commons) Years in the making, the influential College Board is launching an ambitious national curriculum on race with an Advanced Placement (AP) program on the African diaspora, the Washington Post reports. Read more HERE.

Read More College Board Creates Advanced Placement Curriculum on African Diaspora for High School Students

By Chris Richards September 12, 2020 at 2:15 p.m. EDT During “Funky Kingston” — that golden-hot sunbeam of a song that Toots and the Maytals first dropped in 1973 — the word “reggae” becomes a sort of hyper-noun: a person, a place and a thing. Hibbert died in Kingston on Friday, 9/11/20, at 77. Read more HERE and HERE.

Read More Toots Hibbert helped give reggae its name, its sound, and its enduring grace

Because much cancer research and clinical trials have been based on white populations, efforts to explore the ways race and ethnicity influence disease are underway. By Emma Goldberg Sept. 11, 2020 The Genome Center’s two-year-old initiative, called Polyethnic-1000, is aimed at closing the knowledge gap that exists largely because decades of genetic studies focused mainly on white patient…

Read More Cancer Projects to Diversify Genetic Research Receive New Grants

This morning, I got a call from 844-348-3391 saying that I owed money to Eversource. (I have never had an Eversource account, but do have a CT phone number.) So I called the number. It started off with one of those “if you speak Spanish press” statements. Then a person came on the line and…

Read More Beware of Scams

By Laura Collins-Hughes Published Sept. 2, 2020 Updated Sept. 3, 2020 Originally scheduled to be performed in April at the Hammerstein Ballroom, this year’s “Miscast” has gone virtual, streaming for free on Sunday, Sept. 13, on MCC’s YouTube channel. It is available on YouTube until 9/17 (this is a fundraiser). The boldface lineup includes, among others, Joshua Henry, Adrienne Warren, Norbert Leo Butz, Phillipa Soo, Leslie Odom Jr., and Beanie Feldstein.…

Read More When the Wrong Singer for the Song Is Just So Right