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  2. Blackvoices.com - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackvoices.com

    Blackvoices.com. Blackvoices.com was an American website with content targeted towards African-American culture. Founded in 1995, by Barry Cooper, it first appeared as a link on the Orlando Sentinel website. [1] After being sold twice, it has become a subsection named Black Voices on the HuffPost website.

  3. HuffPost - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HuffPost

    The Huffington Post subsumed many of AOL's Voices properties, including AOL Black Voices, which was established in 1995 as Blackvoices.com, and AOL Latino, Impact (launched in 2010 as a partnership between Huffington Post and Causecast), Women, Teen, College, Religion, and the Spanish-language Voces (en español).

  4. And So Jedidiah Brown Gave All of Himself to the City He ...

    highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/trauma...

    Alone inside his car, Jedidiah wept. On the phone docked to his dashboard, the 30-year-old Chicago activist and Baptist minister set a gospel song to repeat and started recording on Facebook Live. He begged forgiveness for giving up and cursed the city that he loved but had robbed him of everything.

  5. Trymaine Lee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trymaine_Lee

    Trymaine D. Lee (born September 20, 1978) [1] is an American journalist. He shared a Pulitzer Prize for breaking news coverage of Hurricane Katrina as part of a team at The Times-Picayune of New Orleans. [2] From 2006 to 2010, Lee wrote for The New York Times and from early 2011 to November 2012 he was a senior reporter at The Huffington Post.

  6. Let's Go Full Crocodile, Ladies - The Huffington Post

    highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/lets-go...

    Story by Rebecca Traister Art by Sally Edelstein. For only five nights in the fall of 1973, a documentary called “Year of the Woman” played at the Fifth Avenue Cinema in Greenwich Village. Crowds lined up around the block. Arthur Schlesinger Jr., described it as “the greatest combination of sex and politics ever seen in a film.”.

  7. Why America Needs Ebonics Now - The Huffington Post

    highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/ebonics

    It’s written in African-American Vernacular English—better known as “Ebonics”—and includes phrases like “mama Jeep run out of gas” and “she walk yesterday.”. The first response from her students is always the same: The writer doesn’t understand possession, he’s failing to show subject-verb agreement, he’s struggling with ...

  8. The Subsidy Gap - The Huffington Post

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/projects/ncaa/...

    More than half of the $30 million that James Madison spent on football from 2010 to 2014 came from student fees, according to annual filings with the NCAA. All told, the university poured $146 million in subsidies into its athletics department over that period, spending more than $4 in student money for every $1 it earned from ticket sales ...

  9. Jawn Murray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jawn_Murray

    Jawn Murray is a Washington, DC -based American TV host, commentator, executive producer, pop culture expert, media personality and social media influencer best known for hosting TV shows for Travel Channel, EPIX and NFL Network, as well as appearing on cable news channels like CNN, HLN and MSNBC. Ebony magazine named him as one of the "30 on ...