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NCAA Announces 2021 March Madness Will Be Played Entirely In Indianapolis

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NCAA Announces March Madness Will Be Entirely Be Played In Indianapolis

Source: Cassius | born unapologetic | News, Style, Culture

Business Facts

  • PRESS ROOM: NFL & Players Coalition Commit $3 Million+ to Communities of Color in Support of COVID-19 Relief
  • David J. Mason, Author, Entrepreneur, Scientist, And Military Officer, Created An Improved Electronic Book (Ebook)Please Enter a Title
  • OP-ED: Stop Excluding People of Color in Environmental Policies | BlackPressUSA
  • Announcements – Meetings 5-13-20
  • 2020 Chevy Bolt running on volts rather than octane | BlackPressUSA
  • Community banks get $30 billion as OneUnited takes lead for black business
  • Lupe Fiasco Creates Nonprofit to Help Inner-City Businesses
  • Wall Street slides again on more worries about recession
  • Illinois Nonprofits Launch Campaign to Boost Access to Stimulus Payments amid COVID-19 Pandemic
  • Facebook Awards Black Press of America Publishers $1.3 Million in Relief Grants

Women Facts

  • Tennis Star Naomi Osaka Becomes Creative Consultant And Investor In Premium Sake Brand
  • Guyanese natural hair promoter and entrepreneur Denisha Victor dies
  • Four more imported COVID cases increase tally to 702
  • THREE MUSIC LEGENDS –
  • Sigma Gamma Rho Issues Statement on the Passing of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg - Watch The Yard
  • Michelle Obama To Host When We All Vote Registered And Ready Virtual Rally | The Oklahoma Eagle
  • Video Shows White Michigan Woman Using A Child's Stroller To Block A Black Mother From Leaving A Parking Lot - Blavity
  • Black Men: Teach Your Sons About Oluwatoyin Salau And The Ways We Harm Black Women
  • Sudan: 'Great First Step' As Sudan Lifts Death Penalty and Flogging for Gay Sex
  • Madam C.J. Walker

American Civil War Facts

  • Augustus Nathaniel Lushington
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  • Enslavement: 1619 to 1696
  • A List of Holidays of Interest to African Americans
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  • Columbus Avenue African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church [Boston] (1838- )
  • Boseman, Benjamin Anthony (1840-1881)
  • George, Sugar T. (1827-1900)
  • Highest Elective officer
  • March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom

Southern United States Facts

  • 54th Massachusetts Infantry (1863-1865)
  • Ida B. Wells-Barnett
  • Post–Civil Rights era in African-American history
  • The Riot of 1898
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  • The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed | An Online Reference Guide to African American History by Professor Quintard Taylor, University of Washington
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