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Serena Williams has made history yet again.

The tennis star’s image will be featured on the iconic Wheaties cereal box, reports ABC News. As Williams noted on Instagram, she is the second Black woman to be featured on a Wheaties box. The only other Black woman to receive the honor was Althea Gibson back in 2001. Gibson is widely recognized as one of the greatest athletes to ever grace a tennis court. She was best known as the first Black woman to ever win a Grand Slam title when she won the French Open in 1956.




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In 2001, Wheaties paid homage to a true champion and an icon by putting her on the cover of a Wheaties Box. Althea Gibson was the FIRST Black Woman tennis player to be on the box. Today, I am honored to be the second.

A post shared by Serena Williams (@serenawilliams) on Jun 25, 2019 at 6:00am PDT

“In 2001, Wheaties paid homage to a true champion and an icon by putting her on the cover of a Wheaties Box,” Williams wrote.

“Althea Gibson was the FIRST Black Woman tennis player to be on the box. Today, I am honored to be the second.”

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noironlineorg@noironlineorg

Wheaties cereal originally began featuring a variant of athletes in 1933; but has featured only two black females within their history.

International tennis players #AltheaGibson was featured in 2011. With #SerenaWilliams recently being featured in 2019.23:00 PM – Jun 25, 2019See noironlineorg’s other TweetsTwitter Ads info and privacy

Wheaties confirmed the development in a press release and praised Williams for her accomplishments.

“Serena exemplifies all of the personal attributes that Wheaties looks for when choosing who its next champion will be,” marketing manager Tiffani Daniels said. “On the court she has been named the women’s most valuable player seven times, while off the court she uses her voice to inspire and spark change to make the world a better place.”

The mom-of-one has won 23 grand slam singles titles and 14 grand slam doubles titles. On June 4, Williams became the first athlete to make Forbes’ World’s Richest Self-Made Women list. Her net worth is reportedly $225 million.




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Be the brand. Starting @Serena and @Serena.Ventures are just a few steps. Honored to be the first athlete on @Forbes #SelfMadeWomen list. Hair by @lorraine_dublin Makeup by @paulinebriscoe

A post shared by Serena Williams (@serenawilliams) on Jun 4, 2019 at 6:01am PDT

“I am so excited to be on the cover of the next Wheaties box,” Williams said in a statement. “I have dreamt of this since I was a young woman and it’s an honor to join the ranks of some of America’s most decorated athletes. I hope my image on this iconic orange box will inspire the next generation of girls and athletes to dream big.”

Williams’ most recent honor caps off an incredible stretch for the tennis star. She was honored with Sportswoman of the Year award at the 2019 BET Awards on June 23.

Credit: blavity.com

The First Lady of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Mrs Aisha Buhari, on Tuesday asked maritime agencies to review subsisting policies to accommodate more Nigerian women in the seafaring profession.

The First Lady, Mrs Aisha Buhari [NAN]

The first lady who described women as good human and material managers said that, such policy drive would help to level gender inequalities existing in the profession.

Mrs Buhari, gave the advice at the 2019 Seafarers Day organised by the Nigeria Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) in Lagos.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the theme of the event was: `On Board with Gender Equality’ aimed at honouring seafarers for their contribution.

NAN) also reports that the president’s wife was represented at the event by the wife of the Vice President of Nigeria, Mrs Dolapo Osinbajo.

She said “There has been significant effort by the NIMASA leadership at making the women play active role in the maritime sector especially in the seafaring aspect.

“Mr President is desirous of seeing more women in the industry this year celebration focusing on women seafarers is therefore apt.

“It will be development on a wider range seeing agencies play pivotal role in leading the pack in the new direction of gender equality in maritime career of the girl child.

“Let me stress that it is important to educate the girl child in opportunities in taking up career in the sector and the derivable benefits there, while dissuading them from the notion that it is men’s job,’’ she said.

Dr Dakuku Peterside, the Director-General (DG) of NIMASA in his address said the agency was gender sensitive, adding that more Nigerian girls had in the recent times benefited from NIMASA cadet training.

To this end the agency will continue to pursue policies that will accelerate gender equality and empowerment of women in the maritime.

“In addition to the 304 female cadets we have trained since the inception of the Nigerian Seafarers Development Programme (NSDP), special attention will now be given to the training of female seafarers in specialised courses to enable them take-up professional responsibilities,’’ he said.

MS Sophia Adula, an awaiting Seatime Mandatory Cadet told NAN that many of them out there were yet to sail out after graduation because of no platform to acquire the training that would certify them.

She called on the authorities to make seatime training platform available for them to ply their trade.

Credit: Pulse News

A woman has been appointed as president of the U.S. Naval War College for the first time in the institution’s 135-year history, the Navy announced on Friday.

Selecting Rear Adm. Shoshana Chatfield, a helicopter pilot who now heads a military command in Guam, as the college’s next leader was a “historic choice,” said Navy Secretary Richard Spencer.

Her appointment follows a scandal involving the former president of the Naval War College.

Just days ago, top Navy officials removed the previous president, Rear Adm. Jeffrey Harley, in the wake of an investigation into complaints over Harley’s behavior, including excessive spending and abusing his hiring authority. The Associated Press first reported on the probe into alleged inappropriate conduct, such as keeping a margarita machine in his office.

The official release about Chatfield made no mention of Harley’s removal. Top Navy officials told the AP that though the investigation into Harley has not been completed, officials “had enough information” to justify Harley’s departure this week.

Incoming president Chatfield, 53, is originally from Garden Grove, Calif., and she had been deployed to helicopter detachments in the Western Pacific and the Arabian Gulf before serving as a commander of a provincial reconstruction team Afghanistan in 2008, according to the Navy. Chatfield, who has a doctorate in education, has also taught political science as an assistant professor at the United States Air Force Academy.Article continues after sponsor message

Then a lieutenant, Chatfield told The Los Angeles Times in 1993 when restrictions on women flying in combat missions were lifted: “The goal of every Navy pilot should be to command a squadron at sea.”

More than two decades later, Chatfield will be at the helm of an institution with more than 50,000 graduates since its founding in 1884.

On her appointment, Spencer said: “She is the embodiment of the type of warrior-scholar we need now to lead this storied institution as it educates our next generation of leaders.”

Kenesha Starling is the first Black student to serve as editor-in-chief of the law review in the school’s history.

The school, which was founded in 1923, touted Starling as a hardworking second-year law student eager to break down longstanding barriers.

“This is an opportunity for us to leave our footprint, our chance to do things a bit differently, a bit better… to shake things up a bit. Our school has a rich and impressive history; our alumni are Texas Supreme Court justices, judges, U.S. and district attorneys, and presidents of state and local bar associations, to name a few,” she told the school in an interview.

“Our Law Review should reflect that same culture; it should be a leading resource for the legal community. It is not enough to be on Law Review — we have to increase our presence, open doors for all the law students who follow our stead as the esteemed South Texas Law Review.”

Starling has an impressive resume. She spent almost two decades working for a federal agency while raising her young son and spending hours studying for her law degree. She already has her MBA on top of all her current work.

“Having a professional background, I tend to see things a bit differently from my peers. Generally, when people think of diversity, they only consider color or ethnicity, but I think diversity is also background, age, and the wealth of experiences that go along with that,” she said.

STCL Houston Professor Shelby Moore said she was proud of Starling for her hard work and said her new position would positively affect hundreds of other people who will look up to her. 

“Kenesha has achieved a truly significant milestone as the first black editor-in-chief of South Texas Law Review — not only for herself, but for all minority students at the law school,” Professor Moore said.

“STCL Houston always has celebrated diversity and this important accomplishment furthers the school’s inclusive environment and reputation as a school of accessibility to all.”

She’s taking almost as many classes as her full-time peers, all while raising her 15-year-old son Darius. Starling was partially inspired to seek the position after seeing an inspirational poster honoring Black History Month. She’s in her final year of law school but is hoping her years of experience will be a benefit to the position.  

“There is a lot of pressure that comes with being the first in anything because people see you as a role model. They wonder if you’ll fall into a certain stereotype or be better or worse than your predecessors. Most of all, you must do your best, more for those coming behind you than for yourself,” she said during the interview with the school.

“Because the reality is — if you don’t knock it out of the park — that ‘failure’ becomes a stigma and follows everyone who looks like you. That’s a weighty but exciting opportunity.”

Credit: blavity.com

At 101 years old, renowned Japanese photographer, Tsuneko Sasamoto continues to express her artistic voice and capture stunning images. Considered to be her country’s first photojournalist at the age of 25, Sasamoto has been documenting history for over 70 years, including pre- and post-war Japan. Her photographs highlighted the country’s dramatic shift from a totalitarian regime to an economic superpower, and the social implications that arose from it.

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Sasamoto shooting in her 20s.

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Sasamoto shooting at 97 years old.

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Tsuneko Sasamoto on the cover of her book, Hyakusai no Finder.

Sasamoto remains enthusiastic about her profession, continuing to impact her chosen field. In 2011, at the age of 97, she published a photo book called Hyakusai no Finder, or Centenarian’s Finder. When she turned 100, she opened an exhibition of selected images.

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Photo credit: Satoko Kawasaki

Now, Sasamoto is currently working on a project called Hana Akari, or Flower Glow, an homage to her friends who have passed away. She is completing this series despite breaking her left hand and both legs last year. Determined to not let it get the best of her, she has attended physical rehabilitation three times a week to get better. When speaking to NHK World shortly before her 100th birthday, Sasamoto offered sage advice.

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Photo credit: Satoko Kawasaki

“You should never become lazy. It’s essential to remain positive about your life and never give up,” Sasamoto told NHK. “You need to push yourself and stay aware, so you can move forward. That’s what I want people to know.”

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Photo credit: Satoko Kawasaki

Via My Modern

Credit: designyoutrust.com

Mae Jemison is getting her very own Lego figurine and if you have ever played with legos you can appreciate this new way to celebrate her accomplishments.

Via Rolling out:

MAE JEMISON, ASTRONAUT, PHYSICIAN, AND ENTREPRENEUR: TRAINED AS A MEDICAL DOCTOR, JEMISON BECAME THE FIRST AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMAN IN SPACE IN 1992. AFTER RETIRING FROM NASA, JEMISON ESTABLISHED A COMPANY THAT DEVELOPS NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND ENCOURAGES STUDENTS IN THE SCIENCES.

Mae isn’t the only astronaut being recognized, Lego is celebrating all the women of NASA in this new collection and with enough support, they hope to get the Lego’s on the shelves.

The other women are:

MARGARET HAMILTON, COMPUTER SCIENTIST: WHILE WORKING AT MIT UNDER CONTRACT WITH NASA IN THE 1960S, HAMILTON DEVELOPED THE ON-BOARD FLIGHT SOFTWARE FOR THE APOLLO MISSIONS TO THE MOON. SHE IS KNOWN FOR POPULARIZING THE MODERN CONCEPT OF SOFTWARE.

KATHERINE JOHNSON, MATHEMATICIAN AND SPACE SCIENTIST: A LONGTIME NASA RESEARCHER, JOHNSON IS BEST KNOWN FOR CALCULATING AND VERIFYING TRAJECTORIES FOR THE MERCURY AND APOLLO PROGRAMS — INCLUDING THE APOLLO 11 MISSION THAT FIRST LANDED HUMANS ON THE MOON.

SALLY RIDE, ASTRONAUT, PHYSICIST, AND EDUCATOR: A PHYSICIST BY TRAINING, RIDE BECAME THE FIRST AMERICAN WOMAN IN SPACE IN 1983. AFTER RETIRING AS A NASA ASTRONAUT, SHE FOUNDED AN EDUCATIONAL COMPANY FOCUSING ON ENCOURAGING CHILDREN — ESPECIALLY GIRLS — TO PURSUE THE SCIENCES.

NANCY GRACE ROMAN, ASTRONOMER: ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE EXECUTIVES AT NASA, ROMAN IS KNOWN TO MANY AS THE “MOTHER OF HUBBLE” FOR HER ROLE IN PLANNING THE HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE. SHE ALSO DEVELOPED NASA’S ASTRONOMY RESEARCH PROGRAM.

Read more about the initiative here.

Women of Nasa

Credit: emilycottontop.com

South African singer, Nhlanhla Nciza, who is one half of the Mafikizolo music duo, has announced that she is splitting from her husband of almost fifteen years, Thembinkosi Nciza.

The 41-year-old singer posted a statement on Instagram saying:

After almost 15 years of our strong bond of marriage, my husband TK Nciza and I have come to a  tough but amicable decision to bring an end to our union.

I am thankful for the support we have given each other over the years while raising our children.

We shall remain on good terms and continue our endeavor to be great and exemplary parents to our children.

We appreciate the support we’ve received from family and friends. At this stage, we would like to appeal for privacy, particularly for the sake of our children. We thank you🙏

All queries may be directed to David Feinberg at
davidf@rwr.co.za

She also posted a few photos of herself and her husband.

The couple has three sons, Nkululeko, Thamsanqa, and Luvuyo. Their daughter, Zinathi, was killed in a car crash in 2009.

A few days ago, Nhlanhla shared a Father’s Day post where she thanked her husband for being a good role model to their sons.

Photo Credit@nhlanhla_nciza

Credit: Bella Naija

A black South African lawmaker has confirmed that she punched a man in self-defence after he allegedly hurled racial abuse at her.

Phumzile van Damme from the opposition Democratic Alliance said she got into a row with a white woman at Cape Town’s V&A Waterfront when the man intervened. She said the man, who was white, was “threatening violence” and used vulgar language to tell her to get out, referring to her as “you black”.  

The V&A Waterfront, a top tourist site, has apologised for the incident.  Ms van Damme was unhappy with the treatment she received from a security officer when she reported the incident.

Ms van Damme said she was standing in a queue in the supermarket when she had a quarrel with a woman who allegedly told her she would “push [her] aside”.  “Then when I went out, she was standing there with her family in a threatening manner. And I went to her and said, ‘why are you looking at me in a threatening manner?’ Then she said, ‘it’s because you’re black’, Ms van Damme said in a video on Twitter.  

She said a man, who was with the woman, “was threatening violence so in self-defence I punched him in the head”.  Ms van Damme said she accepted V&A Waterfront’s apology and their commitment not to tolerate unacceptable behaviour from its patrons. She has, however, threatened to file charges with the police.

Credit: LIB

Poet, writer and musician Joy Harjo — a member of the Muscogee Creek Nation — often draws on Native American stories, languages and myths. But she says that she’s not self-consciously trying to bring that material into her work. If anything, it’s the other way around.

“I think the culture is bringing me into it with poetry — that it’s part of me,” Harjo says in an interview with NPR’s Lynn Neary. “I don’t think about it … And so it doesn’t necessarily become a self-conscious thing — it’s just there … When you grow up as a person in your culture, you have your culture and you’re in it, but you’re also in this American culture, and that’s another layer.”

Harjo, 68, will represent both her Indigenous culture and those of the United States of America when she succeeds Tracy K. Smith as the country’s 23rd poet laureate consultant in poetry (that’s the official title) this fall. Her term, announced Wednesday by Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden, will make her the first Native American poet to serve in the position.

“It’s such an honoring for Native people in this country, when we’ve been so disappeared and disregarded,” Harjo says. “And yet we’re the root cultures, over 500-something tribes and I don’t know how many at first contact. But it’s quite an honor … I bear that honor on behalf of the people and my ancestors. So that’s really exciting for me.”

A native and resident of Tulsa, Okla. — she is also the first Oklahoman to be named U.S. poet laureate — Harjo says the appointment is an opportunity to continue a role she has often assumed throughout her career: as an “ambassador” of poetry. The Library of Congress calls the position “the nation’s official poet” and assigns a “modest minimum” of official duties in order to enable individual projects designed “to raise the national consciousness to a greater appreciation of the reading and writing of poetry.”

“Since I started writing in 1973, I’ve almost always been on the road with poetry, and meeting people and communities … every state in the union, small and large communities, for years on behalf of poetry — and the gift that poetry brings to all of us,” Harjo says.

Harjo is the author of eight books of poetry, including the American Book Award-winning In Mad Love and War (1990). She has also written a memoir and literature for children and young adults. She has taught at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of Tennessee.

A new collection called An American Sunrise will be published in August. Its title poem interpolates and salutes a famous Gwendolyn Brooks poem, but imbues it with new meaning about the persistence of Native people: “We are still America. We / know the rumors of our demise. We spit them out. They die / soon.”

Born in 1951, Harjo did not have an easy start to her life as a multidisciplinary artist. Her memoir Crazy Brave discusses her father’s alcoholism, her abusive stepfather, teen motherhood, a failed first marriage and living in poverty — before finding the “spirit of poetry.”

“I needed to find my voice, I think, in order to live,” she said to Neal Conan on NPR’s Talk of the Nation in 2012.

The memoir also discusses the time that she heard Miles Davis on her parents’ car radio and experienced a transcendental moment, which she connected to her mother’s singing and her deep identification with music. Much later in life, nearing age 40, she picked up a saxophone for the first time. She has now released five albums of original music and won a Native American Music Award in 2009.

Harjo talks about her poetry as a kind of music — like making a fire by slamming two rocks together. “You hit words together with rhythm and sound quality and fierce playfulness,” she says.

But in terms of subject matter, she also sees poetry as “an immense conversation of the soul.” She says she’s driven by “justice and healing and transformation: The idea that you can … transform the images of our people from being non-human to human beings, and the ability to transform experiences that could potentially destroy a people, a family, a person to experiences that build connection and community.”

Her work often merges the global and the personal, the imagery of the natural world and that of the inner one. She speaks often not only of the diversity of humanity, but also of its unifying story, its oneness.

“To her, poems are ‘carriers of dreams, knowledge and wisdom,’ and through them, she tells an American story of tradition and loss, reckoning and myth-making,” said Hayden in a statement. “Her work powerfully connects us to the earth and the spiritual world with direct, inventive lyricism that helps us reimagine who we are.”

In “She Had Some Horses,” found in the collection of the same name, Harjo describes the many, often contradictory “horses” within a woman: “She had some horses she loved. / She had some horses she hated. / These were the same horses.”

In “This Morning I Pray for My Enemies,” which she read for NPR, she relates the sun to the heart.

And whom do I call my enemy?
An enemy must be worthy of engagement.
I turn in the direction of the sun and keep walking.
It’s the heart that asks the question, not my furious mind.
The heart is the smaller cousin of the sun.
It sees and knows everything.
It hears the gnashing even as it hears the blessing.
The door to the mind should only open from the heart.
An enemy who gets in, risks the danger of becoming a friend.

The poem appears in Harjo’s 2015 collection Conflict Resolution for Holy Beings. Harjo says that humanizing and healing will be her aims as poet laureate — “a healing of people speaking to each other, with each other,” she says.

“Communities that normally would not sit with each other, I would love to see … interchanges with poetry,” Harjo says. She suggests gathering “cowboys and Indians” for a poetry summit. “I really believe if people sit together and hear their deepest feelings and thoughts beyond political divisiveness, it makes connections. There’s connections made that can’t be made with politicized language.”

Credit: Npr.com

At 103, Julia “Hurricane” Hawkins has cemented her title as the oldest woman to compete on an American track after finishing the 50- and 100-meter dashes at the National Senior Games in New Mexico.

Event organizers say the Louisiana resident holds the world record for her age group of 100 and over in the 100-meter dash.

In this photo provided by the National Senior Games Association, 103-year-old Julia Hawkins, of Baton Rouge, La., competes in the 50-meter event at the 2019 National Senior Games in Albuquerque, N.M., Monday, June 17, 2019. (Brit Huckabay/NSGA via AP)

She didn’t beat her previous time Tuesday but crossed the line in just over 46 seconds in Albuquerque.

On Monday, she was clocked at 21.06 in the 50-meter event, which appears to be a new Senior Games record for the women’s 100-plus age division. There’s no record of a past female competitor in that contest.

The retired teacher says staying active keeps her sharp and she hopes she can serve as an inspiration to others.

In this photo provided by the National Senior Games Association, competitors in the 90+ age division, including 103-year-old Julia Hawkins, of Baton Rouge, La., far right, wave to the crowd after their 50-meter race at the 2019 National Senior Games in Albuquerque, N.M., Monday, June 17, 2019. (Brit Huckabay/NSGA via AP)

Credit: abc22now.com