It’s my birthday! I had a Scooby-Doo party eventhough some ppl said it was childish blah blah.
Live a little while you alive TF 🐶🦴
I was Velma🔎
#birthday#birthdaygirl#scoobydoo
Between this and Keith Lee saying he wont ever to back to Atlanta because of how the restaurants treated him and his family, it’s something in the water out in Atlanta
If you have a business, you should be able to use PTO to have “personal business “ days to actually work on your business orders/content instead of just making somebody else rich at a 9-5
being a business owner w 0 hired staff is so stressful. Our “new” supplier is a joke and has been immediately revoked. We ordered so many “necessities” for a pop up shop and nothing is here or close to arriving besides a table cloth,tape n nail boxes🥲 no banner,bags
This article is a mess, @nytimes
Both the headline and the body of your piece imply that the Black woman’s videos or her commentary thereafter were somehow misleading or not telling the whole story of what happened in Victoria’s Secret.
The fact is — a white woman accosted her, started screaming and physically attacking her when she realized she was being recorded, AND even though said WW was the aggressor — the store employees, the other customers, and the police all treated her like she was the victim.
The fact that the woman involved suffers from “anxiety” isn’t relevant. It’s yet another cleanup job the media is so happy to do in order to rehabilitate WW facing consequences for bad behavior.
https://t.co/E0TDa7oSpw
John Morton Finney was a Buffalo soldier who fought in World War 1, earned 11 degrees and practiced law until he was 106 years old.
He was believed to be the longest practicing attorney in the United States.
—John Morton-Finney (June 25, 1889 January 28, 1998) was an American civil rights activist, lawyer, and educator who earned 11 academic degrees, including 5 law degrees.
—He spent most of his career as an educator and lawyer after serving from 1911 to 1914 in the U.S. Army as a member of the 24th Infantry Regiment, better known as the Buffalo soldiers, and with the American Expeditionary Forces in
France during World War I.
—Morton-Finney taught languages at Fisk University in Tennessee and at Lincoln University in Missouri, before moving to Indianapolis, Indiana, where he taught in the Indianapolis Public Schools for forty-seven years.
—Morton-Finney was a member of the original faculty at Indianapolis's Crisps Attucks High School when it opened in 1927 and later became head of its foreign language department. He also taught at Shortridge High School and at other IPS schools.
—Morton-Finney was admitted as a member of the Bar of the Indiana Supreme Court in 1935, as a member of the Bar of the U.S. District Court in 1941, and was admitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1972.