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The Roundtable Convo
Photography by Vicky Pink - On Tuesday, February 18, 2014, Houston Style Magazine was on …
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Alley Theatre Ribbon Cutting Ceremony
Photography by Roswitha Vogler-On Saturday, September 26, 2015, Houston Style Magazine was on hand at …
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Teens4Pink Breast Cancer Issue Forum at CBC
Photography by Vicky Pink - On Friday, September 18, 2015, Houston Style Magazine was on …
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Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee’s Annual Thanksgiving Turkey Giveaway
Photography by Vicky Pink - On Monday, November 23, 2015, Houston Style Magazine was on …
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Angelique Bartholomew's Toy Drive
Photography by Vicky Pink - On Thursday, December 24, 2015, Houston Style Magazine was on …
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2015 SWAC Champions
Photography by Semetra Samuel On Saturday, March 14, 2015, Houston Style was on hand at …
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Shake, Raffle and Roll for Kidney Disease
Photography by Vicky Pink On Thursday, March 26, 2015, Houston Style Magazine was on hand …
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Bronson Woods’ 30th Birthday Party
Photography by Vicky Pink - On Tuesday, June 16, 2013, Houston Style Magazine was on …
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Nurses' union president criticizes new CDC mask guidance
The president of the country's largest nurses' union has spoken out against updated federal guidance which says that -- with a few exceptions -- people who are fully vaccinated against Covid-19 don't need to wear face masks in indoor or outdoor settings.
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Black, Hispanic dialysis patients are at greater risk of dangerous bloodstream infections
Patients with failing kidneys who need regular dialysis treatments still have sky-high rates of dangerous staph infections in their blood compared with people who don't need these treatments, according to a new Vital Signs report from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Rates of infection are particularly high among people who are Black or Hispanic or who have a lower socioeconomic status, the report said.
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Discovery Green® Celebrates 15 Years with an Action-Packed Spring Season
A Quinceañera Celebration, Bank of America’s Screen on The Green, UHD Thursday Night Concerts, Jazzy Sundays and more free entertainment for all.
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‘Moths to a flame’: Insect behavior around light isn’t about attraction, scientists say
At night, it’s not unusual to find a hoard of moths and other insects circling around a porch light or street lamp — but their reasons for being there are likely quite different from what most people assume, new research has found.
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College Board hits back at Florida's initial rejection of AP African American Studies course and admits it made mistakes in rollout
The testing organization behind a new college-level African American studies course for high schoolers is hitting back at Florida officials' comments about the Advanced Placement class, accusing the state Education Department of "slander" and spreading misinformation about it for political gain.
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Congressional Data Privacy Bill Would Unjustly Enrich Trial Lawyers
Several Members of Congress just introduced legislation that aims to protect consumer data from misuse and abuse.
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How Group Identities Fuel Inequality
How we relate to social groups, members of our own and others, influences how inequality arises and persists. That’s according to a Duke professor and pioneer in stratification economics, which combines sociology, social psychology, history, and economics to deepen understanding of persistent racial and ethnic disparities.
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MSU African Studies Center Facebook Cover Photo (via facebook)
Published on January 16, 2018
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African-American men are needed for the largest-ever study on prostate cancer.
Published on August 29, 2019
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'Boost everybody.' CEOs should mandate boosters before returning office workers, Andy Slavitt says
The Omicron coronavirus variant will cause a "winter wave" that will complicate the return of workers to offices in the United States, according to Andy Slavitt, a former senior pandemic adviser to President Joe Biden.
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World-Renowned Jazz Pianist Who Composed Music for Selma Film to Be Georgetown Distinguished Artist in Residence
Jason Moran, the internationally acclaimed pianist who wrote music for the film Selma and who serves as artistic director for jazz at the John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts, has joined Georgetown as Distinguished Artist in Residence.
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Synthetic cells make long-distance calls
Rice scientists' circuits help bacteria quickly pass signals to an entire community
The search for effective biological tools is a marathon, not a sprint, even when the distances are on the microscale. A discovery at Rice University on how engineered communities of cells communicate is a long step in the right direction.

