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First leased aircraft by Indian company lands at MIHAN SEZ - Nagpur Today : Nagpur News

The loss is incalculable : descendants of the Tulsa massacre on what was stolen from them | Oklahoma

Last modified on Mon 31 May 2021 03.01 EDT Earlier this month, the three known survivors of the 1921 Tulsa massacre testified in Congress about the world they lost when a white mob burned their thriving community to the ground. “The neighborhood I fell asleep in that night was rich – not just in terms of wealth, but in culture, community and heritage,” said Viola Fletcher, who was visiting the US capital for the first time in her 107 years. “Within a few hours, all of that was gone.” After being willfully suppressed from the national memory for close to a century, in many ways the history of the massacre is now more visible than ever – in media, popular culture and even the US Capitol. But this history, and the question of who has the right to tell it, remain contested. That is true even in Tulsa itself, where Black Tulsans say official centennial commemorations have obscured its lingering effects on their community and failed to meaningfully involve d

Things to do in San Antonio this weekend: Strawberry festival, Tony Rock, Charley Crockett

Things to do in San Antonio this weekend: Strawberry festival, Tony Rock, Charley Crockett
expressnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from expressnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Monolith mania comes to Chelsea

Monolith mania comes to Chelsea Michael Manfredi takes a photo of ‘‘Ptolemy’s Wedge II’’ by Beverly Pepper at the exhibition “Between the Earth and Sky at the Kasmin Gallery, New York, Jan. 23, 2021. The handsome and inordinately timely group show brings together 22 works, some recent, some quite old, all of them billed as “monolithic sculptures.” Nina Westervelt/The New York Times. by Deborah Solomon (NYT NEWS SERVICE) .- I don’t blame you if you never want to hear the word monolith again. It was certainly one of the most misused terms of 2020. It officially means “one stone” (mono for one and lith for stone or carving, from the Greek word lithos) and was pressed into overtime last fall when social media was inundated by reports of “mystery monoliths.”

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