vimarsana.com

Page 54 - தேசிய நம்பிக்கை க்கு வரலாற்று ப்ரிஸர்வேஶந் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Do you look for the union label on nonprofit solicitations? – People s World

Images: ILGWU “Look for the union label!” Remember that little ditty on TV that promoted consumption of union-made goods and products? It’s good advice, whether you’re purchasing a car or appliance, clothing, food or drinks. Consumers have tremendous power to affect the common good by focusing their buying habits on union-made, union-grown, union-marketed products. Employers will eventually become more favorable to unionization when they see their unionized competition is gaining on them owing to popular favor. Maybe the same principle can be applied to organizations that solicit our financial support healthcare institutions and advocacy groups, human rights, arts, environmental, religious, gun control, voting rights, etc.

Historic Kegel s Inn in West Allis is one of only 25 restaurants in the U S to receive this $40,000 grant

Historic Kegel s Inn in West Allis is one of only 25 restaurants in the U.S. to receive this $40,000 grant Bob Dohr, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel © Evan Casey/Now News Group The beer garden at Kegel s Inn in West Allis is open from 4 to 8 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday and 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday. A German restaurant that s been a fixture in West Allis since 1924 will be getting a $40,000 boost to help its operations. Kegel s Inn, 5901 W. National Ave., is one of 25 historic and culturally significant U.S. restaurants owned by underrepresented groups that will receive funding through the Backing Historic Small Restaurants Grant Program.

The Fight to Preserve Greenwood

The Fight to Preserve Greenwood Caleb Gayle © Decades of urban renewal including a highway cutting through the community have drastically changed . When Brenda Nails-Alford received the letter informing her that her ancestors were survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, she had to reread it five times. The massacre was a two-day onslaught of racial violence that is believed to have killed hundreds of people and laid waste to the prosperous Black neighborhood of Greenwood which included a business district known as “Black Wall Street” in Tulsa, Nails-Alford’s hometown. She had never heard of it. In 2003, a legal team sued the city of Tulsa, the Tulsa Police Department, and the state of Oklahoma on behalf of more than 300 of the massacre’s survivors and survivors’ descendants. After their letter reached Nails-Alford, she drove to Greenwood and walked up and down the streets, just like she had as a kid. Her memories suddenly felt haunted.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.