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David Bennett Becomes First man ever to Receive a Heart from a Gene Edited Pig

David Bennett Becomes First man ever to Receive a Heart from a Gene Edited Pig

Doctors successfully transplanted a pig heart into 57-year-old David Bennett, saving his life.

This is the first time in history where a gene-edited pig has been used as an organ donor.

Doctors reported that the Maryland man and his new heart were doing well days after the surgery.

Bennett had previous heart conditions that made him ineligible for a human heart transplant. When he was offered the pig heart Bennett was shocked, but his family says, “it’s nothing short of a miracle.”

Original post by Corryn Wetzel/Daily Correspondent-Smithsonian Magazine

Read more here: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/in-a-first-man-receives-a-heart-from-a-gene-edited-pig-180979380/ 

First Asian American Woman-owned Bookstore Opens in NYC

First Asian American Woman-owned Bookstore Opens in NYC

Lucy Yu has converted a funeral supply shop in Manhattan’s Chinatown into the cities first Asian American woman-owned bookstore. “Yu and Me” opened officially in mid-December of 2021.

In the store, Yu built a snug refuge for a community that has been a target of attacks during the pandemic. The work of legendary New York photographer Corky Lee is on display on a turquoise wall framed with string lights and Japanese woodblock prints. On another wall, shelves stacked with thousands of books by Asian and Asian American authors.

Yu put in the effort to gather inventory that reflects the diversity and depth of the Asian American community. As well as featuring mainly lesser-known works focusing on Southeast Asia and the island nations.

Original post by Claire Wang/NBC

Read more here: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/-see-shelves-first-asian-american-woman-owned-bookstore-opens-nyc-rcna8408 

Historic Train Building to Become Home to Ludlow Heritage Museum

Historic Train Building to Become Home to Ludlow Heritage Museum

The Ludlow Heritage Museum and Norfolk Southern announced a lease agreement to preserve the railroad company’s Ludlow Yard Store House building.

The agreement will allow the renovation of the museum building and the repurposing of its new headquarters. The plan is to create more museum space and additional rooms for meetings and events.

It is the last remaining original structure on Ludlow used by the Cincinnati, New Orleans, and Texas Pacific Railway, which became part of Southern railway, and later, Norfolk Southern.

Original post by River City News

Read More here: https://www.rcnky.com/articles/2022/01/07/historic-train-building-become-home-ludlow-heritage-museum

Brigette Lacquette Becomes the First Indigenous Woman to Scout for an NHL team

Brigette Lacquette Becomes the First Indigenous Woman to Scout for an NHL team

Brigette Lacquette is now the first indigenous woman to scout for an NHL team, by recent hire by the Chicago Blackhawks.

Lacquette has a past with breaking barriers as she became the first Frist Nations woman to play hockey for Canada in the 2018 Winter Olympics. In addition to that, the 29-year-old from Mallard, Manitoba, also played in three world championships over six years in the national women’s team, winning two medals.

Ryan Stewart, Blackhawk’s assistant general manager, offered the job to Lacquette via direct message on Facebook. The Blackhawks were looking to replenish their scouting staff with a more diverse group of people.

Original post by Associated Press

Read more here: https://indiancountrytoday.com/news/breaking-barriers-nhls-1st-first-nations-scout

Lucille Clifton’s Historic Sites in Baltimore

Lucille Clifton’s Historic Sites in Baltimore

Lucille Clifton was a poet and author from Baltimore. She inspired people of all ages with her writing. Clifton often visited and conjured her writing in notable places around the city, making her mark on the community.

Angel’s Tavern was a small bar in a historic neighborhood in Baltimore where Clifton read her poems to a reoccurring audience. From 1974-1985 she served as a trustee of the Enoch Pratt Free Library, yet another place where she connected and inspired young writers. Her passion for educating young adults through literature naturally led her to work at Coppin State University and St. Mary’s College.

Sidney Clifton described her childhood century-old home, The Clifton House, as the setting for her mother’s famous poems. In 2018, Sidney began working on regaining possession of the house after it had been lost due to foreclosure in the 80s.

Sidney was able to buy back the house and in 2020 the house received an African-American Cultural Heritage Action Fund project planning grant. The project’s plan was to begin the transformation of the house into a new cultural arts space.

 

Original post by Orilonise D. Yarborough/National Trust for Historic Preservation-Saving Places

Read more here:

https://savingplaces.org/stories/a-place-to-grow-lucille-cliftons-life-in-baltimore#.YYRMdNbMLPY

The First Native American Restaurant in Northern California Opens

The First Native American Restaurant in Northern California Opens

Wahpepah’s Kitchen in Oakland, California is the first woman-owned restaurant specializing in native cuisine in the area.

The owner of the restaurant, Crystal Wahpepah, is an enrolled citizen of the Kickapoo Nation of Oklahoma. She became very familiar with cooking for tribal events with her family at the International Friendship House.

Wahpepah’s Kitchen is looking to reclaim, transform, and sustain changes to the food system through utilizing an Indigenous food sovereignty model in Oakland, California, and beyond. It is surrounded in color and the history of the Kickapoo Nation.

Original post by Nanette Deetz/Native News Online

Read more here: https://nativenewsonline.net/currents/first-native-american-restaurant-in-northern-california-opens-wahpepah-s-kitchen-in-oakland-ca

New Project aims to Preserve Tribe’s Cultural History

New Project aims to Preserve Tribe’s Cultural History

Near the Arizona-Nevada border, more than 700 petroglyphs can be found at Grapevine Canyon. The petroglyphs are from 1100-1900 AD.

The Fort Mojave Indian Tribe occupies the land from Mojave City to Topock and straddles the Nevada, California, and Arizona borders.

Fort Mojave was established as a U.S. military outpost in 1859. There are ruins of Fort Mojave still existing near the Colorado River. The Fort Mojave tribe holds the river sacred to its traditions.

Nora McDowell is the manager of the Topock Remediation Project. This project will consist of cleaning chromium contamination in the groundwater near Topock Maze.

Topock Maze is an over 600-year-old geoglyph that is spiritually important to the Mojave.

 

Original Post by: Fred Mayson/Associated Press

Read more here: https://indiancountrytoday.com/news/project-aims-to-preserve-tribes-cultural-history

Mary McLeod Bethune statue soon makes history at U.S Capitol

Mary McLeod Bethune statue soon makes history at U.S Capitol

Early next year, Mary McLeod Bethune will make history as the first Black person to have a state-commissioned statue in the U.S. Capitol. Her statue will replace the Confederate general statue at the Capitol’s Statuary Hall.

Bethune was an influential educator and civil rights activist. She founded the National Council of Negro Women, advised multiple U.S presidents, and created a boarding school for Black children which later became Bethune-Cookman University.

The statue of Bethune has already been created and was recently unveiled in her home state of Florida. It will be moved from Florida to the Capitol in early 2022.

The statue was created by artist Nilda Comas, the first Hispanic master sculptor to create a statue for the National Statuary Hall State Collection.

Original post by Rachel Treisman/NPR

https://www.npr.org/2021/10/14/1045964525/mary-mcleod-bethune-statue-us-capitol-florida-unveiling

3D Reconstruction Reveals the Faces of Three Ancient Egyptian Mummies

3D Reconstruction Reveals the Faces of Three Ancient Egyptian Mummies

21st-century technology has enabled researchers to see the faces of people who lived more than 2,000 years ago. The scientist used the DNA taken from three ancient Egyptian mummies to create digital images of what they might have looked like in their 20s.

The animations created are based on DNA phenotyping which predicts an individual’s skin, hair, and eye color.

Parabon NanoLabs presented the reconstructed images of the Egyptians. Parabon NanoLabs, a Virginia-based company usually helps solve cold cases. NanoLabs is the first company to work with DNA phenotyping on human DNA from several years ago.

Original Post by David Kingly/Smithsonian Magazine

Read More Here: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/3d-reconstruction-ancient-egyptian-mummies-180978786/

Once a Meeting Place for Mexican-American Civil Rights Movement, now a Local Landmark

Once a Meeting Place for Mexican-American Civil Rights Movement, now a Local Landmark

During the Mexican-American civil rights movement, the Council 60 Clubhouse was a meeting place for social and political groups.

In 1929, the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) was founded in response to racial discrimination. The LULAC held meetings at the clubhouse for nearly 60 years.

This clubhouse played a significant role during the most active years of the Latino Civil Rights Movement during the 1950s and 60s.

Advocates are working to preserve this historic site and designate it as a local landmark.

Original Post by Sehila Casper/National Trust for Historic Preservation

Read More Here: https://savingplaces.org/stories/now-a-local-protect-landmark-the-lulac-council-60-clubhouse-looks-to-the-future#.YVYByGZucbk