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History Knox: Following Rud Hayes from Kenyon to the White House

History Knox: Following Rud Hayes from Kenyon to the White House
richlandsource.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from richlandsource.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Massive outage of digital gradebook hampers NYC schools

Public schools across New York City depend on the tools, known as Skedula and PupilPath, for a dizzying array of tasks. They’ve been offline all week.

The NYC teacher who inspired a Nobel Prize winner - New York Daily News

The NYC teacher who inspired a Nobel Prize winner - New York Daily News
nydailynews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nydailynews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Jeff Jacoby: The Racial Decency — and Irony — of Rutherford Hayes — The Patriot Post

When Rutherford B. Hayes died in 1893, tributes to the 19th president poured in from across the political and social spectrum. Among them was a letter from a youthful black scholar doing graduate work in Berlin, studies that were subsidized by the Slater Fund, an endowment created to promote the education of African Americans. Hayes, one of the fund’s original trustees, had been impressed by the student and persuaded the other trustees to provide financial support. That young scholar was W.E.B. Du Bois, then unknown but soon to become one of the most renowned intellectuals of the early 20th century. Hearing of the former president’s death, he contacted the Slater board to express condolences. “I am especially grateful to the memory of him, your late head, through whose initiative my case was brought before you,” Du Bois wrote, “and whose tireless energy and single-heartedness for the interests of my race, God has at last crowned.”

The racial decency — and irony — of Rutherford Hayes

The racial decency — and irony — of Rutherford Hayes He was a steadfast champion of Black voting rights, yet he presided over the end of Reconstruction. By Jeff Jacoby Globe Columnist,Updated February 15, 2021, 2:59 a.m. Email to a Friend An undated drawing shows Rutherford B. Hayes taking the presidential oath of office in 1877.Library of Congress via The New York Times When Rutherford B. Hayes died in 1893, tributes to the 19th president poured in from across the political and social spectrum. Among them was a letter from a youthful Black scholar doing graduate work in Berlin, studies that were subsidized by the Slater Fund, an endowment created to promote the education of African Americans. Hayes, one of the fund’s original trustees, had been impressed by the student and persuaded the other trustees to provide financial support.

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