i will be joined by marshall warfield, known as roz on night court. so much more along with that. she weighs in on the role of the lgbtq+ community in making us laugh as part of a new documentary called outstanding. i am charge charles coleman junior. we have a lot to talk about. this is the sunday show. good evening. donald trump seems to make a lot of assumptions about the black community and among them being we love sneakers and sympathizers to convicted felons. perhaps his boldest assumption of late is about black community has lost its short- term memory. trump apparently wants us to believe that when it comes to race, donald trump the person is somehow different than donald trump the president. how else could he go to detroit last night, one of the country s blackest cities and proclaim again that he is the best president for blacks since abraham lincoln? keep in mind, trump has previously denigrated detroit as a disgrace and likened it to living in hell. he wants
Graduate Publishing Program Update, 2020 By Judith Rosen | Dec 18, 2020
In a year marked by a global pandemic and renewed social justice protests, it’s not just publishers that have been forced to pivot. So too have the graduate programs that serve as feeders for trade houses and scholarly presses. To find out how graduate publishing programs have maintained their educational missions and reacted to calls for more diversity in publishing,
PW spoke with directors and faculty at five of the largest programs: Emerson College, NYU School of Professional Studies, Pace University/Dyson School of Arts and Sciences, and Rosemont College in the U.S., as well as Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada.