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Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion 2021 Report evidences collective achievement

Emory’s first chief diversity officer, Carol Henderson, has had full days since touching down in Atlanta for her first days of work heading the Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (ODEI) nearly two years ago. Henderson, who also is vice provost for diversity and inclusion and adviser to the president, recalls getting right down to it. She remembers her first decision: Would she co-sponsor “For Peace I Rise”? It is a musical depicting the bond between C. T. Vivian and his wife, Octavia Geans Vivian. Their love story helped ground them in their civil rights work during a volatile period in the nation’s history.

Anderson: Minnesota s intense drought has different impact for different critters

Within a few weeks, northern Minnesota black bears preparing for hibernation will scrounge for 12,000 calories a day worth of food, a search that might lead the ravenous bruins to trash cans and bird feeders, due to a shortage of berries and nuts caused by the state s ongoing drought. In southern Minnesota, meanwhile, ring-necked pheasants just ended what might have been their best hatch in decades, thanks to the same extremely dry conditions. The birds could benefit further by a banner grasshopper crop the bane of many farmers that is just now showing up on the state s farmlands, again due to the drought.

Vehicles line up at Nova Scotia s border as province opens up to all of Canada

Vehicles line up at Nova Scotia s border as province opens up to all of Canada
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Juneteenth event to feature acclaimed doctor who overcame medical school rejection based on race

June 17, 12-1 p.m. Learn more and register here to attend this free, virtual event. In 1959, the waning days of the Jim Crow era, Clark College graduate Marion Gerald Hood applied to Emory University School of Medicine. The response from the school’s director of admissions, L. L. Clegg, was pointed and swift: “I am sorry I must write you that we are not authorized to consider for admission a member of the Negro race.” The school returned Hood’s $5 application fee. “I don’t even know if they looked at my credentials,” he says.  Hood went on to attend medical school at Loyola University in Chicago and to enjoy a long and distinguished career in gynecology and obstetrics in Atlanta. 

The Cracker Barrel: Housing project | Pine and Lakes Echo Journal

The Cracker Barrel: Housing project The trick to masterminding a successful avian housing project is to learn what species of birds might like to locate on your property, and then to provide them with the sort of buildings they prefer.  Written By: Craig Nagel | Columnist | 7:00 am, May 23, 2021 × Now that winter has melted into puddles of post-traumatic memories, it’s time to turn our attention to something more constructive than shoveling snow. Something, for example, like putting up birdhouses. You don’t have to be an experienced builder to get a project like this underway. All you need is a miniature house or two or three, purchasable from area stores, and the gumption to hang them from wires or nail them to posts in places appealing to creatures with feathers.

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