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A dynamo reaches out


April 28, 2021
“My story is kind of strange, and it’s not as clear as others,” says Anita Randolph. 
Indeed.
Randolph, an assistant professor in the Department of Pediatrics, began with a fascination for exotic cats like cheetahs and tigers, which led to an interest in strokes in nonhuman animals, which led to neuroscience and a groundbreaking study of blood-brain barrier dysfunction after smoke inhalation injury. 
And before she knew it, she had become fascinated with all aspects of neuroscience.
“It didn’t matter if I was working with Alzheimer’s disease or PTSD as long as I was in the field learning, I was totally happy,” Randolph says. ....

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Oregon once legally barred Black people—has the state reconciled its racist past?


Oregon once legally banned Black people. Has the state reconciled its racist past?
Oregon became ground zero of America’s racial reckoning protests last summer. But activists say it doesn’t know its own history.
Cleo Davis and Kayin Talton Davis are artists and activists who have made it their mission to preserve and celebrate African American history in Portland. Here, their daughter, Ifetayo Davis, stands with her father and sisters outside their home.Photograph by Diana Markosian, National Geographic
ByNina Strochlic
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On most weekends during the warm months, you’re likely to find Zachary Stocks in buckskin pants and a linen shirt guiding visitors around Fort Clatsop, a replica of the encampment where American explorers Lewis and Clark holed up during the bitter winter of 1805. But on one chilly morning last fall, Stocks was bundled in a fleece jacket, his dreadlocks pulled into a ponytail, and a mask covered his face protecting against both COVID ....

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