Attorney whos investigating president Donald Trumps allies refuses to resign despite efforts to remove him. And a worrying combination the threat of monsoon rain in corona virus for injured stuck in the worlds biggest refugee camp. So then a call for Racial Justice that began weeks ago in the United States is echoing through other parts of the world for another weekend its just gone 4 pm here thats the french capital of paris where crowds are marching to highlight issues with Police Brutality and in the scottish capital Edinburgh People are demanding the removal of the melville monument that commemorates a politician who resisted calls to end the slave trade and in the United States 4 statues have been torn down in different cities this was washington d. C. Where crowds cheered as the any confederate general statue in the capital was toppled there also protests in the u. K. s capital and its with the marches and the london 90 once again protesters gathering right around the country. Th
Hudson County Community College presents Living in the Invisible hudsonreporter.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hudsonreporter.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Hudson County Community College (HCCC) Department of Cultural Affairs highlights the transformational power of the written word with the installation of
HCCC Director of Cultural Affairs for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Commemorates 20th Anniversary of 9/11 hudsonreporter.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hudsonreporter.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Price: Free with registration Sarah Cascone
Tuesday, February 16
This mural at a Chicago public school building is among several early 20th-century works in the city’s collection that have been criticized for having outdated depictions of Native Americans and other races and ethnicities. Photo courtesy of Chicago Public Schools.
2. “Resolving Tensions Over Race and Representation in Public Art” at the National Coalition Against Censorship, New York
The National Coalition Against Censorship is hosting a virtual luncheon to consider the delicate issue of historic WPA murals that whitewash problematic aspects of US history, and whether or not to remove them. Karyn Olivier, an artist and professor at Temple University in Philadelphia; Adriene Lim, dean of libraries at the University of Maryland; and scholar and curator Anthony Huffman will discuss.