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W&L to name new Center of Southern race relations, culture, politics in honor of Ted DeLaney

W&L to name new Center of Southern race relations, culture, politics in honor of Ted DeLaney
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The U S Is Increasingly Diverse, So Why Is Segregation Getting Worse?

The U.S. Is Increasingly Diverse, So Why Is Segregation Getting Worse? Alana Semuels, Time, June 21, 2021 The integration battles of the Civil Rights era happened more than half a century ago, but the U.S. is getting more, not less, segregated, as that past recedes. More than 80% of large metropolitan areas in the United States were more segregated in 2019 than they were in 1990, according to an analysis of residential segregation released Monday by the Othering & Belonging Institute at the University of California-Berkeley. The U.S. has become more diverse over time, which has obscured the persistence of segregation, the report finds. Metropolitan areas aren’t all-white, all-Black, or all-Latino, but within metropolitan areas, the different races are clustered in segregated neighborhoods, creating social and economic divisions that can fuel unrest.

Anniversary of Brown v Board ruling to be celebrated at Evergy Plaza

The Back Page

The Back Page By George Campbell Jr. In 1876, Edward Bouchet received a PhD in physics from Yale University. Just two years earlier, he had graduated Summa Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa, also from Yale, with a bachelor’s degree in physics. His remarkable academic success and substantial early contributions to research as a graduate student suggested a promising future in physics. Except for one thing. Edward Bouchet was Black. Bouchet’s doctorate was, in fact, the first-ever PhD awarded to an African American by an American university in any field. Initially intent on a research career after graduation, Bouchet could find a job only at the Institute for Colored Youth in Philadelphia. At the pinnacle of his career, his last job, he served as principal of a high school in Ohio [1].

A Vision of Racial and Economic Justice: A Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin

<p>&quot;More than a year into a national reckoning over racism, two heroes in the struggle for racial justice have received little national attention. A. Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin were mentor and student, friends and colleagues&mdash;eventually, their relationship was like father and son.&quot;</p>

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