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Modern Mathematics Confronts Its White, Patriarchal Past

Obits | Post Bulletin

Margaret Moore Rochester, MN Margaret Lee Moore, 78, passed away very peacefully on June 17, 2021, in her independent living apartment in the Charter House, after a brief illness with acute leukemia. Margaret, the beloved daughter, the pride and joy, of Robert Lee Moore and Hazel Nalia Zwerneman Moore, who preceded her in death, was born September 29,1942 at Kapiolani Maternity Hospital in Honolulu, Hawaii. She was also preceded in death by her closest cousin, Patsy Moore Neal of Nashville, TN, and many other much loved relatives and friends. Cherishing her memory is her loving cousin and caregiver, Anne Koschmeder, who Margaret dearly loved with all her heart. Her memory will also be forever special to Patsy’s children and grandchildren in Nashville, TN; St. Louis, MO; Dunwoody, GA; New York, NY; and San Diego, CA. Other much loved survivors include first cousin, Laurel Kimber, Saint Ansgar, IA, and her children Sarah, Katie (Joe) and Amanda (Drew); cousins, Andy (Norma) Ma

Montford Point Marine, Veteran of Two Wars, Dies at 91

Montford Point Marine, Veteran of Two Wars, Dies at 91 Screen shot of a video interview with Robert L. Moore on the day the Montford Point Marines received the Congressional Gold Medal at Camp Pendleton, Calif., August 14, 2012. (U.S. Marine Corps video/Sgt. Eugenio Montanez) 16 Mar 2021 The San Diego Union-Tribune | By Pam Kragen In 1946, Robert L. Moore was stunned to see two Black Marines in uniform walking down the street near his home in North Carolina. Those men were Montford Point Marines, who were the first Black men to serve in the U.S. Marine Corps. Beginning in August 1942, about 20,000 Black men including Moore, who rushed to enlist after seeing the men trained at the segregated Camp Montford Point in Jacksonville, N.C. The camp was decommissioned in 1949 when President Harry Truman desegregated the armed forces. Today, fewer than 400 of these men are believed to survive, and last month the

Obituary: 1929-2021: Oceanside s Moore was among the nation s first Black marines

Oceanside    In 1946, Robert L. Moore was stunned to see two Black Marines in uniform walking down the street near his home in North Carolina. Those men were Montford Point Marines, who were the first Black men to serve in the U.S. Marine Corps. Beginning in August 1942, about 20,000 Black men including Moore, who rushed to enlist after seeing the men trained at the segregated Camp Montford Point in Jacksonville, N.C. The camp was decommissioned in 1949 when President Harry Truman desegregated the armed forces. Today, fewer than 400 of these men are believed to survive, and last month their number fell by one more with Moore’s death.

Montford Point Marine Robert L Moore, veteran of Korean and Vietnam wars, dies at 91

Montford Point Marine Robert L Moore, veteran of Korean and Vietnam wars, dies at 91
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