Brown v. Board at 70: Students from Topeka’s all-Black schools recall how segregation shaped lives Former students of four all-Black Topeka schools gathered Saturday to remember the teachers, peers and families that shaped their lives — and how their schools helped shape the nation’s education ... 05/18/2024 - 10:30 am | View Link
7 realities for Black students in America, 70 years after Brown Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education found that separating students by race violated the Constitution’s equal protection clause, but the legacy of segregation remains. 05/13/2024 - 2:54 am | View Link
Emerson president is the latest college leader to face sharp criticism related to Israel-Hamas war protests The numbers of Asian, Hispanic, and Black faculty members also grew. Colleagues at the Moody College described Bernhardt as ... stand across the street with an Israeli flag to show support for a ... 05/3/2024 - 6:59 pm | View Link
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis’ first vetoes following this year’s legislative session included a bill aimed at fighting wage theft in the construction industry that he said “would not punish the real wrongdoers.”
The bill sought to hold general contractors liable for wage theft committed by subcontractors. But Polis wrote in a veto letter that as passed, the measure would let subcontractors “off the hook” while penalizing good actors further up the project’s chain of command.
In all, Polis nixed six bills.
CNN's Kara Scannell describes the dramatic moment in the Trump hush money trial where Judge Juan Merchan briefly cleared the courtroom after a tense exchange with Costello over his behavior on the stand.
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Alice Stewart represented a modern master class in how to hold sincere beliefs without surrender or skirmish. The Republican strategist respected the cynics and critics across the table enough to talk, not sneer.
The city of Denver announced Monday that it would pay $1,000 bonuses to qualifying young people who log at least 100 hours at a job this summer.
The payments — available to Denverites ages 14 to 21 years old — are part of a broader effort Mayor Mike Johnston’s office is spearheading this summer to drive down rates of youth violence.
“We are thinking about this as a multi-pronged approach to how we can engage young people into positive summer activities and how we can help prevent the risks of summer violence,” Johnston said during a morning news conference.
The YouthWorks initiative will be funded through a $1 million state grant, according to city officials.
City officials say the program is designed to provide payments to up to 1,000 youths in the city.
Whether he’s showing weakness to the International Criminal Court or bowing before the mullahs, we now see the Biden administration for what it really is.