By Stacy M. Brown, Micha Green, Hamil R. Harris, and James Wright Jr. | The Washington Informer | Word In Black This post was originally ...
Staff told the Crimson, the Harvard student newspaper, that they were not given any advance notice of the decision Thursday to lay off staff and outsource research to American Ancestors of Boston.
When the Eaton Fire blazed through Altadena earlier this month it took more than homes and memories — it devastated a city that has long been a haven for Black families.
A federal judge temporarily blocked President Trump’s executive order ending the constitutional guarantee of birthright ...
Trump’s return to office on MLK Day feels like a rebuke of everything King stood for and fought for: his personal decency and dignity as well as his ethical, moral and spiritual nobility. Trump’s ...
A Seattle judge is siding with attorney generals from 22 states calling the challenge to birthright citizenship "blatantly unconstitutional." ...
In 1935, Bethune founded the National Council of Negro Women, an “organization of organizations” to unify African American women’s organizations under one major umbrella. The Mary McLeod Bethune ...
Only one copy of a single issue still exists. In fact, one of the only things known about the Messenger is that in 1921, the white-dominated Charlottesville Daily Progress reprinted a Messenger ...
President Woodrow Wilson facilitated the segregation of a diverse federal workforce, where Black and White professionals had been working together for years.
It is amazing that the State Department’s “one flag” directive could be controversial. Even more amazing is how we got here in the first place.
To recognize John Chase and his achievements, the UT Austin School of Architecture library is now named after him. The John S. Chase Architecture and Planning Library was made possible thanks to a ...
The renowned food journalist won James Beard Awards for two books and also serves as Editor in Chief of the "Cook’s Country" magazine and television show.