
Cage - “Look at What You Did”
Whoa, hey! It’s another jawn from Cage’s brilliant new album, Depart From Me. Courtesy of the kind folks at Def Jux.
Depart From Me arrives July 7th, 2009. You can go ahead and preorder DFM now, if you’re so inclined.
Author Vicki E. Murray, a senior fellow in education studies at the Pacific Research Institute, had this to say last week on humanevents.com about the Montgomery GI Bill and school choice: "A recent study from McKinsey & Co. ... found that 'lagging ...
A Juneteenth celebration in East Orange today had the usual outdoor festival fanfare: live music, speeches and even a little double Dutch jump roping. The Buddhist influence, however, added a twist. About 200 people attended event commemorating the ...
Happy Poppa’s Day to all the dads out there holding it down for their kidlets. From one dad to another. In the words of Charles Wadworth, “By the time a man realizes that maybe his father was right, he usually has a son who thinks he’s wrong.” Be a father to your child.
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Even though it has been 55 years since he became the first African-American Reds player, Chuck Harmon experienced a sense of civil rights accomplishment this weekend. As the Civil Rights Game and festivities took place Friday, Saturday and Sunday ...
NOW said Terry O'Neill, who is white, defeated Latifa Lyles, a 33-year-old African-American woman from Washington, D.C., during the organization's three-day national conference in Indianapolis. The group did not release totals from Saturday's vote ...
The National Organization for Women has elected a 56-year-old Maryland woman as the group's next president. NOW said Terry O'Neill, who is white, defeated Latifa Lyles, a 33-year-old African-American woman from Washington, D.C., during the ...
When Americans think of slavery, our minds create images of Africans inhumanely crowded aboard ships plying the middle passage from Africa, or of blacks stooped to pick cotton in Southern fields. We don't conjure images of American Indians chained in coffles and marched to ports like Boston and Charleston, and then shipped to other ports in the Atlantic world.
Yet Indian slavery and an Indian slave trade were ubiquitous in early America. read more »