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Although the fight for racial equality is ongoing, Stax co-owner Al Bell says so is the hope for a better future envisioned by Wattstax a half-century ago.
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Flemister, who died last week, was the first Black woman to serve as a special agent in the 1970s, but was forced out by racial discrimination. She spent the next three decades in the foreign service.
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The victim, who was brutally attacked after he tried to move into their remote village on Maui, wouldn't have been beaten if he wasn't white, a U.S. judge said in sentencing two men for a hate crime.
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Voice of San Diego has released its 5th annual "Parent's Guide to San Diego Schools."
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KPBS Midday EditionFor Kemet Ackee of Second Chance Beer Company, brewing provides the perfect creative outlet.
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The career-civil rights lawyer and former California labor head would be the first Asian American to serve as a secretary in Biden's cabinet.
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Fifty years ago, Oglala Lakota activists took over the village of Wounded Knee in an occupation that lasted 71 days. Journalist Kevin McKiernan reflects on the standoff and the legacy it leaves.
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The comic's creator, Scott Adams, said a recent opinion poll changed his mind about "helping Black Americans."
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White farmers' suits blocked a USDA program and led to a race-neutral approach.
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The report is part of a growing body of research into whether institutions and policies reinforce preexisting racial disparities.
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