Medgar Evers Died for Civil Rights: U.S. Navy Names Ship to Honor Sacrifice
“You can kill a man, but you can’t kill an idea.” -Medgar Evers On June 12, 1963, civil rights hero Medgar Evers was shot in
“You can kill a man, but you can’t kill an idea.” -Medgar Evers On June 12, 1963, civil rights hero Medgar Evers was shot in
The Troy Davis execution case in Georgia has inspired national and international support from the likes of Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa and Pope
According to Jennifer O’Brien, a tenured first grade teacher in Paterson, N.J., her class of mostly black and Latino students is a frustrating and exasperating
If you think Donnell White was tapped for the head position at the Detroit Branch NAACP for his charisma, composure and boyish good looks you’d
The so-called war on drugs has been a failure of colossal proportions — from both racial and preventive standpoints — and the NAACP passed a
Reginald Turner is by all accounts, a man of enormous credibility who is true to his calling — the practice of law as public service.
The NAACP sees Wal-Mart’s U.S. Supreme Court victory in the sex discrimination lawsuit as a substantial civil rights setback. This judgment counters two lower courts
The Cobb County branch of the NAACP will celebrate Juneteenth with a two-day extravaganza at Glover Park on the Marietta Square, Marietta, Ga. On Friday,
Since its inception, the NAACP’s annual Freedom Fund Dinner in Detroit has been known as the largest sit-down dinner in the world. The illustrious list
When Wells Fargo & Company acquired Wachovia, they increased their presence on the East Coast as well as globally. With the expansion came the opportunity
The economy remains stubbornly and mercilessly stagnant, and it is suffocating already beleaguered states fiscally. States are learning — as they lay bruised and battered