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I Have A Dream

David Marshall: Maintaining a diverse federal Judiciary

(TriceEdneyWire.com)—It is rare for a sitting U.S. president to step aside and not run for reelection. The magnitude of this type of decision cannot...

Why the Olympic Games are a ‘civil religious’ ceremony with a global congregation

The U.S. gymnastics team selected for the 2024 Paris Olympics celebrates in Minneapolis. AP Photo/Abbie Parr by Terry Shoemaker, Arizona State University Fans are getting ready...

Gospel singer Mahalia Jackson made a suggestion during the 1963 March on Washington − and it changed a good speech to a majestic sermon...

by Bev-Freda Jackson, American University School of Public Affairs Every now and then, a voice can matter. Mahalia Jackson had one of them. Known around the...

Ketanji Brown Jackson sworn in as Supreme Court justice: 4 essential reads

Ketanji Brown Jackson is the first Black woman to serve on the highest court in the land. Fred Schilling/Collection of the Supreme Court of the...

Judge Jackson Rewrites U.S. History as First Black Woman on the Supreme Court

After arduous and volatile hearings last month, the Democratic-controlled Senate confirmed Jackson by a 53-47 vote. At 2:17 p.m. EST, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson entered...

Ketanji Brown Jackson confirmed as Supreme Court justice: 4 essential reads

The votes are there. Ketanji Brown Jackson will become the first Black woman to sit on the Supreme Court. AP Photo/Susan Walsh by Matt Williams, The...

Ketanji Brown Jackson and the color blind society of Martin Luther King Jr.

by Bev-Freda Jackson, American University School of Public Affairs U.S. Sen. Chuck E. Grassley had a question for Ketanji Brown Jackson during her confirmation hearings...

MLK’s vision of love as a moral imperative still matters

Martin Luther King Jr.‘s message of love matters today. Tami Chappell/Reuters by Joshua F.J. Inwood, Penn State More than 50 years after the assassination of Martin Luther...

How MLK became an angry Black man

FREE AT LAST--Martin Luther King and Ralph Abernathy (background) leave Birmingham City Jail following their release on April 20, 1963, after eight days of imprisonment. (AP Photo) by John Blake (CNN) -- By the time Clarence Jones reached him, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was in bad shape.

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