ACTOR AND PITTSBURGH NATIVE LAMMAN RUCKER (FILE PHOTO)
It's time for Black men to have the conversation.
Even if they don't think it's the "manly" thing...
Alison Cole, lead music therapist, sings along with young cancer patients and family that battle cancer. Photo courtesy of Kids Rock Cancer
by Ashley Winters...
More time spent on social media can leave young adults feeling worse about their bodies.
Leo Patrizi/E+ Collection via Getty Images
Julia F. Taylor, University of...
This book cover image released by Crown shows "Just Babies: The Origins of Good and Evil," by Paul Bloom. Bloom, the developmental psychologist and Yale professor, takes on the nature of morality and vast research spanning evolutionary biology to philosophy, drawing on everyone from Sigmund Freud to Louis C.K. (AP Photo/Crown) by Leanne ItalieAssociated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) — Are we naturally good or naturally evil? Cognitive scientist Paul Bloom argues in a new book that we're both. In "Just Babies: The Origins of Good and Evil" (Crown), the developmental psychologist and Yale professor takes on the nature of morality and vast research spanning evolutionary biology to philosophy, drawing on everyone from Sigmund Freud to Louis C.K.
GEORGE E. CURRY (NNPA)—On Sept. 16 the news was shocking: A contract employee who worked at the Navy Yard in Washington, D.C., later identified as Aaron Alexis, killed 12 innocent people in the facility before he was killed by police. For many African-Americans, our first thought was: “I hope it wasn’t one of us.” On Oct. 3, there was another disturbing incident in the nation’s capital: An unarmed woman with her 1-year-old child in the car, drove her vehicle into barriers outside the White House and on Capitol Hill before being shot to death by police.