Originally published Feb. 27, 2007 Paper Makes Hay With Sharpton-Thurmond Link The revelation that the Rev. Al Sharpton’s ancestors were owned by the late Sen.
Gerald Boyd Services Illustrate Obligation, Burden Eulogies: “Well, That’s One Hell of a Burden” Gerald M. Boyd’s former colleague Bernard Weinraub raised an issue worth
Celebrating Journalism With a Jazz Sensibility Wynton Marsalis, left, artistic director of jazz at Lincoln Center, blows a passionate rendition of Duke Ellington’s “Black and
Newsman Was Among Most Recognized Journalists Ed Bradley, arguably the most visible black journalist of his generation and among the most recognizable television journalists of
Panel Urges One-Year Accreditation for J-School Asserting that “critics, some of whom are black, are jealous of our program,” Dean Tony Brown and the top
After Deficit, New Director Gets Stabilizing Task The National Association of Black Journalists announced the appointment of a new executive director last night as its
N.C. Panel Wants Redress for Anti-Black Violence A 600-page report on anti-black riots in Wilmington, N.C., in 1898 recommends that newspapers – particularly the News
Reflections on Legendary N.Y. Times Editor “Abe was not politically correct. He didn’t like homosexuals. He was not happy with the feminist movement, and it’s