News

How one of the Constitution’s earliest critics used the founding language — and silences — to fight for freedom.
Frederick Douglass delivered his most famous and powerful speech, “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” on July 5, 1852.
“Professor,” a diligent young woman from Queens who described herself as Latina and applied a no-nonsense activist lens and ...
More than 10,450 signatures have been collected on a petition to deny parole for a man convicted decades ago in the death of a young girl, according to Ontario County District Attorney Jim Ritts. A ...
Other people might note his alienness and quickly forget it, but I couldn’t unsee it. And because I couldn’t unsee his, I ...
This administration seems to relish the cruelty of these actions. “Alligator Alcatraz” is an example of this. It’s in the ...
Review’s Sunday magazine noted a new trend in child birth: husbands helping in the delivery room, thanks to Lamaze classes.
Democrats plan to celebrate America’s birthday with mass nationwide protests and marches Every year on July 4, citizens of ...
Ball, a free man of color, opened a one-room photo studio in Cincinnati in 1845, but the business soon folded. He honed his ...
Frederick Douglass’ life and its relation to the Constitution might be said to revolve around Article 4 and how, if at all, the preamble informs it. Douglass’ first foray with the Constitution was ...
Winfield Ward Murray provides Burruss Correctional Training Center inmates with access to higher education as part of a ...
The Greece Police Department has introduced a new program aimed at improving responses when those with disabilities have an emergency. The C.A.R.E. Alert Program strives for better communication ...