Underage Mexican drug mules are in for a shock in one Arizona county
Mario Nieblas shuffled into the courtroom in ankle chains and mismatched jail scrubs: green-and-white pants worn by juvenile inmates, red-and-white top worn by adults.
He was arrested on suspicion of smuggling nearly 90 pounds of marijuana from his native Mexico in March and turned 17 in a holding cell.
Read more in the Los Angeles Times.
Woman says she was denied Getty Foundation internship because she’s white
LOS ANGELES — A woman is suing the Getty Foundation alleging she was denied an undergraduate internship with the institution because she is white.
Samantha Niemann filed the lawsuit Friday in Los Angeles Superior Court, alleging a violation of her civil rights, racial discrimination and harassment as well as retaliation. She seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive
A Few Miles From San Bernardino, a Muslim Prom Queen Reigns
FONTANA, Calif. — In the days after the December terrorist attack in San Bernardino, Calif., when pictures of the hijab-wearing suspect filled television screens and newspapers, Zarifeh Shalabi’s mother and aunts stayed at home.
Read more in The New York Times.
For Women in Advertising, It’s Still a ‘Mad Men’ World
As a so-called bathroom break girl at the advertising agency BBDO in 1985, Susan Credle took over for receptionists when they left their desks. When she learned how to type quickly and accurately, she was promoted to secretary. In the decades since, she has become one of the most accomplished women in the industry, holding
Should Everyone Go to College? For poor kids, ‘college for all’ isn’t the mantra it was meant to be
Last fall a new instructor taught a remedial writing course at a community college in Maryland. Most of her students came from low-income backgrounds. Many had gone to broken schools. That they had made it to college at all was a feat.
In teaching them to write, she faced challenges that went to the foundations: Several
Op-Ed Why has there been an exodus of black residents from West Coast liberal hubs?
The Black Lives Matter movement has brought the challenges facing black America to the fore, and introduced racially conscious quality-of-life questions into the national debate. How are black residents in America’s cities faring? And how are those cities doing in meeting the aspirations of their black residents, judged especially by the ultimate barometer: whether blacks
Column Angry while female: Why it matters that Beyonce, Kelly Ripa and Samantha Bee won’t hide their outrage
It’s tough to imagine Beyoncé, Kelly Ripa and Mary Pat Christie hanging out over mix tapes and Chardonnay, but all three recently revealed one common characteristic: the willingness to be angry in public while female.
They join a small but growing group of women, currently best symbolized by “Full Frontal’s” Samantha Bee, who increasingly reject the time-honored dictate
Academic Studies Underscore Benefits of Government Assistance to Poor
The sons of female beneficiaries of the U.S. government’s first welfare program for mothers tended to live longer, attain more education and earn higher income than their peers whose mothers were rejected from the program.
More recently, young children of families who, under a 1990s government initiative, moved from public housing to neighborhoods with less poverty
The 2010 census missed thousands of California’s Latino children. Here’s what could change in 2020
More than 113,000 young Latinos in California weren’t counted in the 2010 census, a new study says, and Latino advocacy groups want to be sure the U.S. Census Bureau is working to reduce that number in 2020.
Read more in the Los Angeles Times.
Top L.A. County sheriff’s official sent emails mocking Muslims, blacks, Latinos and women
A top Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department official forwarded emails with jokes containing derogatory stereotypes of Muslims, blacks, Latinos, women and others from his work account during his previous job with the Burbank Police Department, according to city records.
Read more in the Los Angeles Times.