For LAPD cops, walking the Koreatown beat filled with mystery, confusion, cultural minefields

By | June 8th, 2016|Police & Community|

It’s a town where people don’t meet your gaze, first names are taboo, and piles of shoes greet you at the doorway. Lifelong friends get in nasty fights over who pays the check, and strangers won’t think twice before asking prying questions about your age or marital status. Here, sometimes yes means no and no means yes.

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Black preschool kids still get suspended much more frequently than white preschool kids

By | June 7th, 2016|Education|

Schools suspend minority students at much higher rates than their peers, sometimes starting from the beginning — preschool.

The Civil Rights Data Collection, a national survey conducted by the U.S. Department of Education, surveyed over 50 million students at more than 95,000 schools and found that while suspensions decreased by almost 20 percentage points between the 2011-2012 and

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In Mississippi Town, Some Fear School Desegregation Ruling May Backfire

By | June 6th, 2016|Education, Intergroup Relations|

CLEVELAND, Miss. — The multicultural high school band kicked off a punchy “Pomp and Circumstance” as the 2016 graduates of Cleveland High School marched across the gymnasium. They were a near-equal mix of black and white students, with the occasional Nguyen, Patel or Rojas sprinkled among them.

Here

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Crossing the ‘abortion desert’: Women increasingly travel out of their states for the procedure

By | June 2nd, 2016|Health|

When she discovered she was pregnant, the 22-year-old aspiring veterinarian started calling abortion clinics in her home state of Oklahoma. It was a short list – there are only two, and neither could get her an appointment quickly.

Read more in the Los Angeles Times.

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African Americans are less trusting of law enforcement in Los Angeles County, poll finds

By | June 1st, 2016|Police & Community|

Despite two decades of efforts to improve relations, Los Angeles County law enforcement is still struggling to build trust among African American residents, according to a new poll.

Read more in the Los Angles Times.

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Spellings Says UNC System Won’t Try to Enforce Controversial Bathroom Law

By | May 31st, 2016|Education, LGBTQ+|

The University of North Carolina system said on Friday that it would not seek to enforce a controversial state law requiring transgender people to use bathrooms corresponding to their gender at birth. The Associated Press reported that Margaret Spellings, the system’s president, said in a legal filing that “I have no intent to exercise my authority

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Undercover police sex stings targeting gay men endure, despite fierce criticism

By | May 27th, 2016|LGBTQ+, Police & Community|

Sitting in cars along the edge of the park, four Long Beach police officers waited for the right time to pounce.

The innocuous signal that spurred them to action came when they saw a middle-aged man close his laptop and head toward a public restroom known in the area as a place where men have sex

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