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Hypocrisy backfires on State of Alabama

Hypocrisy backfires on State of Alabama Updated May 09, 2021; Today’s guest columnist is J. Mason Davis. I graduated from Talladega College, a small liberal arts college located in Talladega, Alabama, in June 1956. Talladega College had been founded in 1867 as one of the first, if not the first, school for educating the former enslaved Black man, though not limited to his or her race. I wanted to become a lawyer to follow in the footsteps of my mother’s middle brother, Walter Wellington Harris, who had graduated from Ohio State University Law School in 1933. Being a resident of the city of Birmingham, the nearest law school for me was located at the University of Alabama, in Tuscaloosa. However, I was prohibited from attending the law school because I was classified as a Negro, and the University of Alabama was supported by all taxpaying Alabamians exclusively for those who claimed to be Caucasian.

Amid Infrastructure Talks, 13 Experts Help Powerful Interests Get in on the Plan

Photos courtesy of Covington; Holland & Knight; BGR Group and Akin Group This story is available exclusively to Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now. Biden has called for more than $4 trillion in new spending for his infrastructure plan.  Democrats will likely pass a bill under reconciliation if no bipartisan deal is reached.  Trade groups and lawmakers, meanwhile, are tapping experts to decipher the Senate s complex rules. President Joe Biden has called for more than $4 trillion in spending and increasing taxes on the wealthy and corporations as a way to pay for his ambitious infrastructure plan. He s pushing for bipartisan action, but that could be tricky as lawmakers spar over the cost and some of the details in his proposal.

David Lucas IP Lawyer Bradley Huntsville Law Firm

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