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Part II: An overhaul of tertiary education and regeneration in Africa is long overdue

Part II: An overhaul of tertiary education and regeneration in Africa is long overdue
thoughtleader.co.za - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thoughtleader.co.za Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

SWFLA To Do List: Anthony Rodia at Off the Hook, more

SWFLA To Do List: Anthony Rodia at Off the Hook, more Staff Big Buck & the Biscuit Boys Performing at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 8, at the Dogtooth Sports & Music Bar, 5310 Shirley Street, Naples. No cover. Information: dogtoothnaples.com or 239-431-7004. Brad Williams at Off the Hook The comedian performs through May 9 at Off The Hook Comedy Club, 2500 Vanderbilt Beach Road, No. 1100. $25 general admission, plus a fee. 7 p.m. Thursday, May 6; 7 and 9 p.m. Friday, May 7; 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. Saturday, May 8; and 6:30 p.m. Sunday, May 9. Information: offthehookcomedy.com or 239-389-6901. JCMI reopens for Sabbath The Jewish Congregation of Marco Island reopens for Sabbath services. Sue Baum, president of JCMI, and the board of directors, have announced the synagogue will reopen for Sabbath services at 7:30 p.m., Friday evenings, commencing May 7. Initially, the synagogue will be open to members, those who reside with them, and guests who must submit proof of completed vaccinat

Decolonising museums isn t part of a culture war It s about keeping them relevant | Dan Hicks

Let’s be open to the idea of returning stolen cultural objects, and remaking international relationships with honesty ‘Britain’s museums sorely need revitalisation, and the question of human remains and artefacts offers a position from which to see debates around them in a clearer light.’ The V&A, London, December 2020. Photograph: Alicia Canter/The Guardian ‘Britain’s museums sorely need revitalisation, and the question of human remains and artefacts offers a position from which to see debates around them in a clearer light.’ The V&A, London, December 2020. Photograph: Alicia Canter/The Guardian Fri 7 May 2021 05.30 EDT Last modified on Fri 7 May 2021 08.23 EDT

That s Not How We Process Our Dead : Princeton, UPenn Heavily Criticized for Harboring Bones of Black Child Killed In 1985 Police Bombing, Vow to Return Remains

A pair of Ivy League universities apologized recently for mishandling the bones of a Black teen killed in a 1985 Philadelphia police bombing. The child’s remains remained at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology for decades and were used as an exhibit for an online forensic anthropology class that Princeton University hosted. Neither of the prestigious schools asked for consent from the child’s surviving loved ones to use her remains for teaching and research purposes. Both schools came under fire last week after Philadelphia news team Billy Penn broke news that the remains sat in a box at the Penn Museum and were shuffled between the two campuses before resurfacing as a “case study” in a 2019 research video.

MOVE bombing victims: The remains at Princeton and the Penn Museum are part of a horrific open secret

In a 2019 video tutorial produced by Princeton, students watched the smiling white anthropologist Janet Monge and a University of Pennsylvania undergraduate hold a human pelvic bone and a femur up to the camera as rows of human skulls, backlit and neatly lined up in wooden cabinets, rested behind them. The bones the two held, transferred between universities over decades, likely belong to Delisha Africa and Katricia “Tree” Africa, two Black children killed in the 1985 MOVE bombing, in which the city of Philadelphia dropped a satchel bomb on a row house occupied by the Black liberation group after a police standoff. Released soon after the bombing to a professor at the University of Pennsylvania for forensic study, the remains will finally be collected from that professor’s home on Friday. How they ended up there, and where they’ve been in between, is something the institutions involved have struggled to explain.

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