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Joseph Duffey, educator and antiwar activist behind influential Senate campaign, dies at 88

Live Updates: Latest News on Coronavirus and Higher Education

Live Updates: Latest News on Coronavirus and Higher Education
insidehighered.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from insidehighered.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Joe Duffey, who inspired liberals during his 1970 anti-war campaign for U S Senate in Connecticut, dies at 88; Paul Newman was his honorary campaign chairman

Joe Duffey, who inspired liberals during his 1970 anti-war campaign for U S Senate in Connecticut, dies at 88; Paul Newman was his honorary campaign chairman
msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

How a minimum wage increase could impact people s livelihoods

More than 17 million Americans could see their income rise if the $15 minimum wage now in the COVID relief bill passes Congress. We hear from some of those who would be impacted by a minimum wage increase, and Stephanie Sy speaks with two economists with different perspectives on the topic. Read the Full Transcript Judy Woodruff: More than 17 million Americans could see their income rise if the $15-an-hour minimum wage in the COVID relief bill now passes Congress. For workers and for employers, there s a lot at stake. Let s hear now from some of them. And then Stephanie Sy will look more closely at the debate behind it.

We ask Red Clay to name one its schools for Dr Joseph E Johnson Jr

Darin Kellam, Donna Kellam, Marion Johnson Brown, Kevin Johnson, Joy Johnson, Stephanie Johnson Watts and Karen Brown Special to the USA TODAY Network President Joe Biden’s January Executive Order on Racial Equity gives us occasion during Black History Month to celebrate and commemorate the achievements of a native son of Delaware and beloved head of our family who made transformational contributions to educational equality in the Delaware public schools. Dr. Joseph E. Johnson, Jr., the son of a Pullman man and a domestic worker, grew up in the well-kept and solid, working-class East Side of Wilmington, effectively the only part of town where African American families were allowed to reside at that time. He attended Howard High School, the only high school in the entire state open to African Americans until the 1954 United States Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education, which ended de jure discrimination in public schools across the land. Joe we, the undersigned c

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