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By Ryan Shepard In today s edition of Rooting For Everybody Black, Onovu Otitigbe-Dangerfield has made history at Albany High School in New York. With a nearly perfect academic record, Otitigbe-Dangerfield has become the school s first Black valedictorian. To put this all in perspective. the school has been open for more than 150 years. As wild as it sounds, the graduating senior is as well known for endeavors outside of the classroom as she is known for endeavors inside the classroom. Otitigbe-Dangerfield is the president of the school s key club and editor-in-chief of the school s newspaper. Above all else, she has a strong passion for engineering and robotics. Winning her first robotics competition at just three years old, the New York native has had to break down barriers as she ascends in a field dominated by white men. Her persistence and determination earned her the position of president in the school s robotic team. ....
Antonio Tsialas was thriving in his first year at college. Then he was found dead in a gorge, and the fraternity that recruited him closed ranks. What happened is still a mystery. ....
Living through a pandemic - in their words News staff FacebookTwitterEmail 30 1of30Buy PhotoMike Saccocio executive director and CEO of City Mission of Schenectady on Tuesday May 24, 2016 in Schenectady, N.Y. (Michael P. Farrell/Times Union)Michael P. FarrellShow MoreShow Less 3of30 4of30Spokesperson for People of Albany United for Safe Energy, Sandy Steubing, speaks at the rally by PAUSE to commemorate the two year anniversary of the Lac Megantic derailment on Monday, July 6, 2015 outside of the Governorís mansion in Albany, N.Y. (Olivia Nadel/ Special to the Times Union)ON/Albany Times UnionShow MoreShow Less 5of30Buy PhotoAria Winter is seen outside her apartment on Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2020 in Albany, N.Y. (Lori Van Buren/Times Union)Lori Van Buren/Albany Times UnionShow MoreShow Less ....
Cornell University created a special rock-climbing course for “people of color,” reports indicate. The “BIPOC Rock Climbing” class has since been slightly altered following backlash, but it was originally restricted to “people who identify as Black, Indigenous, Latinx, Asian, or other people of color” – meaning no whites allowed. The course, which costs $1,890 – this includes the standard one-credit course cost of $1,575 plus an additional mandatory $315 “course fee” – was branded and marketed as a way to get more dark-skinned people involved in the sport of climbing rocks. Since Campus Reform reached out to Cornell to ask about the racially discriminating class, the school quietly changed its description to state that it is: ....