Topic: Julian Bond

Julian Bond, chairman emeritus of the NAACP, urges Marylanders to support gay marriage in a new video ad released TuesdayJulian Bond, chairman emeritus of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), urges Marylanders to support gay marriage in a ...

Is the Black Church Losing Focus?

By: Jenée Desmond-Harris | Posted: August 30, 2011 Print Email +/- Text SizePermalink SHAREFacebook Digg Twitter MySpace Stumble Upon Google Tweet...
Wanda Sykes and Don Lemon spoke at the NAACP's recent panel discussion on LGBT issues within the Black communityComedian Wanda Sykes and CNN anchor Don Lemon spoke at the NAACP's recent groundbreaking panel discussion on LGBT issues within the Black ...
You have probably heard of the Semester at Sea program which places undergraduate college students on a cruise ship offering classroom instruction...

What is the gay black agenda?

They let us go to war. Now we want peace." . . So says Dr. Jasmine Waddell, when asked, "What is the gay black agenda?". . Waddell, a young...
A prominent leader of the NAACP has called on the gay community to stop 'hijacking' the civil rights movementA prominent leader of the NAACP has called on the gay community to stop 'hijacking' the civil rights movement. At a Tuesday rally held ...
When Civil Rights leader James Forman died in 2005, he left behind a legacy of activism, writing and leadership that spanned decades.. . He also...
NAACP elects 44-year-old health care executive Roslyn Brock as its youngest board chairman The NAACP elected a health care executive as its youngest board chairman Saturday, continuing a youth movement for the nation's oldest civil rights organization.Roslyn M. Brock, 44 ...

Julian Bond

January 14, 1940, Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.), U.S. legislator and black civil rights leader, best known for his fight to take his duly elected seat in the Georgia House of Representatives.. In 1960 he joined in creating the Student Nonviolent Coordinating ...

Charles Morgan Jr

Jan. 8, 2009, Destin, Fla.), American attorney who argued and won several prominent civil rights cases during the 1960s and '70s, most notably Reynolds v. Morgan was named the American Civil Liberties Union's (ACLU's) Southern director in 1964.