Marvel’s “Black Panther,” Chadwick Boseman, graduated from Howard University with a bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts (BFA) in 2000.
Author Archives: Julianne Malveaux
Ben Carson must adhere to spirit of Fair Housing Act
The Fair Housing Act was passed a week after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was..
We must never forget legacy of Hattie Carroll
Hattie Carroll (1911-1963) was a 51-year-old restaurant server who was..
Obama’s last year brought economic success A
The income, poverty and health insurance data released by the Census Bureau on Sept. 13 confirm what many already knew.
Obama’s last year brought economic success
The income, poverty and health insurance data released by…
Public policy after Hurricane Harvey
Hurricane Harvey did everything people said it would do, and more.
‘Rabbit: The Autobiography of Ms. Pat’
I don’t often write about comedians, but the recent passing of my friend Dick Gregory reminded me of the very important role that comedians play in our lives. Not that Gregory was simply a comedian. He was so much more than that—a civil rights activist, leader, amazing speaker, holistic health practitioner. It was in thinking of him that I picked up the book, “Rabbit: The Autobiography of Ms. Pat,” a hot, relatively new comedian who uses her dysfunctional early life as fodder for her comedy.
Confederate statues fall, but economic racism lingers
Cheers to New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu, one of the first mayors to take Confederate statues down and to make the strong point that these statues represent nothing but oppression. You should check out the speech he delivered, in May at MarketWatch.com.
Black women strive daily to fight unequal treatment
Lots of women’s organizations commemorate Equal Pay Day, which this year was April 5. It meant that women, in general, would have had to work all of 2016, and until April 5, 2017, to earn the same amount of money that a man earned in 2016. Few will recognize July 31, 2017, which is the day by which African American women will have to work to earn the same money a man earned last year—seven extra months! A Latina woman will work until October, or nearly 10 extra months, to earn the same money a man earned.
Hugh Price’s African American Life: Lessons and blessings
Hugh Price was the seventh leader (from 1994 through 2002) of the National Urban League, the civil rights organization founded in 1910 to help African American migrants assimilate into urban life, to provide opportunities for urban migrants, and to eliminate segregation in our nation. Price, an attorney, activist, writer, and foundation executive was well-suited for that work, for which he may be best known, but Urban League work is only part of his legacy. Price is scheduled to share his reflective autobiography “This African American Life” (Blair, 2017) during the National Urban League convention that began yesterday, July 26, in St. Louis. I’m sure that many of his colleagues will enjoy his reflections, much as I did, when I read his book.

