This year marks the 60th anniversary of “Bloody Sunday,” a moment that marked a turning point in the Civil Rights Movement.
On March 7, 1965, a march by over 500 civil rights demonstrators was violently broken up at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma ...
Jobs lost, tariffs, funding cuts nationally and globally, deportations, looming Medicaid cuts, DEI erasure - America is ...
Bloody Sunday, civil rights activists warn that the right to vote is in peril due to political attacks and restrictive laws.
Sixty years ago on March 7, hundreds of footsoldiers in the Civil Rights Movement were violently beaten and gassed by Alabama ...
Six decades later, the story of that “ Bloody Sunday” in Selma shouldn’t be confined to the pages of history books. It is a ...
"Bloody Sunday" memorializes the march on the Edmund Pettus Bridge led by Congressman John Lewis and Reverend Hosea Williams.