New Jersey
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9/27/2020
Anti-racist Lens Distorts History on New Jersey “Freeholders”
by Tony Fels
Beginning in 2021, New Jersey county officials will no longer be known as "freeholders." Although the author concedes the term is archaic, and "county commissioner" is a more informative descriptor, the term "freeholder" is not a relic of past racism.
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SOURCE: Washington Post
8/4/2020
More Than a Century Before the 19th Amendment, Women were Voting in New Jersey
For decades, there has been only anecdotal evidence that any women actually used this right.
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SOURCE: Jersey Digs
7/24/2020
Old Jail Could Inspire Youth to Stay Out of Prison — but Only If It Survives
What better way to enshrine the lessons we’ve learned from decades of mass incarceration than by transforming the remnants of Newark’s first penitentiary into a gathering place — be it a museum or community center — that might bring about the end of a problematic legacy.
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SOURCE: NJ.com
2/16/19
N.J. schools will finally teach about LGBTQ history. Here’s what kids would learn.
If done right, New Jersey will help set the national agenda for teaching kids about gender and sexuality throughout history and across all subjects, exposing students to a past that’s largely been ignored.
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SOURCE: USA Today
2/1/19
New Jersey becomes second state in nation to require that schools teach LGBT history
“By learning about LGBTQ people who have made amazing contributions to their country, they are seeing possibilities for themselves and hope for the future."
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SOURCE: The New Republic
1-21-14
Cory Booker Never Spoke for Newark Like Amiri Baraka Did
by Jelani Cobb
Amiri Baraka was a poet and activist, and he's the key to understanding modern Newark.
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10-21-13
Chris Christie and the Legacy of New Jersey’s Rosa Parks
by Michael Stewart Foley
Christie is attempting to unmake the legacy of New Jersey civil rights icon and fair housing activist Ethel Lawrence.
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Country Matters in Elizabethan England
by Bruce Chadwick
As You Like It Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey 36 Madison Ave, Madison, NJ Drew UniversityAll is not well in the city where William Shakespeare’s As You Like It begins. The play, written in 1599, now running at the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, charts the problems of urban life as cities grow, often without much order, in contrast to the increasingly inviting green retreats of the rural countryside. Within this conflict is the romance between Orlando, a frustrated younger brother in a powerful family, and the lovely Rosalind, a Duke’s daughter.Separately, the pair flees the city and seeks out the solitude of the Forest of Arden, with its thick clusters of trees, meandering streams and cast of characters. Rosalind disguises herself as a man so that she can keep an eye on Orlando, who is smitten with her as a girl. They are one of several pairs of lovers in the forest. The play is simple and relies on its director and actors to make it interesting. They do. As You Like It is impressive.
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SOURCE: CNN.com
5-12-13
Julian Zelizer: Chris Christie's Weight -- Why It Matters
Julian Zelizer is a professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University. He is the author of "Jimmy Carter" and "Governing America." Princeton, New Jersey (CNN) -- New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie made headlines last week when one of his aides admitted that he had surgery to lose weight. Christie said that the surgery had nothing to do with politics and everything to do with his health and his family. Christie said: "It's not a career issue for me. It is a long-term health issue for me and that's the basis on which I made this decision. It's not about anything other than that."It is impossible to know whether we should take Christie at face value. Given that there has been ongoing speculation about his presidential aspirations for 2016, often coupled with discussions of his struggle with weight, it is certainly not unreasonable to wonder whether these are related.Why do Americans care about the weight of a candidate and why is appearance an issue in presidential elections? There is very little chance that the issue will go away. Certainly, old-fashioned bias has something to do with this concern....
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SOURCE: NBC 40
2-21-13
Cumberland County battle field could soon become historical site
Some members of the Cumberland County community are seeking a grant that they say will shed light on the truth behind a suspected Revolutionary War battle site.Revolutionary War history is said to be rooted here in Port Norris, and some members of the Cumberland County community say they will stop at nothing to shed light on the truth."Get something going all the way back to the Revolutionary War era right here in Cumberland County would certainly an asset to our tourism and our economy."...
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