The Skanner Newspaper – More Than A Score: A New Uprising Against High Stakes Testing

Details Written by Donovan M. Smith Special to The Skanner News Published: 28 January 2015

Activist, speaker, writer and teacher at Seattles Garfield High School, Jesse Hagopian (second to the left) is pictured here following an event hosting Olympic legend John Carlos. Hagopian is the author of a new book titled More Than a Score: A New Uprising Against High Stakes Testing. Susan Fried photo

Jesse Hagopian boasts a lot titles, but at the core he is an educator. Hagopian is a teacher at Garfield High School in the rapidly gentrifying Central District in Seattle.

He recently released his first book, More than A Score: A New Uprising Against High Stakes Testing, which analyzes the history of standardized testing in America and its close-ties to institutional racism in the country.

The Skanner News Donovan M. Smith spoke with Hagopian after an event he organized last week with Olympic legend John Carlos -- who famously raised his fist for Black Power at the 1968 Games in Mexico to discuss his book.

The Skanner News: Give our readers a general outline of what your role in Seattles education system has been.

Jesse Hagopian: I teach here at Garfield High School and Im co-advisor to the Black Student Union here. And two years ago our faculty voted unanimously to refuse to give a standardized test Measures of Academic Progress [also known as] the MAPwe thought it was harmful to our kids. They threatened all the teachers who refused with a 10 day suspension without pay. The teachers didnt back down, and instead the district had to cancel the test, and its now gone from the high schools in Seattle. And that movement helped to ignite a movement around the country where more and more teachers were refusing to give the test; students are walking out in mass like in Coloradothey had the largest walkout in probably U.S. history against high stakes tests recently; and parents are opting their kids out of the test, and its become the largest movement against high stakes testing in U.S. history. So my book is a chronical of that movement. It has an introduction by former Assistant Secretary of Education Diane Ravitch. It also has the stories of the parents who opted their kids out--why they did it. The stories of the kids who led walkouts refusing to take the tests and stories of teachers from around country refusing to give it. So its a book thats a testament to the resistance to this corporate education reform and this multi-billion dollar testing industry thats trying to reduce the intellectual process of teaching and learning to a single number. And then they can use that number to label our schools failing so they can close them, so they can deny students graduation so they can bust up the teachers union and fire teachers. Im just glad that this book can be part of that resistance to this corporate reform.

TSN: The #BlackLivesMatter movement is kind of new. Does your book tie in?

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The Skanner Newspaper - More Than A Score: A New Uprising Against High Stakes Testing

STERN: Skin in the game, and eugenics

Photo by Thao Do/Illustrations Editor.

Yalies receiving financial aid are the recipients of something extraordinary, something unavailable to nearly anyone even a generation ago: a nearly free education. Yet that last word nearly is the operative one. Upperclassmen, even those on full financial aid, still have to pay this University $6,400 a year in student effort, factoring in both the term-time self-help and summer contribution (freshmen, meanwhile, pay $4,475). This means that anyone on financial aid will have to pay Yale $23,675 over their four years here the equivalent of a brand new Chevy Camaro.

Does Yale need this money? According to the admissions office, roughly 50 percent of undergraduates are on financial aid. Thus, Yale raises approximately $16 million from the student effort. To put this in perspective, that number accounts for less than four-tenths of 1 percent of the amount the endowment increased last year alone.

In other words, the student effort is virtually meaningless to Yale, from a financial standpoint. For students, though, it presents a considerable hardship. Students who need to work have less opportunity to join more demanding, supposedly prestigious extracurriculars that can help land internships or jobs. In a YCC survey, more than half of respondents on financial aid reported that the student effort requirement limited their potential summer opportunities. Fifty-six percent of students reported having to tap into family income and/or family savings to cover part of the student income contribution this, in spite of the fact that Yale eliminated the family contribution a decade ago. The YCC sent this report to the administration; they know these facts.

So, why keep student effort? The phrase used over and over again in justifying the existence of the student contribution is that students on financial aid should have skin in the game. As in, they should have a financial stake even a small one in their education.

There is a word for this argument: eugenic. This argument is predicated on the unstated assumption that rich kids deserve their easier lives, that they deserve to be at Yale more. This argument demands that poorer kids work because that is what poorer kids are supposed to do, while richer kids get a free pass. Even the vocabulary of self-help and student effort is stunningly paternalistic.

But lets slow down for a moment. Some may argue that Yale is already so generous reducing an education that can cost upwards of $60,000 to just a little over $6,000. Such an argument is beside the point. Just because Yale is generous does not mean that students should not push Yale to address flaws in the system. This is not ingratitude; it is common sense.

The News recently asked several senior administrators: If money werent an issue, would you eliminate the student income contribution? Not one gave a straightforward answer. They know theyre on the wrong side of this.

Personally, I accept the argument that work is rewarding. I currently hold one campus job; for the last two years, I held three. So I think Yale should make everyone work. Kids who dont need aid, many of whom have never had to work, could actually benefit more from real work experience (and not some cushy internship).

Either Yale should force all undergraduates to work, or it should force none of them to do so. What it cannot do is force only the less wealthy kids to work. This creates a social dynamic whereby poorer kids indirectly serve the wealthier ones doing clerical work like filing papers or swiping IDs just because they had the misfortune of being born into a family with less money.

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STERN: Skin in the game, and eugenics

Why we need to address population growth's effects on global warming

Earlier this month, Pope Francis made news when he said that not only was climate change real, but it was mostly man-made. Then, last week, he said that couples do not need to breed like rabbits but rather should plan their families responsibly albeit without the use of modern contraception.

Though the pope did not directly link the two issues, climate scientists and population experts sat up and took notice. That's because for years, they have quietly discussed the links between population growth and global warming, all too aware of the sensitive nature of the topic. Few of them can forget the backlash after then-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in 2009 that it was strange to talk about climate change without mentioning population and family planning. Critics immediately suggested that she was calling for eugenics, thus shutting down the conversation and pushing the issue back into the shadows. The pope's support of smaller families might help that discussion come back into the light, where it belongs.

Sensitive subject or not, the reality is that unsustainable human population growth is a potential disaster for efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions. These days, the biggest population growth is occurring in developing nations, which is why any discussion must be sensitive to the perception that well-off, industrialized nations the biggest climate polluters, often with majority-white populations might be telling impoverished people of color to reduce their numbers. In fact, person for person, reducing birth rates in industrialized nations has a bigger impact on greenhouse gas emissions because affluent people use more of the Earth's resources and depend more heavily on fossil fuels.

In other words, population is not just a Third World issue. More than a third of the births in the United States are the result of unintended pregnancies, and this month the United Nations raised its prediction of population growth by the year 2050 because of unforeseen, rising birth rates in industrialized nations. So even though the highest rates of population growth are in the poorest and least educated countries Africa's population is expected to triple by the end of the century any attempt to address the issue will have to target the industrialized world as well.

By 2050, world population is expected to increase from its current level of about 7 billion to somewhere between 8 and 11 billion. According to a 2010 analysis published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, keeping that growth to the lower number instead of even the mid-range 9.6 billion could play a significant role in keeping emissions low enough to avoid dangerous levels of climate change by 2050. A more recent report, though, casts doubt on whether it would be possible to bring about dramatic enough changes in population quickly enough to hold the total to 8 billion.

Another 2010 report, by the nonprofit Center for Global Development in Washington, D.C, predicted that fast-growing developing countries will become the dominant emitters of greenhouse gases within a generation. That's partly because of their rising populations but also because of their poverty; they are less able to afford solar energy projects or other investments in non-fossil energy.

The report also notes that these countries and their people are far more vulnerable to the effects of climate change. A disproportionate number of impoverished countries are in low-lying areas where rising sea levels are expected to cause disastrous flooding. Agricultural productivity is expected to fall 40% in India and sub-Saharan Africa by the second half of this century.

The population issue is just beginning to get some of the public attention it deserves. The most recent report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the United Nations' board of climate experts, included concerns about population size, saying, Globally, economic and population growth continued to be the most important drivers of increases in CO2 emissions from fossil fuels. For the first time in its five years of producing such reports, the panel acknowledged that family-planning programs could make a real difference, both in slowing the rate of warming and in helping vulnerable nations adapt to its effects.

And progress can be made without draconian or involuntary measures. According to Karen Hardee, director of the Evidence Project for the nonprofit Population Council, developing nations are already beginning to recognize the usefulness of family planning in preventing hunger and crowding and in combating climate change. She cites Rwanda, Ethiopia and Malawi as countries that are taking the first steps on their own.

But they and other nations need assistance on two fronts: education for girls and access to free or affordable family-planning services. The benefit of even minimal education is startling: Women in developing countries who have had a year or more of schooling give birth to an average of three children; with no schooling, the number is 4.5. Add more years of schooling and the number of births drops further. Women who have attended school also give birth later in life to healthier children.

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Why we need to address population growth's effects on global warming

Book Traces History of Racism, Race-Based Psuedo-Science

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Newswise When it comes to race, too many people still mistake bigotry for science, argues Washington University in St. Louis anthropologist Robert W. Sussman, PhD, in his new book, The Myth of Race: The Troubling Persistence of an Unscientific Idea.

The book offers readers an opportunity to better understand where modern prejudices come from, said Sussman, professor of physical anthropology in Arts & Sciences. It shows where racist ideas first originated and how they developed through the ages. It illustrates how these racist myths of the past are just as old and outdated as those about the earth being flat.

A noted authority on the eugenics movement, Sussman has written extensively on anthropologys role in building the scientific consensus that perceived racial distinctions among humans have no biological basis.

His latest book, published recently by Harvard University Press, traces the early origins of racist theories, moving systematically through the Bible-based arguments that fueled the Spanish Inquisition, the teachings of botanist Carl Linnaeus and philosophies of Immanuel Kant. It reveals how 16th-century theories of racial degeneration became a crucial justification for Western imperialism and slavery.

These theories, Sussman writes, later fused with Darwinism to produce the highly influential and pernicious eugenics movement. Believing that traits from cranial shape to raw intelligence were immutable, eugenicists developed hierarchies that classified certain races, especially fair-skinned Aryans, as superior to others.

These ideologues proposed programs of intelligence testing, selective breeding and human sterilization policies that fed straight into Nazi genocide.

Sussman, who has taught courses about race and racism for many years, describes the book as an attempt to bring together in one place all the most important developments in the history of racism.

It includes all the aspects of the history of race, including where it started, where it is today and the people who fought against it and why they fought against it, especially right after the eugenics movement and the Nazi movement in Germany, he said.

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Book Traces History of Racism, Race-Based Psuedo-Science

Library book cuts hit schools hard

Move to digital resources means kids will miss out on old-fashioned books. KIM KNIGHT

John Cosgrove

BOOKWORMS: Changes to school library policies on non-fiction books will affect Rupert, 5, left, Polly, 10, and Leo, 12, Lublow-Catty.

Student accessto specialist non-fiction National Library books will be cut from July.

Shocked teachers say they weren't consulted about the move, expected to hit rural and technology-poor schools hardest.

Last year, 16,000 teachers made 40,000 requests for almost a million hard-copy items via the National Library's curriculum topic support service.

That service is being dumped from term three, in favour of directing students to "curated online resources".

For some educationalists, contact from the Sunday Star-Times this week was the first they knew of a change they describe as "enormous".

Denise Torrey, Principals' Federation president, said schools didn't have the resources to own large, varied collections. She supported digital learning, but feared for schools with limited technology.

This week, the School Library Association of New Zealand issued an open letter to National Library saying it was "disheartened" by the change which would have a negative impact on teaching and learning.

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Library book cuts hit schools hard

Using Cuba To Defend Nkrumahism Is Laughable

Feature Article of Saturday, 24 January 2015

Columnist: Kwarteng, Francis

We should like to take this opportunity to thank Mr. Philip Kobina Baidoo, Jr. for responding to our rejoinder. That aside, we should quickly add that though he made some efforts to respond to our piece, he failed abysmally to address most of the substantive issues we raised therein. We may, however, forgive him for serious intellectual lapses because, among other things, his frank admission on not reading Marxs four-volume piece in its entirety (and other writings) we recommended for his perusal says a lot about where his intellect stands on important global issues. Thus, we shall not waste too much time on him.

How can anyone read one or two writings in a writers larger corpus of written works and decide to draw general conclusions? Who says the subject matter Marx discussed in his first volume is what he also discussed in his three other volumes? What sort of faulty reasoning is this? Using the same logic, however, can we read Maps in Nuruddin Farahs so-called Blood in the Sun trilogy, and decide to draw general conclusions on Secrets and Gifts which are also in the trilogy? Can one even read a chapter or two of the same book and begin to draw general conclusions based on the books subject matter? Again, let us assume that Mr. Baidoo, Jr.s statement to the effect that he had only read the first volume in Marxs four-part volume is hypothetical, nothing to be taken serious, but has it occurred to him that the summary he gave on Marxs first volume may not be represented in the other three volumes?

Simply put, what Mr. Baidoo, Jr.s says about Marxs first volume is not representative of Marxs larger work. What we want to say, in effect, is that what Mr. Baidoo, Jr. attributes to Marx in his reading of the first volume is a small component of the larger context of Marxs entire corpus of written works, and therefore, we cannot read too much into it. Does this not fall under fallacy of defective induction, faulty generalization, or overgeneralization? The issue we raise is analogous to reading Nkrumahs 1967 Consciencism: Philosophy and Ideology for Decolonization and then making general conclusions without also reading the revised version (1970). One word, one paragraph, one additional page, and a new introduction can make a huge difference in the general interpretation of two same books, one being a revised version of the other. Nkrumahs revised position on the class nature of traditional African society, for instance, has created major divisions among scholars around the world as to what to make of the new information in the general exegesis of the two texts.

Another good example is Einsteins forced use of cosmological constant, a constant he created to address a problem that did not fit the constant. Einstein, in fact, regretted inventing it and using it. What is more, he continued to use it over other mathematicians and physicists objections only to retract it later. At one time, Einstein even ignored the correct implications of his mathematical computations based on some of his ideas because, apparently, the German scientist Erwin F. Freundlich, his friend, had given him astronomical data that happened to be entirely correct about the Milky Way (See Amir D. Aczels The Mystery of the Newly-Discovered Einstein Manuscript: Why Did He Come Back to Lambda?).

Why does Mr. Baidoo, Jr. read too much into Marxs first book and what, in his limited opinion, was Marxs faulty reasoning with regard to some of the underlying assumptions for his theories? Of course, there is nothing wrong with aspects of Marxs ideas being wrong. Egyptian, Indian, Chinese, Greek, Babylonian, and Mesopotamian mathematics and science were not always right. Yet a revision of Ancient Egyptian calendar engendered the calendar we use today. We can say the same of mathematical pi and of hundreds of other ancient ideas. Even not every aspect of the moral philosopher Adam Smiths ideas is relevant today. How much of todays capitalism is owed to Adam Smiths classical economics? How much of todays Marxism is owed to Karl Marxs and Friedrich Engels theories? How much of todays evolution is owed to Charles Darwin (Alfred Russell Wallace and Al-Jahiz)? How does Darwins atheistic evolutionary theory different from Francis Collins theistic evolutionary theory? Did Isaac Newton, the man who gave us the Three Laws of Motion and Gravitational Theory, and Gottfried W. Leibniz, who together with Newton gave us calculus, infinitesimal calculus that is, dabble in alchemy, a now discredited science (now seen as pseudoscience; there is some evidence that point origin of infinitesimal calculus to India, which later made its way to Europe)?

Did Greek thinkers like Aristotle and Anaximander not advance the so-called spontaneous generation, generally meaning life forms originate from lifeless matter, a pseudoscience discredited by Louis Pasteurs (and others) germ theory? Again theories and hypotheses undergo radical changes all the time, so too are assumptions. And yet Karl Marxs theories are not the only ones. It is why Leninism, Maoism, Stalinism, and Fidelism (Castroism) are variants of Marxism, as it were subject to the realities and dictates of circumstance, time, revisions, geography, and the like. Thus, the infinite assumptions which Mr. Baidoo, Jr. associated with Marxs first volume can be found in natural science, mathematics, logic, philosophy, and other branches of social science, too. Even labor time is a staple of capitalism.

What are we saying? Our point is that Marxism and capitalism are merely theories and therefore not carved in stones or, alternatively, are not expected to work all the time. The Supply-Demand Curve, for instance, does not always work in practice. But it is always beautiful and workable in theory. Therefore, it is not everything that Adam Smith and Karl Marx said that should be religiously pursued to its logical conclusion in the complex praxis of human interactions (Note: the supply-demand theory is implied in Smithss invisible hand concept; insider trading (privileged information), incomplete information, monopolies, greed, patrimonial capitalism, time, politics, decisional irrationality, corruption, oligarchies, and geography are some of the variables that limit the operational utility of Smiths invisible hand theory, the basis of free market; this is also why regulation and state intervention models are called for). If the markets are so predictable, for instance, how come Alan Greenspan and his team of world-class economists could not foresee Americas recession at the coming of the Obama Administration and putting corrective mechanisms in place to nip it in the bud?

The fact is that markets do fail all the time, and has actually been so throughout human history. This is one of the major criticisms leveled against Milton Friedman. This is where regulation, legislation, and state intervention come in. But he slipped all too easily into claiming both that markets always work and that only markets work, Paul Krugman writes of Milton Friedman. Its extremely hard to find cases in which Friedman acknowledged the possibility that markets could go wrong, or that government intervention could serve a useful purpose (See Krugmans Who Was Milton Friedman?, the New York Book Review, Feb. 15, 2007). Krugman also maintains: Friedman was wrong on some issues, and sometimes seemed less than honest with his readers, I regard him as a great economist and a great man. Sadly, Mr. Baidoo did not inform his readers that Keynes economic theories had always been part of the political economy of the 20th century, that they are back in full swing in the 21st, and that Keynes work and ideas made the British Treasury more powerful.

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Using Cuba To Defend Nkrumahism Is Laughable

How family histories can tell us who we are

Illustration: Mick Connolly.

Science

The Invisible History of the Human Race: How DNA and History Shape Our Identities and Our Futures CHRISTINE KENNEALLY Black Inc, $29.99

The Meaning of Human Existence EDWARD O WILSON Liveright, $30.95

The Meaning of Human Existence by Edward O Wilson.

At face value, things aren't always quite as they seem. DNA, however, doesn't lie. The challenge is to work out what truth it can reveal about ourselves. When Christine Kenneally's father sat his five adult children down in the kitchen to reveal a hidden family truth, he was barely able to mouth the words, such was his discomfort.

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The story of a missing grandfather triggered an interest that Kenneally, an accomplished science writer, couldn't let go. A quarter the DNA tucked away in each of her cells was from a man the family knew nothing about. What might his story reveal about her? She became her family's historian, driven by a more ambitious guiding question than most amateur genealogists: "Can our personal DNA tell us about the history of the world?"

Now in his 80s, eminent Harvard biologist Edward O Wilson's heritage is also threaded with angst. Growing up in the United States' racist Deep South during the 1930s and '40s, he retreated into nature. His childhood contemplations about the world around him led him to become one of the world's most influential and provocative thinkers about social behaviour.

The Invisible History of the Human Race by Christine Kenneally

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How family histories can tell us who we are

NC state Sen. Earline Parmon to resign next week

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) A Winston-Salem Democrat will resign from the North Carolina Senate next week and become an aide in the office of new U.S. Rep. Alma Adams.

Sen. Earline Parmon, who joined the legislature in 2003 and has been in the Senate the past two years, has been hired as the 12th District congresswoman's outreach director, Adams chief of staff Rhonda Foxx said in an email. Adams and Parmon served together in the House for years.

In a phone interview before Foxx's confirmation of her hiring, Parmon was coy about her next move after leaving the legislature effective Jan. 28. That's the day General Assembly members return from a two-week hiatus to begin considering legislation.

Parmon, 71, cited the death of her husband last July after a brief illness as a turning point for her to look at new opportunities and options to serve. Foxx said Parmon was offered the 12th District position independently of her resignation.

"The knowledge Earline has gained through her extensive work in the community is a welcomed addition that will bring added value to team Adams," Foxx said in a news release.

A former Forsyth County commissioner and recent Legislative Black Caucus leader, Parmon was an education consultant who joined the House in 2003. She said she was proud of her involvement in efforts for the state to provide financial compensation to those sterilized under North Carolina's past eugenics program. The legislature in 2013 approved a $10 million pool of compensation funds.

Parmon was a primary sponsor of legislation that ultimately became law in 2009 that allowed convicted murderers to have their sentences reduced to life in prison if they could prove racial bias influenced the outcome of their cases. She was also a chief sponsor of a 2007 law creating same-day voter registration during the early voting period.

"The opportunity to make voting (more) accessible to people was one of my highlights of being in the legislature," she said.

The death penalty law called the Racial Justice Act and same-day registration later were repealed by the Republican-controlled General Assembly. In recent years, she's also been outspoken in her efforts to reduce state delays in getting food stamps to her constituents and others.

"Earline Parmon is a true grassroots politician and has long been a tireless champion of her community and our state," Senate Minority Leader Dan Blue, D-Wake, said in a statement. Senate leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, said Parmon was respected on both sides of the political aisle.

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NC state Sen. Earline Parmon to resign next week

Book Review: Glow

When critics talk about ''boy genius'' authors, they're talking about guys like Ned Beauman. The London native was the youngest writer on Granta's once-a-decade list of the best young British novelists in 2013, at age 28. Boxer, Beetle, his 2010 debut, followed a nine-toed boxer and a swastika-stamped beetle through 1930s Britain in a caper about eugenics. The Teleportation Accident, a genre bender about a man who time-travels between Weimar-era Berlin and 1930s Hollywood, got him long-listed for the 2012 Man Booker Prize. His latest, Glow, introduces a pill-popping raver named Raf who discovers that a friend has been kidnapped by mysterious forces in a white van. It's a pulpy whodunit, but it develops into something much weirder: a conspiracy thriller that involves a Burmese paramilitary group, the international trade of an MDMA knockoff called ''glow,'' and a shady mining corporation called Lacebark. The whole thing is so complicated that by the end of its slim 247 pages, you might feel as if your brain had been CrossFit training.

That's a good thing, until it isn't. At first, the mystery is irresistible because it's easy to care about Raf, a guy with so much heart he unlocks the lonely pit bull who's chained to his building to walk her around London each day. Beauman's descriptions are so vivid I started marking the best ones until I'd dog-eared half the book: The moon is a ''silver pill half dissolved on the tongue of the night.'' A child's discarded glove is ''like the carcass of a small, blind mammal with a body made mostly of fingers.'' But whenever he adds an insanely complex subplot to this already idea-stuffed book, his characters are forced to divulge what's happening. (''You still haven't explained what exactly Lacebark are doing in London. Is it something to do with the Shan forest Concession?'') It's strange that an author who's so fascinated by the human drive for pleasure would forget that great books are like great drugs. They can be as mind-bending as you like. But first, they have to be fun. B+

MEMORABLE LINE ''When Barky does arrive he still wears flecks of shaving cream on both ear lobes like little pearl studs, so maybe, like Raf, he got out of bed only a short while ago.''

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Book Review: Glow

Watch Dogs Negative Eugenics Trophy/Achievement Guide (Watch Dogs Bad Blood DLC) – Video


Watch Dogs Negative Eugenics Trophy/Achievement Guide (Watch Dogs Bad Blood DLC)
Kill 4 enemies at once by blowing up the RC Car. You unlock the RC Car after the 3rd main mission in T-Bone #39;s story. You also need to be Militia Level 15 to unlock the detonate option for the...

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Watch Dogs Negative Eugenics Trophy/Achievement Guide (Watch Dogs Bad Blood DLC) - Video

Victim advocates want to close eugenics loophole

Advocates for North Carolinas eugenics victims are asking state lawmakers to close what they see as a loophole that may be making victims ineligible for compensation.

More than 7,000 people were involuntarily sterilized under North Carolinas decadeslong eugenics program.

So far the state has awarded $4.4 million to 220 victims. But hundreds more could be ineligible because of the way a 2013 law was written.

Lawmakers created a $10 million fund for people sterilized under the authority of the Eugenics Board of North Carolina. Thats been interpreted to exclude people sterilized by local health or welfare officials, not by the state eugenics board.

But Elizabeth Haddix, senior staff attorney for the University of North Carolina Center for Civil Rights, which has represented victims, said the local officials played a pivotal role in implementing the state eugenics policy.

There is no question that eugenics victims excluded from compensation were sterilized by state actors against their will, and therefore are plainly part of the class that the (compensation) statute was designed to reach, she wrote to House Speaker Tim Moore and Senate President Pro Tem Phil Berger.

Shelly Carver, a spokesman for Berger, a Rockingham County Republican, said it is too early to speculate on what might happen during the legislative process. Moore, a Republican from Cleveland County, said he is reviewing the proposal.

Any changes to the 2013 law could meet resistance.

Sen. Tommy Tucker, a Union County Republican who co-chairs the Senates appropriations committee on Health and Human Services, said the states done its part.

They should go to the county where they were sterilized, not the state, he said of those victims. The states done its part to right the wrongs that we did, but the county should be responsible for what it did.

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Victim advocates want to close eugenics loophole

Demaskus Theater Collective looks to tell unusual stories

Classic dramas envisioned through new eyes and unfamiliar works that tell unheard or unusual stories will be the focus of Demaskus Theater Collective.

The newly created, Pittsburgh-based cooperative of a dozen theater artists from Pittsburgh, Los Angeles and New York will launch its inaugural two-play season from March 12 to 15 with a production of Wine in the Wilderness by Alice Childress in the Pierce Studio of the Trust Education Center, Downtown.

A second production, You Wouldn't Expectby Marilynn Barner Anselmi, will follow Sept. 17 to 20.

We are thrilled to be adding work and new stories to an already robust Pittsburgh theater scene, says Demaskus founder and CEO Shaunda Miles, who will direct the first production. Our goal is to tell a classic tale in new ways and from different perspectives and give voice to marginalized communities.

The collective's name embodies the idea of revealing the truths that lie beneath the mask, Miles says.

Many of the plays will feature stories about women and people of color but will resonate with a far wider community, Miles says.

Wine in the Wilderness takes place during the Harlem race riots in New York City and explores the perceptions of black people toward one another.

It's a great play. But it hasn't been done in Pittsburgh since the '70s, Miles says. It deals with one community's vision of itself and de-masks perceptions the black community may have (about) itself.

You Wouldn't Expect is based on true events surrounding the North Carolina eugenics program, which sterilized more than 7,000 women in that state between 1929 and 1976. It's an intense drama about the relationship between two women forced to work with each other in a divided South.

During the run of each production, one performance will be prefaced by an optional dinner, during which a speaker and conversation will provide context for the issues in the play.

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Demaskus Theater Collective looks to tell unusual stories