Top 20 DVDs for Spring 2015 |
These DVDs are not presented in any particular order. You can find most of them on www.amazon.com , .ca or www.barnesandnoble.com. It is also possible to find some of them in a Blu-ray format on these Web sites.
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Written by Dr. Joe R. Feagin and Dr. Karyn D. McKinney
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Tuesday, 24 January 2017 00:00 |
A racist society is not a healthy society, for the perpetrators of racial discriminatiion as well as for the targets of that discrimination. In an earlier book, Joe Feagin and his colleagues argued that all Americans have paid a heavy price for continuing racism:
Racist notions have brought ill-gotten resources and benefits to many white Americans. Yet few whites realize the heavy price that they, their families, and their communities have paid and will pay for this institutionalized racism. White Americans have paid greatly in the form of their ignorance and fears, in human contributions and achievements sacrified, in the failure to create a just and egalitarian society, in the resistance and lashing out of the opressed, and in the fundamental ideals and egalitarian morality thus betrayed. In our view, U.S. society certainly cannot afford white racism in the long run, for it may well destroy this society as we know it sometime in this century.
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A profile of the Oscar winning actor Jamie Foxx |
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Written by Kam Williams
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Sunday, 14 November 2010 17:09 |
Texas native Jamie Foxx was born Eric Marlon Bishop on December 13, 1967 and raised by his grandparents from the age of seven months following the failure of his parents' marriage. Although he was a star athlete at Terrell High (where he receive top grades) on both the school's football and basketball teams, he majored in classical music and composition at the U.S International University in California.
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Exclusive interview with the heart and soul of the movie Concussion: Dr. Omalu M.D. |
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Written by Patricia Turnier LL.M and LL.D Candidate in 2016
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Wednesday, 02 August 2017 00:00 |
Dr. Bennet Omalu was born in Nigeria (where he learned to speak Igbo and Pigeon English) during the Civil War. He is the sixth of seven siblings. His mother worked as a seamstress while his father occupied roles such as civil mining engineer, community leader in Enugu-Ukwu and deputy director of mines. Thus, the physician comes from a family that values higher education. For instance, his younger sister holds a PhD degree from Scotland in energy law.
Dr. Omalu started primary school at the age of three. He outperformed the older children in his class. He learned how to read at three like Oprah Winfrey, Johnnie Cochran, Shirley Chisholm, Condoleezza Rice and Toni Morrison. Being exposed to education so early definitely helped them to rise up. Later, the pathologist enrolled into the Federal Government College Enugu for secondary school. He began medical school at the age of sixteen at the University of Nigeria in Nsukka. In 1990, he obtained a MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery) in Nigeria. He graduated from medical school in 1990. Albeit disappointed by the political situation of his country, he started to look for opportunities in America. He looked for scholarships. Hence, Dr. Omalu arrived first in Seattle, Washington in 1994 to finish an epidemiology fellowship at the University of Washington. In 1995, he enrolled in Columbia University’s Harlem Hospital Center for a residency training program in anatomic and clinical pathology.
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Dr. Rebecca Lee Crumpler 1831-1895: The First African-American Female Physician |
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Written by Crystal R. Emery
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Wednesday, 20 July 2016 17:26 |
Rebecca Lee Crumpler challenged the prejudice that prevented Black Americans form pursuing careers in medicine to become the first Black woman in the United States to earn an MD degree. Although little has survived to tell the story of her life, Dr. Crumpler secured her place in the historical record with her two-volume book, The Book of Medical Discourses, published in 1883.
Miss Crumpler was born a free woman of color in 1831 in Delaware. Early in her life she moved to Pennsylvania, living with her aunt, "whose usefulness with the sick was continually sought". At that time "I early conceived a liking for, and sought every opportunity to relieve the sufferings of others," she wrote.
By 1852 Dr. Crumpler had moved to Charlestown, Massachusetts, where she worked as a nurse for the next eight years. In 1860, with the help of written recommendations from the doctors she worked with, she was admitted to the New England Female Medical College. When she graduated in 1864, Dr. Crumpler was the first Black woman in the United States to earn an MD degree and the only Black woman to graduate from the New England Female Medical College, which closed in 1873.
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