The data may be suggestive of a pattern.
Continuing a trend for a second day with regard to the Lone Star State's capital, I recommend Brown Equals Terrorist's "Racial Profiling Data Illuminating, yet Inconclusive" goes to an Austin Chronicle report on police profiling of people of color.
Elsewhere: - Mama JunkYard's "Behind Our Names" considers names and safe spaces for African women who blog.
- Good Reputation Sleeping's "The Hot Spot" points to continuing and widening exchanges about identity blogging.
- Black Perspective and Introspection points to the BBC's latest campaign.
- Lydia Polgreen's New York Times article "Africa Makes Fine Films. Of Course, Projector May Fail." outlines room still left to innovate for the continent's nascent cinema industry.
- Dan Huntley's Charlotte Observer exclusive "Race got in the way" tells how a South Carolina university fumbled away a chance to host a cache of civil-rights-era documents.
- " He was fabulous to the end. Sylvester had style, yes, and he sure could sing," San Francisco Chronicle writer Joel Selvin's review of Joshua Gamson's "The Fabulous Sylvester: The Legend, The Music, The Seventies In San Francisco," made me tap my toes.
- Bankelele notes the latest data from the World Economic Forum on countries' information and communications technology, in which, according to a press release with links to a chief economist's interview and PDFs of the report, Singapore surpasses the United States for top ranking and "South Africa and Tunisia strengthen their dominant positions among the 23 African countries covered by the Index, positioning themselves in 34th and 31st place overall, up from 37th and 40th position last year respectively."
posted in reviews
on March 11, 2005 6:11 AM
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