What Would Dr. King Say?
We cannot remain silent in this treacherous moment in U.S. History. We must speak and confront the rising evil of this age, the fostering of hatred and denial of the right of all people to enjoy “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
Voices of Trinity: Faculty Speak on Black Lives Matter
Dr. Monroe reminded us of this truth: as Fannie Lou Hamer said, ‘Nobody’s free until everybody’s free.”
Dr. King’s Witness for Justice
Dr. Martin Luther King’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” is still an urgent call to action for racial justice.
If King Had Lived…
Where are the leaders today who can accomplish Dr. King’s unfinished agenda?
Leadership Imperatives
True leadership is a moral act to restore hope, ensure justice, achieve peace. Leaders cannot equivocate in the face of clear hatred, provocation and violence. We must be clear and firm: there is no place in American society for those who seek to foment racial hatred.
What Would Dr. King Say?
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., called on the United States to live up to the moral imperative for justice. The quest is as urgent as ever.
Race, Class and Educational Opportunity
Economic justice is essential to achieve racial equality; school reform is ineffective without an honest and vigorous plan to address poverty among schoolchildren.
Voices of Trinity: A Team Name: What Would MLK Say?
An encounter at the March on Washington leads an adjunct professor to reflect on the name of our local football team…