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As part of our IMPACT Initiative, we’re partnering with LACC Theatre Academy to revive this powerful production honoring Rubén Salazar and the 1970 Chicano Moratorium.
Originally created by Latino Theater Company artists in 1990, August 29 follows a university professor haunted by the events of 1970 as she writes a book about Rubén Salazar. His spirit returns to push her — and us — to confront the past and ignite the future.
Once In Awhile …
Once in awhile …
Protest Against Trump’s Administration
Tens of thousands of people gathered at over 1,500 actions across the United States on Thursday to protest the Trump administration. The protests came under the banner of “Good Trouble Lives On,” a reference to the late civil rights leader and lawmaker John Lewis, who died
five years ago.
Once In Awhile …….
Once in awhile …….
Celebrating The Life of Professor Dipa Basu
With colleagues, friends, and familia – Celebrating the life of Professor Dipa Basu from Pitzer College “where she became beloved as the “Professor of Hip Hop,” inspiring generations of students through her work on the sociology of music, Black popular culture, and the politics of race and ethnicity. She also co-edited the influential book The Vinyl Ain’t Final: Hip Hop and the Globalization of Black Popular Culture (2006), which brought critical international perspectives to hip hop studies and remains widely cited.
Supporting “Good Trouble” Protest in Rancho! Adelante!
Supporting “Good Trouble” Protest in Rancho! Adelante!
Se Repite De Vuelta
Las escenas que vemos en redes sociales de agentes federales persiguiendo a inmigrantes en Los Ángeles evocan, para algunos, un capítulo vergonzoso de la historia estadounidense.
Hace casi 100 años más de un millón de personas de origen mexicano, inclusive ciudadanos estadounidenses, fueron expulsados a México.
The Big Bad Bill Is A $4.5 Trillion Robbery
The Big Bad Bill Is A $4.5 Trillion Robbery
Scapegoating At The Highest Levels
Scapegoating at the highest levels attacking our immigrant communities to hide the systemic reasons for why immigrants come here, blaming them for the state of the economy, and to hide the tremendous profits made by multinational corporations here and abroad from their labor. We know who the real criminals are – and it is not our hard-working immigrant families. As the studies in this article show: “About 68% of those had no criminal convictions and an additional 57% had never been charged with a crime.”
