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Robin Washington column: Irene Morgan remembered — and why we have historic markers
Editor’s note: On Saturday, a historic marker was dedicated in Saluda, Va., to Irene Morgan, who died at 90 in 2007. Eleven years before Rosa Parks, Morgan refused to give up her seat to a white couple on an interstate bus, leading to a 1946 Supreme Court case that found segregation in interstate travel unconstitutional. News Tribune editor Robin Washington, who produced a television documentary about her and the early Civil Rights Movement, was asked to speak at the dedication. Here are his comments — and a postscript.
RELATED CONTENT2012's 20 Under 40 honorees meld community involvement, personal interests
There are dozens of real-estate brokers and pastors in the Northland. The same for lumbermen, National Guardsmen, university administrators and members of every imaginable profession. Everyone, I’m sure, has an interesting life story or compelling tales to tell.
RELATED CONTENT- 20 Under 40 Q&A: David A. Nolle
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Chelsea Morgan
- 20 Under 40 judges
- Frank Bucar nurtures a strong work ethic
- Serving the community is a priority for Emily Kalligher
- For Jenice Meyer, the focus is on making connections
- For Pastor Gabe Green, it's not a career, but a calling
- David Chura aims to help others learn and grow
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Amy E. Lukasavitz
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Jennifer Webb
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Billy Shelton
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Jeremy Craycraft
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Travis Hansen
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Briana von Elbe
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Ken Kolquist
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Cara Lindberg
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Jason Manning
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Chris Francis
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Dan Bart
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Dawn M. Johnson
- 20 Under 40 Q&A: Anna M. Downs
Editor's View: A couple of guys I know
As a reporter and TV producer in Boston, News Tribune editor Robin Washington has met Barack Obama and Mitt Romney several times; some just fleeting encounters, some in-depth interviews.
RELATED CONTENTWant to sing the blues? Try living it 
ROBIN WASHINGTON: If you want to hear the blues, head down to Bayfront Festival Park where the bluesfest continues in full swing today. If you want to see the blues, you might try outside the CHUM building.
RELATED CONTENTTime magazine art critic, credited with changing the genre, dies
Though it probably would account for little more than a drop of paint on the grand canvas of his career, one of the last public exhibitions of the work of Robert Hughes during his lifetime came in Duluth.
Vidal leaves behind a book titled ‘Duluth,’ his ‘fantasy city’ 
The man who wrote the book about Duluth has died.
RELATED CONTENTGore Vidal wrote about Duluth — sort of 
Among his works were hundreds of essays, a recently revived Tony-nominated play, “The Best Man,” and the best-selling novels “Lincoln” and “Myra Breckenridge” — as well as a critically acclaimed but less-popular novel, “Duluth.”
RELATED CONTENTConfessions of a cocktail party Cherokee — or Blackfoot
ROBIN WASHINGTON: My family’s history is not unusual. Most African Americans I ask tell of Indian ancestry, and historians have long documented liaisons between the two groups.
RELATED CONTENTAddendum: 'This American Life' says contributor's unrecorded work 'probably fabricated' 
A statement posted on the “This American Life” website on Friday appears to support the adage that “if you don't have it on tape, you don't have it” – at least regarding another notorious fabricator whose work was aired on the show.
RELATED CONTENTShow love to white supremacists
ROBIN WASHINGTON: I can’t speak for anyone else, but I’m feeling good about the visit of the Supreme White Alliance to Duluth on March 3.
RELATED CONTENTColumns
Former Fox 21 news director finds new job — and contrition
ROBIN WASHINGTON: Let’s call it Jason’s Journey. For former Fox 21 KQDS-TV news director Jason Vincent, 32, it’s a continuum of everything he’d learned, or hadn’t learned, about cultural respect and identity, including his own.
RELATED CONTENTDuluth businessman and wife are certifiably married after 31 years
ROBIN WASHINGTON COLUMN: Donde and John Goldfine are getting married today. Four months after their 31st anniversary.
RELATED CONTENTMy word! You can’t call a creek an ethnic slur
ROBIN WASHINGTON: Rather than repeat it, let’s just call it an ethnic slur that rhymes with bagel. And even if it’s self-applied, it’s still derogatory. So it was more than a little surprising to find it in a Lake County Sheriff’s Office report recently.
RELATED CONTENTAfter 80 years, Duluth Central grads still have class 
ROBIN WASHINGTON COLUMN: They probably won’t need a ballroom at the DECC for the Central High School class reunion on Friday. The Northland Country Club should be able to handle it just fine. In one of its 12-person meeting rooms. With half the space to spare.
RELATED CONTENTDespite tragedy, divers not deterred at ‘the cribs’ in Duluth 
ROBIN WASHINGTON COLUMN: Chalk-written homages to 13-year-old Jeffery Carlos Watson Jr., who died a month ago near “the cribs,” are gone, but it’s doubtful everyone would heed their warning were they visible.
RELATED CONTENTRobin Washington: Who says you can’t get flood insurance?
Joanna Kokkonen has heard all the stories about Duluth homeowners without flood insurance, and the notion that you can’t even buy it here.
RELATED CONTENTBillboard backlash: Ignore it and it won’t go away 
The young person asked me not to use her name (or his, and respecting that, I won’t disclose the gender) because technically, the act could be considered a misdemeanor. But if it is, then prosecute away, and I’ll gladly serve as a character witness.
Billboard backlash: Ignore it and it won’t go away 
CORRECTION: A previous column by Robin Washington about the Un-Fair Campaign mistakenly ran in the print edition today. Here is the correct column.
RELATED CONTENTDuluth couple endures tsunami on the river
ROBIN WASHINGTON: Richard Vitullo and his wife, Perry, share on Water Street in Fond du Lac. They were the neighborhood’s last unevacuated residents on Saturday, even with the St. Louis River turning their back deck into a pier.
RELATED CONTENTRefined mail-order bride fails to tame El Gato
ROBIN WASHINGTON: El Gato the ocelot came into my life when I was a child and after a family meeting about break-ins at our Chicago home.
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