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Brown v Board of Education 50th

By Trish Anderton on Wednesday, May 12, 2004.

In 1954 the Supreme Court handed down a landmark decision that would make public school segregation unconstitutional. We'll look at Brown versus Board of Education fifty years later to see if it's still relevant and what impact it still has on the public school system. Trish Anderton hosts. Her guest is James Patterson, Author of ?Brown v. Board of Education: A Civil Rights Milestone and its troubled Legacy? and a Ford Foundation Professor of History at Brown University in Rhode Island. Also, Derrick Bell, Author of ?Silent Covenants: Brown v. Board of Ed and the Unfulfilled Hopes for Racial Reform?. Bell is a Visiting Professor of Law at New York University Law School and as an NAACP Legal Defense Fund Lawyer, he handled hundreds of school desegregation cases during the 60s. He also was the first black professor at Harvard to receive tenure.

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Rally Racing

By John Walters on Wednesday, May 12, 2004.

Tim O?Neil likes to drive cheap, fast, and out of control. Well, not out of control, he?s a many-times-over champion rally driver. And, actually, not really cheap either. Professional rally driving takes a decent investment.
Tim O?Neil drives expensive, fast, and in control down loose one-lane dirt and gravel roads, on ice, and through mud and snow. Rally racing sends suped-up, stripped-down cars to places one might imagine are meant for ATVs or snowmobiles. It?s hugely popular in Europe and Canada and North Country native O?Neil is a big name in the circuit. We visit him at Team O'Neil Rally School in Dalton to talk about his life barreling down un-paved roads and go for a spin- literally.

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2500 Manchester Children Without Basic Healthcare

By Raquel Maria Dillon on Wednesday, May 12, 2004.

A recent survey of children's healthcare in Manchester counted approximately 25-hundred kids who don't have access to a primary care doctor. The many reasons why these kids aren't getting basic healthcare are complicated. But a group of doctors, public health officials, and community leaders say they have a plan to do something about it. New Hampshire Public Radio's Raquel Maria Dillon has more.

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