
A. Lamont Williams
Articles
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Apr 21, 2024 |
localnewsmatters.org | A. Lamont Williams
AFTER LOSING THEIR inaugural home opener, NWSL’s newest expansion team Bay FC won their first home match against the Seattle Reign in front of a crowd of 16,719 screaming fans dressed head-to-toe in navy blue and orange! Much like the sold-out opener, this match was an impressive display of the power of effective marketing and community engagement.
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Mar 6, 2024 |
visiblemagazine.com | A. Lamont Williams
As a Black tenure-track professor, I was surprised when I walked onto my current campus and realized the racial landscape I was facing. I became a professor because I wanted to be a part of the progress toward educational equity in the age of , , and so that more of our underrepresented students don’t fall through the cracks–but I never thought about Black leaders (like myself) who also face challenges in higher education.
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Jul 3, 2023 |
rockdalenewtoncitizen.com | Keenan Norris |A. Lamont Williams
When AB 1887 was passed into law in 2016, its purpose was to name, shame and boycott four states - Tennessee, Kansas, North Carolina and Mississippi - which had passed laws that discriminated against LGBTQ+ persons. The law bans state-funded and state-sponsored travel to places with discriminatory laws. That list has grown now to 23 banned states. But the measure has failed to curb American prejudice.
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Jul 3, 2023 |
henryherald.com | Keenan Norris |A. Lamont Williams
When AB 1887 was passed into law in 2016, its purpose was to name, shame and boycott four states — Tennessee, Kansas, North Carolina and Mississippi — which had passed laws that discriminated against LGBTQ+ persons. The law bans state-funded and state-sponsored travel to places with discriminatory laws. That list has grown now to 23 banned states. But the measure has failed to curb American prejudice.
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Jul 3, 2023 |
gwinnettdailypost.com | Keenan Norris |A. Lamont Williams
When AB 1887 was passed into law in 2016, its purpose was to name, shame and boycott four states — Tennessee, Kansas, North Carolina and Mississippi — which had passed laws that discriminated against LGBTQ+ persons. The law bans state-funded and state-sponsored travel to places with discriminatory laws. That list has grown now to 23 banned states. But the measure has failed to curb American prejudice.
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