Delahanty discusses how he wants people viewing the interview in the future to respond to what they’ve heard and what

 

Delahanty discusses how his faith plays into him fighting for human rights as well as how the pope is using

 

Delahanty talks about some of the problems that exist still today that need to be worked on and dealt with.

 

Delahanty discusses his work associated with the abolishment of the death penalty in Kentucky. He tells of how he worked

 

Delahanty talks about his time working with immigrants, especially with refugees, that are coming into the United States and his

 

Delahanty discusses his role in getting the Lindsey Scott case appealed for a retrial. He talks about the key people

 

Delahanty discusses the process of getting a halfway house built in the neighborhood where his parish is located in Louisville,

 

Shaw talks about her hopes for Kentucky in terms of finding common values, combating poverty, and increasing representation of marginalized

 

David Tandy is a Louisville Civic Leader. Tandy discusses the different projects he was part of while he was a

 

David Tandy is a Louisville Civic Leader. Tandy discusses the neighborhoods and businesses that his metro council district encompassed. This

 

Shaw discusses how she attempts to not editorialize during her broadcasts, but that it is impossible to completely separate journalism

 

Shaw’s heroes are Georgia Davis Powers, Betty Baye, Marleen Davis, Nikki Finny, Crystal Wilkinson, Frank X and Bianca Sprigs. She

 

Shaw talks about her decision to attend Western Kentucky University. She talks about her hard work to earn scholarships and

 

She talks about the loss of hope in poverty, which she calls poverty of spirit. She talks about the importance

 

Renee Shaw talks about her childhood and family background, growing up in rural Tennessee in a predominately white community. She

 

Renee talks about her career at KET, her interest in public policy and the legislature. She talks about various aspects

 

Delahanty discusses the books that he read during the time of the civil rights disputes in the sixties as a

 

Delahanty discusses his memories of the Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert Kennedy assassinations, as well as what actions he

 

Delahanty discusses his family’s work for justice. Father Patrick Delahanty is a priest and human rights advocate from Louisville, Kentucky.

 

Father Patrick Delahanty is a priest and human rights advocate from Louisville, Kentucky. Delahanty discusses his family’s work for justice

 

Hamilton talks about integration in his schools growing up and his mother choosing his school. Ed Hamilton is a sculptor

 

Hamilton talks about his parents and his early life in Louisville. Ed Hamilton is a sculptor living in Louisville, KY.

 

Hamilton talks about “Urban Removal” and the effect it had on the black community in Louisville, specifically Walnut Street. Ed

 

Hamilton talks about the fear that women endured during the civil rights movement. Ed Hamilton is a sculptor living in

 

Hamilton talks about meeting his mentor, Kentucky sculptor Barney Bright. He also recalls his past work history and making art

 

Hamilton talks about witnessing civil rights activism, but his mother being too protective to let him participate. Ed Hamilton is

 

Hamilton recalls getting involved in the civil rights movement through his art and art groups. Ed Hamilton is a sculptor

 

Hamilton talks about a moment that was had between a white woman and a black young man while looking at

 

Hamilton talks about learning from other black artists and absorbing black history. Ed Hamilton is a sculptor living in Louisville,

 

Logan talks about his first class at UK and experiencing discrimination. George Logan is a civil rights activist from Lexington,

 

Logan talks about working to make the day MLK was assassinated a holiday in Kentucky. George Logan is a civil

 

Logan talks about attending college. He also talks about bringing a weapon to campus for protection, but deciding not to

 

Logan talks about going to a segregated school and segregated dining etsablishments in his community. George Logan is a civil

 

Owens talks about the Urban League and NAACP and their different roles. Darryl Owens is a Kentucky State Representative and

 

Owens talks about getting involved in the movement and the Louisville bussing case. Darryl Owens is a Kentucky State Representative

 

Owens talks about the Louisville bussing case and the difference between desegregation and integration. Darryl Owens is a Kentucky State

 

Owens talks about the struggles of desegregation. Darryl Owens is a Kentucky State Representative and a Civil Rights Lawyer. This

 

Owens talks about young black children not understaing “from whence they come”. Darryl Owens is a Kentucky State Representative and

 

Owens talks about being President of the Legal Aide Society, one of the first black attonery generals for KY and

 

Owens talks about a ROTC trip across the country and encountering discrimination getting a hotel room. Darryl Owens is a

 

Wallace talks of the intersection of a myriad of civil rights issues with the common thread of race. Carla Wallace

 

Wallace recalls the story of her grandmother in the Netherlands who harbored people being persecuted by the Nazis. Wallace summarizes

 

Neblett talks about the psychology of oppression and fear and how to overcome it. Charles Neblett is a civil rights

 

Neblett talks about strategies to stay safe while protesting racial injustice. He also recounts a car chase with a policeman.

 

Neblett talks about safety strategies while protesting and “living under terrorism”. Charles Neblett is a civil rights activist and founding

 

Neblett talks about Freedom Summer program in Mississippi to get voters to register. Charles Neblett is a civil rights activist

 

Neblett talks about the Freedom Singers to take the civil rights message throughout the North. Charles Neblett is a civil

 

Neblett talks about the power of singing as a motivator and as an organizing tool. Charles Neblett is a civil

 

Neblett talks about getting compensated as a community organizer, monetary and otherwise. Charles Neblett is a civil rights activist and

 

Owens talks about his Uncle Robert who was a policeman and witnessing segregation in the courtrooms. Darryl Owens is a

 

Owens talks about being president of the NAACP in Louisiville and the issues they addressed. Darryl Owens is a Kentucky

 

Owens talks about being in the ROTC and encountering discrimination at a diner. Darryl Owens is a Kentucky State Representative

 

Neblett talks about fighting for voting rights and the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee. Charles Neblett is a civil rights activist

 

Neblett talks about singing and making music in jail to keep spirits up while fighting racial discrimination. Charles Neblett is

 

Neblett talks about his muliple arrests. Charles Neblett is a civil rights activist and founding member of The Freedom Singers.

 

Neblett talks about dealing with fear and fighting against racial injustice. Charles Neblett is a civil rights activist and founding

 

Neblett talks about faking a scandal in college to raise awareness for black rights. Charles Neblett is a civil rights

 

Neblett talks about reacting to segregation in diners, theaters and basketball games and using resistance. Charles Neblett is a civil

 

Neblett talks about the trial of Emmett Till and the bus boycott in Alabama and how motivated him into getting

 

Neblett talks about the racial climate in Mississippi and how bad it was. He also talking about going there to

 

Neblett talks about his mother and how she instilled self-respect in her children. Charles Neblett is a civil rights activist

 

Grundy talks about occupation tactics as a civil rights strategy. Chester Grundy is a Diversity Advisor for the University of

 

Grundy talks about visiting a park after desegregation and being underwhelmed. Chester Grundy is a Diversity Advisor for the University

 

Grundy talks about childhood car trips to see family and the provisions they would bring along. Chester Grundy is a

 

Grundy talks about the ongoing issues of race. Chester Grundy is a Diversity Advisor for the University of Kentucky. This

 

Grundy talks about being inspired by University of Louisville and other colleges and the programs and activism they achieved. Chester

 

Grundy talks about the black community on UK’s campus and how it aided in developing support for African American students.

 

Grundy talks about UK’s campus politics and programs created for African Americans students. Chester Grundy is a Diversity Advisor for

 

Grundy talks about meeting an influential black intellectual at UK. Chester Grundy is a Diversity Advisor for the University of

 

Grundy talks about the racial climate at University of Kentucky when he was in college. Chester Grundy is a Diversity

 

Grundy talks about going to Male High School in Louisville KY, which was desegregated at the time. Chester Grundy is

 

Wallace relays Mattie Jones’ comment that it is the same people opposing the fairness campaign who were wearing hoods opposing

 

Wallace exclaims that it was easy for to her to become a social change activist: it was in her blood,

 

Wallace reflects on life on the farm in Prospect, Kentucky. She remembers people calling her father names because of his

 

Wallace talks about the loss in Berea where the Fairness Ordinance was not passed. However, tiny Vicco Kentucky passed a

 

Wallace talks of her Dutch family who resisted the Nazis, how Anne Braden came to dinner, and begin her journey

 

Wallace connects racial justice and the environmental movement. Carla Wallace is a Civil Rights Activist from Louisville, Kentucky. This interview

 

Wallace talks about her siblings, her family, the loss of her father and her civil rights family. Carla Wallace is

 

Wallace reflects on the significance of the Kentucky Civil Rights Hall of Fame, how she felt about being inducted herself

 

Wallace describes her activism at Tufts University, Boston and then Louisville, connected with South African Divestment. Carla Wallace is a

 

Wallace discusses how homophobia was being used to divide people and the beginnings of the Fairness Campaign in Louisville. Carla

 

Wallace endows a chair in Race, Class, Gender and Sexuality at the University of Louisville in honor of black, lesbian,

 

Wallace is torn when she is faced with coming out as gay and wonders how this will affect her reputation

 

Wallace describes the group she helped start called Showing Up for Racial Justice. It is a network of white racial

 

Wallace reflects on Kentucky’s Human Rights situation. Carla Wallace is a Civil Rights Activist from Louisville, Kentucky. This interview took

 

Wallace discusses the national struggle for gay marriage but never forgets the intertwined issues of race in America. “We have

 

Neal marvels about how exciting the sixties was. Nothing like it has happened since. You heard about change from everyone.

 

Elliott recalls lynchings in the woods and the start of the movement. Rev. Dr. Charles Elliott Jr. was born in

 

Neal talks about University of Louisville and Law School. He recalls going to ask Ed Post to help him pay

 

Neal discusses the need for government policies that encourage opportunities in the West End. He says we are at a

 

Neal tells how his parents sent him and his sister to the Highlander Folk School where they learned so much.

 

Neal talks about his father’s Union activity. Gerald Neal is a Kentucky State Senator from Louisville and a Civil Rights

 

Neal talks about his family and his neighborhood and her father’s union activism. Gerald Neal is a Kentucky State Senator

 

Neal recalls his juvenile arrests protesting segregation in Louisville. Gerald Neal is a Kentucky State Senator from Louisville and a

 

Neal describes the protests at the President’s Office at the University of Louisville. Gerald Neal is a Kentucky State Senator

 

Neal reflects on urban renewal and its cost to black businesses and therefore its effect on generational wealth in the

 

Neal describes the policy of Red Lining. Gerald Neal is a Kentucky State Senator from Louisville and a Civil Rights

 

Neal learned from his son when he brought 10 white friends home from school. Gerald Neal is a Kentucky State

 

Neal describes the scene in the West End after the death of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Gerald Neal is

 

Elliott voices his opinion that Dr. King was anointed by God. Dr. King told them not to hate, because it