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

 

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

 

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

 

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.

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

Davis describes her early life in Owensboro, Kentucky and how she was the first of three students to integrate the

 

Merlene Davis carried the stress of school in her neck. Her days at the desegregated school were stressful. Merlene Davis

 

Davis credits her fifth grade teacher Olive Bopp with guiding her into writing. Merlene Davis graduated from the University of

 

Watts is moved to teach on the Northwest Side of as part of the desegregation of the teachers Chicago Public

 

Watts reflects on implementation of Brown vs. Board of Education in Tennessee. It occurred in the city of Nashville in

 

Anderson speaks of how black teachers lost their jobs when the schools integrated and how he remembers colored and white

 

Anderson discusses Chicago’s De Facto Discrimination in the 1960s and 1970s. Alan Anderson is the author of Confronting the Color

 

Anderson says that people ask him how he joined the Civil Rights movement. He says he didn’t. He was just

 

Anderson talks about origins of the women’s movement, the NAACP and the clarity of these issues in earlier times. Now,

 

John Johnson talks about traveling to NYC with a marketing research firm (Pinkett Brown and Black) and marketing strategies for

 

John Johnson talks about Jefferson County being one of the most integrated school systems in the nation. John Johnson was

 

John Johnson discusses Kentucky’s higher education integration efforts. John Johnson was born in Franklin, Kentucky and is the Executive Director

 

John Johnson talks about Laken Cosby and his son Dr. Kevin Cosby working to bring integration to Jefferson County neighborhoods

 

Peeples talks about when his high school integrated. P.G. Peeples began his career at the Urban League of Lexington soon

 

Peeples talks about the discrimination he encountered at the University of Kentucky and maintaining a sense of humor. P.G. Peeples