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Bellarmine community looks to Chapel worship service for support

By Tabitha Hodges

Bellarmine community finds support in worship service after deceased infant is found on campus.

Autopsy report reveals baby was alive when born in Bellarmine dorm

By Tabitha Hodges

Baby found deceased at Bellarmine may have been born alive.

Smooth sailing for Ball on the Belle

BAC recieves sell out crowd and few complications with adjusted rules

By Rita "Peat" Dixon

Five hundred sixty-eight people boarded the Belle of Louisville and zero were driven back to Hilary's last Friday. According the Bellarmine Activities Council (BAC) president, Autumn White, Ball on the Belle 2007 was a success.

Residence Life says campus drinking is under control

By Shannon Siders

Residence Life says that rise in drinking is result of rise in enrollment, and proportionally figures are the same.

Investigation of newborn death at Bellarmine

By Concord Editing Staff

Reports inconclusive in newborn death incident on Bellarmine's campus.

Student charged with murder in death of infant

Released from jail after family posts $50,000 bond

By Tabitha Hodges

Released from jail after family posts $50,000 bond

Pressure put on World Bank to participate in micro-lending

By Danielle Fleming

World Bank looks to fully participate in micro-lending, possibly give more.

Listen. Internalize. Effect.

Segregation: The separate but equal sequel (Part I)

By Dr. Hank Rothgerber

egregation stirs memories in many older Americans of the infamous Jim Crow Laws enacted during the hundred years following the Civil War. More than 400 state laws, constitutional amendments, and city ordinances legalized racial separation in the U.S. In Kentucky, not unlike other parts of the South, whites and blacks were prohibited from marrying (as late as 1955) or cohabitating, from attending the same school or ever using the same textbooks, and from using the same bathroom facilities, public parks, etc. Segregation in Kentucky was enforced all the way to our doorsteps: statutes barred the building of houses for blacks in white neighborhoods or vice versa and the renting of an apartment or house unless the renter was the same race as the other occupants.

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