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Race attitudes improve after 9-11
Metro Detroiters may be feeling more kindly toward their neighbors of different races
after Sept. 11. But some experts say the warm, fuzzy feelings may not last long enough to
change the area's high levels of segregation. 01/14/02
The Detroit News
"We're still dealing with stuff we were dealing with during the civil
rights time," said Detroit teacher Julia Tolliver.
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Where we live
Efforts to integrate are 'just an illusion'
James Kiner first watched his Detroit neighborhood and now his Southfield neighborhood
become predominantly black. "It doesn't bother me," said Kiner, 67, who is
black. "It just happens." 01/14/02
Commentary: Mark Silverman
Segregation
too costly to ignore
The U.S. census made official last year what most of us already knew -- Metro Detroit is
the nation's most segregated area. 01/14/02
What the Numbers Show
Racial
divide widest in U.S.
By any definition, the gulf between black and white is as wide or wider in Metro Detroit
neighborhoods than any metropolitan region in the nation. 01/14/02
By the numbers
Metro Detroit
by race
01/14/02
The Racial Divide
Locale
links segregated cities
Detroit and other Great Lakes metro areas are the bastions of segregation in the United
States, where common histories, growth trends and demographics have helped make them stand
out from the rest of the country. 01/14/02
Neighborhoods
Detroit slow to find ways to integrate
For all the similarities between Metro Detroit and other highly segregated regions, there
is much that sets Detroit apart -- and more than just a few points on a segregation index. 01/14/02
Methodology
Segregation scores based on census data
What do we mean when we say "segregation," and how do we measure it? 01/14/02
Voices
Metro Detroit residents speak out on segregation
01/14/02
Detroit News/WDIV Poll
Attitudes
toward living apart
01/14/02
The past:
A policy of
exclusion
WARREN -- Nothing in his training had prepared young Bill Whitbeck, up-and-coming
Washington bureaucrat, for the scene he faced: a hot Sunday night, angry protesters, and a
car that wouldn't start. 01/14/02
Politics
Young, riots cast shadow on Detroit
It is an article of faith for many Metro Detroiters that the city's decline can be traced
to two events: the riot of 1967 and the election of Coleman A. Young in 1973. 01/14/02
Timeline
Major moments in Metro Detroit race relations
01/14/02
The present:
Mistrust
keeps races living apart
Caroline Mallory and her husband asked about the color of their neighbors when they looked
for a home. Janine Houle-Gurka and her husband didn't. 01/14/02
Attitudes
Stereotypes born of racism have endured
William Allen has lived in Dallas, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Boston and New York, and
considers Detroit "the most race-conscious place I've lived." 01/14/02
Two families, one history
Families'
paths are worlds apart
They were children in 1943, growing up just a few blocks from each other on Detroit's east
side, when their world exploded. 01/14/02
Detroit among highest in
alcohol-related traffic deaths
LINCOLN, Neb. -- Nebraska's capital city ranks lowest among 107 cities in the nation for
incidents of alcohol-related traffic deaths, while Detroit has one of the highest rates,
according to the results of a study released Monday. 01/14/02
Spurned father accused of
starting fatal fire
DETROIT -- A 30-year-old man started a fire Thursday that killed three people -- including
a baby born after her mother died -- because the mother wouldn't let him see his
1-year-old daughter, police said. 01/14/02
Pete Waldmeir
Unusual times call for action
that is hardly racial profiling
It's official. The arrest and detainment of Muslim part-time clergyman Rabih Haddad,
recently of Ann Arbor, and the government's hunt for some 300,000 illegal aliens, has hit
the big time. 01/14/02
Detroit Briefs
01/14/02
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