Freedom for all: A record 25 percent of the 122 million voters in America’s 2018 midterm elections were Black, Asian or Latino. The Voting Rights Act, enacted 55 years ago Thursday, was a reason, Erin Blakemore writes for Nat Geo. Provisions of the act have been weakened in recent years, but the gains in electoral participation were the intention of the law, which sought to stop voting suppression of American citizens of color by whites. Former President Barack Obama has sought to close loopholes in election procedures, and rename the strengthened bill the John Lewis Voting Rights Act.
The second city: Nagasaki wasn’t even on the initial list of U.S. targets. Nonetheless, the port city, crucial to Japan’s opening to trade, became only the world’s second—and last—city to endure a nuclear bombing, 75 years ago yesterday. In fact, the city of Kokura, home to the Japanese army’s arsenal, was the intended target, but persistent cloud cover there prompted the plane, fatefully, to switch course, mid-flight, for Nagasaki, Nat Geo’s Amy Briggs writes. When the bomb detonated, as many as 70,000 people were killed almost instantly. Three days earlier, a U.S. A-bomb instantly killed some 200,000 people in Hiroshima.
Preserving teak: About half of the wild teak left on Earth grows in Myanmar. For a century, loggers have made inroads in the nation’s northern jungles, Nat Geo’s Paul Salopek reports. Many of the felled trees are shipped illegally to China, India, and Europe. “We are trying to save the trees that are left, but it’s late,” says Than Tun Aung, a retired geography teacher whose small environmental group, Mawlaik Network, is trying to stop illegal logging in his isolated region. Read Paul’s report.
R.I.P Helen Jones Woods: She was a trombonist in what Downbeat magazine called “America’s number one all-female orchestra.” Woods and the biracial International Sweethearts of Rhythm played the Apollo and Wrigley Field, and played alongside Dizzy Gillespie, Billie Holiday, and Ella Fitzgerald. Yet the Mississippi-born Woods never made much from the band, went back to school, and turned to a career in nursing for 30 years. She died of COVID-19 in Sarasota, Florida, the New York Times reports. She was 96. | | | |
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