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local university. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)The Associated PressIn this March
27, 2013 photo, Cassie Quinlan, 69, poses for a photo in her
Concord, Mass., home. Almost 40 years ago, Quinlan drove one of the
Boston public school buses that took black students from the citys Roxbury
neighborhood to a predominantly white high school in Charlestown. She said
that dozens of white protesters would line the curb and police would
have to make a wall at the bus door so black students
could get into school. Quinlan said her experiences opened her own eyes
to black culture, and she became the first white member of a
black gospel choir at a local university. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)The Associated
PressIn this 1974 file photo, police guard while black students board a
school bus as Boston begins a school busing program. The nonprofit Union
of Minority Neighborhoods is hosting a group of exercises across Boston
in 2013, where participants talk about how the citys busing crisis impacted
them in the 1970s. Organizers hope it will unite people to fight
for better access to quality public schools for all students, even as
another new Boston school assignment system starts. (AP Photo/Peter Bregg,
File)The Associated PressBOSTON Last fall, Ginnette Powell traveled from
her home in Boston's Dorchester section to her old middle school in
South Boston a journey of just two miles, but one
that covered a huge emotional distance. Finally, she was able to le
April 6, 2013: This image shows Afghan National Army soldiers rushing to
the scene moments after a car bomb exploded in front the PRT,
Provincial Reconstruction Team, in Qalat, Zabul province, southern Afghanistan.APISTANBUL
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry mourned on Sunday the first
death of an American diplomat on the job since last year's Sept.
11 attack on the U.S. diplomatic installation in Benghazi, Libya.Speaking
to U.S. consulate workers on a visit to Istanbul, Kerry called the
death of Anne Smedinghoff a "grim reminder" of the danger facing American
foreign service workers serving overseas. The Illinois native was one of
six Americans killed in an attack Saturday in Afghanistan. She was on
a mission to donate books to students in the south of the
country."It's a grim reminder to all of us... of how important, but
also how risky, carrying the future is," Kerry told employees in the
Turkish commercial capital."Folks who want to kill people, and that's all
they want to do, are scared of knowledge. They want to shut
the doors and they don't want people to make their choices about
the future. For them, it's you do things our way, or we
throw acid in your face or we put a bullet in your
face," he said.Kerry described Smedinghoff as "vivacious, smart, capable,
chosen often by the ambassador there to be the lead person because
of her capacity."She aided Kerry when he visited the country two weeks
ago, serving as his control offic
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