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Secure health info profiles can help first responders in emergencies

Richmond residents can create a digital health profile that paramedics and other emergency personnel can access after a health emergency strikes, the city Department of Emergency Communications has announced.

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Eva Davis Brinkley, Armstrong High guidance director, dies at 91

Eva Davis Brinkley went above and beyond for Richmond students at Armstrong High School.

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Rep. Ilhan Omar, others encourage U.S. to rebuild refugee resettlement

Congresswoman Ilhan Omar of Minnesota thanked Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service during an online event June 17, in the name of “all the refugees you have settled and the millions around the world who have benefited from your work.”

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Witches celebrate the summer solstice wth cakes, mead – and salsa

To Lidia Pradas, the summer solstice “always recharges my energy and makes me want to start new projects,” she shared on her popular Instagram account, Wiccan Tips.

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Sha’Carri Richardson blazes new trail to Tokyo Olympics

Whether watching from Jamaica, Japan or the United States, it was hard to miss that shock of flowing, orange hair that came streaking across the finish line first in Eugene, Ore., last Saturday night.

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Complexion of U.S. soccer team changes

With 15 players of color on a 23-man roster, the U.S. Men’s Soccer Team is diverse like never before. Now Americans are hoping the team will win like never before.

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Good news and bad news for the Rams

After a decade of playing professional basketball overseas, Brandon Rozzell has come home.

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The NCAA, Justice Kavanaugh and student-athletes

We were quite interested in the U.S. Supreme Court’s opinion this week regarding the NCAA and student-athletes and what compensation students can expect for providing their talent to a college or university.

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Rebirth of a nation, by Dr. E. Faye Williams

Some of my “vintage” or “experienced” readers may remember or actually saw the movie, “Birth of a Nation.” Not the 2016 Nate Parker version, I refer to the 1915 silent film, originally called “The Clansman” by D.W. Griffith. In short, it glorified the Ku Klux Klan and denigrated civil and human rights for formerly enslaved people using the “Black man, white woman” paradigm.

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‘A mind is a terrible thing to waste’, by Venson Jordan

As a boy growing up Black in America, I remember that there were a few TV advertisements that spoke directly to me. The most memorable was the United Negro College Fund. The words rang in my head like the bells of truth. The heavy, articulate voice would say, “A mind is a terrible thing to waste.”

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Ambulance Authority struggling to keep up with calls

The Richmond Ambulance Authority has long boasted of being a role model in emergency response.

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Mayor Stoney turns up the heat, orders RFP for new George Wythe to be issued

Mayor Levar M. Stoney is moving to hire an architectural firm to design the new George Wythe High School whether the Richmond School Board likes it or not – even as he acknowledged that City Hall would need the board’s consent to actually build the school.

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City Council gives greenlight to casino project

Richmond easily leaped the first hurdle in its quest to become a casino city — City Council approval.

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VCU opens COVID-19 clinic for ‘long haulers’

The spread of COVID-19 has slowed significantly. But plenty of people who contracted the virus are still dealing with the effects.

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Free COVID-19 testing, vaccines

Free community testing for COVID-19 continues.

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Richmond’s banking desert grows

Outside of Downtown, the eastern half of Richmond – which tends to be largely African-American and Latino—has increasingly become a banking desert, bereft of branch banks that are more commonplace in the Downtown and western half of the city.

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Plans proceed to put federal money toward homeless services, affordable housing

City Council is recommending that the administration pour $5.6 million in new federal dollars into homeless services and pump $7.1 million into a city fund to boost assistance to developers creating apartments and homes with reduced rents and price tags.

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Race, racial issues major topics for Pulitzer Prize winners for the arts

NEW YORK Stories of race, racism and colonialism in the United States swept the Pulitzer Prizes for the arts, from Louise Erdrich’s novel “The Night Watchman” to a Malcolm X biography co-written by the late Les Payne to Katori Hall’s play “The Hot Wing King.”

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‘In the Heights’ opens to low numbers

NEW YORK Just when a party was poised to break out in movie theaters, the below-expectation debut of “In the Heights” last weekend dampened Hollywood’s hopes of a swift or smooth recovery at the summer box office.