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Electoral board chair planning hearing on city registrar’s removal

James M. Nachman, chairman of the Richmond Electoral Board, is planning to hold a board hearing to consider the removal of veteran Richmond Voter Registrar J. Kirk Showalter.

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Residents can have their say on Richmond casino survey

What community benefits do you want a Richmond gambling casino to provide?

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Virginia redistricting committee takes shape; public can apply

More than a half dozen legislators have been named to a bipartisan redistricting commission that seeks to fairly draw congressional and state legislative districts.

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South Side woodland to be turned over to city for possible parkland, trails

South Side is gaining 13 additional acres of parkland as a gift from the land’s current owners, it has been announced.

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Bruce Boynton, who inspired 1961 Freedom Rides after Richmond arrest, dies at 83

Bruce Carver Boynton, a civil rights pioneer from Alabama who inspired the landmark “Freedom Rides” of 1961, died Monday, Nov. 23, 2020. He was 83.

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NSU basketball opens on a roll

If Norfolk State University can play as well at home as it has away, the Spartans are looking at a banner season.

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Jaret Patterson rushes into the record books

Jaret Patterson has raced straight into the college football record books and smack dab into the NCAA spotlight.

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The DNA of a Black woman, by Chuck Richardson

There is something magical about a fearless, intelligent, incorruptible Black woman — a woman willing to sacrifice and face any obstacle she must for a greater cause than herself. Black women have been, and continue to be, the crucible of fortitude. Harriet Tubman, Ida B. Wells, Mary McLeod Bethune, Fannie Lou Hamer and thousands of others have been the bedrock of African-American progress.

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America faces threat

As an 84-year-old man, it is hard to comprehend how America has changed so much in a few decades, especially in how people now perceive the precious rights and liberties granted us by our Founding Fathers when they drew up the greatest Constitution in the world.

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Working at ground zero

VCU Medical center’s Jade Jones knows the joy and pain wrapped into caring for COVID-19 patients as a respiratory ICU nurse

Jade Jones is living her life’s dream — in the midst of a deadly national nightmare.

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Task force recommends bevy of public safety reforms to Mayor Stoney

Handed the mission of re-imagining public safety in Richmond, Mayor Levar M. Stoney’s 38-member Richmond task force has come up with a buffet of ideas.

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Pressure mounts on city voter registrar to resign or be fired

J. Kirk Showalter continues to lead the voter registration operation in Richmond, just as she has for 25 years.

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Power, resistance and spiritual beliefs all told in Richmond cemeteries

To Dr. Ryan K. Smith, cemeteries are ideal places to learn about the past and present of a community.

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Tomlin is winningest Black coach in NFL records

Make room at the top. A native Virginian is now No. 1 on the all-time list of NFL Black head coaches.

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All-Black officiating crew takes over Monday Night Football games

When fans think of “firsts” in terms of Black involvement in sports, they generally think of players and coaches.

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President Obama’s memoir off to record-setting sales start

Former President Barack Obama’s memoir, “A Promised Land” sold nearly 890,000 copies in the United States and Canada in its first 24 hours, putting it on track to be the best selling presidential memoir in modern history.

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Malcolm X bio wins National Book Award

Tamara Payne and her late father Les Payne’s Malcolm X biography, “The Dead Are Arising,” has won the National Book Award for nonfiction.

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City election problems should raise alarms

Election Day 2020 has come and gone. Overall, the election occurred without a hitch. The same cannot be said for the City of Richmond. Issues that arose included precincts reporting the wrong vote counts, City Council candidates allocated the wrong vote totals, individual voters receiving numerous ballots — the list goes on.

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Charges dismissed against Sen. Lucas

A Richmond judge dismissed charges on Monday that were filed against the highest-ranking Black state senator and several other Portsmouth officials after police said that she and others conspired to damage a Confederate monument in the Hampton Roads city.