Quantcast

Show advanced options

Select all Clear all

Story
Tease photo

Armstrong/Walker football rivalry celebrated in new Black History Museum exhibit

A legacy created from a 40- year football rivalry between Armstrong and Maggie Walker high schools, the only two schools for Black students for decades, will be remembered this month at the 2nd Annual Armstrong Walker Football Classic Legacy Project Celebration. The first event is an exhibit at the Black History Museum and Cultural Center, featuring memorabilia collected and on display from alumni, staff and Richmonders who attended both schools.

Story
Tease photo

James River Park gains key acreage at trailhead

Private property that provides an entry to a popular trail in James River Park is being donated to the city.

Story
Tease photo

Henrico County’s leaf collection starts Nov. 7

Henrico County will begin providing annual leaf collection services starting Monday, Nov. 7, with both free and paid options available for county residents.

Story
Tease photo

Get out and vote

The midterm election cycle hasn’t generated much buzz in Richmond. While a few registration and get-out-the vote drives have occurred, the hubbub of activity usually associated with election-year cycles has been absent.

Story
Tease photo

Race neutrality is anti-Blackness, by Julianne Malveaux

During this Supreme Court session, the justices will tackle affirmative action in two cases brought by “Students for Fair Admissions,” opposing affirmative action policies at Harvard University and the University of North Carolina.

Story
Tease photo

Top Heisman prospect has Virginia ties

Hendon Hooker was at Virginia Tech before 2021 transfer to Tennessee

It’s becoming routine. Since 2006, Black quarterbacks have won the Heisman Trophy seven times and have been close to winning on many other occasions. The trend is likely to continue this season with one of the top-tier candidates having Virginia connections.

Story
Tease photo

Migos rapper Takeoff dead after Houston shooting, rep says

The rapper Takeoff, best known for his work with the Grammy-nominated trio Migos, is dead after a shooting early Tuesday outside a bowling al- ley in Houston, a representative confirmed. He was 28. Kirsnick Khari Ball, known as Takeoff, was part of Migos along with Quavo and Offset. A representative for members of Migos who was not authorized to speak publicly confirmed the death to The Associated Press. Police responded shortly after 2:30 a.m. to reports of a shoot- ing at 810 Billiards & Bowling, where dozens of people had gathered on a balcony outside of the third-floor bowling alley, police said. Officers discovered one man dead when they arrived. An AP reporter at the scene observed a body loaded into a medical examiner’s van around 10 a.m., more than seven hours after the shooting. Security guards who were in the area heard the shooting but did not see who did it, a police spokesperson said. Two other people were injured and taken to hospitals in private vehicles. No arrests have been an- nounced and few details were released about what led up to the shooting, but Houston po- lice planned a news conference

Story
Tease photo

Police Chief Gerald Smith resigns

20-year-veteran Richard Edwards becomes acting chief

The troubled tenure of Police Chief Gerald M. Smith is over.

Story
Tease photo

High job hopes

Nonprofit offers former convicts free solar training for brighter futures

Criminal convictions can be a real barrier to finding work.

Story
Tease photo

Free Covid-19 testing, vaccines

Free community testing for COVID-19 continues.

Story
Tease photo

Judge rules City can remove A.P. Hill statue

The last statue of a slavery-defending Confederate still standing in Richmond can be removed after 130 years.

Story
Tease photo

Fade to dark

What a week. From failing test scores to another vigil for a young Black person to yet another police chief’s resignation. So much bad news within just a few days leaves many of us cynical, fearful, speechless and definitely exhausted.

Story
Tease photo

Better wages for low-wage workers at tipping point, by Clarence Page

As our pre-pandemic way of life struggles to make a come- back—which I, for one, am rooting for it to do—one tradition that I greet with mixed emotions is my personal subsidy to low-wage workers. I’m talking about tipping.

Story
Tease photo

Yellen boosts Biden’s agenda in Virginia as midterms near

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is promoting Biden administration policies as the key to advancing the nation’s “long-term economic well-being” in the lead-up to the midterm elections.

Story
Tease photo

VUU’s winning streak continues with rout of Lincoln

Saturday’s Chowan match may decide CIAA Northern title

Jada Byers keeps a rockin.’ The Panthers keep a rollin.’

Story
Tease photo

Shelter in place?

Homeless advocacy group says many unaware of warm housing when temperatures drop

As temperatures plunged into the 30s this week as fore- cast, a reluctant City Hall at the last minute grudgingly opened two overnight shelters – one for 50 single men and one for 50 single women, but none for those with children. Mayor Levar M. Stoney and his administration quietly sent email notices to some home- less groups about opening, but refused to issue any public statement in an apparent bid to reduce demand — follow- ing the script from the Sept. 30 tropical storm when only 12 homeless people managed to find the unannounced city shelter to get out of the heavy downpour. As was the case Sept. 30, most people who needed a warm place never got the word, ac- cording to a homeless advocacy organization, which decried the fact the city waited until 6 p.m. to announce the two shelters had opened an hour earlier. The shelters at United Na- tions Church, 214 Cowardin Ave. in South Side, and at the

Story
Tease photo

Operation Bold Blue Line

Youngkin plans to reduce homicides, shootings with more police, higher pay

What’s the solution to the spate of shootings and violence that appears to be on the upswing in Richmond and across the state?

Story
Tease photo

Student loan forgiveness application website goes live

President Biden on Monday officially kicked off the application process for his student debt cancellation program and announced that 8 million borrowers had already applied for loan relief during the federal government’s soft launch period over the weekend.

Story
Tease photo

Fans, and others, can’t help ignore Jackson State’s winning ways

Jackson State is having perhaps its greatest football season on the field and at the ticket booth, but how good is Coach Deion Sanders’ third edition of the Tigers?

Story
Tease photo

What’s in a name?

Efforts to rename the Lee Bridge rise again, bounded by slave-holding ties

Instead of a slavery-defending general, a key bridge over the James River could soon bear the name of a plantation where enslaved people labored.