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Bettie Elizabeth Boyers Cooper’s actions spurred City’s full school desegregation

Bettie Elizabeth Boyers Cooper, who helped end Richmond and Virginia’s determined efforts in the 1950s to maintain racially segregated public schools, has died.

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Personality: John Michael Joyce

Spotlight on president of the Richmond branch of the ToolBank network

For the last four years, John Michael Joyce has been a helping hand for the many community services in Richmond.

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VUU likely will advance to Super Region 2

Virginia Union University has won nine football games on the field. Now it must play another kind of game – the waiting game.

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Report finds profound pandemic impact on Virginia education

Virginia’s teacher workforce is smaller, unhappier and less qualified than before the COVID-19 pandemic, Virginia’s nonpartisan legislative watchdog agency stated in a report Monday that urged the state to boost funding to address the issue.

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Free COVID-19 testing, vaccines

Free community testing for COVID-19 continues.

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Richmond Community High School graduate receives national scholarship

Morghan Williams, a Richmond Community High School graduate who is a first-year student at North Carolina A&T, is one of 25 students in the United States to be awarded $10,000 through the Sallie Mae Fund’s Bridging the Dream Scholarships for High School Seniors.

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Adjustments in City’s pension plan may take six or more years

City Hall’s 4,200 retirees likely may wait years before seeing another cost-of-living adjustment in their pensions.

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Democracy matters, even after elections, by Clarence Page

In his highly publicized speech on the perils facing American democracy as midterm Election Day approached, President Biden was largely preaching to the choir. The sermon needs to be preached, but is anybody listening?

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Black excellence needed again in baseball, by David W. Marshall

The Philadelphia Phillies and Houston Astros competition in the recent 2022 World Series was the first time since 1950 that there was not a single American-born Black player on either team’s 26-person roster.

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Jeremy Pena wins twice as Series’ MVP

Jeremy Pena is sitting atop of baseball’s highest mountain.

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VCU graduate named to U.S. National Blind Soccer Team

Richmonder Antoine Craig has shown his considerable speed for years as an elite track sprinter.

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Author reaches back to family roots for children’s book

The Great Migration was an exodus of 6 million African-Americans from the rural South to the North and the West between 1910 and 1970. Desiree Cooper’s parents were children of the Great Depression, and her family was among those who relocated to leave the trauma of the Jim Crow South.

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Rev. Calvin Butts, influential pillar of Harlem, dies at 73

The Rev. Calvin O. Butts III, who fought poverty and racism and skillfully navigated New York’s power structure as pastor of Harlem’s historic Abyssinian Baptist Church, died Oct. 28 at age 73, the church announced.

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Reaching the peak

Robert Dortch’s pilgrimage to Mount Kilimanjaro

Richmonder Robert Dortch Jr. is a man of faith. So he was pleased to learn that his guide up Mount Kilimanjaro was named Emmanuel. In the Bible, Emmanuel means “God with us.”

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CoStar expansion a shining example

Tuesday was a banner day for Richmond as ground was broken on one of the biggest single private developments in city history.

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Affirmative action in jeopardy after justices raise doubts

The survival of affirmative action in higher education appeared to be in serious trouble Monday at a conservative-dominated Supreme Court after hours of debate over vexing questions of race.

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Personality: Dr. Lester D. Frye

Spotlight on president of the Baptist Ministers’ Conference of Richmond and Vicinity

In a time of adjustment and reinvention for communities as a whole, Lester Frye is working to guide both toward a better future.

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Black church tradition survives Georgia’s voting changes

Black church leaders and activists in Georgia rallied Sunday in a push to get congregants to vote — a long-standing tradition known as “souls to the polls” that is taking on greater meaning this year amid new obstacles to casting a ballot in the midterm elections.