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The U.S. men’s basketball team is headed to the Tokyo Olympics with a chip on its shoulder, but with history on its side.

The U.S. men’s basketball team is headed to the Tokyo Olympics with a chip on its shoulder, but with history on its side.

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Former NBA player-coach Reggie Theus named AD, coach at Bethune-Cookman

Bethune-Cookman University is hoping a big-name former athlete will lead to big-time success in athletic competition.

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Diane Walker stepping down from NBC12 after 41 years

She has been on Richmonders’ side for 41 years.

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Honoring true trailblazers

Engine Company No. 9 & Associates celebrated the 71 anniversary of the hiring of the first professional Black firefighters in Virginia.

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Use stimulus aid for summer jobs for youths, by Marc H. Morial

“The Harlem Youth Action Project was a city-funded attempt to keep some of the smarter kids off the street ... the next time I saw JET magazine there I was, all the way in the top left-hand corner of a news photo, leaning over Dr. King with my trusty tape recorder in my hand, looking for the last word. I was anything but a Power Memorial junior; I was starting to feel like what I thought of as a man.” — Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

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‘Telling the whole story’

Statue of Virginia segregationist Harry F. Byrd Sr., architect of ‘Massive Resistance,’ removed from Capitol Square

After 45 years in Capitol Square in Downtown, the statue commemorating arch-segregationist Harry F. Byrd Sr. was removed Wednesday morning, marking the latest undertaking in Virginia’s long reassessment of and reckoning with its history of oppressing Black people and other people of color.

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11 U.S. mayors commit to reparations as national example

Eleven U.S. mayors — from Los Angeles to tiny Tullahassee, Okla., — have pledged to pay reparations for slavery to a small group of Black residents in their cities, saying their aim is to set an example for the federal government on how a nationwide program could work.

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Personality: John S. ‘Johnny’ Newman Jr.

Spotlight on recipient of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity’s Elder Watson Diggs Award

A storied pro basketball career, educational and entrepreneurial success and helping to better the lives of African-American youths.

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Jehovah’s Witnesses move annual conventions online for second year

For the second consecutive year, the Jehovah’s Witnesses have canceled their large, in-person annual three-day conventions in Richmond and around the globe because of the coronavirus pandemic.

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Phoenix Suns and Milwaukee Bucks go head to head in the NBA Finals

With the very first pick of the 2018 NBA Draft, the Phoenix Suns selected Deandre Ayton out of the University Arizona. Since then, the Suns have risen from the NBA’s worst team (21-61 in 2017-18) to being on the cusp of their first-ever championship.

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Pulitzer-winning journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones chooses Howard University after tenure tug-of-war with UNC

Acclaimed journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones, who won a Pulitzer Prize last year for her groundbreaking work on the legacy of slavery in the “1619 Project” that she spearheaded for the New York Times Magazine, announced Tuesday that she will not join the faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill following an extended tenure fight marked by allegations of racism and conservative backlash about her work.

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Want a job? Employers say talk to the computer

A day after her interview for a part-time job at Target last year, Dana Anthony got an email informing her she didn’t make the cut.

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Damon Hewitt named new executive director of Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law

The executive committee of the Washington, D.C.-based Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law has announced that veteran civil rights attorney and policy expert Damon Hewitt will serve as the organization’s next president and executive director.

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Union vows to defend teachers in CRT fights

One of the nation’s largest teachers unions on Tuesday vowed to defend members who are punished for teaching an “honest history” of the United States, a measure that’s intended to counter the wave of states seeking to limit classroom discussion on race and discrimination.

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Old forgotten cemeteries dot the city

Peggy Stoots made an urgent call to the Richmond City Attorney’s Office just two days before a vacant quarter-acre parcel in South Side was to be auctioned off to recover more than $2,000 in past due property taxes. Ms. Stoots, who has lived near the property for 60 years surprised a staff member by saying, “You can’t auction that property. It’s a cemetery.”

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Marijuana legalization comes with info, warnings from health officials

Treatment for chronic pain. Possible addiction. Improving muscle spasms. Mood changes.

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AME bishops address COVID-19, critical race theory, voting rights as annual meeting opens

The bishops of the African Methodist Episcopal Church opened their denomination’s major meeting — a year after it was delayed due to the coronavirus — with a call for greater worldwide access to COVID-19 vaccines and testing.

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Monument to activist-journalist Ida B. Wells unveiled in Chicago

A monument to journalist and civil rights activist Ida B. Wells was unveiled June 30 in Chicago.

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Nikole Hannah Jones

There’s nothing better than the warm embrace of family.

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D.C. statehood must be achieved, by Marc H. Morial

“Congress has both the moral obligation and the constitutional authority to pass the D.C. state- hood bill. This country was founded on the principles of no taxation without representation and consent of the governed, but D.C. residents are taxed without representation and cannot con- sent to the laws under which they, as American citizens, must live.” — Eleanor Holmes Norton, delegate to U.S. House of Representatives representing the District of Columbia