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Carter Aldrete’s promising start for Squirrels

From the same college that produced the likes of Reggie Jackson and Barry Bonds comes Carter Aldrete.

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Virginia Tech’s Traylor and Soule WNBA bound

Two Virginia Tech women’s basketball stars are taking their talents to the WNBA.

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Trinity Thomas vaults to her 28th perfect score

On a scale of one to 10, Trinity Thomas is about as close to a 10 as there is.

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Music that’s beneficial

Nine performers will be featured at “The STEM ‘Mad Scientist’ Benefit Concert” that a Richmond group stages to raise money to increase Richmond youths’ access to science learning.

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ICA at VCU to celebrate 5 years of art and community

The Institute of Contemporary Art at VCU will celebrate its fifth anniversary with an evening of casual conversation, music, performances, new works and more on Friday, April 21, starting at 5:30 p.m. Steven Holl, who designed the ICA building, along with project architect Dimitra Tsachrelia and ICA’s executive director Dominic Willsdon will lead a conversation about the institute. The 2022 Fall season’s program “Mis- read Unread Read Re-read Misread Un- read Re-read (MURRMUR) will launch newly commissioned works from Richmond residents Sam Taylor and nicole killian along with New York-based artist Riley Hooker. New works from artists in residency will be unveiled for the ICA’s ongoing exhibition “So it appears” — an intricate kaleidoscopic work by Australian born artist Tricky Walsh and an audio response to the exhibition by audio artist Sharon Mashihi. Another feature of the evening will be Richmond-based artist Vivian Chiu presenting some of her “sketches” created over the past decade. The evening is free. For more informa- tion or to RSVP to attend the anniversary celebration, visit https://icavcu.org/. The Institute of Contemporary Art at VCU is located at 601W. Broad St.

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Serious sisters

Washington’s MLK Jr. Library opens Black feminism exhibit

A new exhibit, “We Who Believe in Freedom: Black Feminist DC” recently opened at the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library.

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NFL reviewing Commanders sale agreement

The NFL is now reviewing the sale agreement of the Washington Commanders, according to a person with knowledge of the situation. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Monday because details of the sales process are not being publicized.

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Damar Hamlin cleared to play 4 months after cardiac arrest

Having spent the past several months meeting President Biden, raising millions of dollars for his charitable foundation and promoting the benefits of CPR training, Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin can focus now on the next big objective in his life: returning to football.

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Supply and demand

City’s ‘housing crisis’ calls for 23,000 affordable living spaces

Seeking to put fresh emphasis on an issue that has been on the agenda for at least a decade, City Council on Monday followed through and joined Mayor Levar M. Stoney in “declaring a housing crisis in the city of Richmond.”

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Expelled Black lawmaker Pearson to return to Tennessee House

The second of two Black Democrats expelled from the Republican-led Tennessee House will return to the legislature after a Memphis, Tenn., commission voted to reinstate him Wednesday, nearly a week after his banishment for supporting gun control protesters propelled him into the national spotlight.

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Personality: Sharon Parham Blount

Spotlight on Shalom Farms board chair

Sharon Parham Blount is bringing a new kind of peace to Richmond’s hungriest residents.

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How Black clergy are reframing approach on abortion with congregations

For the Rev. Irene Prince, discussions around reproductive choice start in Bible study.

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Panthers rejoice! Byers is coming back

Spoiler alert: VSU-VUU season finale is renamed

Virginia Union University football fans can take a deep breath. Jada Byers is staying put.

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Jeffrey Osborne keeps holding on, flying high

Blessed with one of the most distinctive voices in modern R&B, it didn’t take Jeffrey Osborne long to establish a solo career after departing the funk band L.T.D. (Love, Togetherness and Devotion) in the early 1980s. After years of playing drums in the group known for the hits “Holding On (When Love Is Gone)” and “(Every Time I Turn Around) Back in Love Again, he stepped out front with his self-titled debut in 1982, produced by George Duke.

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Margaret Elizabeth Cooper Osei remembered for her selfless roles in civic, social and church organizations

For more than 30 years, Margaret Elizabeth Cooper Osei helped root out discrimination against employees in Virginia government offices as an Equal Employment Opportunity investigator for the state Department of Human Resources Management. But Ms. Osei was better known for assisting people with securing good-paying jobs, her family said.

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What dreams come true

City’s ownership of Mayo Island appears within reach

City Hall is jumping to buy a major James River island that the city has dreamed of owning for 40 years to expand parkland.

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Bagby is sworn in

Lamont Bagby is officially a state senator.

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Virginia legislators considering Youngkin amendments, vetoes

The politically divided Virginia General Assembly has convened in Richmond to work through scores of Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s proposed amendments to legislation during a one-day session.

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City hires first woman for top legal post

Laura K. Drewry is the new city attorney and first woman to hold City Hall’s top legal post.

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Mother of 6-year-old who shot teacher indicted by grand jury

A grand jury has indicted the mother of a 6-year-old boy who shot his teacher on charges of child neglect and failing to secure her handgun in the family’s home, a prosecutor said Monday.