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Rally speakers criticize efforts to sanitize nation’s racial history

Members of the Virginia State Conference NAACP and other activists gathered last Saturday at Capitol Square to share concerns and criticisms of the efforts by Gov. Glenn A. Youngkin to restrict voting rights, and end mask mandates and ban the teaching of critical race theory in public schools.

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’Coach Lan’ holds court

Coach George Lancaster has been honored again at his old stomping grounds, Highland Springs High School in Henrico County.

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10 players from Va. schools selected for inaugural HBCU Legacy Bowl in NOLA

The state of Virginia will be well represented at the inaugural HBCU Legacy Bowl set for Saturday, Feb. 19, in New Orleans.

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L.A. Rams put a ring on it

Put a ring on it. As an exclamation point to winning Super Bowl LVI, the Los Angeles Rams defensive tackle Aaron Donald triumphantly pointed to the ring finger on his left hand. Now the NFL’s most ferocious pass rusher will have a Super Bowl ring to go with his extensive collection of individual awards that include three-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year.

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Black History Month events continue

Black History Month is an annual celebration of achievements by African-Americans and a time for recognizing their central role in U.S. history.

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Princeton University scraps exhibit of Jewish American artists with Confederate ties

Last summer, Princeton University agreed to organize an exhibit of works by American Jewish artists in the second half of the 19th century.

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Overcoming NFL’s shameful history, by Marc H. Morial

“More than half the players in the NFL are Black, and most coaches have played the game at some level. That would seem to be the perfect recipe for Black coaches to find success. But most NFL owners have been white men, and they have seldom been willing to let African Americans or Latinos call plays — either on the field or from the sidelines. This is no different from when franchises presumed that Black players weren’t smart enough to play quarterback and lacked leadership skills to command men. The league’s paltry record of hiring minority head coaches comes from the same mindset. And its primary effort to address the problem has been a failure, because a policy can’t compensate for ignorance.”— Jemele Hill

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'Long, dirty toenails’, by Dr. Gregg Suzanne Ferguson

Death humbles us all, and death comes for us all. For that reason, in every culture speaking ill of the dead is taboo, if not amoral. When the deceased is an innocent victim, speaking ill of them is especially abominable.

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HOME to receive $1.1M from landmark multimillion-dollar bias settlement with Fannie Mae

It took six years, but a national mortgage company has finally agreed to accept responsibility for its racial bias in handling foreclosed property.

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Black Book Expo kicks off Feb. 15

Books and authors will be the focus of a Black History Month expo being held during the next two weeks.

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VUU’s on a roll at home – and to CIAA Tournament

The countdown to Baltimore and the CIAA Tournament has begun, and few teams appear more prepared for takeoff than the Virginia Union University Panthers.

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Black History Month events continue

Black History Month is an annual celebration of achievements by African-Americans and a time for recognizing their central role in U.S. history. The event grew out of “Negro History Week,” the brainchild of noted historian Dr. Carter G. Woodson and other prominent African-Americans.

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Disdain for the people

We are gravely concerned by the growing disdain the Youngkin administration and his GOP and Democratic supporters have for the people of the Commonwealth.

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Whoopi Goldberg’s teachable moment – and ours, by Clarence Page

I hesitated to say anything about Whoopi Goldberg’s remarks that resulted in her suspension from ABC’s “The View” until I could figure out precisely what to be offended about.

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Diversity and the Federal Reserve Board, by Marc H. Morial

“The Federal Reserve is our country’s most powerful economic policy institution. Twelve Fed leaders meet every six weeks to make decisions that include how many people should be unemployed and whether wages should be going up. Most of those leaders are white men who come from Wall Street. We want the leadership of the Fed at all levels to be more diverse so it looks and thinks like the working people it is supposed to represent, not Wall Street.” — The Fed Up Campaign

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What will the Black History Museum leave out with Confederate statues?

Re “Confederate pedestals out: Grass and landscaping to soon replace dead soldiers,” Free Press Feb. 3-5 edition:

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Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity members commit to cleaning local gravesite of national founder’s family

Beginning next month, members of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity will keep up the family gravesite of one of the fraternity’s founders in historic Evergreen Cemetery in Richmond’s East End.

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State of the City

Mayor Levar M. Stoney outlines plans to boost public safety, health, affordable housing, job creation, violence prevention to improve the quality of life for Richmonders

Bigger investments in public safety – including the creation of a gun buyback program as part of a strategic effort to quell the surge in gunfire and violence.

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Personality: Lawrence ‘Larry’ Clark

Spotlight on president of the Greater Richmond Chapter of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogicial Society

The history of African-Americans remains obscured because of the effects of slavery and white supremacy. It’s this lack of information that Lawrence “Larry” Clark seeks to resolve as president of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society’s Greater Richmond Chapter.

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The Rev. Charles Williams Jr., director of the Office for Black Catholics, dies at 70

The Rev. Charles Williams Jr., who led the Catholic Diocese of Richmond’s Office for Black Catholics for three years, has died.