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Structure and consistency help students in AB Christian Learning Center’s Freedom School improve their reading skills.
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The Plano African American Museum is set to launch a soft opening on June 17th — just in time for the city's celebration of Juneteenth.
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Thursday’s 5-4 decision could signal support for future challenges based on a provision of the federal Voting Rights Act.
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From being ‘the only one in the room’ to religious trauma, troupe members share how they make personal struggles funny.
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Historic Black neighborhoods in Southeast Denton are changing — Now longtime residents are trying to preserve the area's history.
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We're celebrating National Poetry Month with a video reading from a different North Texas poet each week. We start with two works from Rah Kalon, who is inspired by the "infinite space of possibilities."
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City staff addressed this realization in the Feb. 10 staff report, and in response to an inquiry by council member Brandon Chase McGee.
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Community Frontline commissioned a mural for the east-facing wall of its headquarters at 2800 Yeager St. in Fort Worth, which is expected to be completed head of Black Heritage Month in February. Dante Williams, a founder of the nonprofit, wanted to show Fort Worth the rich history of Black businesses and their impact on Fort Worth — a history he learned later in life.
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When a Southern civil rights leader is found dead under strange and suspicious circumstances, there are bound to be questions. That’s what happened in East Texas in 1976 with the death of Frank J. Robinson. The controversial official ruling was suicide, but Texas Public Radio’s David Martin Davies has found evidence that challenges this narrative and points to the possibility of murder. Here’s part two in his investigative series.
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In 1976, a Texas civil rights leader died under mysterious circumstances that today continue to baffle the residents of Palestine. The death of Frank J. Robinson is remembered by many as a miscarriage of justice that needs to be rectified. In the first part of a series of reports Texas Public Radio’s David Martin Davies investigates.
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A decade ago, Black women in Texas were twice as likely as white women to die from pregnancy and childbirth. Today, not much has changed.
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The airline hosted the Bessie Coleman Aviation All-Stars tour last week to celebrate the anniversary of Coleman earning her international pilot's license in 1921.