A Dallas native recalls segregated South Dallas in 1956, where thriving Black neighborhoods and schools produced graduates who later changed Dallas and the nation.
Dallas has lost half its sub-$1,000 rentals in just two years, leaving tens of thousands of low-income families cost-burdened as the city moves to overhaul zoning and boost affordable housing.
At a Chesapeake library, 100 quilts by African American quilters turn Underground Railroad history and family traditions into ...
After Rev. Jesse Jackson’s death, civil rights leader E. Faye Williams recalls how his campaigns fueled her historic ...
As rural hospitals close, the deeper crisis is a collapsing workforce model. This piece argues mobile care must become core infrastructure to keep rural health viable.
As new attacks on equity and education rise, Dr. Norman C. Francis’s lifetime of opening doors at Xavier University offers a ...
Israeli strikes Iran resulting in the death of the country’s supreme leader after nearly four decades in power. Trump said the bombing would continue “uninterrupted throughout the week, or as long as ...
Monday Night Politics’ March 2, 2026, candidate forum is canceled after Dallas County Republicans report no contested primary races; general-election forums will follow.
In segregated Dallas, James E. Smith Jr. greeted JFK moments before his death. His story traces how Black civic leaders ...
After alleged illegal ICE raids and deaths in Chicago and Minneapolis, governors and mayors are moving to hold federal agents ...
With Texas teens in 19% of 2024 crashes, TxDOT and UIL's new "Saved by the Belt" contest urges students at 1,500 high schools ...
Trump's immigration crackdown was supposed to open more jobs for U.S.-born workers, but unemployment is rising and wage ...