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In the heart of Harlem, where culture, resilience, and history converge, Congressman Charles “Charlie” B. Rangel stood as a ...
Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, the second-highest ranking elected official in the city, rolled out his endorsements for the mayoral and comptroller races last week.
A contentious bill backed by right-wing politicians that would ban headscarves in all sporting competitions has cleared its first legislative hurdle in the Senate ...
Eight mayoral candidates in the upcoming democratic primary took the stage at Cooper Union for a forum on protecting civil rights.
Venezuelan migrants have become prime targets of Trump’s immigration crackdown. Despite multiple court orders attempting to halt removals.
East Harlem’s Center for Puerto Rican Studies (CENTRO) at Hunter College currently features two important new exhibitions.
Track and field athlete Julian Morgan Lynch reflects on a year that has brought both challenges and successes.
Clarence A. Haynes knows books. Which is to say that he doesn’t just write them, but actively cultivates them.
After crossing the border for better schools, some parents are pulling their kids and leaving the US
Even as immigrants in the U.S. avoid going out in public, terrified of encountering immigration authorities, families across the country are mostly sending their children to school.
In “Purpose,” Kara Young has found her perfect artistic vehicle. The play demands space for contemporary Black voices.
Pitts‘ elegiac meditation was published fourteen years ago, a pivotal moment in Harlem’s history has passed. Far beyond mere encroachment, gentrification has actually dislodged some guardians of Black ...
The Classical Theatre of Harlem (CTH) has been unexpectedly excluded from this year’s National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) funding list.
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