~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP0RtaHR0cHM6Ly9saXZlaW50ZW50Lm5ld3lvcmt0aW1lc2luZm8uY29tL2NsaWNrP3M9MjA3NTgwJmxpPVJSJm09YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcD1SUl8yMDE5MDcxMFcDbnl0QgoAJBhrJl1ULwTJUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~
~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP0RtaHR0cHM6Ly9saXZlaW50ZW50Lm5ld3lvcmt0aW1lc2luZm8uY29tL2NsaWNrP3M9MjA3NTgxJmxpPVJSJm09YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcD1SUl8yMDE5MDcxMFcDbnl0QgoAJBhrJl1ULwTJUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~ ~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP0RtaHR0cHM6Ly9saXZlaW50ZW50Lm5ld3lvcmt0aW1lc2luZm8uY29tL2NsaWNrP3M9MjA3NTgyJmxpPVJSJm09YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcD1SUl8yMDE5MDcxMFcDbnl0QgoAJBhrJl1ULwTJUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~
The loss will be felt for generations.
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Wednesday, July 10, 2019
[More Race/Related »](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP0TEaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vc3BvdGxpZ2h0L3JhY2U_dGU9MSZubD1yYWNlLXJlbGF0ZWQmZW1jPWVkaXRfcnJfMjAxOTA3MTA_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9MzcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9MTA4MjEmc2VnbWVudF9pZD0xNTA5MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3JnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTIyMDE5MDcxMFcDbnl0QgoAJBhrJl1ULwTJUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~)
[Lauretta Charlton]
Lauretta Charlton
Itâs hard to overstate the importance of the legendary black newspaper The Chicago Defender.Â
It reported on the lives of African-Americans when most newspapers did not consider them newsworthy. It challenged Jim Crow. It published the likes of Langston Hughes and Gwendolyn Brooks. It documented the Great Migration, the subject of some of my [favorite paintings](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP4QaAWh0dHA6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAxNS8wNi8yOC9ib29rcy9yZXZpZXcvamFjb2ItbGF3cmVuY2UtdGhlLW1pZ3JhdGlvbi1zZXJpZXMtYnktbGVhaC1kaWNrZXJtYW4tYW5kLWVsc2Etc21pdGhnYWxsLmh0bWw_dGU9MSZubD1yYWNlLXJlbGF0ZWQmZW1jPWVkaXRfcnJfMjAxOTA3MTA_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9MzcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9MTA4MjEmc2VnbWVudF9pZD0xNTA5MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3JnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTIyMDE5MDcxMFcDbnl0QgoAJBhrJl1ULwTJUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~) by Jacob Lawrence.
L. Alex Wilson, an editor, was beaten and [hit with a brick](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP0S3aHR0cHM6Ly9uaWVtYW5yZXBvcnRzLm9yZy9hcnRpY2xlcy90aGUtY2l2aWwtcmlnaHRzLXN0cnVnZ2xlLWFuZC10aGUtcHJlc3MvP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTEwODIxJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTUwOTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkNyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyVwNueXRCCgAkGGsmXVQvBMlSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) in Little Rock while covering the civil rights movement in 1957. He never fully recovered from his injuries, and died at 51. He is one of the many heroic journalists who worked for The Defender.
This week, the paper, founded in 1905 by Robert Sengstacke Abbott, printed its final copy. It will remain online, but the loss, written about in detail below, still stings. If you have memories of reading The Chicago Defender, please share them with us at racerelated@nytimes.com.
[The Chicago Defender, Legendary Black Newspaper, Prints Last Copy](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP4QFAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tLzIwMTkvMDcvMDkvdXMvY2hpY2Fnby1kZWZlbmRlci1uZXdzcGFwZXIuaHRtbD9lbV9wb3M9bGFyZ2UmcmVmPWhlYWRsaW5lJnRlPTEmbmw9cmFjZS1yZWxhdGVkJmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMTkwNzEwP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTEwODIxJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTUwOTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkNyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyZWRpdF9ycl8yMDE5MDcxMFcDbnl0QgoAJBhrJl1ULwTJUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~)
By MONICA DAVEY AND JOHN ELIGON
[A newsboy selling The Chicago Defender in 1942. The newspaper is suspending its print operations, though the digital operation continues.](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP4QAAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tLzIwMTkvMDcvMDkvdXMvY2hpY2Fnby1kZWZlbmRlci1uZXdzcGFwZXIuaHRtbD9lbV9wb3M9bGFyZ2UmcmVmPWltZyZ0ZT0xJm5sPXJhY2UtcmVsYXRlZCZlbWM9ZWRpdF9ycl8yMDE5MDcxMD9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD0zNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD0xMDgyMSZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTE1MDkxJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MmVkaXRfcnJfMjAxOTA3MTBXA255dEIKACQYayZdVC8EyVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA)
A newsboy selling The Chicago Defender in 1942. The newspaper is suspending its print operations, though the digital operation continues. Jack Delano/Farm Security Administration, via Library of Congress
CHICAGO â Decade by decade, the newspaper told the story of black life in America. It took note of births and deaths, of graduations and weddings, of everything in between. Through eras of angst, its reporters dug into painful, dangerous stories, relaying grim details of lynchings, of clashes over school integration and of the shootings of black men by white police officers. Among a long list of distinguished bylines: Langston Hughes and Gwendolyn Brooks.
After more than a century, The Chicago Defender will cease its print editions after Wednesday, the newspaperâs owner has announced. The Defender will continue its digital operation, according to Hiram E. Jackson, chief executive of Real Times Media, which owns The Defender and other black newspapers around the country. He said the move would allow the news organization to adapt to a fast-changing, highly challenging media environment that has upended the entire newspaper industry.
âIt is an economic decision,â Mr. Jackson said, âbut itâs more an effort to make sure that The Defender has another 100 years.â
Still, the demise of The Chicago Defenderâs print editions represented a painful passage for many people who grew up in Chicago and for those with memories of its influence far beyond this city. Of its many significant effects over many years, The Defender told of economic success in the North, and was seen as a catalyst in the migration of hundreds of thousands of black Americans from the South.
[The Defender's coverage of Emmett Till's funeral included a full page of photos.]
The Defender's coverage of Emmett Till's funeral included a full page of photos.
Chicago Defender
In Chicago, it was a constant, on newsstands in African-American neighborhoods and on kitchen tables in African-American homes.
âAs a kid, you always knew about The Defender,â said Glenn Reedus, a former editor of the newspaper. âIt was at everybodyâs house. It was at the barberâs. It was everywhere, South Side or West Side. There was a joke that if someone said something had happened and someone else said it hadnât, you knew it didnât happen if it wasnât in The Defender.â
The Defender delivered news of monumental events â the funeral of Emmett Till, the death of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the election of Barack Obama â but also of everyday life for black Americans, the Rev. Jesse Jackson said.
âWe never saw ourselves listed other places in weddings, funerals, debutantes, so this became a real frame of reference for activities,â Mr. Jackson said. âMy career would not be what it is today if not for The Defender.â
The nationâs black press, including The Defender, was in some ways born out of necessity, providing an outlet for black people at a time when there was no other platform for them. The first black newspaper, Freedomâs Journal, was created in 1827 and argued for the abolition of slavery. By some estimates, more than 500 black-owned newspapers emerged in the three decades after the end of the Civil War in 1865, according to [a report on the black press](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP0TTaHR0cHM6Ly9jZG4uZ2l2aW5nY29tcGFzcy5vcmcvd3AtY29udGVudC91cGxvYWRzLzIwMTkvMDMvMjgxMTUwMDgvMjAxOV9ERl9BZnJpY2FuQW1lcmljYW5NZWRpYVRvZGF5LnBkZj9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD0zNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD0xMDgyMSZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTE1MDkxJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MlcDbnl0QgoAJBhrJl1ULwTJUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~) commissioned by the Democracy Fund.
Not only did black-run media counter negative stereotypes of African-Americans that were pervasive in mainstream outlets, it was also a very influential advocating force for black communities. It exposed the terrors of lynching.
The National Newspaper Publishers Association, a trade organization for African-American-owned newspapers, said it currently counts 218 such publications across 40 states that attract 22.2 million readers between print and online each week.
[The Defender's front page from January 6, 1966, when the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. visited to announce plans for the Chicago Freedom Movement.]
The Defender's front page from January 6, 1966, when the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. visited to announce plans for the Chicago Freedom Movement.
Chicago Defender
Although the country may look different now, the enduring challenges of racism make the black press just as essential now, said Benjamin Chavis Jr., the president and chief executive of the association.
âAs long as racism is still a problem, youâre going to need the press from multiple sources, including the black press,â he said.
Dr. Chavis estimated that print newspapers still accounted for about 60 percent of the readership of the black press. That figure, to some, highlights the challenges that these legacy news media organizations face.
âThe influence today is definitely waning,â said Angela Ford, the founder and executive director of the Obsidian Collection, an archive for black media that wrote the Democracy Fund report. âThe world has changed so much with the internet and social media. The black press hasnât been as nimble as technology itself. Weâve got to catch up.â
Ms. Ford, 55, grew up on the South Side of Chicago and fondly remembered how a copy of The Defender was always within armâs reach. It was an essential publication for a black girl coming up, she said, because of the empowering image it represented of black people.
âItâs very difficult to put something on the coffee table thatâs not an insult to the black community,â she said. âBy surrendering the black voice, we surrendered our own positivity.â
The Chicago Defender will find the competition for online readers to be intense.
[ [Read our book review of âThe Defender,â a compelling history of the trailblazing newspaper](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP0TxaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAxNi8wMS8xMC9ib29rcy9yZXZpZXcvdGhlLWRlZmVuZGVyLWJ5LWV0aGFuLW1pY2hhZWxpLmh0bWw_dGU9MSZubD1yYWNlLXJlbGF0ZWQmZW1jPWVkaXRfcnJfMjAxOTA3MTA_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9MzcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9MTA4MjEmc2VnbWVudF9pZD0xNTA5MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3JnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTIyMDE5MDcxMFcDbnl0QgoAJBhrJl1ULwTJUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~). ]
The Root, a leading African-American-focused online publication, hit traffic records in January with 20 million unique visitors, said Danielle C. Belton, the editor in chief. Much of that traffic was because of the release of âSurviving R. Kelly,â a documentary about accusations of sexual misconduct against the R&B musician, and the controversy surrounding an encounter between a group of mostly white Catholic schoolboys and a Native American drummer at the Lincoln Memorial.
Even as many mainstream news organizations boast increasingly diverse staffs and cover major issues important to black communities, the tone and framing in the black press sets it apart, its many fans say. While some news stories related to African-Americans may get buried inside mainstream newspapers, they can be front-page news for black publications. The black press may also be able to speak in a way thatâs more familiar to African-Americans, journalists in the industry said.
âThis is a place where you can let your hair down and be yourself,â Ms. Belton said.
In 1905, Robert Sengstacke Abbott started The Chicago Defender in a landlordâs kitchen. In the years that followed, the newspaperâs reputation reached far beyond Chicago, in part with the help from Pullman railway porters who carried copies of the newspaper with them and spread the editions along their routes. The newspaper tackled issues of race head on, editorializing against Jim Crow laws, advocating equity for African-Americans in the military, and becoming an essential outlet for any politician who hoped to win black voters.
The Chicago Defender was able to survive âwithout conforming to the white pressâs notions about separating objective news from subjective editorials,â wrote Gene Roberts and Hank Klibanoff in their Pulitzer Prize-winning book, âThe Race Beat.â
âDuring racial confrontations, The Defender would design, for the front page, box scores showing how many Negroes had been injured and killed versus whites,â they wrote.
The Defender left another legacy in Chicago: [a parade that runs through the South Side](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP0SNaHR0cDovL3d3dy5idWRiaWxsaWtlbnBhcmFkZS5vcmcvP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTEwODIxJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTUwOTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkNyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyVwNueXRCCgAkGGsmXVQvBMlSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) each year at the end of summer, named for Bud Billiken, a fictional character created in the 1920s as part of a section of the newspaper for young people.
âNo newspaper played a greater role in shaping American politics and demographics during the 20th century,â said Ethan Michaeli, who worked at The Defender and [wrote a book](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP0TxaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAxNi8wMS8xMC9ib29rcy9yZXZpZXcvdGhlLWRlZmVuZGVyLWJ5LWV0aGFuLW1pY2hhZWxpLmh0bWw_dGU9MSZubD1yYWNlLXJlbGF0ZWQmZW1jPWVkaXRfcnJfMjAxOTA3MTA_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9MzcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9MTA4MjEmc2VnbWVudF9pZD0xNTA5MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3JnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTIyMDE5MDcxMFcDbnl0QgoAJBhrJl1ULwTJUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~), âThe Defender: How the Legendary Black Newspaper Changed America, From the Age of the Pullman Porters to the Age of Obama.â
[The Rev. Jesse Jackson was featured in the paper's penultimate print edition.]
The Rev. Jesse Jackson was featured in the paper's penultimate print edition.
Chicago Defender
In recent years, though, The Defender has struggled, contending with the pressures that have rippled through the newspaper business â declining print advertising and readers turning to the internet.
Black news organizations must still battle negative stereotypes in vying for advertising dollars, said Jean Boone, the publisher of the Richmond Free Press in Virginia, an African-American publication started by her husband in 1992.
A local upscale clothing retailer once told her that he would see if he had any money in his miscellaneous budget to place an ad in her paper, she said. A car dealer told one of her sales representatives, who was white, that they were not interested in buying an ad because black people would come to them to shop anyway.
âWeâre an afterthought,â said Ms. Boone, whose publication has a weekly circulation of 35,000 and draws around 130,000 readers each week.
Regardless of the financial challenges, Ms. Boone said her publication had no intention of going the way of The Defender and eliminating its print edition.
The newspaper repaid all of its initial investors within five years of launching, she said, and it has never missed a payroll. Her family owns a controlling share of the paper and it owns the building in which it is housed. She sees the paper as a political influencer: All of the candidates it endorsed in last yearâs midterm elections won.
âWeâre a miracle,â she said. âWe are a miracle and most black newspapers are a miracle.â
Until now, some 16,000 copies of The Defender were printed each week, according to Mr. Jackson of Real Times Media, who added that the newspaper has far more readers online. Officials would not provide specifics about the newspaperâs financial circumstances or say how many employees now work at the newspaperâs office on Chicagoâs South Side.
In 2015, only 10 full-time employees were left, including one staff reporter.
Mr. Jackson said no staff members would be cut as the print edition ends. Instead, he said, existing employees would turn to improving news coverage [for their website](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP0SHaHR0cDovL2NoaWNhZ29kZWZlbmRlci5jb20vP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTEwODIxJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTUwOTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkNyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyVwNueXRCCgAkGGsmXVQvBMlSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) and social media accounts, as well as expanded efforts to hold newspaper-sponsored events and to interest readers in the newspaperâs vast archives.
âWeâre nervous but weâre really excited about this,â Mr. Jackson said. âThe Chicago Defender is known for the impact itâs had. The only way we can be impactful is to have a huge audience. You canât do that with printed newspapers.â
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~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP4QTAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tLzIwMTkvMDcvMDcvdXMvcG9saXRpY3MvbW9ucm9lLXNsYXZlcnktaGlnaGxhbmQuaHRtbD9lbV9wb3M9c21hbGwmcmVmPWltZyZubF9hcnQ9MCZ0ZT0xJm5sPXJhY2UtcmVsYXRlZCZlbWM9ZWRpdF9ycl8yMDE5MDcxMD9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD0zNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD0xMDgyMSZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTE1MDkxJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMTkwNzEwVwNueXRCCgAkGGsmXVQvBMlSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~ [James Monroe Enslaved Hundreds. Their Descendants Still Live Next Door.](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP4QYAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tLzIwMTkvMDcvMDcvdXMvcG9saXRpY3MvbW9ucm9lLXNsYXZlcnktaGlnaGxhbmQuaHRtbD9lbV9wb3M9c21hbGwmcmVmPWhlYWRsaW5lJm5sX2FydD0wJnRlPTEmbmw9cmFjZS1yZWxhdGVkJmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMTkwNzEwP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTEwODIxJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTUwOTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkNyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyZW1jPWVkaXRfcnJfMjAxOTA3MTBXA255dEIKACQYayZdVC8EyVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA)
By AUDRA D. S. BURCH AND MIRANDA BARNES
A small African-American community has existed less than 10 miles from the presidentâs former plantation for generations. Only recently has the full extent of their relationship been revealed.
~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP4QLAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tLzIwMTkvMDcvMDcvdXMvYWZyb2Z1dHVyZS1mZXN0LXRpbnktamFnLmh0bWw_ZW1fcG9zPXNtYWxsJnJlZj1pbWcmbmxfYXJ0PTEmdGU9MSZubD1yYWNlLXJlbGF0ZWQmZW1jPWVkaXRfcnJfMjAxOTA3MTA_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9MzcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9MTA4MjEmc2VnbWVudF9pZD0xNTA5MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3JnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTJlbWM9ZWRpdF9ycl8yMDE5MDcxMFcDbnl0QgoAJBhrJl1ULwTJUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~ [Detroit Festival Backtracks After Charging White People Double](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP4QQAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tLzIwMTkvMDcvMDcvdXMvYWZyb2Z1dHVyZS1mZXN0LXRpbnktamFnLmh0bWw_ZW1fcG9zPXNtYWxsJnJlZj1oZWFkbGluZSZubF9hcnQ9MSZ0ZT0xJm5sPXJhY2UtcmVsYXRlZCZlbWM9ZWRpdF9ycl8yMDE5MDcxMD9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD0zNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD0xMDgyMSZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTE1MDkxJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMTkwNzEwVwNueXRCCgAkGGsmXVQvBMlSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~)
By DERRICK BRYSON TAYLOR
Afrofuture Fest initially planned to charge people of color $20 and ânon-POCâ $40. By Sunday evening, it announced a general admission fee of $20 for all.
~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP4QZAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tLzIwMTkvMDcvMTAvdXMvYmxhY2std29tYW4tYW1lcmljYW4tYWlybGluZXMtY292ZXItdXAuaHRtbD9lbV9wb3M9c21hbGwmcmVmPWltZyZubF9hcnQ9MiZ0ZT0xJm5sPXJhY2UtcmVsYXRlZCZlbWM9ZWRpdF9ycl8yMDE5MDcxMD9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD0zNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD0xMDgyMSZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTE1MDkxJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDcmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMTkwNzEwVwNueXRCCgAkGGsmXVQvBMlSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~ [Woman Required to Cover Up on American Airlines Flight Says Race Was a Factor](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRfCPAYP4QeAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tLzIwMTkvMDcvMTAvdXMvYmxhY2std29tYW4tYW1lcmljYW4tYWlybGluZXMtY292ZXItdXAuaHRtbD9lbV9wb3M9c21hbGwmcmVmPWhlYWRsaW5lJm5sX2FydD0yJnRlPTEmbmw9cmFjZS1yZWxhdGVkJmVtYz1lZGl0X3JyXzIwMTkwNzEwP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTM3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTEwODIxJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9MTUwOTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkNyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyZW1jPWVkaXRfcnJfMjAxOTA3MTBXA255dEIKACQYayZdVC8EyVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA)
By NEIL VIGDOR
Dr. Tisha Rowe was about to fly from Jamaica to Miami when a flight attendant briefly removed her from the plane because of her romper, she said.
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