Charleston Chronicle
Lorraine Toussaint: Veteran Actress Talks ‘The Village’ and Brooklyn
CHARLESTON CHRONICLE — Lorraine Toussaint has plans. The SAG award-winner and NAACP Image award nominee that has an acting career that spans more than thirty years, is starring as Patricia on NBC’s mid-season replacement “The Village,” a show about a motley crew of residents living in a building in Brooklyn with interconnected lives. Filling the time slot of NBC’s mega hit “This Is Us,” “The Village” features an ensemble cast made up of a “who’s who” of television stars (Dominic Chianese, Frankie Faison, Moran Atias, Michaela McManus, Jerod Haynes, Grace Van Dien, Warren Christie and Daren Kagasoff) working together to convey the story of a “family” supporting each other as their lives unfold.
Black History
Women’s Suffrage Forged by Founding Sisters: Happy Birthday to Ida B.
CHARLESTON CHRONICLE — So proclaimed Ida B. Wells-Barnett, who fearlessly shined a light with words on the abominable dark days after slavery and into the 20th century. Journalist, publisher, author, activist, and suffragist leader, Ida B.’s spirit soars. July 16 marks the 157th anniversary of her birth. Blood, sweat, and ink sealed her legacy and the future of a nation still struggling to be whole.
Charleston Chronicle
Home Telecom Partners with Berkeley County School District to Roll Out Free Internet to K-12 Student Households in Cross Schools
CHARLESTON CHRONICLE — Award-winning Lowcountry technology provider Home Telecom announces the rollout of free internet to households with school-age children in the Cross community this upcoming school year. As part of their partnership with the Berkeley County School District (BCSD) who has support from Google via a grant, Home Telecom will be making network improvements that make the free service available to households with children from kindergarten through 12th grade that are attending Cross Elementary or Cross High Schools.
Charleston Chronicle
Regulatory rollback on student loans takes away borrower protections
CHARLESTON CHRONICLE — Every Fourth of July celebrates this nation’s founding. But this year, only a few days before the annual freedom celebration, an ill-advised governmental action will financially doom rather than free millions of student loan borrowers – as of July 1. Moreover, this action arrives as the cost of higher education continues to soar and household incomes remain largely stagnant.
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Activism2 weeks ago -
Activism4 weeks agoOakland Post: Week of June 10 – 16, 2026
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Business3 weeks agoSale of Coliseum to African American Developers Moves Toward Completion
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Activism3 weeks agoOakland Post: Week of June 17 – 23, 2026
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Alameda County2 weeks agoFerry Fares to Increase July 1 as Ridership Hits Record Highs
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Bay Area2 weeks agoUC Berkeley Named Top Public University in the U.S. and No. 7 in the World by ‘U.S. News’
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Arts and Culture2 weeks agoIN MEMORIAM: Oakland Dance Legend Reginald Ray-Savage, 67
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Activism2 weeks agoOakland Museum Presents Landmark Retrospective Celebrating Beloved Bay Area Artist Mildred Howard


By Gwen McKinney
By Charlene Crowell

