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Leoneda Inge chats with Barbara Garrity-Blake, cultural anthropologist and president of NC Catch, and Captain John Mallette, co-owner of Southern Breeze Seafood Co., about their new exhibit called “Recognizing African American Participation in the North Carolina Seafood Industry."
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Due South’s Jeff Tiberii talks with a Charlotte bakery owner about how the stress of potential deportations has impacted his business, his community, and his family. They are also joined by ¼ª²ÊÍøÍøÕ¾'s Aaron Sánchez-Guerra and Nikki MarÃn Baena of Siembra NC.
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The prominent civil rights attorney Ben Crump joined a legal team to represent Henrietta Mason, whose son, Tyrone Mason, died in a crash involving the State Highway Patrol.
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Leoneda Inge sits down with Rev. Jay Augustine to discuss the 40-day Target fast.
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Leoneda Inge sits down with the director and a principal actor from the play to talk through its themes of race, gender and social empowerment.
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UNC-Chapel Hill’s School of Law is partnering with Legal Aid of North Carolina to address post-Helene legal efforts.
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Pauli Murray Center denounces removal of queer, transgender references from Murray's federal websiteA directive from the Trump administration has led to the removal of references to Pauli Murray's queer and transgender identities on the federal U.S. National Park Service website.
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Republican legislation furthering the collaboration of state agencies and Immigration and Customs Enforcement is advancing in the North Carolina General Assembly.
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Leoneda Inge talks to Jocelyn Robinson, founder and director of the HBCU Radio Preservation Project, about historically Black college and university broadcasting history and her team's initiative to archive and preserve it.
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Celeste Headlee talks to historian Martha S. Jones about her North Carolina family roots and her new memoir, The Trouble of Color: An American Family Memoir.
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It was President Donald Trump who first issued Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelans in 2021 while in the last days of his first presidential term.
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A scholar, an activist, and a poet talk about our state's history of racial terror, and the reverberations of that past in the present.