Local News

       From a teen perspective, learning about Eunice Hunton Carter feels like uncovering a story that deserves way more attention. At a time when opportunities for Black women were heavily restricted, she stepped into the legal field with confidence and purpose. She wasn’t just chasing personal success  she was proving that intelligence, preparation, and courage could challenge unfair expectations. For us teens today, that kind of determination is powerful because it shows what can happen when someone refuses to lower their goals. 

National News

       “I kind of felt violated,” she recalls, describing how two male correctional officers searched her and unzipped her hoodie despite her objections. Angry and intoxicated, she flooded a toilet in her pod after being denied a phone call. “It was like an out of body situation,” she says. “I was so mad they wouldn’t let me make a phone call. I could’ve bonded out that night.”

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Entertainment

       Documentarians Maia Lekow, a renowned Kenyan musician/filmmaker, and her Australian-born husband and co-director Christopher King have given Kenya and the world a point-by-point project outline on how to snatch an outdated institution from the ashes and make it appropriate for the new world. They’ve chronicled the work of a writer named Shiro and a publisher named Wachuka. Two feisty, spirted academics who are turning a symbol of segregation into a lesson on perseverance and community building. The women get a 5-year government contract to renovate and refurbish a library that was segregated until 1958. They tear it apart and build it back up.

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