Richmond Free Press February 25-27, 2021 Edition

Page 1

Ruth Carter shines A8

Richmond Free Press © 2021 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.

VOL. 30 NO. 9

RICHMOND, VIRGINIA

www.richmondfreepress.com

ee Fr

Fr ee

Meet this week’s Personality B3

FEBRUARY 25-27, 2021

High rollers 6 companies roll the dice in hopes of landing Richmond’s sole casino license By Jeremy M. Lazarus

A gusher of tax revenue for Richmond and potentially 1,400 or more new jobs for city residents. That’s the story that up to six groups are pitching as they seek the single license to build a casino and resort hotel in Richmond. For the first time with a huge deal involving an investment of hundreds of millions of dollars, Black companies and individuals are definitely in the mix. On that score, the standout is Urban One, a Black-owned media conglomerate best known for its radio stations in Richmond and elsewhere and its array of radio programming. Already part owner in MGM’s National Harbor casino operation in the Maryland suburbs outside Washington, D.C.,

the company sees Richmond as a huge opportunity to develop the first Black-owned gaming and entertainment center in the country, according to Alfred C. Liggins III, Urban One’s chief executive officer. The company is offering to build a $517 million destination gambling resort, theater and concert venue on the 100-acre site of the former Philip Morris operations center on Walmsley Boulevard that has long been vacant and up for sale. While Mr. Liggins said the company has agreed to hire Pacific Entertainment to operate the casino, he said that company would not have an ownership stake. Instead, Urban One is teaming with at least 48 investors, mainly Black people, to generate a destination center off the Bells Road exit of Interstate 95.

Photos by Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press

Freeman Hall, above, and Ryland Hall

Please turn to A4

Names on UR buildings still carry racist stigma By Jeremy M. Lazarus An artist rendering shows One Casino + Resort, a $517 million project proposed for South Richmond by Urban One, the Black-owned media conglomerate. The group said it would be the first Black-owned gaming and entertainment center in the nation.

Flying Squirrels honor legacy, history of Richmond 34 By Fred Jeter

The Richmond 34 will not be forgotten, at least not as long as the Richmond Flying Squirrels have anything to say about it. At The Diamond on Wednesday, the local semipro baseball team announced multiple initiatives to celebrate a bold-letter event in Richmond’s civil rights history. On Feb. 22, 1960, a group of 34 Virginia Union University students were arrested for challenging the “whites only” lunch counter at Thalhimers Department Store in Downtown. Their peaceful sit-in, coming just days after the noted Woolworth’s lunch counter sit-in by four North Carolina A&T State University students in Greensboro, N.C., led to the total integration of Thalhimers and other white-owned Downtown businesses and influenced legislation in the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Please turn to A4

Please turn to A4

Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press

A huge mural across the top of The Diamond honors the Richmond 34, the Virginia Union University students who were arrested in February 1960 during a lunch counter sit-in protesting the whites-only service at Thalhimers department store in Downtown. The mural, painted by Andre Shank, is one of several initiatives the Richmond Flying Squirrels is undertaking to honor the former students and their history.

Golf without Woods? A possibility Free Press wire report

LOS ANGELES The PGA Tour without Tiger Woods was always inevitable purely because of age. His shattered right leg from his SUV flipping down a hill Tuesday morning on a sweeping road through coastal Los Angeles suburbs only brings that closer. Golf wasn’t ready Wednesday to contemplate the future of its biggest star after the 10th and most complicated surgery on the 45-year-old Woods. There was more relief that he was alive. “Listen, when Tiger wants to talk about golf, we’ll talk about golf,” Commissioner

Free COVID19 testing

Jay Monahan said at the World Golf Championship in Florida. “When you’re going to overcome what he needs to overcome, I think the love of all of our players and everybody out here, Tiger Woods it’s going to come forward in a big way and across the entire sporting world. I think he’ll feel that energy and I think that’s what we should all focus on.” The Los Angeles County sheriff on Wednesday characterized the crash that

Free community testing for COVID-19 continues. The Richmond and Henrico County health districts are offering testing at the following locations: • Thursday, Feb. 25, 1 to 3 p.m. Second Baptist Church of South Richmond, 3300 Broad Rock Blvd. in South Side. Drivethru testing. • Thursday, March 4, 1 to 3 p.m. Randolph Community Center, 1415 Grayland Ave. in the Near West End. Appointments are encouraged by calling the Richmond and Henrico COVID-19 Hotline at (804) 205-3501 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, or by registering online at https://bit.ly/

Please turn to A4

Dr. Ronald A. Crutcher is taking a more nuanced approach to dealing with the racist parts of University of Richmond’s history and the long overlooked Black people who are part of it. Instead of completely erasing or replacing names of segregationists on buildings such Dr. Crutcher as Virginia Commonwealth University and other public institutions in the state have done, UR’s first Black president announced plans for inclusion of Black history in the campus narrative to “spark conversation and understanding” among students and anyone else who comes to campus. Dr. Crutcher told the Free Press the biggest name involves a residence hall named for Douglas Southall Freeman, the late historian, UR rector, influential radio commentator and white Richmond newspaper editor who championed white supremacy, segregation and Black voter suppression.

seriously injured Mr. Woods as “purely an accident” and appeared to rule out any potential criminal charges even as authorities were still investigating. Deputies did not see any evidence that the golf star was impaired by drugs or alcohol after the rollover wreck on a downhill stretch of road known for crashes, Sheriff Alex Villanueva said. “He was not drunk,” Sheriff Villanueva said during a livestreamed social media event. “We can throw that one out.” The sheriff said investigators may seek search warrants for a blood sample to definitively rule out drugs and alcohol. Detectives also could apply for search warrants for Mr. Woods’ cellphone to see if he was driving distracted, as well as the vehicle’s event data recorder, or “black box,” which would give information about how fast he was going. Mr. Woods, who had checked into a clinic in 2017 for help dealing with prescription medication, was driving alone through coastal Los Angeles suburbs when his SUV struck a raised median, crossed into oncoming lanes and flipped Please turn to A4

Va. on record: Racism is a public health crisis By Jeremy M. Lazarus

Racism is a public health crisis, the General Assembly has declared. A resolution with that declaration cleared the House of Delegates by a 55-37 vote in January and passed the state Senate with a voice vote Tuesday. Sponsored by the Virginia Legislative Black Caucus, the resolution sets state policy, but is not a law that requires the governor’s signature. Still, it puts Virginia on record for the first time as being publicly opposed to racial inequity and is part of the wave of Please turn to A4

Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press

Last blast of winter Four-year-old Unique Bolden plays with what’s left of the wintry mix of snow and ice left last Saturday at a playground at Maxie Lane and Old Armstrong Way in Church Hill North. The youngster was enjoying the outdoors with her mother, Ciarra.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.