The flyer read, "Leave now avoid deportation," and included information for KKK groups in Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, and Pennsylvania.
In such a time as this, there’s work we have to do,” said Elaine Johnson, president of the Santa Cruz County NAACP branch ...
Some of the executive orders signed by President Donald Trump are getting pushback from people in Greater Cincinnati.
The climate of the world today needs more warming of people coming together,” Whitehead said. David Whitehead is the president of the Cincinnati NAACP. He said the organization is focused on inclusion ...
FAMILY: Emerge, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. daily, Krohn Conservatory, 1501 Eden Park Drive, Mount Adams. Runs Jan. 18-April 20.
Darryl Haley began with Cincinnati Metro 19 years ago as the agency’s customer relations manager and worked his way up ...
Cincinnati Metro's CEO Darryl Haley is retiring this year after nearly 20 years with the Transit Authority. Haley announced ...
State, according to our news partner WCPO Cincinnati. Residents in Fort Wright, Kentucky found the flyers left on their doors ...
How did Martin Luther King's message get across to America? Partly through pop culture. Music, movies, TV helped spread his message in the '60s ...
Civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump and the NAACP are going after Southern California Electric on behalf of victims who lost their lives and homes in the devastating Eaton fire in separate lawsuits.
Young adults were at the forefront of bringing about change then, and they still are today, Spokane NAACP President Lisa Gardner told a group of Spokane Falls Community College students last week.