It’s not often that a production can perfectly balance humor and drama. VCU’s newest production A Time To Kill manages to fill you with emotions of anger and sadness, but also make you laugh at Raymond Hodges Theatre from now until Feb. 26.
Imagine going for a wintertime dip in a hot tub, blanketing yourself in warm, percolating water despite the frigid air – and basking in the knowledge that maintaining the tub is someone else’s responsibility.
TCM’s sixth and final – for now – cruise celebrates enduring quality
Representatives of organizations involved in maintaining and using Richmond’s James River Park system spoke and fielded questions at the Richmond Trail Forum to a full house at the Byrd Park Roundhouse on Feb. 1, 2017.
In this case, I’d like to rewind back to the fall of 1980. Jimmy Carter was President, the Strawberry Street Café was four years into an incredible run with the bathtub salad bar, and over at WXEX, Ken Strayhorn, Lou Charlip and I were embarking on a magical five-year run of covering sports in the city of Richmond.
The historic church was one of dozens of African-American Civil Rights movement sites throughout the country that the NPS awarded grant funds as part of their African American Civil Rights Grant Program, which preserves the history surrounding those sites. Boyd told me that he and his congregation feel blessed to receive the NPS grant.