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  • Creating a Legacy with Love: Phong Bui’s Tribute to Meyer Schapiro

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    Phong Bui with Meyer and Lillian Schapiro. c. 1994. Photo by Eyal Danieli

    Connection was and is of vital importance to both art historian Meyer Schapiro (1904-1996) and Phong Bui (born 1964), a writer, curator and critic, and their influence in the art world is far-reaching. They have integrated art with history, politics, psychology, sociology and social criticism. The two first met in 1986 and quickly became close friends, along with Schapiro’s wife, Lillian. Schapiro, until his death 10 years later, was also Bui’s mentor, including him in his circle of friends and colleagues (a convergence that gave birth to the Brooklyn Rail in 2000). To celebrate that relationship and as a testament to Schapiro, Bui has curated an exhibition featuring works by a number of well-known artists with whom Schapiro had a close bond throughout his life.

    “Singing in Unison, Part 13,” now on in the Brattleboro Museum’s two main galleries, showcases brilliantly the scope of the pair’s expansive minds. On one of the large walls of the museum is Bui’s “Shrine to Meyer,” which is usually mounted on Bui’s bedroom wall in Brooklyn. A large full-length mirror is surrounded by works that Schapiro collected over the years and gave to Bui, as well as Schapiro’s own art. Bui said Meyer made art so he could understand art and the speed of execution, building a sensitivity to the making of art. The Meyer Shrine acknowledges Meyer’s enduring intellectual curiosity and clearly demonstrates Bui’s love for his mentor and friend.

    Beyond that, the show is a veritable Who’s Who of American art, with paintings by Philip Guston, Arshile Gorky, Grace Hartigan, Roberto Matta, Mercedes Matter, Pat Passlof, Robert Motherwell, Mark Rothko, Janice Biala, Stuart Davis, Hans Hofmann, Larry Rivers, Robert De Niro Sr., Wolf Kahn, Emily Mason and others. They may not be well-known works from the artists’ oeuvres due to insurance costs, but each piece is a testament to Schapiro’s reach in the New York art world. The gathering of these works is also a testament to Phong Bui’s commitment to reaching across time and bringing together a community of craftsmen. Each artist was devoted to their craft, pushing themselves throughout a lifetime of discipline. The show sparkles with excitement.

    A large graphite drawing on paper depicts loosely sketched, overlapping human-like figures and abstract shapes arranged across a faint grid, with light shading and scattered marks suggesting movement and spatial relationships.A large graphite drawing on paper depicts loosely sketched, overlapping human-like figures and abstract shapes arranged across a faint grid, with light shading and scattered marks suggesting movement and spatial relationships.
    Arshile Gorky, Study for the Betrothal, 1940. Graphite and wax crayon on paper, 24 ⅜ x 19 ⅛ inches. Courtesy Jack Shear Collection

    Meyer Schapiro was born in Lithuania in 1904 and moved with his family to the United States when he was three years old. Bui was born in Vietnam in 1964 and came to the United States at the age of 16. The exhibition features artists who also emigrated, including Gorky, Guston, Rothko, Hofmann, Samaras, Hélion, Kahn, Vicente, Müller and Seligmann—all in pursuit of greater freedom. Emigration is not easy: assimilating into a foreign culture, learning a new language, making friends and understanding how people think. Artists find one another, just as Bui found Schapiro, and communities are formed, something crucial for foreigners. New York City was a haven for the artists whose works you’ll see here.

    What is striking about both Schapiro and Bui is their profound knowledge of history, politics, poetry, literature, psychology and art. Bui continues to this day to be a proud connector of communities, bringing together people from all walks of life. His enduring commitment to the Brooklyn Rail—not only as co-founder but also as artistic director for 25 years—is a testament to his wide-ranging drive to cross-pollinate the arts with history. “How do we keep it alive?” he asks, seeking to unify a divided world. He learned so much from Schapiro, and his passing “left an impossible void. Every day, images derived from his stories would appear and haunt me. What I realized, later, was that the only way I could pay homage to him while relieving my nostalgia for his past was to create my own. When I thought of the more exciting periods of American intellectual life, especially in the 1930s and ’40s as being coincident with the rise of bohemia, the very idea of bringing artists and writers together in their struggle with and for the world became identical to my own longing for an extended family, one that would include individuals who shared the same aspiration.”

    A dark, welded metal sculpture composed of flat plates, circular discs and angular blocks lies horizontally against a white background, its forms arranged like an abstracted mechanical or architectural structure.A dark, welded metal sculpture composed of flat plates, circular discs and angular blocks lies horizontally against a white background, its forms arranged like an abstracted mechanical or architectural structure.
    Dorothy Dehner, Siena #1, 1962. Bronze, 8.5 x 24 x 15 inches. © Dorothy Dehner Foundation for the Visual Arts. Courtesy Berry Campbell, New York

    In 2022, Bui curated the first “Singing in Unison” in that spirit, showcasing seasoned artists as well as new ones, and then tailoring each subsequent exhibition to its environment. He gathers together musicians, dancers, performers, innovators and artists to celebrate community, optimism and love. An important and necessary dictum for Bui is, “Artists need to create on the same scale that society has the capacity to destroy.” A fitting dictate for an exhibition that features the works of so many immigrants forging their way through history.

    Singing in Unison, Part 13: Homage to Meyer Schapiro” through February 15, 2026, at the Brattleboro Museum & Art Center, Brattleboro, Vermont.

    A brightly colored abstract painting fills the frame with broad vertical and horizontal fields of red, orange, yellow, green and pink paint, some areas dripping downward over the canvas surface.A brightly colored abstract painting fills the frame with broad vertical and horizontal fields of red, orange, yellow, green and pink paint, some areas dripping downward over the canvas surface.
    Emily Mason, Stillness is Volcanic, 1966. Oil on canvas, 54 x 43 inches. © Emily Mason and Alice Trumbull Mason Foundation, Inc. (ARS). Courtesy of Miles McEnery Gallery, New York, NY

    More exhibition reviews

    Creating a Legacy with Love: Phong Bui’s Tribute to Meyer Schapiro

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  • Atlanta Falcons have plenty to play for heading into final three games

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    First, there was a one-point win over rival Tampa Bay on Thursday Night Football, and now there are three more opportunities to potentially spoil other teams’ seasons. The Atlanta Falcons (5-9 overall) will be back in action in Arizona against the Cardinals on Sunday, and with no playoff hopes in sight, there’s still something to play for.

    Atlanta will be without quarterback Michael Penix, Jr., the rest of the way, but that hasn’t stopped several Falcons from having career years. Running back Bijan Robinson is on pace for a 2,000-yard season from scrimmage despite only having four 100-yard rushing games this season. He had 93 yards rushing on Thursday night. With that, Robinson currently has 1,174 rushing yards (fourth in the NFL) and 684 receiving yards. 

    Robinson is currently among the top 25 in receptions and is behind only San Francisco 49ers running back Christian McCaffrey (86) for the top spot among running backs. 

    Tight end Kyle Pitts, Sr., much maligned for his play and overall effort during his four years with the Falcons, is also in the midst of a strong season. Pitts, with 73 receptions, is third amongst tight ends in receptions behind the Arizona Cardinals tight end Trey McBride (105) and Dallas Cowboys tight end Jake Ferguson (77). An argument can be made that McBride and Ferguson are featured targets for their teams, where Pitts, Sr. has only recently become a primary target for the current Falcons starting quarterback, Kirk Cousins, over the past few weeks.

    On Thursday night in Tampa, Pitts finished the game with  11 catches for 166 yards and three touchdowns. All were season highs by a long shot. A week earlier, in a loss to Seattle, Pitts had six catches, and he had seven during a road loss at the New York Jets. Before the season highs against Tampa, Pitts had a nine-reception game against the Dolphins in a blowout loss at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on October 26.

    Falcons rookie defensive end Jalon Walker said he wanted to finish his rookie season on a high note. Asked if winning the final three games of the year would be an efficient high note, Walker, who was volunteering at a holiday event in Tucker on Tuesday, said, “That’s my goal. That’s how I want to end the last chapter of my rookie season.” 

    Falcons rookie defensive end Jalon Walker (above) has 5.5 sacks this season. Fellow rookie James Pearce, Jr. (not shown) has eight. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Walker, a former University of Georgia standout, has 5.5 sacks and 21 tackles this season. His fellow rookie and first-round pick, James Pearce, Jr., has eight sacks.

    The Falcons will close the 2025 regular season with back-to-back games at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, beginning with a meeting with one of the best teams in the NFC (at least on paper), the Los Angeles Rams. It will be a reunion of sorts for Falcons head coach Raheem Morris, who was the Rams’ defensive coordinator before taking the job with the Falcons two seasons ago. 

    The Rams are 11-3 and looking for a bye to start their playoff run. Atlanta, on the other hand, will be looking to get over .500 at home. The Falcons are 2-4 in The Benz and can even out that record and end the season on a high note with wins over the Rams and rival New Orleans Saints in the season finale on January 4. 

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Murray Brothers: ‘We care for the dead, but also for the living’

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    One of the things that makes Atlanta a sort of utopia for Black Americans is the number of Black-owned businesses within its borders. According to a recent report by the Pew Research Center, only three percent of American companies are owned and primarily operated by Black people. In comparison, just over 11 percent are owned by Asians, while Hispanics own eight percent of companies. 

    While Florida leads with the most Black-owned businesses, totaling 21,000 according to Pew, Georgia, with just under 17,000, has Atlanta, which is the city with the most Black-owned businesses in America.

    Family photos like the one above are located all over the funeral home. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    The continued success of Black-owned businesses is vital to Atlanta’s lifeblood and reputation as one of the dwindling number of larger “Black cities” in the United States, alongside sister cities such as Chicago, Washington, D.C., Houston, and Philadelphia, respectively. 

    Murray Brothers Funeral Home, Inc., located in Southwest Atlanta off Cascade Road, is one of many family-owned Black businesses that began and continue to operate in Atlanta. Founded by Hubert Murray on Labor Day, September 7, 1981, Murray Brothers is a name synonymous with Black business in Atlanta. 

    Murray Brothers Funeral Home was founded by Hubert Murray on Labor Day, September 7, 1981. The current address is the third home for the business. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    From Hubert to Kenneth to William and beyond

    On a cool Tuesday morning in late October, inside the funeral home’s chapel, William Murray, Jr. and his youngest sister, Ayako Murray, stood on either side of their father and stared into the photographer’s camera. 

    “Hubert Murray used to walk around Booker T. Washington High School, telling people he was going to open up a funeral home,” Murray, Sr., the family’s master storyteller, said. “I believe he was inspired by our uncle, Norris Gunby.” 

    Murray Brothers Funeral Home founder Hubert Murray. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    A photo of Hubert rests in a frame on a dresser in the hall of Murray Funeral Home.   

    Murray, Sr. recalled Gunby, originally from Lincolnton, Georgia, traveling the 130-plus miles to Atlanta to see family and discuss the idea of opening a funeral home. When Murray family members, back in what Murray Sr. called their “ancestral home,” passed away, they all trekked back to Lincolnton for funerals. 

    “You had to go, there wasn’t no way out of it,” Murray, Sr, said. 

    Gunby owned several businesses in Lincolnton, one of which was the funeral home he eventually opened. Years later, the family would open Murray Brothers Funeral Home. Murray, Sr, and his family were living in Pennsylvania when he got the call to come home and help out on a family project.

    “I worked 12 hours a day, seven days a week, and 30 days later on Labor Day, we opened Murray Brothers Funeral Home,” Murray, Sr. said. 

    William Murray, Sr. and William Murray, Jr., October 2025. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    The first Murray Brothers was located at 195 Senoia Rd. in Fairburn, and the second at 502 Pryor St., SW, in Atlanta. What began as a trip to buy additional furniture for the funeral home at an auction turned into an expansion. A local funeral home, J. Austin Dillion, had closed, and Hubert Murray ended up securing the building and everything in it. 

    “He met the owners, they came to an agreement, and then he said, ‘Look what we got,’” Murray, Sr. said. 

    Today, William Murray, Sr., along with his children William Murray, Jr., Zenia Murray McCray, Ayako Murray, and Candis Mathis, continue to represent the family name in the bereavement and funeral services business. There’s only one location in Cascade, which was purchased in 1991, but the reach of Murray Brothers is citywide. 

    William Murray, Sr. (seated), Ayako Murray (left), and William Murray, Jr. inside the chapel at Murray Brothers Funeral Home, Oct. 2025. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Murrays have always run the business; Hubert ran the business up until his passing in 1991. Kenneth Earl Murray, Sr., ran the business for 26 years, and Murray, Sr. ran the business for five years. Kenneth was featured in a May 1976 issue of Ebony magazine. On the cover were the gleaming domes of singer/songwriter Isaac Hayes and actor Telly Savalas. The story was titled, “The Shaved Head Syndrome: What’s It all About?” Murray wasn’t bald; he was a sought-after interior designer and was included in a list of “The 100 Most Influential Blacks.” 

    The company reorganized, and William Murray, Jr., was elected managing partner in November 2023. Along with his sister Zenia, they are the future of the business. Having grown up in the funeral home, the company would be passed down.

    “I can always remember as a kid, I would say that I never wanted to work in a funeral home,” Zenia said. 

    Zenia’s fifth-grade teacher brought a copy of a homework assignment, “What are you going to be when you grow up?” to the funeral of her mother, with whom she shared a name, and showed it to her. The assignment said she would be a funeral director one day. Zenia laughed while retelling the story.

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    “I guess I lied,” she said.

    Today, she is one of the funeral directors alongside Ron Jenkins. 

    “We can all agree on how blessed we are to have served the public all these years,” Jenkins, an unofficial member of the Murray family, the other funeral director, and the funeral home’s head embalmer, said. 

    A native of Beaufort, South Carolina, Jenkins, came to Atlanta to attend mortuary school at Gupton-Jones College of Funeral Service in Decatur. On his first-ever visit to Murray Brothers, he would wind up helping bring boxes in off of a delivery truck. 

    Jenkins remembers Kenneth Earl Murray, Sr., asking him three questions, one of which was when he wanted to move into the living quarters at Murray Brothers. That was in 1986, and he has been at Murray Brothers ever since.

    “He gave me a chance of a lifetime,” Jenkins said. 

    William Murray, Jr., Jenkins, and Zenia all shared stories of working with families. The common thread of all of the stories was the quality of service Murray Brothers is expected to deliver to families during one of the worst times. Zenia continues that tradition by opening a funeral home, McCray Family Funeral Service & Cremation, in Bankhead. 

    “It’s a hell of an accomplishment,” Murray, Jr. said.

    Murray Brothers handled the funeral service for Atlanta’s first Black mayor, Maynard Jackson, and the funeral for Bobby Brown’s sister, Elizabeth Brown. William, Jr. remembers watching the late Whitney Houston walk into the church and take to the pulpit to sing, “I Love the Lord.” 

    Having Houston sing at a service was something William Jr. said he would never forget, but he remained professional. 

    “This position is a calling, so people look at you a certain way,” said William, Jr., who has been married to his wife Valarie for the past 28 years, said. “Murray Brothers is the standard, and we handle things in a professional manner.” 

    William Murray, Sr. (above). Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Planting Seeds

    Towards the end of a recent interview with the family one afternoon, Murray, Sr., brought a plate of peppers, bean sprouts, and mustard greens from his garden to the table. A member of the Georgia Master Gardener Association, he learned how to garden by watching his late mother, Myrtice Murray. Murray, Sr., believes there’s power in providing nourishment from the earth. 

    “It’s important because they label anything, but if you grow it yourself, you will know what you’re eating,” he said. “With gardening, I am able to reach out and touch people. It’s good for your mind, soul, and spirit.” 

    Murray, Sr. said Murray Brothers has helped start gardens at local churches, including Lindsey Street Baptist Church, Zion Hill Baptist Church, and Salem Bible Church. At Thanksgiving time, Murray, Sr. said he has been able to give back to the community that has helped make Murray Brothers a household name in Atlanta for many years. He gives back through the garden.

     “On some instances, I have been able to give out two or three hundred bunches of collard greens for families at Thanksgiving,” he said, calling his efforts, “creating goodwill.” 

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Murray, Sr., handed the reporter a piece of mustard greens off the plate next and asked him to try it. “It’s spicy. You bite it twice, you’ll say it ain’t nothing, but bite it a third time and you’ll get to sweating.” 

    He took a tiny ghost pepper off the plate and waved it around. 

    “You’ll need to wash your hands if you touch that one,” he joked. 

    Explaining what the family business has done for the community for the past 44 years, Murray, Sr. simply said, “We care for the dead, but we also care for the living.” 

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Book Talk: My Big Red Machine, with author and journalist Terence Moore

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    Moore’s “My Big Red Machine” is available in paperback and hardcover. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Major League Baseball’s postseason has begun, and for the teams and fan bases involved, there will be a chance to win a World Series title. One of those teams involved was the Cincinnati Reds; decades ago, in the 1970s, that franchise was one of the perennial favorites to win championships. 

    That team, nicknamed The Big Red Machine for its efficiency and power, had fans all over the country. One of those fans was sports writer and author Terence Moore. During Moore’s youth and later as a young reporter for the Cincinnati Enquirer, he had the unique opportunity to get close to the stars of The Big Red Machine, Joe Morgan, Johnny Bench, Ken Griffey, Sr., Tony Perez, and, of course, Pete Rose.

    Moore visited The Atlanta Voice to discuss his inspiration for his latest book, “My Big Red Machine,” walking the thin line between fandom and journalism, and his lifelong love for baseball.

    The Atlanta Voice: Good morning, Terence. Is this your first time inside The Atlanta Voice office?

    Terence Moore: Yeah, I can feel the history as we sit here right now. You can feel the history of the people that this paper represented through the years and decades. Black publications were so huge to the Civil Rights Movement in general, but particularly here in Atlanta.

    AV: How long have you been thinking about writing this book? I know you grew up in Cincinnati and had worked at one of the local daily newspapers. This book must have been special to report on.

    TM: It’s been forever. I would tell people different stories, and they would say that I needed to write about it. The Big Red Machine is the greatest team in baseball; that’s my story, and I’m sticking to it. The Reds of the 1970s won more games than anybody in baseball in that decade. And in 1975 and 1976, they won back-to-back world championships. This is the 50th anniversary of the first of those back-to-back championships. I figured the timing is perfect.

    Moore said, “My Big Red Machine” is about more than baseball. “It’s sort of a memoir about me as a young person idolizing this team and having another goal in life: becoming a journalist. It’s an interesting journey,” Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    AV: But this book is about more than baseball, correct?

    TM: The thing that I am very proud of about this book is that people are shocked that it’s not just a baseball book. It’s not just about The Big Red Machine; it’s not just about sports. It’s sort of a memoir about me as a young person idolizing this team, and also having another goal in life: becoming a journalist. It’s an interesting journey.

    AV: If you had to describe this book in a sentence, what would that sentence be?

    TM: It’s a riveting tale with great storytelling. The storytelling gives the reader the journey of not only my life, but the life of anybody who was passionate about anything in his or her life. And then having it come to fruition. 

    AV: How did it feel to be telling parts of your life, family, and career in this book? You have done this in your previous books, like in The Real Hank Aaron, but this went deeper.

    TM: It was an out-of-body experience. After I wrote this book, and then I read the proof, I was like, ‘Who wrote this?’ It was the strangest thing. There were passages that I know I obviously remember writing, and then there were other passages that I was like, ‘This was unbelievable.’ 

    Moore revealed that the entire project came together -from start to publication- in 13 months. “Somehow I was able to get this done,” he said.

    AV: On page 63 in chapter 3, you vividly describe the smells inside the old Crosley Field on your first visit with your family. The recall of the many personal and professional moments was so interesting. How did you remember so much detail?

    TM: A lot of people ask me that. Even before I was a reporter, I was a reporter. I’m very much my mother’s son; she never threw away anything. I save everything. It’s just unbelievable the stuff that I’ve saved through the years.

    One of the things I teach my journalism students is the big three: reporting, interviewing, and angles. It’s a must in anything that you do.  

    AV: In the book, you describe writing the first story ever on Ken Griffey, Jr. in the Cincinnati Enquirer in July 1978. Did you see anything special about the boy that told you he would become a future Baseball Hall of Fame inductee?

    TM: I’m at Riverfront Stadium in the summer of 1978, my first year of working at the Cincinnati Enquirer. One of the groundskeepers came up to me and told me I should do a story on Ken Griffey. I told him I had written tons of stories on Ken Griffey, and he said no, not the father, the son. I said ‘How old is he?’ and he said he’s eight years old. I said, ‘Ok.’

    Moore said that when he finally decided to look into how good Ken Griffey, Jr. really was, he was astounded that the groundskeeper’s tip was spot on. “He was the greatest eight-year-old kid I ever saw,” Moore said. 

    AV: What do you want readers to come away with from reading “My Big Red Machine”?

    TM: I want them to understand that you can bring stories alive through a lot of circumstances, situations, and experiences. That’s what I try to do. I try to bring stories alive by using myself as a vehicle to show different aspects of life. Because we can all relate to journeys, we can all relate to the journey of being a young person and having a fixation and passion for something. For me, it just happened to be this baseball team, this Big Red Machine. The greatest baseball team of all time.  

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Your Voice: What was your initial reaction to Biden pulling out of the campaign, and what do you want to see happen next?

    Your Voice: What was your initial reaction to Biden pulling out of the campaign, and what do you want to see happen next?

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    Vice President Kamala Harris embraces President Joe Biden in Raleigh, N.C., March. 26, 2024. (AP Photo/Matt Kelley)

    Bernita Lawrence

    Conyers

    “I was upset that he dropped out of the race. [But] I woke up today with a different outlook because I don’t like a quitter, and I wouldn’t say I liked the fact that the Democrats were not being unified like the Republicans. But I wanted Kamala to be at the top of the ticket in the future, and now she is. I do feel encouraged today with Kamala at the top of the ticket. So, I’m looking forward to the first black female president. I do hope that she does unify the country.”


    Douglas Johnson

    College Park

    “I was happy he dropped out, but I’m stuck with who will replace him. I’m all for Black women. Let’s get together and uplift and empower our Black women. But I don’t think she’s authentic. I’ve been reading a lot of your articles where she kept black men [locked up] and incriminated a lot of black men that she could have helped them. I wish it were somebody like Joe that was more authentic. At one point, she was claiming she was Indian and not necessarily black. To me, it’s no different than what Trump is doing. I don’t want him. I know he doesn’t like us, but she pretends she is for us only for her cause. That’s what she’s done her whole life.”


    Lorene Hill

    Newnan

    “I believe it will be an interesting race because One, she’s Black. Two, she’s a woman. Third, there was still some controversy about how she was as a D.A. On the other hand, Trump has a lot of followers, but in my opinion, he’s a cult leader. [I hope] people get out and vote for who [they feel is] their best person that they think will take care of our country.”


    Marc Smith

    Atlanta

    “I was relieved because I was really for Biden and his family and relieved that maybe there’s a chance of beating Trump. I hope that Kamala gets the nomination, that she wins, and that people accept that you can have a female president. It’d be great to have the first black female president. I mean, we’re in peril. We’re in a moment of crisis. And she’s running against a guy that has 34 felonies. So, I don’t know how that’s a choice.”

    The post Your Voice: What was your initial reaction to Biden pulling out of the campaign, and what do you want to see happen next? appeared first on The Atlanta Voice.

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    Vincent Christie

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  • Your Voice: What was your initial reaction to the assassination attempt on Republican candidate Donald Trump?

    Your Voice: What was your initial reaction to the assassination attempt on Republican candidate Donald Trump?

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    Beverly Baker

    Atlanta

    “My initial reaction was it was an inside job. I believe that the shooter and also the victim were part of Donald Trump’s plan. This is just a derailment to get off the subject of what he’s facing, and I truly believe it is an inside job. I do. I believe it was an inside job until I see proof that this man was not part of a plan.”


    Omari Stennet

    Covington

    “I think it was absurd. I think it was uncalled for. I’m not a big fan of politics like that. I’m not even a big fan of Donald Trump. However, he’s for the people from listening to Donald Trump and what he represents and speaks about. And all he wanted to do was the right thing. So I don’t I don’t want him to get killed. I don’t want anybody to get killed. But, you know, I thought it was absurd. And I’m more than grateful that he survived. And I wish the best for him. I don’t want anything to happen to Donald Trump. And that’s my answer. It’s good.”


    Francesca Lowe

    Fayetteville

    “I didn’t believe it. I didn’t know what was going on. I didn’t hear about it. My coworker just told me. And the first thing that came to mind was that it was staged. It was not real to provoke sympathy or empathy. I’m not sure which one. That’s it.”


    Roger Williams

    Atlanta

    “My first reaction to what happened to Trump is that I believe the government set it up because a real sniper is not going to miss; if they wanted to shoot you, they would have shot you. A real sniper is not going to miss. I think it was politically set up for him to get more votes, get more attention, and for him to make history because he was almost assassinated. I mean, it’s all publicity.”

    The post Your Voice: What was your initial reaction to the assassination attempt on Republican candidate Donald Trump? appeared first on The Atlanta Voice.

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    Vincent Christie

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  • Protein per target bodyweight (1.6g/Kg) (0.7g/lbs)

    Protein per target bodyweight (1.6g/Kg) (0.7g/lbs)

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    Morton RW, Murphy KT, McKellar SR, Schoenfeld BJ, Henselmans M, Helms E, Aragon AA, Devries MC, Banfield L, Krieger JW, Phillips SM. A systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression of the effect of protein supplementation on resistance training-induced gains in muscle mass and strength in healthy adults. Br J Sports Med. 2018 Mar;52(6):376-384. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2017-097608. Epub 2017 Jul 11. Erratum in: Br J Sports Med. 2020 Oct;54(19):e7. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2017-097608corr1. PMID: 28698222; PMCID: PMC5867436.

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