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Dallas, TX
Dallas civil rights leader Juanita Craft’s birthday celebrated at African American Museum
Inside Fair Park, two teens at the African American Museum in Dallas answered a question: What does freedom represent to you?
They were there Thursday for the 124th birthday of Juanita Craft. The late civil rights leader and Dallas City Council representative was a “local icon of liberation,” said Marvin Dulaney, the museum’s historian and scholar-in-residence. An archival collection was shown alongside the museum’s “Icons of Liberation” gallery, which features the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela.
Craft was a “barrier breaker, a freedom seeker, a freedom fighter,” said Lisa Ross, president and CEO of the museum, to dozens of attendees who later crowded around a pop-up exhibit for the civic leader.
“She understood the power of what happens when we work together and we push with our fists and not our finger,” Ross said. “She understood the absolute necessity and the dynamic force of sisterhood. She was a force in this city.”
A September 1976 staff photo of Dallas City Council member Juanita Craft.
The Dallas Morning News
Born Feb. 9, 1902, Craft started her life the same year a state poll tax law was passed, which made it harder for some to vote. She would go on to become the first Black woman to vote in a public election in Dallas County in 1944. A leader in the NAACP, Craft was credited with organizing more than 180 chapters and youth councils.
Craft’s home drew visits from King, Lyndon B. Johnson, Thurgood Marshall and Eleanor Roosevelt. Dulaney said that while Craft did not receive the same international platform as others, including men like King or Mandela, she serves as a local example of how anyone can become engaged and create change.
“We often forget that it’s these people who, on the local level, are also active and who are also icons in their own way,” Dulaney said. “Indeed, they’re meeting with young people every day and working in the community every day to change basic things.”
Linda Lydia, youth adviser for the Juanita Craft Youth Council, listens to a presentation on a Juanita Craft exhibit by Marvin Dulaney, historian at the African American Museum of Dallas, during an event to celebrate what would be Craft’s 124th birthday on Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026, in Dallas.
Angela Piazza / Staff Photographer
Visitors on Thursday got to peek at archival items that tie back to Craft’s story as part of the celebration put on by the museum and nonprofit Friends of Juanita Craft Civil Rights House and Museum. They were only expected to be on display for a few days.
Dulaney said the civic leader’s work “epitomizes” the grassroots nature of the Civil Rights Movement. Craft “was out there organizing, working with people, which is what the movement was all about,” he added.
Racial tensions were high when Craft moved into her home in South Dallas in 1950. There were bombings in the surrounding area that year. During the ‘50s, she led efforts to end segregation at the State Fair of Texas. In 1963, she took dozens of students to the March on Washington. In 1975, when she was 73 years old, Craft was elected to the Dallas City Council. She served two terms. She died 40 years ago, on the anniversary of the Voting Rights Act.
Craft’s house on Warren Avenue is now a museum.
Diane Ragsdale, a former council member and community advocate, was among those celebrating Craft’s legacy. She was a “Craft kid,” joining the NAACP youth council under Craft’s leadership when she was 11 years old. She said Craft’s contributions inspired her activism and fostered community.
Diane Ragsdale, a community advocate, views the “Icons of Liberation” exhibit at the African American Museum during an event to celebrate what would be Juanita Craft’s 124th birthday on Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026, in Dallas.
Angela Piazza / Staff Photographer
The pop-up exhibit, alongside King and Mandela in an esteemed museum, was “right where it needs to be,” Ragsdale said.
“It elevates and amplifies her history and her service and also our struggle as Black people,” Ragsdale said of the display, adding, “You want more young people to be aware of Mrs. Craft and her history and her sacrifice, but that is something that we have to make happen.”
Dulaney said there was a need for increasing education around Black history and civil rights at a time when he said it is being “sanitized,” pointing to changes made by the Trump administration, including the removal of an exhibit on slavery in Philadelphia last month.
“We need to teach young people about what happened in our past,” Dulaney said. “By telling the story of slavery, we indeed increase the empathy that people have for each other.”
Related Mikelan Chambers, 13, signs his name next to his response to the question “What does freedom represent to you?” at the African American Museum during an event to celebrate what would be Juanita Craft’s 124th birthday on Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026, in Dallas.
Angela Piazza / Staff Photographer
As Dulaney showed the museum’s exhibits, Christin White was encouraging her two teenage sons to have pride in themselves, learn Black history and form their own opinions.
“We repeat things if we don’t learn it the first time,” White said. “Our people have fought for so many different freedoms, so many different privileges. I think a lot of the kids, they just don’t know anything about that.”
White sat at a dry-erase board with the boys, 14-year-old Mikael Chambers and 13-year-old Mikelan Chambers, and pressed them to answer the prompt: What does freedom represent to you?
Mikael wrote that freedom means “to do whatever you want with your life without someone judging you.” His brother wrote that freedom means “to give and obtain knowledge.”
Then, they left the exhibit and gathered with the crowd to sing “Happy Birthday.”
This reporting is part of the Future of North Texas, a community-funded journalism initiative supported by the Commit Partnership, Communities Foundation of Texas, The Dallas Foundation, the Dallas Mavericks, the Dallas Regional Chamber, Deedie Rose, Lisa and Charles Siegel, the McCune-Losinger Family Fund, The Meadows Foundation, the Perot Foundation, the United Way of Metropolitan Dallas and the University of Texas at Dallas. The News retains full editorial control of this coverage.
Dallas, TX
Dallas Cowboys Defense is ‘Annoying’ CeeDee Lamb and That’s a Good Thing
Based on what wide receiver CeeDee Lamb is saying about the Dallas Cowboys’ defense during OTAs, it would appear the unit might be moving in the right direction.
Of course, all eyes will be on Dallas’ defense this season after the unit was one of the worst in the NFL in 2025 and prevented the Cowboys from making the postseason.
Since then, the Cowboys have a new defensive coordinator in Christian Parker and a bunch of new players on that side of the ball, which gives hope the unit can rebound and Dallas can get back to the playoffs.
When asked about the defense after OTAs practice on Thursday, Lamb called the Cowboys’ revamped unit “annoying” and “tricky.”
“It’s annoying. It’s been annoying to prepare against, but obviously just seeing it practice every day… it’s kind of unique, just seeing different guys communicate and being able to understand and take what they learn from the meeting room and being able to easily translate it on the field. It’s good to go against, it’s very tricky,” Lamb said, per DLLS Cowboys.
There’s a few positives to unpack from Lamb’s comment.
For starters, having stiffer competition from the defense in practice is going to help Dallas’ offense get even better.
To see that Lamb is even remotely bothered by the Cowboys’ unit and calls it “tricky” says a lot about the complexity of the defense and how difficult it will be for opposing offenses to figure it out.
Then, there’s the remark about the communication, which will be key for everyone getting on the same page and the defense moving as one, which is important with so many new pieces.
Now, does all of that mean we can lock the Cowboys’ defense in for an improved season? No, but it’s a positive sign that there is progress being made toward that goal.
Cowboys’ defense is key for 2026 season
Jerry Jones said it back in March and we couldn’t agree more: the Cowboys’ defense held the team back in 2025.
“I’ll tell you, when you have the challenges we had last year, there’s no place to go but up on the defensive side of the ball,” he said. “Had we played a lick of defense last year, we would’ve had ourselves, I think, a real playoff run.”
Looking ahead to 2026, if the Cowboys want to get back to the playoffs, things have got to get much better on that side of the ball.
With an offense that stands to be elite, the defense doesn’t have to totally match that level of performance. Instead, we believe the Cowboys can get back to the postseason simply by sporting an average defense.
And, if the Cowboys can improve to a top-10 unit, it’s not crazy to think Dallas can compete for more than just a playoff spot this coming season.
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Dallas, TX
Crews cover up AT&T branding as stadium becomes
Dallas, TX
3 different Cowboys 53-man roster projections pinpoint contested roster spots
I’m not revealing any major secrets here, but if the past 15 years or so that I’ve been intensely following the Dallas Cowboys training camp have taught me anything, it’s that rosters are largely set before the offseason program even begins, and most of the extra players brought in are little more than sparring and training partners for the roster locks.
That is the stark reality of NFL life.
Injuries, standout performances in camp, and the occasional suspension provide the opportunity for maybe a handful of players each year to work their way onto the roster, but that’s pretty much it.
To get a better feeling for what the contested spots could be on the 2026 Cowboys roster, I took a look at three separate roster projections. One from from our old friend Mike Fisher at CowboysRoundtable.com, one from the always reliable Jon Machota of The Athletic, and one from our very own Connor Livesay.
These three projections should give us a good idea of where public sentiment currently stands regarding the 2026 Cowboys roster. I’ve combined all three projections in the tables below, one for the offense and one for defense and special teams combined. The tables highlight (in yellow) the spots that do not yet appear to be locked down. Look closely, and you’ll see there aren’t many of those spots left, at least if these projections are anything to go by.
| POS | Machota | Fisher | Livesay | ||
| Quarterbacks | Prescott | Prescott | Prescott | ||
| Milton | Milton | Milton | |||
| Running Backs | J. Williams | J. Williams | J. Williams | ||
| Luepke | Luepke | Luepke | |||
| Blue | Blue | Blue | |||
| Mafah | |||||
| Wide Receivers | Lamb | Lamb | Lamb | ||
| Pickens | Pickens | Pickens | |||
| Flournoy | Flournoy | Flournoy | |||
| Turpin | Turpin | Turpin | |||
| Mingo | Mingo | Holden | |||
| Tight Ends | Ferguson | Ferguson | Ferguson | ||
| Spann-Ford | Spann-Ford | Spann-Ford | |||
| Schoonmaker | Schoonmaker | Schoonmaker | |||
| Trigg | Trigg | Trigg | |||
| Offensive Line | Guyton | Guyton | Guyton | ||
| Smith | Smith | Smith | |||
| Beebe | Beebe | Beebe | |||
| Booker | Booker | Booker | |||
| Steele | Steele | Steele | |||
| Thomas | Thomas | Thomas | |||
| Shelton | Shelton | Shelton | |||
| Bass | Bass | Bass | |||
| Keegan | Keegan | Cornelius | |||
| Cornelius | Henessey | Henessey |
Not too many surprises for the offense, and there really only seem to be four spots up for grabs.
At QB, the consensus seems to be that the team has invested too much in Milton to just let him go – though there is an expectation that Sam Howell will challenge for the backup spot.
At RB, the question is whether the Cowboys will carry three or four players; Phil Mafah would really have to show up in camp to grab one of the last roster spots on the 53.
At WR, the final spot seems to be the contested one, and don’t discount Marquez Valdes-Scantling here, he might be a safer option for 2026 than either Mingo or Holden.
At TE, the spots look fixed, but the team could easily opt for just three tight ends, and the odd man out in that case may not be Michael Trigg but Luke Schoonmaker.
Finally, the only two truly contested spots appear to be the last two offensive line spots, and at this point you can make a case for almost every lineman to fill one of those two spots. A lot here will depend on how training camp plays out.
On defense and special teams, the situation is very similar, with competition likely only for the last backup spots.
| POS | Machota | Fisher | Livesay | ||
| Defrensive Line | Q. Williams | Q. Williams | Q. Williams | ||
| K. Clark | K. Clark | K. Clark | |||
| Bullard | Bullard | Bullard | |||
| Overton | Overton | Overton | |||
| Ogbonnia | Ogbonnia | Ogbonnia | |||
| Outside Linebacker | Gary | Gary | Gary | ||
| Ezeiruaku | Ezeiruaku | Ezeiruaku | |||
| Lawrence | Lawrence | Lawrence | |||
| S. Williams | S. Williams | S. Williams | |||
| Houston | Houston | Houston | |||
| Wheat | Wheat | ||||
| Inside Linebacker | Overshown | Overshown | Overshown | ||
| Winters | Winters | Winters | |||
| Barham | Barham | Barham | |||
| James | James | James | |||
| Barron | Barron | Robinson | |||
| Cornerback | Bland | Bland | Bland | ||
| Revel | Revel | Revel | |||
| Durant | Durant | Durant | |||
| Moore | Moore | Moore | |||
| Kendrick | Steward | Butler | |||
| Bridges | Carson | ||||
| Safety | Downs | Downs | Downs | ||
| Thompson | Thompson | Thompson | |||
| Hooker | Hooker | Hooker | |||
| Locke | Locke | Locke | |||
| A. Clark | |||||
| Special Teams | Aubrey | Aubrey | Aubrey | ||
| Anger | Anger | Anger | |||
| Sieg | Sieg | Sieg |
At outside linebacker and safety, the only question is whether the Cowboys go long at those spots and keep an extra guy, and the fifth ILB spot also seems to be contested to some degree.
The cornerback position may be the most contested in camp, but again, it’s likely to be about just the two last spots at the position, but there will be a lot of players contesting those two spots.
As far as projections go, these three have probably summarized the general sentiment about the roster pretty well at this point of the season.
Suspensions (knock on wood), trades, injuries (knock on wood three times), and other things of that nature (knock on wood) tend to disrupt these projections. But that’s also where depth guys then get to step up and seize their opportunity.
What’s your take on the combined projections above, and which of your pet cats didn’t make the cut on any of the three projections?
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