When the Panthers football team was expelled from their private school league for being "too good," the nearly 200-year-old Catholic school, which is located in the heart of a neighborhood plagued by gun violence and grinding socioeconomic challenges, it became a source of immense pride and then a source of racial controversy. The Panthers' football team, which is predominantly black, has been a source of immense pride and then a source of racial controversy since the incident occurred. Because they were unable to find a league in which to compete, the team created its own schedule, traveling across the country in search of elite competition and the opportunity to display its players as they competed for athletic scholarship opportunities.
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When the Panthers football team was expelled from their private school league for being "too good," the nearly 200-year-old Catholic school, which is located in the heart of a neighborhood plagued by gun violence and grinding socioeconomic challenges, it became a source of immense pride and then a source of racial controversy. The Panthers' football team, which is predominantly black, has been a source of immense pride and then a source of racial controversy since the incident occurred. Because they were unable to find a league in which to compete, the team created its own schedule, traveling across the country in search of elite competition and the opportunity to display its players as they competed for athletic scholarship opportunities.
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