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Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Phil Freelon, architect known designing for African American museum dies

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Architect Phil Freelon, who designed buildings ranging from local libraries to the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture, died Tuesday in North Carolina.

Freelon, 66, had suffered from Lou Gehrig’s disease for several years. He died in Durham about a week after he had quit consuming food or liquids, his neurologist said.

“I’ll remember him as one of the most gifted architects I’ve ever worked with but also one of the kindest individuals I’ve ever known,” said Lonnie Bunch, founding director of the African American Museum and now secretary of the Smithsonian Institution.

One of Freelon’s most important contributions to the museum was recognizing the National Mall as “sacred space,” Bunch said, so visitors “didn’t just go into a building. They could look out and see where history occurred. So that was kind of his genius.”

Freelon, a Philadelphia native, worked for years at architectural firms in Texas and North Carolina. When he opened his own firm, he was the only employee. He declined to design prisons, casinos or strip malls, focusing instead on libraries, museums and schools because he preferred “projects that contribute to society in some way,” he told The Associated Press in early 2017.

A statement from his family said Freelon “designed buildings to uplift the human spirit.”

His reputation grew as he designed projects such as the National Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta, the Museum of the African Diaspora in San Francisco, the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of African American History and Culture in Baltimore, and the International Civil Rights Center and Museum in Greensboro.

Along the way, The Freelon Group merged with Perkins and Will, where he was managing and design director.

In a statement on its website, Perkins and Will said Freelon “was committed to designing a socially equitable world,” and broke down socio-economic and cultural barriers in architecture and design.” It added, “He led the design of almost every major museum or public space dedicated to black culture in the United States … He was, arguably, the most significant African American architect in recent history.”

The African American history museum opened in September 2016 in Washington, D.C., to wide acclaim. Freelon was the architect of record for the museum, working with partner David Adjaye, the lead designer, and Max Bond, whom Freelon described as dean of the project. The building’s design included a facade known as the Corona. Its three-tiered shape was inspired by a symbol from the Yoruba people of West Africa featuring a crown.

“Freelon’s career reflected how much he valued transforming the diversity of the architecture practice, especially for African Americans,” said professor David Hill, head of the school of architecture at North Carolina State University, where Freelon graduated in 1975 with a bachelor’s degree in environmental design.

Months before the Washington museum opened, he was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, a degenerative neurological disease that leads to total paralysis. His disease slowed him, but he kept working, with projects that included a $50 million expansion of the Motown Museum in Detroit.

Dr. Rick Bedlack, a Duke University neurologist, said he last saw Freelon on June 27. By then, Freelon was in a wheelchair and unable to dress or bathe himself without assistance.

“In that conversation, Phil had told me that he just had had enough,” said Bedlack, who began treating Freelon in March 2016. He had decided to quit eating and drinking, which he did on June 30, Bedlack said.

“He lived his life, and he made the decisions,” Bedlack said. “The disease didn’t make the decisions for him.”

In a speech at Duke University in 2017 for Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Freelon described his vision of architecture as a form of activism.

“I have worked through my career as an architect to create environments that are uplifting, inspiring, and set the tone for sharing knowledge and facilitating cultural exchange,” he said. “You see, I believe that the built environment — that’s buildings and landscapes — can and SHOULD contribute in a positive way to the lives of everyday people. Beautiful architecture should be accessible to all, not just the 1 percent that can afford to engage the stars of our profession.”

Friends and colleagues described Freelon’s genius and generosity. He would sit quietly and beam as a colleague made a presentation at museum planning meetings, said Kinshasha Holman Conwill, the museum’s deputy director.

“He listened deeply. He heard profoundly. And he translated brilliantly the ideas of his clients,” she said. Many architects have an attitude of “my way or the highway,” but Freelon was different, she said.

Bunch said Freelon was valuable not only as an architect but as one who remained calm during the stress of deadlines and budgets.

“He made us believe we could always do this,” Bunch said. “And that’s a unique talent.”

A service will be held Sept. 28 at the Durham County Human Services Complex, which Freelon designed. Survivors include his wife, the Grammy-nominated singer Nnenna Freelon, and three children.

The post Phil Freelon, architect known designing for African American museum dies appeared first on theGrio.



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Reddit’s ‘Manosphere’ and the Challenge of Quantifying Hate

Researchers analyzed Reddit's most misogynist communities. It's exactly as bad as you thought.

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Best MacBooks for 2019: Which Model Should You Actually Buy?

It's never been harder to buy the right Apple laptop. Should you get a MacBook Pro? A MacBook Air? What about the Touch Bar? Let us help you.

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Inside Dave Asprey’s Bulletproof Body-Hacking Gym

Dave Asprey of Bulletproof Coffee fame is sharing his high-tech workout secrets with the public at workout facilities called Upgrade Labs.

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In New York, Friendships Run Along Subway Lines

A study finds New Yorkers are more likely to be Facebook friends if they live along the same subway line.

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Albert Adomah: Nottingham Forest sign former Aston Villa winger

Albert Adomah joins Nottingham Forest on a two-year-deal after being released by Aston Villa following their promotion.

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Libya conflict: French missiles found on pro-Haftar base

France says the missiles, found in Libya, were due to be destroyed and were not sold to any group.

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Tuesday, July 9, 2019

Africa Cup of Nations: What to look out for on day 20 in Egypt

We have reached the quarter-finals of the Africa Cup of Nations - so what can we expect on day 20?

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Caring for her community

Lisa Volpatti loves helping people. She also loves a challenge. That’s part of the reason why she’s working to improve insulin therapies for diabetic patients.

A PhD student in chemical engineering, Volpatti is researching avenues for a self-regulating insulin treatment that people with diabetes could take once a day. The insulin would be released from an implanted reservoir when a person’s blood sugar levels are high. Manual insulin administration doesn’t always mimic the function of a healthy pancreas, and it’s a burden for patients to give themselves regular injections. Volpatti hopes a self-regulating insulin system could help keep patients’ blood sugar at therapeutic levels for longer periods of time.

One in 11 people across the globe have diabetes, and so the potential reach of Volpatti’s research is massive.

“I get really excited about working on something that could potentially help so many people across the globe and give them a higher quality of life,” she says. “And it’s a really challenging problem, so that’s also exciting from a scientific standpoint.”

Dispelling imposter syndrome

Before coming to MIT, Volpatti studied chemical engineering at the University of Pittsburgh. During her senior year, she applied to the graduate program in MIT’s Department of Chemical Engineering (ChemE). She didn’t get in, but that didn’t dissuade her from trying a second time. After going abroad and earning a master’s degree in chemistry from Cambridge University, Volpatti applied to MIT again and was accepted.

“I was really embarrassed to share that with people because I felt like I didn’t really belong. But now, I think that I’ve had a lot of success here, and I’m more willing to share that with people who are also struggling with imposter syndrome, or who think that they can’t do it, or that if they get a rejection it’s the end. It’s never the end,” Volpatti says.

At Cambridge University, her research involved looking at amyloid fibrils, proteins that are typically associated with neurodegenerative disorders, and investigating possible uses for them in biotechnology, specifically in drug delivery. As a fifth-year doctoral student at MIT, working in the labs of Daniel Anderson and Robert Langer, Volpatti continues to work with drug-delivery applications, now for insulin therapies.

Caring for her community

Volpatti’s passion for helping others is reflected in her community service at the Institute, especially in the department where she makes her academic home.

“It’s always been my goal, broadly, to help people. Since I was really excited about chemistry, I thought medicine would be a great place to do that. Throughout my undergrad and grad careers, I try to be involved in other things [in addition to academics] so I can give back, because I also have gotten a lot of help,” explains Volpatti.

She is the co-founder of the Institute’s Graduate Women in Chemical Engineering group that provides support for female graduate students in the department. The group is relatively new — it was established last fall — and Volpatti is excited to see where the initiative will go. When the Department of Chemical Engineering received a 2019 Change-maker award for this effort, they asked Volpatti to accept the award on the department’s behalf. She also recently received a 2019 PKG award.

“I’ve had a lot of really important mentors that have helped me make my decisions, so I try to be a mentor for other people as well,” she says.

Volpatti is also a fellow in the ChemE Communication Lab, where she helps students and postdocs with their communication needs. From dissertation help to resume workshopping, Volpatti tries to help her peers effectively translate their work outside of the department.

She is also active in Resources for Easing Friction and Stress (REFS), a confidential peer-to-peer counseling service that serves as a mental health resource for graduate students. In addition to being a peer counselor, Volpatti and her colleagues organize stress-reducing activities such as free ice cream events and mindfulness workshops.

“Anyone can learn”

Volpatti and her colleagues haven’t created the perfect self-regulating insulin system quite yet, but they have made good progress. For example, they have made headway in the kinetics of insulin release. In mouse models, they have minimized the lag in the self-regulating insulin’s response to high glucose levels.

She will finish her degree in December, and will pursue a postdoc in immunology, specifically in cancer immunotherapy, which involves similar materials and delivery principles as her work with insulin, but with a focus on the immune system.

To take a break from her research, Volpatti loves taking runs down to the esplanade along the Charles River. She also enjoys hiking and camping, and staying in touch with her family. She video-chats with her sister and niece on a daily basis, often showing them her experiments in the lab.

Something that not many people know about Volpatti is that she is an adept juggler — a skill she acquired with her signature determination and persistence.

“One summer I just practiced with a friend who knew how and finally figured it out. I now believe that anyone can learn how to juggle,” she says. “You think ‘no I can’t, I’m not coordinated enough’ but you can. Anyone can learn.”



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A Zoom Flaw Gives Hackers Easy Access to Your Webcam

All it takes is one wrong click, and the popular video conferencing software will put you in a meeting with a stranger.

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Lawyers for police officer who killed Botham Jean in his apartment want murder trial moved out of Dallas

TheGrio has launched a special series called #BlackonBlue to examine the relationship between law enforcement and African-Americans. Our reporters and videographers will investigate police brutality and corruption while also exploring local and national efforts to improve policing in our communities. Join the conversation, or share your own story, using the hashtag #BlackonBlue.

The law team for the former Dallas police officer Amber Guyger who shot and killed Botham Jean last year, is fighting to get her murder trial moved and asked a judge on Monday to consider a new venue given the “media hysteria” the case has caused.

Judge issues gag order in fired cop Amber Guyger’s murder trial

Last September, Amber Guyger shot and killed 26-year-old Botham Jean in his own apartment claiming she thought he was an intruder in her residence. Guyger claimed that she was tired after working a 14-hour shift and thought she was on the third floor where her apartment was located, when she had parked her car on the fourth.

In their court filing, Guyger’s attorneys Robert Rogers, Toby Shook and Michael Mowla, claimed that the “publicity surrounding this case has been prejudicial and inflammatory,” The Dallas Morning News reports.

Guyger’s legal team doesn’t believe she can get a fair trial in Dallas with the potential jury pool who have likely already formed an opinion about the case.

The also stated that national figures such as former Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings, U.S. presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke and state Sen. Royce West also caused harm when they “injected themselves into the case.”

They attorneys also argued that the media has been biased because Jean is Black and Guger is white saying that they promoted a false racial narrative.

Witness who filmed Botham Jean police shooting aftermath harassed and fired

The trial is scheduled to start Sept. 23.

The post Lawyers for police officer who killed Botham Jean in his apartment want murder trial moved out of Dallas appeared first on theGrio.



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Home Depot shoppers call for boycott after co-founder plans to Trump 2020 support and reports reveal he donated millions to defeat Clinton

Some shoppers are threatening to jump ship from Home Depot after it was discovered that one of its co-founders donated $7 million to groups supporting Donald Trump’s presidential run in 2016, and he reportedly plans to do it again in 2020.

Kamala Harris pulls forward as top Democratic 2020 contender, polls suggest

In 2016, Bernie Marcus reportedly gave $7 million to spending groups and PACs that backed Trump, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Home Depot shoppers are also furious that the billionaire told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that he will support Trump’s re-election campaign.

“If we look at this country, I would say that we are better off today than we were eight years ago or six years ago,” he said.

Marcus says while he doesn’t “agree with every move” be believes the president had made great strides and “produced more than anybody else.”

Since his announcement, twitter users have made the #boycotthomedepot hashtag go viral and they are asking companies who work with the home improvement brand to cancel them and go with Lowes.

A Home Depot representative however told MarketWatch that Marcus doesn’t speak for the brand and retired some 15 years ago from the company.

Marcus, “isn’t speaking on behalf of the company. In fact, as a standard practice, the company does not endorse presidential candidates.

Education Sec. Betsy DeVos hindering Obama-era law meant to help disabled minority students

The post Home Depot shoppers call for boycott after co-founder plans to Trump 2020 support and reports reveal he donated millions to defeat Clinton appeared first on theGrio.



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La La Anthony wins $68,000 casino jackpot and 50 Cent’s got his hand out already

Lady Luck La La Anthony cleaned up at a New Orleans casino when she dropped $200 into a slot machine and hit the jackpot for $68,000.

La La Anthony is exploring her ‘legal options’ on what’s next after latest split from Carmelo Anthony

And the Power star’s winnings caught the eye of the show’s executive producer 50 Cent who couldn’t help but comment after hearing that Anthony had come into some cash. But luckily it doesn’t seem like she owes him a cent. We all know that 50 Cent “The Loan Shark” loves to call people out people and collect his coins.

“So, it all started when I put $200 in a slot machine in NOLA at 4am this morning,” Anthony wrote on Instagram, The NY Daily News reports.

“Well god damn, good morning” 50 Cent replied. “I thought I was having a good morning,” he joked.

Then in true 50 Cent fashion, he asked his million of Instagram followers if they perhaps owed him some money because he was ready to collect.

“Any of you motherf—er owe me money, it’s Monday,” the “Get Rich or Die Tryin’” rapper tweeted.

Lala Anthony, Ne-Yo, Gabrielle Union and more celebs share their mom’s best advice

On Sunday, she also sent birthday wishes to 50 Cent who celebrated his 44th birthday.

“Happy Birthday 50 Cent!!” she wrote on Instagram. “Thank you for giving me the opportunity to be on such an iconic show…Power changed my life. Wait til they see what we do next‼️Enjoy your day Fif.”

In addition to working on Power together, Anthony and 50 Cent have a new show in the works.

In the new Starz series, Intercepted, Anthony plays the role of Marlee Harper, girlfriend to an NFL-star. However, when her relationship unexpectedly ends, she vows to never date an athlete again until Gavin Pope, the new star quarterback comes to town.

The post La La Anthony wins $68,000 casino jackpot and 50 Cent’s got his hand out already appeared first on theGrio.



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#JusticeForElijah: Grieving family calls for hate crime charges against white man who stabbed Black teen to death over rap music

The killing of an innocent Black teen by a white man who said he felt threatened by the rap music the 17-year-old was playing has promptedd family members and activists to call for the heinous murder to be categorized as a hate crime.

Teen killed by white man who says rap music made him feel ‘unsafe’

Since the killing of Elijah Al-Amin, there has been an outcry by community leaders to bring hate crime charges against 27-year-old Michael Paul Adams who viciously stabbed Al-Amin and then confessed.

The hashtag #JusticeforElijah began trending after he was killed at a Circle K store in Peoria, Arizona last thursday. His family and others are demanding that the homicide include hate crime charges, AZ Central reports.

“When you talk about an individual attacked by their type of music…This is very radicalized language that’s being used. There is definitely a hate component to the crime,” said Imraan Siddiqi, executive director of the Arizona Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR).

Amanda Steele, a spokeswoman for the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office, told reporters that the case is still in its infancy in determining what would be included in the case.

On Monday, a vigil was reportedly held for Elijah as family and friends gathered at the Islamic Community Center in Tempe to pay their respects.

LAPD’s internal affairs will investigate police handling of getaway driver in Nipsey Hussle case

According to police reports, Adams approached the teen inside the store at 1:42 AM and stabbed him and then slit his throat with a pocket knife.

Adams, who had just been released from prison two days before, told police that “rap music made him feel unsafe because in the past, he was attacked by people who listened to that music genre,” according to court documents.

Police say Adams expressed he, “needed to be proactive rather than reactive and protect himself and the community from the victim” even though Al-Amin did nothing to threaten him.

Surveillance footage shows the teen walking into the convenience store and Adams walking in a few seconds later.

Adams’ criminal history includes theft, shoplifting, marijuana violation, disorderly conduct, assault with a weapon and aggravated assault of a correctional employee, according to Maricopa County Superior Court records.

Jacie Cotterell, Adams’ lawyer, is questioning his ability to access mental health services after he was released from prison and many are concerned that this will be part of his defense.

Adams is reportedly scheduled to appear in court July 15 for a preliminary hearing.

The post #JusticeForElijah: Grieving family calls for hate crime charges against white man who stabbed Black teen to death over rap music appeared first on theGrio.



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Dove Joins Effort to Ban Discrimination Against Natural Black Hairstyles in the Workplace

Hair bias in the workplace is an issue that black people know too well. A recent study by Dove reveals that black women are 80% more likely to change their natural hair in order to meet social norms or expectations at work. On the other hand, many who don’t conform to Eurocentric standards are often penalized. According to the survey, black women are 50% more likely to be sent home from their jobs or know of a black woman who was sent home over their hair. Now, anti-hair-discrimination legislation is being championed by The CROWN Coalition, a national alliance comprised of Dove, the National Urban League, Color of Change, and the Western Center on Law and Poverty.

“Dove is proud to be a part of changing the narrative for black women and girls and anyone with textured hair, and we are excited to stand with The CROWN Coalition and Sen. Holly J. Mitchell to make a tangible impact in the state of California,” said Esi Eggleston Bracey, EVP and COO of North America Beauty and Personal Care at Unilever, Dove’s parent company, in a press release.

Under the Creating a Respectful and Open Workplace for Natural hair (CROWN) Act, employers and school officials will be prohibited from enforcing grooming policies that restrict natural hairstyles, like cornrows, braids, and locs. “The CROWN Act is about inclusion, pride, and choice,” said State Sen. Holly J. Mitchell, the author of the bill, in a statement. “This law protects the right of black Californians to choose to wear their hair in its natural form, without pressure to conform to Eurocentric norms.”

Additionally, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a new law Wednesday making California the first state to ban discrimination against black students and employees over their natural hairstyles. During a press conference last week, Gov. Newsom said his consciousness about the stigmatization of black hair was raised last year when a black wrestler was forced to cut off his dreadlocks in order to participate in a high school wrestling match in New Jersey. Footage of a white woman cutting off the teen’s dreads went viral and sparked a firestorm of backlash. “His decision whether or not to lose an athletic competition or lose his identity came into, I think, stark terms for millions of Americans,” said Newsom. That type of discrimination “is played out in the workplace, it’s played out in schools.”

In February, the New York City Commission on Human Rights issued a ban on hair discrimination, granting legal recourse for victims of the practice.

The unique set of challenges that black women face in the workplace is well-documented. A 2016 study, titled the “Good Hair” Study: Explicit and Implicit Attitudes Toward Black Women’s Hair, found that most people, regardless of race and gender, have an implicit bias toward women of color based on their hair. White women, however, have the strongest bias—both explicit and implicit—against textured hair, rating it as less beautiful, less sexy or attractive, and less professional than smooth hair.



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Airline trashed after using white man in blackface to play President Obama and mocks birther conspiracy in racist ad

How hard can it be to find a Black actor to play a Black man in a commercial?

Apparently, it was a difficult task for the executives at Alitalia Air to tackle as seen in a video ad that uses a white man in blackface to portray President Barack Obama.

Really?

Viral video captures boy begging dad not to call cops on Black man for ‘trespassing’

Alitalia is getting slammed on social media after the carrier posted the commercial to its YouTube page with the man in blackface portraying the former president, along with other white actors as Presidents Donald Trump, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, PEOPLE reports.

As a result of the backlash the airline issued an apology but it sounds like it’s too late.

“This flew under the radar (no pun intended).,” wrote #OscarsSoWhite hashtag creator April Reign. “Alitalia dropped an ad featuring a white actor in blackface portraying President Obama. In 2019. Read that again.”

The video has been since taken down from their YouTube page but not before people tore into that company’s insensitive casting choice.

Many are calling the ad racist not only for its depiction of Obama but for fanning the flames about the birther controversy that plagued him through his presidency thanks to Trump.

According to The Washington Post, in the video an interviewer asks people if they recognize who Obama is, and follows up and asks if they know where he was born. One person answers, “in Africa.”

Education Sec. Betsy DeVos hindering Obama-era law meant to help disabled minority students

The post Airline trashed after using white man in blackface to play President Obama and mocks birther conspiracy in racist ad appeared first on theGrio.



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Should You Wear White or Black on Hot Days? Here's the Data

Quick experiments can help you answer the eternal question of whether to wear black or white on hot summer days. Turns out, it's complicated.

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Kim Kardashian’s friend said people were suspicious of Tristan Thompson and Jordyn Woods’ relationship before cheating scandal broke

Kim Kardashian’s close friend Larsa Pippen was reportedly the first one to spill the tea and tell the reality star all about Tristan Thompson cheating on Khloe with Jordyn Woods and now Scottie Pippen‘s ex says things didn’t start there.

Twitterverse drags Khloe Kardashian for ‘fat a**hole’ comment directed at Jordyn Woods

Larsa sat down with Hollywood Unlocked and revealed that even though the story dropped in February that Woods had kissed Thompson after spending the night at his home after a late night party and lots of drinking, many in their inner circle believed that the two had already hooked up before because of questionable interactions the two had previously.

When the story started to circulate earlier this year that Thompson and Woods, who was Kylie Jenner’s best friend, had gotten a little too close for comfort, Pippen said she told Kim Kardashian who initially didn’t believe her, PEOPLE reports.

“I called Kim. She didn’t believe me — she was like, ‘No way. There’s no way,’ ” Pippen said. “Then we called Kourtney and Kourtney was like, ‘Yeah, I believe it.’”

Pippen explained that Kourtney had felt something was amiss with Thompson and Woods.

“There were other situations where [Jordyn and Tristan] were in the same room together and it was like, a weird feeling. And Kourtney was in that room.”

Jordyn Woods on feeling like a ‘Black woman for the first time’ after being bullied over Tristan Thompson cheating scandal

The scandal was recently aired out on the new season of Keeping up with the Kardashians.

According to reports, Khloe who shares a child with Thompson, doesn’t plan to reconcile with the NBA star.

The post Kim Kardashian’s friend said people were suspicious of Tristan Thompson and Jordyn Woods’ relationship before cheating scandal broke appeared first on theGrio.



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Egypt to sue Christie's to retrieve £4.7m Tutankhamun bust

The artefact was sold for £4.7m last week, despite Egypt warning it was probably stolen.

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Trees Emit a Surprisingly Large Amount of Methane

Figuring out trees' net emissions is becoming an urgent priority as countries and companies adopt tree-planting programs to offset their carbon footprints.

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What Is Blockchain? The Complete WIRED Guide

It's super secure and slightly hard to understand, but the idea of creating tamper-proof databases has captured the attention of everyone from anarchist techies to staid bankers.

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5 Best Slow-Motion Video Apps: How to Shoot Slo-Mo on Phones

How to manipulate time and space to get the most out of your phone's camera. Our slo-mo advice, and the best smartphones for recording in slow motion.

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Wendy Williams reveals chronic illness and vows to beat lymphedema

Wendy Williams has been living her best life since breaking up with her husband but admits that in the meanwhile her body is taking a beating due to a chronic condition called lymphedema.

Wendy Williams sheds tears over divorce drama, but then gets real about it

On Monday, Williams revealed on her show that the acute condition causes her body tissue to bloat, which explains why ankles appear to be badly swollen in recent pics holding hands with her new boyfriend, The Daily Mail reports.

“So Marc [Tomlin, the man is in the pics with] is new to New York and he’s having panic attacks,” Williams said.

“I’m unsteady on my feet. I’ve got the vertigo. And lymphedema, by the way. I’ve been diagnosed,” she said.

“It’s not going to kill me, but I do have a machine,” which Williams said she uses 45 minutes a day.

“And how dare you talk about the swelling of it all! It’s lymphedema. And I’ve got it under control.

Viral video captures boy begging dad not to call cops on Black man for ‘trespassing’

Williams also suffers from Graves disease and hyperthyroidism, which are two conditions that are also reportedly caused as a result of having breast implants.

Williams filed for divorce from Kevin Hunter after months of speculation and rumors that he was cheating and had fathered a child with his mistress.

The post Wendy Williams reveals chronic illness and vows to beat lymphedema appeared first on theGrio.



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Global literacy targets already off track - Unesco

The UN's education agency says global targets on improving education are going to be missed.

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The Real Challenge for the Green New Deal Isn’t Politics

Generating clean energy is easy. Getting the transmission lines to pipe it to the cities is the hard part.

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How a Blockchain Could Help Roll Out Berkeley’s Next Fire Truck

Berkeley is considering a plan to finance big projects with "minibonds" that would be sold, and interest credited, via a blockchain system.

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Nokia Beacon 1 Home Mesh Router: Specs, Price, Release Date

The Finnish tech company has a new home networking device that could help improve its business customers' internet service.

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Arimah's 'naked until married' story wins Caine Prize

Lesley Nneka Arimah's story imagines a parallel Nigeria were women go unclothed until they are married.

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Monday, July 8, 2019

First ever opera in Pidgin comes to Lagos

Composer Helen Epega says Pidgin is a uniting force in Nigeria, a country with hundreds of languages.

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What’s next for Ryan Destiny after ‘STAR’ cancellation?

When FOX announced that it would be cancelling Lee DanielsSTAR, tons of fans were crushed that they wouldn’t be seeing Ryan Destiny grace their small screens every week. any longer.

Luckily, the talented beauty who played Alexandra on the series that also featured Queen Latifah, Luke James, Brandy, Jude Demorest, Brittany O’Grady and Quincy Brown has already landed her next gig and we couldn’t be happier.

EXCLUSIVE: Ryan Destiny on colorism and learning to love her dark skin

Ryan Destiny will have a recurring role on the third season of Grown-ish alongside Yara Shahidi, Trevor Jackson, Luka Sabbat, and Chloe x Halle.

According to Deadline

Destiny will play Jillian, a transfer student from an HBCU who has come to study filmmaking at Cal U. Smart, worldly, and cultured, Jillian can talk art and music with Luca (Luka Sabbat), politics and activism with Aaron (Trevor Jackson), and also fits right in with Zoey (Yara Shahidi) and her eclectic crew of girls.

EXCLUSIVE: Ryan Destiny gushes over “selfless” boyfriend, Keith Powers

The black-ish spinoff executive produced by Kenya Barris for Freeform has already begun production for the show’s third season.

Following news that the Fox Network cancelled the music drama STAR after three seasons, comes word from producer Lee Daniels that the series will be making a comeback as a televised movie.

“The bad news is that ‘Star’ is not getting picked up for series,” Daniels said in an Instagram video post on Friday, captioned “Get ready for a two-hour gag!!”

In the clip, he calls the circumstances surrounding the cancellation “too long of a story to cry about.”

“The good news is: we’re doing a movie of the week to wrap things up for you all,” he said.

The post What’s next for Ryan Destiny after ‘STAR’ cancellation? appeared first on theGrio.



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The World Cup Was a Prime Target for Amazon Counterfeiters

The ecommerce giant was flooded with fake US women's soccer merchandise the day after their historic World Cup victory.

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Issa Takeover: 4 more Black celebs Disney should consider casting for the Little Mermaid

AfroFuture Fest Organizers Change Decision to Charge White People More for Tickets

The AfroFuture Fest Detroit-based music festival came under scrutiny when its organizers announced that it would charge $10 tickets to people of color and $20 and up to ‘non-POC’ people. The ticket prices have since been changed to reflect one price for all.

One of the event’s organizers, Francesca Lamarre, said that the initial pricing structure was put in place “to ensure people of color have a chance to experience joy and pleasure within the same spaces as their white counterparts” and to allow “white people to show themselves as allies and use their wealth and privilege to increase equity, joy, and pleasure for black life in Detroit,” according to reporting by Detroit Metro Times.

The group received backlash. One rapper who was scheduled to perform, Tiny Jag, pulled out of the concert because of the race-based pricing.

“I was immediately enraged just because I am biracial,” she said to Detroit Metro Times.

Additionally, Eventbrite, the website from which people could purchase tickets for AfroFuture, threatened to take down the event’s ticket page.

In a statement to CNN, Eventbrite outlined its policy to not “permit events that require attendees to pay different prices based on their protected characteristics such as race or ethnicity.”

“In this case, we have notified the creator of the event about this violation and requested that they alter their event accordingly,” the statement continued. “We have offered them the opportunity to do this on their own accord; should they not wish to comply we will unpublish the event completely from our site.”

Race-based pricing came to light last year after Nigerian chef Tunde Wey, said he had given white people the option to pay $12 or $30 at his New Orleans lunch spot, Saartj. At the time Wey said the pricing model was to highlight the gap in racial and wealth disparity in America. He said the higher cost paid by white people would be redistributed to people of color and called the move a “social experiment.”

The reviews site Yelp currently reports Saartj as closed.

But, the question remains—is race-based pricing constitutional? Tiffany Ellis, a Detroit-based civil rights lawyer told The New York Times, that such a pricing structure as AfroFuture was offering could result in lawsuits.

“We have constitutional rights as an individual, and the 14th Amendment provides that we cannot be discriminated against because all people are created equal,” she told NYT, although she said that private businesses have a little more leeway in choosing whom to do business with.

 

 

 

 



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Idris Elba rushes off stage to help woman having seizure during new play, ‘Tree’

A theatre-goer has opened up about how actor Idris Elba rushed off stage to help her when she suffered a seizure during a preview of his new play Tree.

Idris, 46, was reportedly quick to aid Amanda Billington, 33, after she collapsed and lost consciousness at Upper Campfield Market Hall in Manchester on Wednesday.

Billington says she has regular seizures due to an undiagnosed condition, the Evening Standard reports. Elba stayed with her until paramedics arrived and escorted her to an ambulance. She was transported to a local hospital for a check-up and was later released.

READ MORE: Idris Elba doesn’t want the the burden of a failed Bond movie on his shoulders

“I would love to thank him personally, but doubt I will cross paths with him, he’s very famous,” She told the Mirror. “I would love to thank him personally, but doubt I will cross paths with him — he’s very famous.”

Elba is starring in Tree, which he co-wrote with Kwame Kwei-Armah. The play is running as part of the Manchester International Festival.

As theGrio previously reported, two British women writers have accused the Hollywood heavyweight of not acknowledging their four years worth of contributions made on the project.

Tori Allen-Martin and Sarah Henley published a statement on Medium outlining their gripes, which Elba called “frustrating.”

READ MORE: Idris Elba calls claims that two women were pushed from his play “frustrating”

“It’s worth mentioning that this whole process has been terribly upsetting and we’ve felt terrified about speaking out, but we want to be the change we want to see, and ultimately have been left with no choice because those involved fail to accept that we have a claim,” the duo wrote.

The Luther star responded to their accusations on Twitter, noting that he “will continue to offer opportunities and to support the next generation of writers and talent.”

“We wanted to offer an opportunity to support these new writers while creating a piece of work and scale and to a director’s vision,” Elba wrote “The outcome is an accusation of plagiarism and discrimination.”

Tree is running at the festival until July 13.

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Lil Nas X on why he didn’t intend to come out as gay publicly and the perfect way he deals with bullies

As Lil Nas X enjoys the fruits of his success, the Atlanta artist says it was bitter sweet opening up about his sexuality, something he thought he’d never come to terms with doing publicly.

Racist country music fans boycott Wrangler’s new Lil Nas X’s collection

In an interview with the BBC Breakfast, the ‘Old Town Road’ rapper admits that be wrestled with the decision to come out as gay and hopes it would help open doors for more people.

“It was something I was considering never doing ever … just take it to the grave,” he admitted. “But I don’t want to live my entire life… not doing what I want to do.”

Since coming out, Lil Nas X said he has experienced some bullying behavior but says he’s not mad at people’s reaction.

“I’m not angry… because I understand how they want that reaction,” the 20-year-old said. “So I’m just going to joke back with them.”

Lil Nas X has been making headlines ever since he burst onto the music scene with his runaway rap/country hit “Old Town Road.” Born Montero Lamar Hill, the artist whose single has spent 13weeks at the No.1 spot on the Hot 100 chart, had plenty of people believing he was gay after a series of social media posts seemed to suggest the news.

Did Lil Nas X just come out?

“some of y’all already know, some of y’all don’t care, some of y’all not gone fwm no more. but before this month ends i want y’all to listen closely to c7osure,” he posted on Sunday along with a rainbow emoji.

In June during Pride Month, he made the official announcement. Plenty of Twitter fans have voiced their support and excitement while others started suggesting he should be canceled for coming out.

Hopefully he’ll continue to ride high and brush off the haters.

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'Spider-Man: Far From Home' Just Made Half a Billion Dollars

Yes, billion.

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Black man in Florida dies after a pack of pit bulls viciously bit him over 100 times

An autopsy revealed that a Florida man, who was mauled by a pack of pit bull dogs, was likely killed after they bit him more than 100 times all over his body.

Detroit concert fights reverse racism claims after charging white people more money for tickets

The vicious attack on 45-year-old Melvin Olds Jr., happened on July 4 in a wooded area behind a home, WFLA reports.

According to the Highlands County Sheriff’s Office, the stray pack of dogs are likely responsible for the man’s brutal death and the six pit bull mixes were found after authorities and animal services laid out traps to capture them.

According to reports, Olds’ took a shortcut home and wandered through the woods before the attack.

“I thought a dog was a man’s best friend,” his mother Cynthia Hill, told the outlet about the father of five.

“He was a good person, a good man. Just so hurt, deeply because it’s so unexpected.’

Starbucks apologizes after Arizona cops were asked to leave shop for making customer feel “unsafe”

The family has set-up a GoFundMe to help with Olds’ funeral costs.

The sheriff’s office continues to try to identify who the dogs belong to.

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Tennis player who criticized Serena Williams for not knowing who the number one women’s tennis player is should take a seat

A former Australian tennis star Sam Groth took issue with how tennis icon Serena Williams reacted to learning about the new number-one woman tennis player.

And he had the audacity to criticize her and offer suggestions on what she should have said.

Um… No thanks, Sammy.

Starbucks apologizes after Arizona cops were asked to leave shop for making customer feel “unsafe”

Williams who has battled against people telling her what she should wear on court when she sported a medical catsuit, and dealt with criticism when she argued with a ref during the U.S. Open women’s final last year, is once again in the crosshairs of opinionated white folks like Groth who apparently feel like its his duty to nit-pick her comments.

Groth wrote a column in the Herald Sun slamming Williams for being unaware that Ash Barty claimed the top spot as the new number one women’s tennis player.

Williams said she had no idea “what he’s talking about,” when asked about Barty’s seeded status.

“I’m happy she’s no. 1. I don’t know anyone that isn’t,” she said.

Groth took Williams response as shade.

“You saw the footage and the way she reacted to the initial question,” Groth said.

“This is 100 per cent my opinion and I’ll stand by it. If you’re an icon of your sport and you have the chance to pump up the future of the sport, the current world No.1…

“Whether Serena knew or not, that reaction and to call Ash ‘nice’ and ‘cute’; she has the chance to say Ash was a fantastic tennis player, she’s a great person for the sport, but she didn’t.

“She called her ‘nice’ and ‘cute’ and didn’t acknowledge that she was the best player in the world, and I thought that honestly was pretty condescending.”

It didn’t matter to Groth that Williams did compliment Barty saying she respects her game.

“I’ve always from the day I played her in Australia had a tremendous amount of respect for her game,” Williams said.

Detroit concert fights reverse racism claims after charging white people more money for tickets

“I just thought she’s just a beautiful player. She has great technique. I love that.

“I’ve seen her play a lot recently, too. Like I always say, she’s just someone in the locker room that you just always root for.

Clearly Sammy has too much time on his hands.

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Network claps back on ‘Poor Unfortunate Souls’ big mad over Halle Bailey’s casting in ‘The Little Mermaid’

As racists collectively pull their hair out in anger after Disney named a Black woman, singer and actress Halle Bailey, as Ariel in the upcoming Little Mermaid, a flood of support has been streaming in backing their casting choice.

Halle Bailey will play Ariel in Disney’s live-action remake of ‘The Little Mermaid’

Disney announced that one half of the Chloe x Halle singing duo would be cast in their live-action remake, which sent the internet in a frenzy praising the pick of Black woman, while others slammed the company for opting for a woman of color and promised to protest the movie.

Bailey assumes a role which originally featured a white red-headed character from the 1989 animated film, which has caused people to boil in anger about a fictional cartoon about a fictional creature.

The ridiculous outrage even promoted a petition #NotMyAriel and several racist Facebook groups even popped up, posting memes criticizing Black people with repulsive comments like “why would a Black person be given a role to swim when Black people can’t swim.”

Disney’s Freeform channel which airs the hit show Grown-ish, starring Bailey, her sister Chloe and Yara Shahidi, posted a response to her haters titled: “An open letter to the Poor, Unfortunate Souls” to explain how silly the angry reaction to the casting is, PEOPLE reports.

“Yes. The original author of The Little Mermaid was Danish. Ariel…is a mermaid. She lives in an underwater kingdom in international waters and can legit swim wherever she wants (even though that often upsets King Triton, absolute zaddy),” the post read. “But for the sake of argument, let’s say that Ariel, too, is Danish.”

“Danish mermaids can be black because Danish *people* can be black,” the letter continued. “Ariel can sneak up to the surface at any time with her pals Scuttle and the *ahem* Jamaican crab Sebastian (sorry, Flounder!) and keep that bronze base tight. Black Danish people, and this mer-folk, can also *genetically* (!!!) have red hair.”

Starbucks apologizes after Arizona cops were asked to leave shop for making customer feel “unsafe”

And to boot, Freeform had to take it there to remind folks that after all, this is all based on a fake concept of a mermaid.

“But spoiler alert – bring it back to the top – the character of Ariel is a work of fiction,” the network continued. “So after all this is said and done, and you still cannot get past the idea that choosing the incredible, sensational, highly-talented, gorgeous Halle Bailey is anything other than the INSPIRED casting that it is because she ‘doesn’t look like the cartoon one,’ oh boy, do I have some news for you…about you.”

Bailey on the other had hasn’t said anything about the hateful comments but on Wednesday when Disney made the initial announcement, she did post about the joy of being cast in the role.

“Dream come true…,” she tweeted.

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Innocent teen murdered by white man who says rap music made him feel ‘unsafe”

It’s a story that eerily sounds familiar. One that has you asking yourself how could this possibly have happened again. Elijah El-Amin, 17, was making a stop at the gas station in Peoria, Arizona after finishing his work shift when he became the target of a hate-filled attack last Thursday.

Police say 27-year-old Michael Paul Adams confessed to killing the teenager because he was playing rap music in his car and it made him feel “unsafe,” reports AZCentral.

According to police reports, Adams approached the teen inside the store at 1:42am stabbed him and then slit his throat with a pocketknife.

Adams, who had just been released from prison two days before, told police that “rap music made him feel unsafe because in the past, he was attacked by people who listened to that music genre,” according to court documents.

Police say Adams expressed he “needed to be proactive than reactive and protect himself and the community from the victim” even though El-Amin did nothing to threaten him.

The story brings back memories of the 2012 murder of Jordan Davis when 45-year old Michael Dunn shot into a car carrying Davis and several of his friends because of the volume of their music. Jordan Davis died on the scene while Dunn has since been sentenced to life without parole.

According to AZfamily.com, Adams attorney Jacie Cotterell is already mounting a defense that he committed the act due to mental illness, but the Arizona Department of Corrections has issued a statement indicating that Adams had no prior history of mental illness:

“Prior to his release, inmate Adams was provided contact information for services in the community such as continuing care, housing, welfare as well as other community resources….The tragic death is terrible, and Mr. Adams will have to answer for his alleged actions.”

Elijah El-Amin was a student at Apollo High School who was said to have loved rap music for the ways it encouraged and related to him.

Bail for Adams has been set at $1 million.

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MIT.nano announces founding members of its corporate consortium

MIT.nano has announced that 11 companies have joined the facility’s consortium as founding members. Drawn from a variety of industries, the founding members are leaders in the development of systems, materials, and technologies for government, business, and consumers around the world.

Since MIT.nano’s official opening in October 2018, a significant effort has been underway to prepare the building’s facilities to support nanoscale researchers from departments, labs, and centers across the campus. The formation of the corporate consortium is an important step in this effort, says Vladimir Bulović, the founding faculty director of MIT.nano.

“Although our founding members come from different industries, they join MIT.nano in common cause: to harness the power of nanotechnology in service to humanity’s greatest challenges,” says Bulović, who is also the Fariborz Maseeh (1990) Chair in Emerging Technology. “We’re proud to have this group of visionary companies in the MIT.nano consortium. Their counsel, collaboration, and leadership will help MIT.nano fulfill its potential to build a better world.”  

Companies that join the MIT.nano Consortium will help guide technical pursuits at MIT in two ways. First, their expertise in specific industries and global markets makes them invaluable advisors on real-world challenges and how to deliver solutions at scale. Second, as leading suppliers of advanced tools and processes for industry, research, and manufacturing, the member companies will be able to inform the selection of the tool sets and technologies that are installed in MIT.nano to support the interests of its users.

In return, the member companies benefit from an ongoing relationship with MIT.nano. A primary advantage is early awareness of innovative technologies emerging from MIT, such as through MIT.nano seminars and events. Members could translate this awareness into formal research collaborations with faculty, company-specific seminars, support for MIT startups, and other opportunities.

Member companies may also place an employee on campus as a visiting scientist, embedding this individual in a research group as an intellectual home to understand and explore MIT. And consortium members form natural and extensive connections to emerging MIT talent, enhancing their ability to attract and hire graduating students and postdoctoral associates.

Companies who joined the MIT.nano Consortium, or who began the conversation to do so, prior to January 2019 are recognized as founding members. MIT.nano is honored to recognize the following companies as founding members:

  • Agilent Technologies, specializing in life sciences, diagnostics, and applied chemical markets. The company provides analytical, clinical, and academic laboratories worldwide with instruments, software, services, consumables, applications, expertise, and workflow solutions with a focus on six key market areas: food, environment and forensics, pharmaceutical, diagnostics, chemical and energy, and research.
  • Analog Devices (ADI) is a provider of high-performance analog, mixed-signal, and digital signal processing solutions that bridge the physical and digital domains. More than 100,000 customers worldwide — across an array of industries including instrumentation, automation, communications, health care, and automotive domains — rely on ADI for its portfolio of products and technologies that sense, measure, power, connect, interpret, and secure.
  • Dow, a materials science company with technology, asset integration, scale, and competitive capabilities that enable it to address complex global issues. Dow’s portfolio of performance materials, industrial intermediates, and plastics businesses deliver a range of differentiated technology-based products and solutions for customers in high-growth markets such as packaging, infrastructure, and consumer care.
  • Draper, a not-for-profit engineering innovation company that focuses on the design, development, and deployment of advanced technological solutions, providing engineering expertise to government, industry, and academia in a myriad of domains including national security, strategic systems, commercial sectors, and space.
  • DSM, a global purpose-led, science-based company active in nutrition, health, and sustainable living. DSM delivers innovative solutions for human nutrition, animal nutrition, personal care and aroma, medical devices, green products and applications, and new mobility and connectivity.
  • Edwards, with a 100-year history specializing in the design, manufacture, and support of sophisticated vacuum system products, abatement solutions, and related services. Edwards products enable the discovery, development and manufacture of things that leverage the nanoscale, as well as a range of industrial processes, scientific instruments, and R&D applications.
  • IBM Researchone of the world’s largest corporate research labs with more than 3,000 researchers in 12 labs located across six continents. IBM Research pioneers promising and disruptive technologies that will transform industries and society, including the future of artificial intelligence, hybrid cloud, and quantum computing.
  • Lam Research, an enabler of the semiconductor industry whose wafer fabrication equipment and services allow chipmakers to build smaller, faster, and better-performing electronic devices. Today, nearly every advanced chip is built with Lam technology.
  • NCSOFT, one of the largest gaming companies in the world and creator of many of the most prominent multiplayer online video games to date. It engages hundreds of millions of players daily, worldwide, with an extensive portfolio of game franchises such as Lineage, AION, Blade & Soul, and Guild Wars.
  • NEC, a global provider of information and communications technology services, integrating IT and network technologies for industry, government, and individual customers through innovative software, applications, development tools, and services.
  • Waters, a specialty measurement company, has pioneered chromatography, mass spectrometry, and thermal analysis innovations serving the life, materials, and food sciences for more than 60 years. 

“MIT.nano will continue to welcome new companies and other organizations to the consortium, fulfilling its mission to search for a broader understanding of the most pressing issues our community of researchers and discoverers should address,” says Bulović. “Engagement, advice, and collaboration with industry leaders boost MIT.nano's ability to deliver the most pertinent solutions to the world."

For more details, visit the MIT.nano Consortium page.



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A Global Pollution Observatory Hunts for Hidden Killers

The first worldwide effort to measure all forms of pollution is calculating staggering numbers on its human toll.

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The New App Gem Takes a Unique Approach to News Recommendations

In an attempt to combat the echo-chamber effect of algorithm-driven news apps, the new iOS app Gem tries something new.

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Starbucks apologizes after Arizona cops were asked to leave shop for making customer feel “unsafe”

Starbucks is in embroiled in yet another discrimination claim, but this time it’s six Arizona police officers who are crying foul after they were asked to leave because a customer complained of not feeling safe in their presence.

Detroit concert fights reverse racism claims after charging white people more money for tickets

Now the coffee company, which has battled a barrage of discrimination claims, has apologized saying that it was an “unacceptable” suggestion by a barista to ask the cops to either move out of the line of sight of the griping customer or leave, USA Today reports.

“This treatment of public safety workers could not be more disheartening,” the Tempe Officers Association said. “While the barista was polite, making such a request at all was offensive. Unfortunately, such treatment has become all too common in 2019.”

Rossann Williams, a vice president at the coffee chain, apologized for the treatment of the officers and released this statement.

“When those officers entered the store and a customer raised a concern over their presence, they should have been welcomed and treated with dignity and the utmost respect by our partners (employees),” Williams said in a statement. “Instead, they were made to feel unwelcome and disrespected, which is completely unacceptable.”

Schools still struggling with how to teach about slavery

The situation sparked the hashtag #DumpStarbucks with people showing both support for the Starbucks barista for asking the cops to leave and support for the police.

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This Summer's Weird Weather Is the Death of Predictability

Extreme heat, hailstorms, and monstrous floods have made for an intense summer. But there's still more seasonal strangeness to come.

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Caster Semenya on challenging the IAAF rules

The athlete says she'll continue to challenge IAAF rules on testosterone levels in female athletes.

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Detroit concert fights reverse racism claims after charging white people more money for tickets

A music festival in Detroit is fighting off claims of reverse racism after selling higher priced tickets to white concertgoers while charging people of color a fraction of the price to attend.

Texas teen who was denied job at Six Flags for his hair could sign with modeling agency

A biracial hip-hop artist planning to play the AfroFuture Fest called out the event and threatened to pullout and Eventbrite made a move to take down the whole event after organizers posted the controversial price structure.

People of color were charged only $20 at attend the Aug. 3 event while others were charged the full price of $40 with the explanation that they were leveling the playing field for people in marginalized communities.

“Our ticket structure was built to ensure that the most marginalized communities (people of color) are provided with an equitable chance at enjoying events in their own community (black Detroit),” the organizers said according to the festival’s Eventbrite page. “Affording joy and pleasure is unfortunately still a privilege in our society for POC and we believe everyone should have access to receiving such.”

“We’ve seen too many times orgasmic events happening in Detroit and other POC-populated cities, and what consistently happens is people outside of the community benefiting most from affordable ticket prices because of their proximity to wealth,” the Eventbrite page continued. “This cycle disproportionately displaces black and brown people from enjoying entertainment in their own communities.”

The rapper Tiny Jag, who is biracial, pulled out of the event saying her grandmother is white and she no longer supported the festival.

“A lot of the songs that I perform are from my first project called Polly – that is my grandmother’s name,” said Tiny Jag, whose born name is Jillian Graham, told the Detroit Metro Times.

“How do you want me to come to a performance and perform these songs off a mixtape that is titled after this white woman that you would have charged double to get in here? Like, it’s just outrageous from so many different angles.”

Schools still struggling with how to teach about slavery

Eventbrite also took issue with the organizers and the explanation they gave and said they would cancel the festival’s page if they didn’t make the pricing equal across the field.

“Our mission is to bring the world together through live experiences,” Eventbrite told The Independent. “We strive to provide a platform that enables people to gather for their chosen purpose, and that reflects diverse viewpoints, so long as they don’t violate our terms.”

Now the festival has charged $20 to all potential concertgoers with a suggested donation to people of color.

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Schools still struggling with how to teach about slavery

“They made me a slave today.”

Aneka Burton still remembers the way her then 10-year-old son, Nikko, who is black, recounted his experience to his grandfather after school one day.

It was 2011. But Burton believes the classroom exercise in which Nikko’s classmates were encouraged to examine and pretend to bid on each other during a history lesson continues to affect his life, even now as an 18-year-old high school graduate.

“He tries to act like it didn’t bother him, but I really think it changed him,” the Gahanna, Ohio, mother said.

It’s those memories that leave her shaking her head years later as reports about mock slave auctions continue to emerge, reminders that schools are still struggling with how to teach about slavery and its impacts.

There are no national standards on how to teach about slavery, although it is often recommended as a topic in curriculum at the state and local levels, according to Lawrence Paska, executive director of the National Council for the Social Studies. The guidance leaves specific lessons up to schools and teachers, who on several occasions have caused offense with attempts to bring history to life.

An investigation by New York Attorney General Letitia James found in May that a mock “slave auction” that singled out black students at the private Chapel School in Westchester County had a profoundly negative effect on all involved students.

“Lessons designed to separate children on the basis of race have no place in New York classrooms, or in classrooms throughout this country,” James said.

Other recent examples include an “Escaping Slavery” game that gave North Carolina fourth-graders a freedom punch card that read: “If your group runs into trouble four times, you will be severely punished and sent back to the plantation to work as a slave.” Families also criticized a Virginia obstacle course intended to replicate the underground railroad, navigated by third-, fourth- and fifth-graders pretending to be runaway slaves.

“Teaching about slavery is hard,” summarized a 2018 report from the Southern Poverty Law Center, which surveyed more than 1,700 social studies teachers and analyzed textbooks. “No national consensus exists on how to teach about slavery, and there is little leadership. … It is time to change this state of affairs.”

Dozens of teachers surveyed reported simulations as their favorite lessons when teaching about slavery, according to the report, though its authors and others said such re-enactments do more harm than good.

At the Chapel School, the fifth-grade teacher who led the mock auction in March was fired. The school agreed to hire a diversity officer and change its discipline practices after parents complained that black students were lined up against a wall wearing imaginary shackles and “sold” to their white peers.

Nicole Dayes complained about a similar exercise in her son’s fourth-grade class in upstate New York’s Watertown City School District in May after he described it to her.

“His whole demeanor changed,” Dayes said. “It was kind of somber and uncomfortable … It took me a while to really comprehend what he was saying to me.”

The district said in a statement the teacher had been placed on administrative leave. Superintendent Patricia LaBarr said the district has since sought expert guidance on diversity, inclusion and equity as it reviews its policies and programs.

New York’s social studies curriculum is typical in that it outlines grade-level concepts — fourth-grade students “will examine life as a slave in New York state,” for example — but does not provide specific lessons.

Ill-conceived lessons happen enough that advocates like Teaching Tolerance, a project of the Southern Poverty Law Center, offer lesson plans with suggestions for texts and discussion. Teaching Tolerance plans to publish a framework for teaching about slavery in grades kindergarten through five in August.

“It’s never OK to recreate painful oppressive events, even in the name of education,” said Mara Sapon-Shevin, a professor of inclusive education at Syracuse University, who said teachers risk harming their students’ sense of belonging, safety and inclusion. “One would never simulate an Indian massacre or having Jews march into the ovens.”

Nor should teachers “gamify” painful history, Teaching Tolerance Director Maureen Costello said, citing exercises like having students compete to remove seeds from cotton.

“Often it’s done because it’s kind of traditional, maybe they had it when they were in school or they’ve heard about another teacher who did it and they think this is a great idea: It gets the kids out of their seats, they’ll be active,” Costello said.

In one example, a 10-year-old black child was told by a white student, “You are my slave,” in 2017 when a school near Kennesaw Mountain in Georgia invited fifth-graders to dress up as characters from the Civil War, according to the black child’s parent, Corrie Davis.

For generations, teachers have wrestled with lessons on discrimination, perhaps none more famously than Jane Elliott , who led a “blue eyes-brown eyes” exercise in her Riceville, Iowa, classroom in response to the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968.

Elliott separated her third-grade class of white students by eye color and unapologetically treated one group as superior, calling them smarter and rewarding them with extra recess and other perks while demeaning the other group. She flipped the roles the following school day.

She said in an interview she has been through the same backlash as the New York teachers, and she stands by her exercise, which she credits with boosting students’ academic performance.

“Every student in my classroom who went through that exercise performed at a higher level academically than they ever had before because they found out the day they were on the top in that exercise how really smart they were,” she said.

Aneka Burton, whose son did not want to be interviewed, said she eventually pulled Nikko out of the school district, when it seemed he was being singled out for discipline and passed over for sports, and she was flooded with hate mail for making the issue public. The experience drastically altered his school experience, she said.

The school principal called to apologize.

“They were able to touch and feel on the slaves. It was really crazy,” she said. “Why would you think that’s OK to do to a child?”

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Kamala Harris on race and electability in 2020

Kamala Harris can’t forget the older black woman she met in Iowa while campaigning for Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama before the state’s 2008 caucus.

“I remember her saying to me, ‘They’re not going to let him win,'” Harris recalled. “She did not want to go to the caucuses. She didn’t want to be disappointed.”

For Harris, it was a revealing moment, one she says illustrated the limitations many Americans, including black Americans, place on who is considered electable for the nation’s highest office.

Twelve years later, with American politics roiled by issues of race and gender, it’s Harris asking Americans to expand their definition of electability once again.

“Sometimes it takes a while to get people to see that this is possible,” Harris said in an interview with The Associated Press in which she discussed race and her standing as the most viable black woman to seek a major party’s presidential nomination.

The 54-year-old freshman senator from California is unabashedly and unapologetically embracing that role. She’s increasingly weaving her personal history into her campaign, including in a searing debate exchange last month with former Vice President Joe Biden over school busing. Her campaign was ready for the moment, quickly tweeting a photograph of Harris as a pig-tailed child, then selling T-shirts bearing the image.

As her place in the race has strengthened, Harris has found herself the target of smears about her citizenship and ethnicity, including by one of President Donald Trump’s sons, that echo the same lies and accusations Trump and others raised about Obama, the country’s first black president.

To Harris, it’s the cost of trying to break through long-standing barriers.

“When you break things, you get hurt, you bleed, you get cut,” Harris said. “When I made the decision to run, I fully appreciated that it will not be easy. But I know if I’m not on the stage, there’s a certain voice that will not be present on that stage. Knowing that there is a perspective, there is a life experience, there is a vision that must be heard and seen and present on that stage, and that I have an ability to do that.”

Harris, the daughter of an Indian American mother and Jamaican American father , entered the 2020 race with seemingly boundless potential: a compelling personal story and polished political pedigree; a prosecutor’s skill at taking on Trump’s record; and the prospect of drawing significant voting support from black women, who are the backbone of the party.

But the opening months of Harris’ campaign have been uneven. She’s faced questions from liberals about her record as a prosecutor in California and has been criticized for appearing cautious and guarded. Her fundraising in the second quarter significantly lagged Biden and Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana.

Harris has gained ground recently due to her debate performance, particularly her exchange over race with Biden. She condemned Biden for his comments about working with segregationists in his early years as a Delaware senator and for opposing federally mandated school busing in the 1970s, powerfully explaining that she was bused as a child. Biden appeared taken aback, and later said he wasn’t prepared for Harris’ attack.
Harris suggested he should have been.

“People want to ask what was going on on that stage. I was not going to stand there and let people rewrite history,” she said. “We can’t write the next chapter without remembering what was in the last chapter. This is not manufactured. It’s something that’s very much a part of my identity.”

The moment was striking, and not just because it dented Biden’s standing as a front-runner.

Harris’ approach and her willingness to raise on her own the deep scars of America’s history with race marked a shift from Obama’s first campaign, when he often campaigned as an almost post-racial figure. His most prominent comments on race as a candidate came when his hand was forced and questions were raised about his controversial pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright. Some Obama advisers worried at the time that the matter might sink his candidacy.

Obama, of course, went on to win two terms in the White House. But his victories did not quell America’s racial tensions; if anything, they flared anew during his tenure and have worsened under Trump’s presidency.

Harris has faced some of the same questions about her race and citizenship as Obama, prompting her rival campaigns to quickly leap to her defense, but also stirring doubts about whether America is really ready to elect a black woman.

“She still has a lot more work to do assuring the American people,” said Linda Walters, a 55-year-old from Rock Hill, South Carolina, pointing to the questions about Harris’ background as proof. “It’s Barack all over again. Kamala is going to have to relieve some people of their fear.”

Harris acknowledged the sting of such comments, saying there are moments in the race that have been “very painful.”

“For me, it’s an affirmation of what a lot of us know, which is that there’s still a lot of educating to do about who we are,” she said, adding that she is loath to constantly be in position of doing that educating herself. “In my moments of fatigue with it all, I’m like, ‘Look, I’m not running to be a history professor.'”

Jill Louis, a Dallas attorney who was Harris’ sorority sister at Howard University, said questions about her electability say more about voters than Harris as a candidate.
“When women and people of color are ready to represent themselves, all they have to do is vote and it happens,” Louis said. “People are holding themselves back. The obstacle is people’s own disbelief in their own power.”

Last month, Harris stepped up her campaign outreach to black voters, drawing particularly on her ties as a Howard graduate to historically black colleges and the country’s influential nine black fraternities and sororities. Privately, some of her advisers also acknowledge that, like with Obama in 2008, some black voters will be watching to see if Harris can win over enough white Americans in early primary contests to prove her viability as a candidate.
Harris said she knows the skepticism about her candidacy, and the country’s willingness to embrace it, exist.

“There are always going to be doubters. That’s not new to me,” she said.
After her words hung in the air, the question came: “So how do you do it?”
“You win,” she said, nodding her head. “You win.”

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Outcry over police abusing Black family accused of shoplifting pushes Phoenix to roll out body cameras for officers

A Phoenix police officer yelled obscenities and forced an unarmed black man suspected of shoplifting up against a patrol car. Another aimed his gun at the man’s pregnant fiancee, ordering her out of the car with the couple’s two small children.

Dramatic video of the confrontation stirred outcry last month, and it came from bystanders’ cellphones rather than from officer-worn body cameras.

The police weren’t wearing them.

Although body-worn cameras are becoming a police standard nationwide, Phoenix was among the last big departments to adopt their widespread use. Leaders of Phoenix, the fifth-largest U.S. city with about 1.6 million people, quickly moved to fix that after the video emerged.

“Every single precinct will have body-worn cameras by August,” Mayor Kate Gallego said after the May confrontation she called “completely inappropriate and clearly unprofessional.”

The couple said their 4-year-old daughter took a doll from a store without their knowledge and rejected police suggestions they stole, too. No charges were filed. The couple has filed a $10 million legal claim against the city, alleging civil rights violations.

The department has had several hundred cameras for years, but it wasn’t until February that city leaders approved $5 million to buy and maintain 2,000 devices for a force approaching 3,000 officers. About 950 cameras were being distributed this week.

The purchase followed a city-commissioned National Police Foundation study that says Phoenix police had more officer-involved shootings than any other U.S. department last year. A separate database that tracks fatal shootings by police showed Phoenix officers also killed more people than any other agency in 2018.

The use of body cameras has burgeoned over the past decade following several high-profile killings of black people by mostly white officers in places like Ferguson, Missouri, and Baltimore.

When a Missouri grand jury in 2014 decided not to charge a white officer who fatally shot unarmed African American 18-year-old Michael Brown, his family called for police nationwide to use cameras.

Cameras are supposed to promote accountability and transparency and reduce officers’ use of force. A survey by the Washington-based Police Executive Research Forum says U.S. law enforcement agencies overwhelmingly support using them. A third now use cameras and nearly 47% plan to adopt them.

“When body-worn cameras first came out, there was some trepidation among officers that use of cameras would have unintended consequences,” said Chuck Wexler, the group’s executive director. “The reality is working cops now feel it is an essential part of defending what they do.”

The New York Police Department, the largest in the U.S., completed its rollout of some 20,000 body cameras early this year.

Around the same time, Phoenix police said they would speed up camera distribution after the study said they opened fire more than any other department last year.
“In 2018, Phoenix police faced more subjects armed with guns (or simulated guns) than in years past, and were no more likely to shoot at an unarmed subject than in years past,” the National Police Foundation report said.

It’s legal to carry a gun in plain sight in Arizona. The study said Phoenix had 44 police-involved shootings in 2018, including 23 that were fatal. That compared with 21 total shootings in 2017, 25 in 2016 and 17 in 2015.

The study referenced the Washington Post’s “Fatal Force” database, showing Phoenix far outpaced other departments in deadly shootings by police. No other agency registered more than 14 last year. New York City had four.

The findings weren’t surprising to many Hispanics and other minorities in the Phoenix area, who remain wary of law enforcement because of past racial profiling under Sheriff Joe Arpaio. He was convicted of contempt of court two years ago for ignoring a 2011 order to stop patrols targeting Hispanics, then pardoned by President Donald Trump.

Police departments in Phoenix and a handful of other cities also are investigating a database that appears to catalog thousands of social media posts by active-duty and former officers disparaging Muslims, black people, transgender people and others.

Phoenix Police Chief Jeri Williams, a black woman, called the postings “embarrassing and disturbing.”

The recent video of the black couple left many in Phoenix’s communities of color clamoring to describe their own encounters, revealing distrust, fear and resentment of police. They have called for wider use of body cameras and an independent review board to let residents weigh in on police behavior.

City leaders this week discussed a civilian review board, a move long opposed by the powerful police union.

The Phoenix Law Enforcement Association views body cameras as a valuable tool, though they can’t show “the totality of any situation,” including nuances of body language, union president Britt London said.

Jody David Armour, a University of Southern California professor of law and criminology, said body-worn cameras “have done quite a bit of good” but only work with strictly enforced requirements.

There have been complaints of officers not keeping their cameras rolling, including an Albuquerque, New Mexico, officer fired in 2014 for repeatedly failing to turn on the device, including the night he shot and killed a 19-year-old woman.

South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg briefly pulled himself from the presidential campaign trail last month after the fatal shooting of a black man by a police officer in his city. An investigation was launched into why the officer’s body cam was not recording and the city is considering buying more cameras for the force.

But even when used correctly, “technology is not a substitute for building trust,” said Mary D. Fan, a professor at the University of Washington School of Law and author of “Camera Power: Proof, Policing, Privacy and Audiovisual Big Data.”

The experts say both sides can benefit from cameras, which are meant to push police and the public to behave better because they know they are being recorded.

The devices bring contested police actions to light, including showing an officer in the Phoenix suburb of Tempe shooting a 14-year-old burglary suspect as he ran away in January.

Another video shown to media but not publicly released shows the boy on the ground, a fake gun under his arm.

“He’s just a (expletive) kid,” Officer Joseph Jaen said. “It’s just a (expletive) toy gun.”

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The Meat-Allergy Tick Also Carries a Mystery Killer Virus

A tick best known for making people allergic to red meat can also infect its victims with the deadly Bourbon virus.

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