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Monday, July 22, 2019

Microfluidics device helps diagnose sepsis in minutes

A novel sensor designed by MIT researchers could dramatically accelerate the process of diagnosing sepsis, a leading cause of death in U.S. hospitals that kills nearly 250,000 patients annually.

Sepsis occurs when the body’s immune response to infection triggers an inflammation chain reaction throughout the body, causing high heart rate, high fever, shortness of breath, and other issues. If left unchecked, it can lead to septic shock, where blood pressure falls and organs shut down. To diagnose sepsis, doctors traditionally rely on various diagnostic tools, including vital signs, blood tests, and other imaging and lab tests.

In recent years, researchers have found protein biomarkers in the blood that are early indicators of sepsis. One promising candidate is interleukin-6 (IL-6), a protein produced in response to inflammation. In sepsis patients, IL-6 levels can rise hours before other symptoms begin to show. But even at these elevated levels, the concentration of this protein in the blood is too low overall for traditional assay devices to detect it quickly.

In a paper being presented this week at the Engineering in Medicine and Biology Conference, MIT researchers describe a microfluidics-based system that automatically detects clinically significant levels of IL-6 for sepsis diagnosis in about 25 minutes, using less than a finger prick of blood.

In one microfluidic channel, microbeads laced with antibodies mix with a blood sample to capture the IL-6 biomarker. In another channel, only beads containing the biomarker attach to an electrode. Running voltage through the electrode produces an electrical signal for each biomarker-laced bead, which is then converted into the biomarker concentration level.

“For an acute disease, such as sepsis, which progresses very rapidly and can be life-threatening, it’s helpful to have a system that rapidly measures these nonabundant biomarkers,” says first author Dan Wu, a PhD student in the Department of Mechanical Engineering. “You can also frequently monitor the disease as it progresses.”

Joining Wu on the paper is Joel Voldman, a professor and associate head of the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, co-director of the Medical Electronic Device Realization Center, and a principal investigator in the Research Laboratory of Electronics and the Microsystems Technology Laboratories.

Integrated, automated design

Traditional assays that detect protein biomarkers are bulky, expensive machines relegated to labs that require about a milliliter of blood and produce results in hours. In recent years, portable “point-of-care” systems have been developed that use microliters of blood to get similar results in about 30 minutes.

But point-of-care systems can be very expensive since most use pricey optical components to detect the biomarkers. They also capture only a small number of proteins, many of which are among the more abundant ones in blood. Any efforts to decrease the price, shrink down components, or increase protein ranges negatively impacts their sensitivity.

In their work, the researchers wanted to shrink components of the magnetic-bead-based assay, which is often used in labs, onto an automated microfluidics device that’s roughly several square centimeters. That required manipulating beads in micron-sized channels and fabricating a device in the Microsystems Technology Laboratory that automated the movement of fluids.

The beads are coated with an antibody that attracts IL-6, as well as a catalyzing enzyme called horseradish peroxidase. The beads and blood sample are injected into the device, entering into an “analyte-capture zone,” which is basically a loop. Along the loop is a peristaltic pump — commonly used for controlling liquids — with valves automatically controlled by an external circuit. Opening and closing the valves in specific sequences circulates the blood and beads to mix together. After about 10 minutes, the IL-6 proteins have bound to the antibodies on the beads.

Automatically reconfiguring the valves at that time forces the mixture into a smaller loop, called the “detection zone,” where they stay trapped. A tiny magnet collects the beads for a brief wash before releasing them around the loop. After about 10 minutes, many beads have stuck on an electrode coated with a separate antibody that attracts IL-6. At that time, a solution flows into the loop and washes the untethered beads, while the ones with IL-6 protein remain on the electrode.

The solution carries a specific molecule that reacts to the horseradish enzyme to create a compound that responds to electricity. When a voltage is applied to the solution, each remaining bead creates a small current. A common chemistry technique called “amperometry” converts that current into a readable signal. The device counts the signals and calculates the concentration of IL-6.

“On their end, doctors just load in a blood sample using a pipette. Then, they press a button and 25 minutes later they know the IL-6 concentration,” Wu says.

The device uses about 5 microliters of blood, which is about a quarter the volume of blood drawn from a finger prick and a fraction of the 100 microliters required to detect protein biomarkers in lab-based assays. The device captures IL-6 concentrations as low as 16 picograms per milliliter, which is below the concentrations that signal sepsis, meaning the device is sensitive enough to provide clinically relevant detection.

A general platform

The current design has eight separate microfluidics channels to measure as many different biomarkers or blood samples in parallel. Different antibodies and enzymes can be used in separate channels to detect different biomarkers, or different antibodies can be used in the same channel to detect several biomarkers simultaneously.

Next, the researchers plan to create a panel of important sepsis biomarkers for the device to capture, including interleukin-6, interleukin-8, C-reactive protein, and procalcitonin. But there’s really no limit to how many different biomarkers the device can measure, for any disease, Wu says. Notably, more than 200 protein biomarkers for various diseases and conditions have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

“This is a very general platform,” Wu says. “If you want to increase the device’s physical footprint, you can scale up and design more channels to detect as many biomarkers as you want.”

The work was funded by Analog Devices, Maxim Integrated, and the Novartis Institutes of Biomedical Research.



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'Terrifying prospect' of resistant malaria spreading

Drug-resistant malaria parasites have moved from Cambodia to Laos, Thailand and Vietnam.

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#ShoppingWhile Black: Georgia State Rep holds press conference to dispute #hatehoax claims she changed story about white man’s “go back to where you came from” attack

Georgia State Rep. Erica Thomas held a press conference at the State Capitol to stand by her story and dispute claims that she has ‘backtracked’ on blaming a white man for telling her to “go back to where she came from.”

Pregnant Black Georgia lawmaker confronts racist who told her ‘go back where she came from’

Over the weekend Thomas’ tearful video about a terrifying encounter she had with a Eric Sparkes in Publix went viral. She reported that the man confronted her and called her a bitch in front of her daughter for being in the 10-items-or-less line with 15 items. She says he then told her that she should go back to where she came from.

“Today I’m here to be very clear about what happened Friday: I want to make sure that everyone knows I’m not backtracking on my statement or retracting anything I said,” said Thomas flanked by her attorney Gerald Griggs and others supporting her.

“I was embarrassed. I was scared for my life. He left the grocery store and came back in to tell me a piece of his mind. … I’m fearing for my life about what I’ve seen all over this country,” Thomas said at the press conference.

Both sides, however, are doubling down on their position of who took matters too far in the checkout line dispute. The man confronted Thomas at a previous press conference and denied saying “go back where you came from” although he admitted on camera that he called the pregnant politician a “lazy b****” in front of her daughter.

Although Thomas initially tweeted with certainly that Sparkes told her to “go back to where she came from,” many thought she waivered from that statement, which caused some concern and sparked the hashtag #HateHoax to trend on Twitter.

She previously said about Sparkes, “He said ‘go back,’ you know, those types of words,” she said prompting critics to question the accuracy of her comments. “I don’t want to say he said ‘go back to your country’ or ‘go back to where you came from’ but he was making those types of references is what I remember.”

During the press conference reiterated her sentiments that Sparkes made the racially insensitive statement.

On Monday, Thomas’ attorney Gerald A. Griggs, wrote on Twitter that “it’s time for all the facts to come out.”

“At no point should a Black pregnant mother be called a B in front of her child,” Griggs wrote on social media with the hashtags #IStandWithErica and “Not A #HateHoax.”

At the conference Griggs said he has asked Publix to release the video tape of the confrontation and that there are witnesses willing and ready to corroborate her story.

The bold way Mahershala Ali snagged Marvel’s ‘Blade’ Reboot

A Georgia republican has joined the #hatehoax chorus calling for Thomas to resign.

The post #ShoppingWhile Black: Georgia State Rep holds press conference to dispute #hatehoax claims she changed story about white man’s “go back to where you came from” attack appeared first on theGrio.



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Michelle Obama posts about diversity after Trump’s racist tweets attacking Democratic Congresswomen

Our Forever First Lady Michelle Obama kept it classy in a tweet on Friday which seemed to indirectly take aim at President Donald Trump’s racist attack against four Democratic congresswomen.

Donald Trump writes racist tweet about congresswomen of color

“What truly makes our country great is its diversity,” Obama begins in her tweet, CNN reports.

“I’ve seen that beauty in so many ways over the years. Whether we are born here or seek refuge here, there’s a place for us all. We must remember it’s not my America or your America. It’s our America.”

Obama joins a chorus of politicians who have chimed in to condemn Trump’s racist attacks against Democratic Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, telling them to “go back” to their countries.

However, three of the women were born in the US. Only Omar comes from Somalia.

That comment ignited a racist chant by Trump’s supporters at a rally in North Carolina days later as the audience yelled, “Send her back!” about Omar during the president’s speech.

Cory Booker calls out President Trump as ‘worse than a racist’

The post Michelle Obama posts about diversity after Trump’s racist tweets attacking Democratic Congresswomen appeared first on theGrio.



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New leadership for Bernard M. Gordon-MIT Engineering Leadership Program

Olivier de Weck, professor of aeronautics and astronautics and of engineering systems at MIT, has been named the new faculty co-director of the Bernard M. Gordon-MIT Engineering Leadership Program (GEL). He joins Reza Rahaman, who was appointed the Bernard M. Gordon-MIT Engineering Leadership Program industry co-director and senior lecturer on July 1, 2018.

“Professor de Weck has a longstanding commitment to engineering leadership, both as an educator and a researcher. I look forward to working with him and the GEL team as they continue to strengthen their outstanding undergraduate program and develop the new program for graduate students,” says Anantha Chandrakasan, dean of the MIT School of Engineering and the Vannevar Bush Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.

A leader in systems engineering, de Weck researches how complex human-made systems such as aircraft, spacecraft, automobiles, and infrastructures are designed, manufactured, and operated. By investigating their lifecycle properties, de Weck and members of his research group have developed a range of novel techniques broadly adopted by industry to maximize the value of these systems over time.

A fellow of the International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE), de Weck was honored with their Outstanding Service Award in 2018 for his work as editor-in-chief of Systems Engineering. He is also an associate fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AAIA), where he previously served as associate editor for the Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets and chair of the AIAA Space Logistics Technical Committee. De Weck is a past recipient of the Capers and Marion McDonald Award for Excellence in Mentoring and Advising from the MIT School of Engineering, and the Teaching with Digital Technology Award from the MIT Office of Open Learning.

A member of the MIT faculty since 2001, de Weck earned a BS in industrial engineering at ETH Zurich in 1993 and an MS and PhD in aerospace systems at MIT in 1999 and 2001. He previously served as associate head of the engineering systems division and as executive director of Production in the Innovation Economy (PIE) commission at MIT. He recently returned to campus after a two-year leave of absence at Airbus in Toulouse, France, where he served as senior vice president and was responsible for planning and roadmapping the group’s $1 billion research and technology portfolio.

Since the launch of GEL in 2007, de Weck has taught 16.669/6.914 (Project Engineering) — a popular bootcamp-style class offered during independent activities period. Besides learning how to better plan and execute engineering projects, the class has helped cohorts of students create a sense of community and belonging.

De Weck succeeds Joel Schindall, co-director for GEL since 2007 and the Bernard M. Gordon Professor of the Practice in electrical engineering and computer science. “Drawing on his many years of experience and success in industry, Joel has been an exceptional leader for the GEL program,” Chandrakasan says. “He has instilled the character and the skills that will enable our students to be both the thought leaders and the ‘do leaders’ of the future.”

Reza Rahaman earned a BEng in chemical engineering at Imperial College London in 1984 and an MS in chemical engineering practice and PhD in chemical engineering at MIT in 1985 and 1989.

Rahaman’s career in industry spanned nearly three decades across consumer packaged goods, pharmaceuticals, and agricultural chemicals. Before returning to MIT, he was the vice president of research, development, and innovation at the Clorox Company, where he guided new innovation strategies and coordinated technology roadmaps for 45 percent of the company’s portfolio. Rahaman also serves as vice chair of the board of directors for Out & Equal Workplace Advocates, the largest nonprofit dedicated to LGBTQ workplace equality in the world.

“Reza has deep expertise in leading large, highly matrixed organizations and spearheading complex technical projects to produce category-changing innovation,” says Chandrakasan. “His experience in industry, as well as his technical depth and inclusive leadership style, are a wonderful asset to our students. By imparting his knowledge, and guiding our students’ attitudes and thought processes, he is helping to create the next generation of exemplary leaders.”



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R. Kelly wants access to a computer to finish album while awaiting sex abuse trial

R. Kelly’s apparently got things to do and records to produce and is demanding access to a computer so he can finish his album despite being held in jail on sex abuse and child pornography charges.

R. Kelly to move to New York to face racketeering charges

The embattled R&B singer who is on lockdown in solitary confinement at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Chicago believes that he can fly above everyone else with this ridiculous request.

“He [Kelly] wants his computer so he can finish up the record album he has been working on,” his lawyer Steve Greenberg told The Chicago Sun-Times.

“My client needs to make money and he has been precluded from doing so because of his legal situation,” he said.

Greenberg said his client is doing OK while incarcerated.

“However, as disappointed as he [Kelly] was in being put in the hole last week, he has now been placed in a bigger cell in a special housing unit … a better situation in solitary at the Metropolitan Correctional Center,” added Greenberg.

‘The Wire’ star Sonja Sohn arrested on cocaine and other drug charges

And he said his string of girlfriends are getting processed so they can pay him a visit and others are trying to send him some gourmet food.

In addition to facing charges in Chicago, R. Kelly was arrested by the NYPD and Homeland Security Investigations in Chicago on July 11 on federal sex crimes charges.

He’s expected to be extradited to New York and charged in a 13-count indictment in Brooklyn federal court.

The singer’s lawyer, Nicole Blank Becker, told TMZ that when she visited him in federal prison, he told her his life would be in grave danger if he was kept with the general population.

The extradition hearing for the singer to be brought to Brooklyn to face the additional charges could reportedly occur sometime on or before Sept. 4, authorities told the New York Post.

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3Q: John Tirman on a new US human rights commission

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has launched a Commission on Unalienable Rights at the State Department. Human rights, he says, are no longer guided by the principles established by America’s founders and are unmooring America from the principles of liberal democracy. A moral foreign policy should be grounded in the definition of unalienable rights, writes Pompeo in an opinion piece in The Wall Street Journal. A serious debate on human rights is urgent, Pompeo argues, and compares the commission to the panel Eleanor Roosevelt convened in 1947, which resulted in the “Universal Declaration on Human Rights.”  

John Tirman, executive director and principal research scientist at MIT's Center for International Studies, provides context behind the newly created commission and describes its potential impact on the human rights movement. Tirman is a co-founding director of the new Human Rights and Technology Program at MIT, leads the MIT Persian Gulf Initiative, and is a member of the Inter-University Committee on International Migration. He is author, most recently, of "Dream Chasers: Immigration and the American Backlash" and "The Deaths of Others: The Fate of Civilians in America’s Wars."

Q: What is the political impetus behind Secretary Pompeo’s commission?

A: Most knowledgeable observers see Pompeo’s commission as an attempt to curtail the gradual expansion of human rights that include marginalized groups — LGBT rights, most particularly, but also of indigenous peoples, immigrants, children, workers, and so on. They also see this as a pushback on reproductive rights for women, and abortion rights specifically. Of course, these rights were not envisioned by the founders. By focusing on “unalienable” rights, he signals that this effort is embedded in so-called natural law, which to many people implies religious origin and legitimacy — rights are only endowed by God. The Declaration of Independence is replete with references to natural rights conveyed by the Creator. If rights are a product of religious faith and practice, then the gatekeepers of religion will likely be the arbiters of rights.

The international dimension serves certain specific ends: an opportunity to chastise states that the Trump administration doesn’t like — such as Iran, Cuba, Venezuela — and provide a boost for some friends in troublesome areas — Israel’s 50-year occupation of Palestinian lands, for example. It will brace the U.S. aid policy of denying abortions. A very narrow definition of human rights would also enable the U.S. government to ignore, more than ever, the human-rights abuses of states with which we are friendly. If one doesn’t grant indigenous peoples’ rights to their original lands, to cite one pressing case, then what Brazil’s president, Jair Bolsonaro, is doing in the Amazon is not of our concern. Similar indifference can be applied to the Rohingya, Kurds, Shia in Saudi Arabia, and dozens of other cases.

Q: How have human rights evolved throughout history?

A: Human rights has a long history, even if they weren’t always recognized as such. In Europe, and Britain particularly, rights evolved in part to curtail the power of the monarch. Gradually, notions of tolerance and protected dissent became keystones. Documents like the Magna Carta (1215) and the English Bill of Rights (1689) established norms that not only formed Britain’s unwritten constitution, but shaped ours as well. Conservatives have always insisted that such precedents are the root and branch of legitimate political principles and practice. The appeal to “natural law” should be understood in that context. 

This holds some irony in the Trump era. Those English documents insisted on parliamentary rights to keep the sovereign accountable, for example. We see today the White House violating Congress’s subpoena and oversight power, which is hardly consonant with conservative values. That is having deleterious impact on, for example, the rights of asylum seekers at the U.S.-Mexico border. Those early precedents also addressed economic rights. In the last 75 years, beginning with Franklin Roosevelt, economic rights — in the idiom of liberty, “freedom from want” — have been high on the agenda of liberals, and resisted by the right wing. Economic rights as human rights have long been embedded in the most important English precedents, however — the right to inheritance, for example, or to fair taxation. And the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, promulgated at the United Nations in 1948 and cited approvingly by Pompeo, is filled with economic rights, including several demands for equality.  

In the category of “Be careful what you wish for,” this is rich irony indeed.  

Q: What are your chief concerns?

A: At a time when human rights are under siege from authoritarian rulers around the world, pulling back and constraining the definition and applicability of human rights is especially vexing. There is, moreover, a robust discourse about rights in academia and civil society. Hundreds, if not thousands, of nonprofit human-rights organizations are at work, and it is through this work that rights are challenged and redefined. The notion that we need a panel of carefully selected conservative thinkers appointed by the government to reassess rights is almost absurd.  

The assertion that human rights only embody what is articulated in America’s founding documents — particularly the Bill of Rights — is worrisome. Our notions of political, economic, social, and cultural rights and obligations change over time, and this should be readily acknowledged by all parties. The founders did not envision or provision a standing army, yet the prospect of America without a military would be considered quite eccentric. Today, we clearly embrace the idea of women’s equality, even if the means to achieve that are contested. Privacy is nowhere mentioned in the Constitution, yet Americans consider their personal sphere to be inviolable. The human cost of war has prompted the international community — often led by the United States — to recognize rights of non-combatants during wartime, or rights of refugees, or rights of women to protection. Little of this was considered before the 20th century.

There are numerous examples of these rights in the international arena, and nearly always they evolved to give voice and standing to otherwise-powerless and, often, victimized peoples. That is the great moral thrust of the human-rights revolution and one of the most encouraging achievements in the history of international relations.



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Cory Booker calls out President Trump as ‘worse than a racist’

Senator and 2020 hopeful Cory Booker called out President Trump on Sunday for using his presidential platform and power to spread racism.

Booker compared the president in fact to a well-known racist from the era of the Civil Rights Movement — late Alabama Gov. George Wallace, a fervent segregationist, and told CNN, “The reality is this is a guy who is worst than a racist.”

Booker made reference to last week’s comments by the president suggesting that four first-term congresswomen of color go back to where they came from.

Booker continued, “He is actually using racist tropes and racial language for political gains, trying to use this as a weapon to divide our nation against itself.”

Booker compared the video of that scene with others from decades ago as activists attempted to upend Jim Crow segregation and flagrant voter suppression activities.

“I have seen this before — in black and white,” Booker said, an apparent reference to black-and-white television of the civil rights era.

“Now I’m seeing it again, decades later, where I thought our country was beyond this,” he said. “I’m seeing this in full color.”

There was no response from the White House to Booker’s comments by late Monday morning, but there is no love lost between Booker and Trump.

 

 

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Pinterest's New Search Tool Puts Stress Relief in Your Feed

Soon the company will begin placing anxiety-relieving exercises within its search results to help boost your mood.

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South Africa's anti-graft chief Busisiwe Mkwebane 'lied under oath'

Busisiwe Mkwebane is accused of being involved in a dirty-tricks campaign against President Ramaphosa.

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VIDEO: Soldier mom surprising track star daughter at finish line after deployment is everything

A 13-year-old track star in Sacramento, California got an over-the-top surprise from her mother as she raced towards the finish line of a 4X100 meter relay race.

Jada McGee finished her anchor leg of the race and ran right into the arms of her mother, U.S. Army Capt. Erika Woodson, who she hadn’t seen since January, the Daily Mail reported.

The emotional reunion between the pair took place May 14, but was captured on video and shared widely in recent days on social media.

Jada runs for Edward Harris Junior Middle School in Sacramento. Her mother has been undertaking a three-year assignment a long way from home in Anchorage, Alaska. But Woodson was determined to see her daughter compete and flew in the morning of the relay.

“I couldn’t even sit in the chair that was there for me,” she told the Daily Mail. “I needed to be able to jump up and run to the finish line at her lane.”

The video shows Woodson with arms outstretched as Jada runs directly to her.

A friend of Jada’s shot the video.

The teen told the Daily Mail that she noticed her mother about 50 yards out from the stretch.

“It was so exciting,” she said.

And apparently Woodson’s appearance helped the runner with her speed. She said she purposely wore her uniform so her daughter would know it was her from far out.

“From the moment that she knew it was me, she really turned up the heat,” Woodson said. “That moment that she ran into my arms was indescribable.”

 

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Swedish official rebuffs Trump’s attempt to free A$AP Rocky from jail while man who started fight won’t be charged

President Trump‘s attempts to have A$AP Rocky freed from a Swedish jail might result in even more jail time for the rapper.
Rocky, whose given name is Rakim Mayers, has been imprisoned in Stockholm for three weeks after his alleged involvement in a street brawl. Social media posts from his associates have described horrific conditions at the jail.
At the behest of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West, Trump reportedly telephoned the Swedish government over the weekend in an attempt to secure the rapper’s release and has said that he and Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven will talk again this week.
But Sweden, apparently, is not being as agreeable as suggested by the president. A spokesperson for Lofven told TMZ after Saturday’s call between the two leaders that no one is permitted to influence criminal justice affairs in their country.
Rocky was jailed after a June 30th dust up that was caught on video. Stockholm District Court approved a request by the prosecutor to keep the rapper behind bars until at least July 25th, while an investigation takes place, the Daily Mail reports. He reportedly believes race isn’t a factor in his arrest.
Trump said last week that he stepped in after multiple people reached out to him to help in the international situation.
“Many, many members of the African-American community have called me, friends of mine, and said, ‘Can you help?’ ” according to the president. “So, I personally don’t know A$AP Rocky, but I can tell you that he has tremendous support from the African-American community in this country — and when I say African-American, I think I can really say from everybody in the country because we’re all one.”
And according to TMZ, the man who attacked A$AP Rocky‘s crew won’t be prosecuted for any crime, despite the fact that he incited the violence and harassed the rapper.
If convicted of aggravated assault the rapper could reportedly face six years in Swedish prison.

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‘The Wire’ star Sonja Sohn arrested on cocaine and other drug charges

Sonja Sohn, the star of “The Chi” was reportedly arrested over the weekend allegedly for cocaine possession and other drug charges.

Netflix acquires ‘Flying Bird’ starring Andre Holland, Zazie Beetz and Sonja Sohn

According to TMZ, Sohn was detained in North Carolina for felony possession of cocaine, possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

Celebrated for breakout roles in the acclaimed HBO series The Wire and Showtime’s TheChi, Sohn, 55, was released Sunday morning in Manteo after her bond was set at $1,500.

Sohn will reportedly be arraigned Tuesday.

–‘High Flying Bird’ actress Sonja Sohn: Athletes should “adopt whole neighborhoods”–

In addition to outstanding performances on screen the actress has also been known for her work helping young people in the Baltimore neighborhoods The Wire was based on.

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The bold way Mahershala Ali snagged Marvel’s ‘Blade’ Reboot

Mahershala Ali is the man of the hour who has muscled his way into snagging Marvel’s Blade movie reboot, a role first made famous by Wesley Snipes.

Mahershala Ali on ‘Green Book’ amidst N-word controversy: ‘It’s a legitimate offering’

The announcement was made on Sunday at San Diego’s Comic-Con and we’re here for the newest chocolate sensation who has been cast as the kick-ass vampire hunter.

Ali got a rousing standing ovation during the studio’s Hall H presentation, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

But the way he got the role also deserves a round of applause.

“When Mahershala calls, you answer,” said Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige. Feige explained that after Ali won his Oscar for Green Book, he reached out to Marvel in an effort to secure the coveted role. And he outright told Feige that he wanted the part.

And apparently want Oscar-winner Mahershala wants, Mahershala gets.

The movie, which centered around a half-human/half-vampire that hunts the undead and ventures out to rid the world of vampires and to serve up some serious payback since it was a vampire who killed his mother during childbirth.

Blade first released in 1998 and received two spin-offs Blade II in 2002 and Blade: Trinity in 2004.

West Philadelphia man scales 19-story building to save mom from fire

Ali has also played in countless other roles in movies like Hidden FiguresAlita: Battle Angel and most recently in the third season of HBO’s drama series True Detective.

This is not Ali’s first time finding himself in the world of Marvel. He received wide praise for his role as Cottonmouth Stokes during the first season of the Netflix series Luke Cage, and most recently he portrayed Prowler in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.

A release date for the movie hasn’t been announced.

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Cardi B flashes new tattoo with husband Offset’s name

Zero Breeze Mark II Portable Air Conditioner Review: A Noisy But Effective Way to Chill Out

The Zero Breeze Mark II is a battery-powered solution for staying comfortable on sweltering camping trips.

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Ethiopia referendum: Dozens killed in Sidama clashes

Activists from the Sidama ethnic group were set to declare their own federal state last week.

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Willpower Woes: How a Rotten Resolve Can Hurt You

Willpower. We all want it. We all need it. But far too many of us just don’t have what it takes to stay resolute and determined when the going gets tough. Indeed, maintaining self-control and self-discipline when facing challenges at work and at home, or when aspiring toward ambitious future goals and objectives, can be among the most difficult life skills to manage and master—but it’s also one of the most impactful.

The significance of having low willpower cannot be overstated since a lack of mental strength and fortitude can adversely affect nearly every aspect of your life and how you are perceived by others. This includes levels of failure and success in the workplace; leadership capabilities relating to career and home/parenting life; maintaining good habits (reliability, promptness, health and otherwise); aptly managing compulsions, impulses, addictions and bad habits; and a myriad of other obstacles, trials and tribulations we’re presented with on a daily basis. Life without willpower paints an ominous picture.

Kanika Tolver

Kanika Tolver

However much desired or well-intended, the process to developing willpower to benefit your professional and personal life can seem impossible, especially when faced with difficult situations, coercion or pressure from others, toxic relationships and certainly addictions of any sort. However, taking the initial steps to develop and maintain a strong will and self-discipline can be life-changing.

With this in mind, I connected with the author of “Life Rehab: Don’t Overdose on Pain, People and Power,” Kanika Tolver—a Certified Professional Coach and thought leader who helps individuals realize career, business, life and spiritual success.  She offered this simple yet insightful 3-step exercise that can help individuals develop better willpower through practice, progression, and patience:

Practice:

  • Brainstorm all of your weaknesses—as many as you can think of—and write them down. When you identify your weaknesses on paper, it initiates the process of acknowledgement and acceptance. We all have weaknesses, whether it’s procrastination or being a “pushover” and the like, that are undermining our ability to be happy and successful. However, thinking comprehensively about our shortcomings and confessing them on paper produces a cathartic sense of awareness and urgency. While any scrap of paper will do, it’s best to invest in a simple journal where you can keep an ongoing log of your flaws and faults that are likely working against you at work, at home and in social circles.
  • Cultivate a list of adversaries. As with your list of weaknesses above that related to your own personality and character traits, it’s also advisable to identify those people and other aspects of your life that challenge your willpower. This can include specific people in your professional and personal life, your job itself, or things like food, alcohol, television, the gym, etc. Keep a running log of these as well so that you remain mindful of exactly what aspects of life you seek to improve. Even try to put this list from most to least important or impactful, with the areas you need the most work on, and that will impact your life most significantly, at the top.
  • Set small, achievable goals for turning your weaknesses into strengths. For each weakness, set small incremental goals. Setting unrealistic goals can lead to disappointment, which often leads to self-sabotage and self-doubt—all of which undercut your efforts to develop stronger willpower. Most of us have spent years repeating a bad habit or suffering a bad relationship. With this exercise, it’s now time to make a conscious choice to make small changes to negate the damage done. A collection of successful small changes will likely lead to big changes, which can lead to life-changing transformations. Reward yourself for even the smallest of victories along the journey. Revel in each achievement, however tiny.

 

Progression:

  • Now that you are aware of what about yourself you need to “fix” and in what circumstances, journal your daily progress—both wins, losses and challenges—and your feelings in relation to each. Over time, you will be able to analyze the “data” and discern patterns, including where you fell short, in what circumstances you remained steadfast, and what made you uncomfortable (and which way that ultimately swung). This will expose ways to better apply willpower and manage situations to your benefit. Progression requires transparent hard work and constant self-evaluation. But the prospective payoff is immense.
  • Surround yourself with people who have experience and overcame the same struggles you have. Associating with people who can give you good, proven advice that can be validated with personal anecdotes and insights is priceless. One great strategy is to find an “accountability partner,” support group, mentor or professional coach who can provide valuable objective perspectives and help guide and advise you when challenges present.

 

Patience:

  • Patience is indeed a virtue because all too few of us have it. But, if you can effectively exercise patience, it can vastly strengthen your willpower. In fact, the two are entirely intertwined. We are a culture of instant gratification, and when the universe does not deliver immediately we tend to get disappointed, which can lead to a “giving up” or “giving in” mentality—either of which are the enemies of willpower.  It’s hard to practice a new habit and continue down the path of progression with an impatient mindset. Know in advance that every day of your journey may not be positive or deliver the result you seek, but practice, progression and patience will ultimately enhance your self-control.

With a big dose of motivation and just a little bit of effort put forth with an exercise such as this, you could be well on your way to winning the willpower game. Cultivating a mental fortitude is not just a life luxury—it’s a mission-critical key to promoting positive change, maintaining favorable habits, and bolstering your drive to achieve in all aspects of life. Carpe diem!



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Summer AileyCamp provides dance training, life skills for children

Of all the mantras Anai Espinoza and her fellow campers recite each morning at AileyCamp, the eighth grader’s favorite is this: “I am in control.”

“It makes me believe I have the power to choose the right thing,” she said.
Anai is one of a thousand students in 10 states this summer attending AileyCamp, a free six-week program for youngsters in financial need or with academic, social or family challenges.

AileyCamp was founded in 1989 in Kansas City, Missouri, by world-renowned dancer, choreographer and director Alvin Ailey, who died later that year. In addition to teaching the students dance, the camp introduces them to the visual arts, creative writing and other communications skills. It also teaches them how to eat well, resolve conflicts and become leaders, according to a description of the program on the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater website.

Atlanta Ballet’s Centre For Dance Education has admitted about 100 students to its camp each summer since 2014. About half of those have some exposure to dance, but very few have professional training, said Atlanta AileyCamp director Diane Caroll Sales.

“The most important thing is to accept campers that are willing to dance — they want to dance — because we are dancing most of the day,” Sales said. “But the core of the program is personal development.”

The Atlanta camp ran this year from May 30 through July 5, concluding with a performance July 6 in the city of Jonesboro, about 15 miles (24 kilometers) south of Atlanta. Sponsors covered the cost of dance training and attire, breakfast and lunch, field trips and classes for creative communication and personal development.

At the end of camp, Atlanta Ballet offers 10 students a full-tuition scholarship for a year of training, which is eligible for renewal, Sales said. One scholarship covers $800-$2,300 worth of dance classes, depending on the placement level.

Kameron Davis attended his first AileyCamp about 10 years ago, when he was in middle school, at The Fox Theatre in Atlanta. He trained for three years after that with the Atlanta Ballet on a scholarship, and later became a dance instructor. Davis said he doesn’t think his mother could have afforded dance classes without the scholarship.

Kids at school teased Davis when he began dancing, but AileyCamp offered a safe haven and confidence boost, he said. He said he enjoys giving back to the program by helping new campers build their confidence.

“It’s an open door to finding new things, doing new things,” Davis said. “When I got to AileyCamp, it just reassured me that, ‘Hey, it’s OK. Everybody is different. You shouldn’t be judged by what you do just because not a lot of people do it.'”

The post Summer AileyCamp provides dance training, life skills for children appeared first on theGrio.



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Robert Mueller's Testimony: What Congress Needs to Know

Here’s what members of Congress should know before they question the former special counsel.

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The Best Algorithms Still Struggle to Recognize Black Faces

US government tests find even top-performing facial recognition systems misidentify blacks at rates 5 to 10 times higher than they do whites.

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Kenya finance minister Henry Rotich faces arrest for corruption

The accusation comes from a police investigation into the misuse of funds meant for a dam project.

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Sunday, July 21, 2019

Is Zimbabwe's economy on track?

The return of the Zimbabwean dollar has raised fears about a return to hyperinflation.

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Prime Minister Mark Rutte of the Netherlands tours MIT

Prime Minister Mark Rutte of the Netherlands visited MIT on Friday, taking an innovation-oriented campus tour with a focus on computing and robotics.

Rutte’s visit was centered in MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), where he watched robotics demonstrations and spoke with faculty and students about a variety of topics concerning innovation.

Rutte was also accompanied by a larger delegation of Dutch government and business leaders, who are on a four-day visit to the Boston area, examining research in AI, robots, biotechnology, and health care. The group included Bruno Bruins, the Netherlands’ minister of medical care, as well as about 40 Dutch innovators in the areas of AI and robotics. 

On the MIT tour, Rutte was principally hosted by Daniela Rus, director of CSAIL and the Andrew and Erna Viterba Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Rutte was also greeted by Frans Kashooek, the Charles Piper Professor in MIT’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, who is also a CSAIL member; Kashooek is a native of the Netherlands.

Rus told Rutte she was “delighted to welcome you to CSAIL and to MIT,” and, along with several CSAIL graduate students and researchers, guided him through a series of demonstrations highlighting different aspects of robotics research and development.

The projects Rutte observed included a muscle-controlled robotic system CSAIL researchers call “RoboRaise,” in which sensors on human muscles relay signals to a robot, showing it how much to, for instance, help lift objects. The system could have applications in construction or manufacturing.

“In the future, the machines will be always adapting to us,” Rus noted.

Rutte was also given demonstrations about inexpensive 3-D printed robots; the incorporation of new, soft materials in robots; a robotic fish; and “M-Blocks,” a set of square blocks that reconfigure themselves and could be the basis for self-assembling forms of robots.

Rutte was highly engaged in the demonstations and asked a series of questions about them — querying about the exact mechanisms that, for instance, allow the M-Blocks to both move and stay attached to each other.

“You make it look so easy,” Rutte marveled to the robotics researchers, at one point during his CSAIL tour.

Rutte also had a sit-down conversation with CSAIL professors Peter Szolovits and David Sontag, whose work is at the junction of computing and health care research. Szolovits is, among other things, the principal investigator in the MIT-Philips alliance, a five-year research agreement formalized in 2015 between MIT and Royal Philips N.V., the giant Dutch technology firm which has a major division in health care innovation. Philips North America moved its headquarters to Cambridge, Massachusetts, last year.

“Everything is here,” Rutte noted when talking to Sontag about the advantages of doing research in the Boston area — a reference to the ecosystem of universities, technology firms, hospitals, and capital available in the region.  

Rutte also remarked on the informal layout of the Stata Center, where CSAIL is housed, and asked Szolovits and Sontag about the “overall atmosphere” at the Institute.

“It is a wonderful atmosphere,” Szolovits replied. “But for me, the best thing is the students. If I don’t know something, I ask my students.”

Rutte has been prime minister of the Netherlands since 2010 and is currently serving his third term. He studied history at Leiden University, the oldest university in the Netherlands, and worked in a managerial role at Unilever before first being elected as a member of parliament in 2003.

Rus also presented Rutte with gifts from MIT, including a hand-crafted glass sculpture made at the MIT Glass Lab, and an MIT cap which, she noted, could be worn by Rutte when he is cycling to work. Rutte is known, in part, for bicycling to the office, and the Netherlands has the densest set of bike paths in the world.



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Refugee entrepreneurs flourish in Kakuma camp

Whether selling electricity, fish or data, these entrepreneurs are thriving in Kenya's Kakuma camp.

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The first Black woman to integrate a southern medical school dies at 91

There are so many unsung hereos in our history that do not get the recognition they deserve and Edith Jones, who died this week, is more than qualifying. Predating the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, over 70 years ago, Jones became the first Black student to attend a medical school in the South.

Born in Conway, Ark., in 1927 to a mother, who was domestic worker and a father, who was a sharecropper before his untimely death when Jones was eight, she experienced humble beginnings that was far from uncommon for most Blacks in the south. She probably could not have imagined all the things she would do and all of the paths she would pave, yet she dreamed of helping others in a way her sister, who died of typhoid fever, could not be helped; she wanted to be come a doctor.

READ MORE: Human Rights Campaign appoints its first African American president

According to the New York Daily News, when Jones submitted her application to the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in 1948, there were only 185 Black medical students in the whole country. Jones ranked in the top 230 applicants, but the school had never accepted Black applicants, so they decided to increase the class sizes by one so that white students could not argue that a spot was taken away from a white person.

Despite death threats and other forms of racist taunts, Jones went on to complete her studies to become a trailblazing doctor.

“Dr. Jones has had a dramatic, lasting impact on health care that will never, ever go away,” the school’s chancellor, Cam Patterson, said in a statement. “She was a tremendous woman, and she opened so many doors for minority students. We are forever in her debt.”

In addition to integrating the University of Arkansas, she also became the first Black woman to attend Baylor College of Medicine’s residency program in Houston as well as the first female president of the National Medical Association.

Outside of the medical field, Jones also made her mark in civil rights working with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.  traveling from church to church and house to house to urge people to join the Civil Rights Movement. The New York Daily News reported that she was the only physician and female member of what was called the “Freedom Four,” who spread the message of the movement.

READ MORE: ‘SouthPark Susan’ pleads guilty to harassing and calling cops on two Black women for nothing

“Her life embodied Dr. Martin Luther King’s call that ‘Life’s most persistent and urgent question is, ‘What are you doing for others?’” Brian Gittens, a vice chancellor at the University of Arkansas, said in a statement.

Jones died in Houston, she was 91. Memorial services in Texas and Arkansas will take place next weekend.

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NFL player Tyreek Hill will not be suspended amid charges of child abuse

The Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Tyreek Hill has been under major scrutiny since reports claimed he may have abused his son. Now the NFL has announced that they are not seeking any disciplinary action against the football star.

In April, KCTV released a partially audio tape that suggested Hill broke the arm of his 3-year-old son. Hill can also be heard telling his fiancee, Crystal Espinal, “You need to be terrified of me, too, b—-.” This was not the first time Hill had been accused of domestic violence.

In 2014 while he was a member of the Oklahoma State University football team, Hill was accused of the domestic assault and battery of Espinal, who was pregnant at the time. According to CNN, he received three years probation and was dismissed from the Oklahoma football team. He finished his college career at the University of West Alabama.

READ MORE: Tyreek Hill denies ever harming his son, despite accusations, lawyer says

When the April incident came to light, the Kansas City Chiefs banned Hill from team activities and police launched an investigation. As of June, a criminal investigation was no longer active.

In a statement released Friday, the NFL said they based their decision on their lack of access to evidence in the case:

“Over the past four months, we have conducted a comprehensive investigation of allegations regarding Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Tyreek Hill,” the statement said. “Throughout this investigation, the NFL’s primary concern has been the well-being of the child. Our understanding is that the child is safe and that the child’s ongoing care is being directed and monitored by the Johnson County District Court and the Johnson County Department for Children and Families.
In conducting our investigation, we have taken great care to ensure that we do not interfere with the county’s proceedings or compromise the privacy or welfare of the child in any way. The information developed in the court proceeding is confidential and has not been shared with us, and the court has sealed all law enforcement records. Local law enforcement authorities have publicly advised that the available evidence does not permit them to determine who caused the child’s injuries.
Similarly, based on the evidence presently available, the NFL cannot conclude that Mr. Hill violated the Personal Conduct Policy. Accordingly, he may attend Kansas City’s training camp and participate in all club activities. He has been and will continue to be subject to conditions set forth by the District Court, Commissioner Goodell, and the Chiefs, which include clinical evaluation and therapeutic intervention.
If further information becomes available through law enforcement, the pending court proceeding, or other sources, we will promptly consider it and take all appropriate steps at that time.”
Hill seems to be walking on a cloud despite the accusations against him as the Arrowhead Pride reported Kansas City is still interested in extending his contract. Hill took to Twitter to express his thanks for the support after his reinstatement:
“I can assure you that I will continue to work to be the person, player and teammate that you envisioned me to be,” he wrote.

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Viral Texas rapper Tay-K convicted of murder in 2016 robbery

Viral sensation Tay-K will not be making music for a while as he was found guilty of a murder that took place during a robbery a few years ago.

In 2017, the 19-year-old Texas rapper, whose real name is Taymor McIntyre, became a household name with the release of is song “The Race,” which he recorded while on the run from police. The video for the song now has over 100 million views on YouTube and according to CNN, the song debuted at No. 70 on the Billboard Hot 100 Charts. McIntyre also received widespread support from rappers like Lil Bibby and Travis Scott. He was taken into custody after being on the run for three months.

READ MORE: Suburban Chicago man uses dating app to find then rob women

Prior to the release of the song, McIntyre was involved in a home invasion with six other people in 2016 that resulted in the death of 21-year-old Ethan Walker, who was fatally shot in the stomach according to People. CNN reported that Walker, a young father, did not even have the money or drugs the group was looking for.  McIntyre and the others involved were initially arrested on capital murder charges in July 2016. He was then placed on house arrest, where he somehow removed his ankle monitor and went on the run.

Prosecutors argued that though McIntyre was not the one that made the fatal shot, he was just as responsible because he was aware that someone was going to be shot in the process of the robbery.

People reported that a 15-year-old girl devised the plan and reached out to the rapper to see if he could get guns for the robbery. When McIntyre told her he did not have guns, he also said he knew someone who was “trigger-happy.”

READ MORE: Kim Kardashian calls on Trump to help A$AP Rocky get out of a Swedish jail

McIntyre is also facing a capital murder charge for a April 2017 robbery that took the life of 23-year-old Mark Saldivar at a Chick-fil-A in San Antonio.

A jury deliberated his sentencing on Friday and will continue deliberating on Monday. McIntyre is facing between five to 99 years in prison.

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Mahershala Ali to star in ‘Blade’ series reboot

To add to the list of “matches made in heaven,” we now have the incomparable Mahershala Ali taking the baton to play Blade in the much anticipated reboot of the supernatural movie franchise.

Marvel Studios announced Ali’s new role at Comic-Con on Saturday and we cannot wait to get our tickets! According to Variety, the actor received wide praise from the audience as he donned a Blade hat.

READ MORE: Now we know why Donald Glover won’t be involved in the ‘Deadpool’ animated TV series

The original Blade franchise, which was based on a character from the Marvel Universe, starred Wesley Snipes. The movie, which centered around a half-human/half-vampire that hunts the undead, was first released in 1998 and received two spin-offs Blade II in 2002 and Blade: Trinity in 2004. Ali is more than qualified for the role having won two Oscars for his work in Greenbook and Moonlight. Ali has also played in countless other roles in movies like Hidden Figures, Alita: Battle Angel and most recently in the third season of HBO’s drama series True Detective.

This is not Ali’s first time finding himself in the world of Marvel. He received wide praise for his role as Cottonmouth Stokes during the first season of the Netflix series Luke Cage, and most recently he portrayed Prowler in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.

READ MORE: Beyonce whisked into exclusive Grand Canyon tribal grounds to film music video

According to CNN, in addition to their big announcement about Blade, Marvel also announced the release of several other projects including Black Widow and The Eternals coming in 2020.

As far as the new Disney streaming service that is set to be released in November, Marvel is also bringing several series to the service like The Falcon and The Winter Soldier, Wandavision, Hawkeye, as well as the company’s first animated original series What If …? The movies Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness and Thor: Love and Thunder, being released in 2021.

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Pregnant Black Georgia lawmaker confronts racist who told her ‘go back where she came from’

After posting a now viral video of her reaction to a white man verbally abusing her in a grocery store line, a Black Georgia lawmaker confronted the man in a heated exchange that was captured on news cameras.

On Saturday afternoon, State Rep. Erica Thomas was talking with Atlanta’s WSB-TV news station at the Publix grocery store where she was berated by Eric Sparkes when he showed up. In the video Thomas posted about the Friday incident, she said she had been in the 10 items or less line with 15 items. With her 9-year-old daughter in tow, she claimed she got into the express line to minimize the time she was on her feet as she is expecting to deliver in less than three weeks, WSB reported.

READ MORE: Jay-Z helps Black family held at gunpoint by Phoenix police at Family Dollar as they sue city for $10 million

Thomas was then approached by Sparkes who was angry that she had more than 10 items.

“This white man comes up to me and says, ‘You lazy son of [expletive]. You need to go back where you came from,'” she said in her Facebook video. “Sir, you don’t even know me. I’m not lazy. I’m nine months pregnant.”

She alleged that he also said, “‘You lazy son of a bitch. You need to go back where you came from,'” adding Sparkes also called her “ignorant” and “a piece of shit.”

After Thomas’ tearful video went viral and on Saturday, Sparkes disputed the claims made by the lawmaker insinuating that Thomas was lying.

“I’m a liar about what?” Thomas asked.

“Everything that happened,” Sparkes said. “Me telling you to ‘Go back where you came from.’ Did I say that? Is it on video?”

“Are you serious? What did you say to me then,” Thomas pressed.

According to Buzzfeed, though Sparkes admitted he called her “lazy,” he denied he told her to “go back where she came from” telling news media that he was a Cuban Democrat. He also alleged Thomas was making up the claims to advance her political career.

READ MORE: Black kids on bikes threatened with gun, called slur after woman says her foot was run over

“This woman is playing the victim for political purposes because she is a state legislator,” Sparkes said. “I’m a Democrat and will vote Democrat for the rest of my life, so call me whatever you want to believe. For her political purposes, make it black, white, brown, whatever. It is untrue.”

Since Donald Trump wrote several tweets about four Democratic congresswomen telling them to go back to their countries of origin, Democrats have been denouncing the president as racist. The lives of the congresswomen have also been threatened by Trump supporters.

Though Thomas did not record the incident with Sparkes on her cellphone, she told WSB that there are witnesses willing to testify in court. Publix also confirmed that there is surveillance footage of the incident, and store management has been cooperating with police on the matter.

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South Africa's Cyril President Ramaphosa hits back in corruption row

Cyril Ramaphosa seeks a judicial review of a report that accuses him of misleading parliament.

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Nigeria abductions: Four Turkish nationals kidnapped in Kwara State

The construction workers were captured by unknown gunmen, amid a wave of abductions in the country.

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SOS Méditerranée resumes Mediterranean migrant rescues

SOS Méditerranée restarts work off Libya with a new vessel, after the last one was forced to stop.

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Date Hotspots For Frequent Travelers Looking For Romance

What exactly is a “frequent flyer dater?” Match, an online dating platform, defines it as someone who mixes business with pleasure while on the road and, apparently, it is becoming increasingly popular.

Match and travel site Localeur have teamed up to provide customers with a list of recommendations provided by locals on which dating hotspots they should hit up while they’re in town or on a business trip.

“Leisure travelers have been the primary source of Localeur’s users for years, but working with Match has allowed us to service the growing needs of business travelers,” Joah Spearman, CEO of Localeur, told Black Enterprise. “By partnering with Match, we’ve been able to bring more value to busy business travelers—whom we’ve deemed “frequent flyer daters”—who don’t want to stop their social lives just because they’re in a new city. This partnership, much like our work with JetBlue Airways, further demonstrates the desire from travelers for more authentic recommendations from locals.”

Localear Joah Spearman

Joah Spearman, CEO of Localeur (Image: Larry Luk)

Curious about the top 10 cities that stand out for an on-the-go romance and what places you should visit, according to the locals? Here they are:

Chicago

  • RM Champagne Salon, West Loop
  • Whiskey Business, Wicker Park
  • Quiote, Logan Square

New York

  • RakuEast, Village
  • El Almacen, Williamsburg
  • 67 Orange Street, Harlem

Los Angeles

  • La Tostaderia, DTLA
  • A-Frame, Culver City
  • Vinoteque, Fairfax
Washington, DC 
  • Harold Black, Capitol Hill
  • Iron Gate, Dupont Circle
  • Atlas Brew Works, Ivy City

Dallas

  • Ten Ramen, Oak Cliff
  • Louie’s Lower, Greenville
  • Happiest Hour, Victory Park

Houston

  • Batanga, Market Square
  • Lei Low Bar, The Heights
  • Mongoose vs. Cobra, Midtown

Denver

  • Angelo’s Tavern, Alamo Placita
  • Denver Beer Co., Highlands
  • Thin Man Tavern, Northeast

Philadelphia

  • Devil’s Alley, Rittenhouse Square
  • Standard Tap, Northern Liberties
  • Zavino, University City

Phoenix

  • Joyride Taco House, Central Phoenix
  • The Little Woody, Arcadia
  • Undertow, Central Phoenix

San Francisco

  • El Techo de Lolinda, Mission District
  • Fat Angel Food and Libation, Western Addition
  • Swan’s Market, Downtown Oakland

 


Editor’s Note: This piece was originally published on October 15, 2018.



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A Meditation on Moon Shots, a Mid-Engine Corvette, and More Car News This Week

We debate the use of the term “moon shot,” digitally drive the first mid-engine ’Vette, and check in how on Formula E is fueling an all-electric future.

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Herve Renard: Morocco coach steps down after Africa Cup of Nations

Herve Renard resigns as Morocco head coach after their early exit from the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.

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The Story Universe of Magic: The Gathering Is Expanding

Can a complicated, nerdy card game turn into a cross-media story? Maybe it already is one.

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Are Super Automatic Espresso Machines Worth Buying?

These premium coffee machines promise a hot, perfect cup of espresso, automatically. We tried some out to see if they’re worth $1,000—or more.

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An Alien-Hunting Russian Tech Mogul May Help Solve a Space Mystery

Russian billionaire Yuri Milner has invested a fortune to help SETI find the source of cosmic flashes that emit the energy of 500 million suns.

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Adware Is the Malware You Should Actually Be Worried About

For all the attention on sophisticated nation-state attacks, the malware that’s most likely to hit your phone is much more mundane.

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'Snowpiercer' Trains an Eye on TV—and Its Genre DNA Runs Deep

Under the watch of the creator of 'Orphan Black,' the post-apocalyptic thrill-ride folds in elements of 'Westworld,' 'The Leftovers,' and more.

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Man stabbed in Trafalgar Square as Algeria fans celebrate

The attack happened while fans were celebrating winning the Africa Cup of Nations.

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Cairo flights: Lufthansa resumes services but BA cancellations continue

But British Airways says flights from Heathrow to the Egyptian capital remain cancelled.

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Saturday, July 20, 2019

Phase 4 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe Isn't Cinematic

A good portion of the upcoming Marvel Studio's slate will be streaming on Disney+.

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Making it easier to program and protect the web

Behind the scenes of every web service, from a secure web browser to an entertaining app, is a programmer’s code, carefully written to ensure everything runs quickly, smoothly, and securely. For years, MIT Associate Professor Adam Chlipala has been toiling away behind behind-the-scenes, developing tools to help programmers more quickly and easily generate their code — and prove it does what it’s supposed to do.

Scanning the many publications on Chlipala’s webpage, you’ll find some commonly repeated keywords, such as “easy,” “automated,” and “proof.” Much of his work centers on designing simplified programming languages and app-making tools for programmers, systems that automatically generate optimized algorithms for specific tasks, and compilers that automatically prove that the complex math written in code is correct.

“I hope to save a lot of people a lot of time doing boring repetitive work, by automating programming work as well as decreasing the cost of building secure, reliable systems,” says Chlipala, who is a recently tenured professor of computer science, a researcher in the Computer Science and Artificial Laboratory (CSAIL), and head of the Programming Languages and Verification Group.

One of Chlipala’s recent systems automatically generates optimized — and mathematically proven — cryptographic algorithms, freeing programmers from hours upon hours of manually writing and verifying code by hand. And that system is now behind nearly all secure Google Chrome communications.

But Chlipala’s code-generating and mathematical proof systems can be used for a wide range of applications, from protecting financial transactions against fraud to ensuring autonomous vehicles operate safely. The aim, he says, is catching coding errors before they lead to real-world consequences.

“Today, we just assume that there’s going to be a constant flow of serious security problems in all major operating systems. But using formal mathematical methods, we should be able to automatically guarantee there will be far fewer surprises of that kind,” he says. “With a fixed engineering budget, we can suddenly do a lot more, without causing embarrassing or life-threatening disasters.”

A heart for system infrastructure

As he was growing up in the Lehigh Valley region of Pennsylvania, programming became “an important part of my self-identity,” Chlipala says. In the late 1980s, when Chlipala was young, his father, a researcher who ran physics experiments for AT&T Bell Laboratories, taught him some basic programming skills. He quickly became hooked.

In the late 1990s, when the family finally connected to the internet, Chlipala had access to various developer resources that helped him delve “into more serious stuff,” meaning designing larger, more complex programs. He worked on compilers — programs that translate programming language into machine-readable code — and web applications, “when apps were an avant-garde subject.”  

In fact, apps were then called “CGI scripts.” CGI is an acronym for Common Gateway Interface, which is a protocol that enables a program (or “script”) to talk to a server. In high school, Chlipala and some friends designed CGI scripts that connected them in an online forum for young programmers. “It was a means for us to start building our own system infrastructure,” he says.

And as an avid computer gamer, the logical thing for a teenaged Chlipala to do was design his own games. His first attempts were text-based adventures coded in the BASIC programming language. Later, in the C programming language, he designed a “Street Fighter”-like game, called Brimstone, and some simulated combat tabletop games.

It was exciting stuff for a high schooler. “But my heart was always in systems infrastructure, like code compilers and building help tools for old Windows operating systems,” Chlipala says.

From then on, Chlipala worked far in the background of web services, building the programming foundations for developers. “I’m several levels of abstraction removed from the type of computer programming that’s of any interest to any end-user,” he says, laughing.

Impact in the real world

After high school, in 2000, Chlipala enrolled at Carnegie Melon University, where he majored in computer science and got involved in a programming language compiler research group. In 2007, he earned his PhD in computer science from University of California at Berkeley, where his work focused on developing methods that can prove the mathematical correctness of algorithms.

After completing a postdoc at Harvard University, Chlipala came to MIT in 2011 to begin his teaching career. What drew Chlipala to MIT, in part, was an opportunity “to plug in a gap, where no one was doing my kind of proofs of computer systems’ correctness,” he says. “I enjoyed building that subject here from the ground up.”

Testing the source code that powers web services and computer systems today is computationally intensive. It mostly relies on running the code through tons of simulations, and correcting any caught bugs, until the code produces a desired output. But it’s nearly impossible to run the code through every possible scenario to prove it’s completely without error.

Chlipala’s research group instead focuses on eliminating the need for those simulations, by designing proven mathematical theorems that capture exactly how a given web service or computer system is supposed to behave. From that, they build algorithms that check if the source code operates according to that theorem, meaning it performs exactly how it’s supposed to, mostly during code compiling.

Even though such methods can be applied to any application, Chlipala likes to run his research group like a startup, encouraging students to target specific, practical applications for their research projects. In fact, two of his former students recently joined startups doing work connected to their thesis research.  

One student is working on developing a platform that lets people rapidly design, fabricate, and test their own computer chips. Another is designing mathematical proven systems to ensure the source code powering driverless car systems doesn’t contain errors that’ll lead to mistakes on the road. “In driverless cars, a bug could literally cause a crash, not just the ‘blue-screen death’ type of a crash,” Chlipala says.

Now on sabbatical from this summer until the end of the year, Chlipala is splitting his time between MIT research projects and launching his own startup based around tools that help people without programming experience create advanced apps. One such tool, which lets nonexperts build scheduling apps, has already found users among faculty and staff in his own department. About the new company, he says: “I’ve been into entrepreneurship over the last few years. But now that I have tenure, it’s a good time to get started.”



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An Honest Conversation About Race in the Workplace

Dealing with issues related to race in the workplace is a challenge for many professionals of color. Nearly every black woman in the workforce can attest to undergoing some form of racism, whether overt or covert, at the hands of a client, customer, colleague, or manager. Sometimes it’s in the form of a microaggression while, at other times, sisters are passed over for a deserved promotion or bonus without a reasonable explanation. It’s also the root cause of many of the unnecessary obstacles and hurdles that women of color face on the job but, somehow, it makes us stronger.

Race in the Workplace

(from L-R) Aisha Thomas-Petit, Carolynn Johnson, Sarah Eames, and Valerie Rainford (Black Enterprise)

At the 2019 Women of Power Summit, an annual leadership conference designed for professional women of color, four corporate leaders held an open dialogue on the issues shaping race relations within companies and shared strategies for successfully navigating race for women at every level of their organizations. The conversation also focused on forming intentional relationships with allies in the workplace. Meanwhile, Sarah Eames, a partner at Healthcare CEO and Healthcare Services Practice Leader, Russell Reynolds Associates, talked about being an ally to help people of color advance in their careers.

Here are a few of the gems that the speakers shared during the session, titled “Intersectionality: An Honest Conversation About Race in the Workplace.”

Race in the Workplace

Valerie Rainford (Black Enterprise)

Valerie Rainford

Managing Director; Head of Advancing Black Leaders & Diversity Advancement Strategies, JPMorgan Chase & Co.
  • “It’s very uncomfortable to talk about race.”
  • “Sometimes we don’t know our own power to change a culture…[and] our own ability to slay.”
  • “Angry doesn’t work everywhere, but passion does…know your culture.”
  • “When I had that epiphany—that there is nobody who walks, talks, and thinks like Valerie Rainford—that became my competitive advantage.”

Carolynn Johnson

Carolynn Johnson (Black Enterprise)

Carolynn Johnson

COO, DiversityInc.

  • “I am an angry black woman. I’m owning it [so that] you won’t shame me by saying it.”
  • “Power is not taken. Power is given.”
  • “I didn’t realize that I was in a box until I was gently uplifted out of it.”
  • “I was ready to give up.”
  • “Allies aren’t just white men or people who have more power than you.”
  • In order to get over our fear and our shame, we have to understand the other side of racial fatigue.

racism

Aisha Thomas-Petit (Black Enterprise)

Aisha Thomas-Petit

Division Vice President, HR, ADP
  • In order to create an ally, you actually have to have a deeper relationship in order to do so.

 

  • Look at your networks: are they diverse and inclusive?

 

  • Being a woman and black “is actually a double blessing.”

 

 



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