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Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Charles Barkley to Sell NBA Memorabilia to Build Affordable Housing in His Hometown

Charles Barkley

NBA legend and current sports commentator Charles Barkley told WJOX 94.5 that he intends to sell some of his NBA memorabilia to help build affordable housing in his hometown of Leeds, AL, according to Sports Illustrated.

“We probably got 30 eyesores, as I call them, where houses used to be when I was growing up. Either a rotted-out house or there are just weeds that have overgrown,” Barkley said in the radio interview. “So, what I’m trying to do—I want to work with the city of Leeds, I want them to give me the spaces, number one. I want them to give me the houses, and I’m going to use my own money selling my memorabilia.”

There is one item that he will not sell: The gold medal he received while playing on the famed 1992 “Dream Team” with Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, and other hardwood gods. Barkley said his daughter wants to keep that gold medal; “Sir Charles” will oblige.

“I want to do something really nice for Leeds,” he said. “And if I could build 10 to 20 affordable houses, I want to do green housing too, (and) if I could sell all that stuff, it would just be a really cool thing for me.”

Barkley attended Leeds High School before starring at Auburn University from 1981-84. Barkley is a two-time Hall of Fame inductee having been inducted in 2006 for his playing career, and in 2010 as a member of the Olympic “Dream Team.”



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Black Kansas City mayor went to vote but was turned away at the polls

The Black mayor of Kansas City, Missouri went to vote on Tuesday in an area where the electorate is overwhelmingly Black but was turned away from the polls – which he said highlights the problems with voting in America.

READ MORE: Black voters expected to deliver Super Tuesday victory for Joe Biden

Quinton Lucas said he was told he “wasn’t in the system” even though he has voted at the same location for more than 10 years and had a utility bill with him to verify his identity. The irony is before Lucas went to vote, he posted a video to Twitter extolling the importance of voting and urging everyone to exercise their right and privilege.

“I made a video this morning about the importance of voting and then got turned away because I wasn’t in the system even though I’ve voted there for 11 years, including for myself four times! Go figure, but that’s okay. We’ll be back later today!” Lucas captioned his tweet, which has been viewed almost 670,000 times.

When one person responded that it’s “not okay because it’s a real issue,” the mayor said he agreed. “Truth. We will be following up. Most people don’t have my privilege to come back,” he tweeted.

The mayor later said it’s unacceptable and that the problem denotes how tough it is for some people to vote in the United States.

“If the mayor can get turned away, think about everyone else,” Lucas tweeted to his followers. “We gotta do better.”

Missouri was one of six states that held a Democratic primary or caucus on Tuesday. The states are important in choosing a candidate to challenge President Donald Trump on the general ballot in November.

After the snafu, Lucas said he was later informed that he was indeed on the voter rolls and a poll worker turned him away by mistake. Lucas said he showed the poll worker his utility bill and went back and forth with the worker until he was outright denied the ability to vote.

“I was probably a bit frustrated,” Lucas told The New York Times. “The other thing that got in my head was it’s a little embarrassing being turned away at the polls.”

An election official reached out to Lucas less than an hour later to inform him that the poll worker had typed in his name wrong, putting his last name first and first name last.

Lucas’ polling spot is inside a Baptist church and is roughly 80 percent African-American, he estimated. After the election official called him, Lucas returned and was able to vote, but pointed out that other voters in his same predicament would most likely not be as lucky.

READ MORE: Stacey Abrams tackles voter suppression in new book due out in June

“I get that mistakes happen,” Lucas told The New York Times, still “we need to make sure we have a system where we don’t have mistakes.”

“It’s clear to me that there is a problem. At a time when we’re trying to get people to have faith in voting, making sure every voter feels valued is vital for us. My experience today made me feel a little less important,” Lucas added.

The post Black Kansas City mayor went to vote but was turned away at the polls appeared first on TheGrio.



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Joe Biden has another big primary night, wins 4 more states

WASHINGTON (AP) — Joe Biden decisively won Michigan’s Democratic presidential primary, seizing a key battleground state that helped propel Bernie Sanders’ insurgent candidacy four years ago. The former vice president’s victory there, as well as in Missouri, Mississippi and Idaho, dealt a serious blow to Sanders and substantially widened Biden’s path to the nomination.

Biden again showed strength Tuesday with working-class voters and African Americans, who are vital to winning the Democratic nomination. Sanders’ narrow hopes for good news rested on North Dakota and Washington state. Washington’s primary was too early to call, and because all votes there are cast by mail or by dropping them off in a ballot box, many ballots were marked for candidates who have since dropped out of the race.

READ MORE: Jim Clyburn called Biden ‘honorary Black man’ according to Cory Booker

The six-state contest Tuesday marked the first time voters weighed in on the primary since it effectively narrowed to a two-person race between Sanders and Biden. And the first four states on Tuesday went to Biden, a dramatic reversal for a campaign that appeared on the brink of collapse just two weeks ago. Now it is Sanders, whose candidacy was ascendant so recently, who must contemplate a path forward.

Addressing supporters in Philadelphia, Biden noted that many had “declared that this candidacy was dead” only days ago, but “now we’re very much alive.” He also asked Sanders supporters to back him going forward.

“We need you, we want you, and there’s a place in our campaign for each of you. I want to thank Bernie Sanders and his supporters for their tireless energy and their passion,” Biden said. “We share a common goal, and together we’ll beat Donald Trump.”

It marked a high point for the former vice president’s staff. They sipped beer and broke into an impromptu dance party after his speech, which was held close to his Philadelphia headquarters.

Even as the contours of the race came into shape, however, new uncertainty was sparked by fears of the spreading coronavirus. Both candidates abruptly canceled rallies in Ohio that were scheduled for Tuesday night. That set the stage for Biden’s remarks in Philadelphia, while Sanders flew home to Vermont and didn’t plan to address the public.

Sanders’ campaign also said all future events would be decided on a case-by-case basis given public health concerns, while Biden called off a scheduled upcoming Florida stop. Still, the former vice president said Tuesday night that he’d be announcing plans to combat the coronavirus later this week.

READ MORE: Trevor Noah mocks Kamala Harris for ‘hostage-style video’ endorsement of Biden

The Democratic National Committee also said that Sunday’s debate between Sanders and Biden would be conducted without an audience.

Among former White House hopefuls and leaders of powerful liberal groups, however, Biden’s momentum is now undeniable.

Bradley Beychok, president and co-founder of American Bridge 21st Century, a liberal super PAC, said his group “will be ALL IN to elect @JoeBiden as our next president.” The organization is spending millions of dollars trying to win over people who backed President Donald Trump in key states in 2016.

Guy Cecil, chairman of the flagship Democratic outside political organization Priorities USA, tweeted: “The math is now clear. Joe Biden is going to be the Democratic nominee for President and @prioritiesUSA is going to do everything we can to help him defeat Donald Trump in November.”

There were other major warning signs for Sanders on Tuesday. He again struggled to win support from black voters. About 70% of Mississippi’s Democratic primary voters were African American, and 86% of them supported Biden, according to an AP VoteCast survey of the electorate.

After Sanders upset Hillary Clinton in Michigan four years ago, his loss there Tuesday was particularly sobering. It undermined his argument that he could appeal to working-class voters and that he could expand the electorate with new young voters.

One of the few bright notes for Sanders was his strength among young voters, but even that has a downside because they didn’t turn out enough to keep him competitive. Sanders won 72% of those under 30 in Missouri and 65% in Michigan, according to AP VoteCast. The senator was also about even with Biden among voters ages 30 to 44.

“There’s no sugarcoating it. Tonight’s a tough night,” New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, one of Sanders’ highest-profile supporters, said on Instagram. “Tonight’s a tough night for the movement overall. Tonight’s a tough night electorally.”

Another top Sanders backer, Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar, tweeted: “Yes we are a family, united in restoring our democracy and committed to defeating Trump, but that doesn’t mean we should stop fighting for the candidate that best represents our policy priorities in this Primary.”

READ MORE: Sanders says Biden winning Black vote by ‘running with his ties to Obama’

According to an Associated Press analysis, Biden had picked up at least 153 new delegates: 53 in Michigan, 40 in Missouri, 29 in Mississippi, five in North Dakota, 17 in Washington and nine in Idaho on Tuesday. Sanders got 89: 35 in Michigan, 23 in Missouri, two in Mississippi, seven in Idaho, five in North Dakota and 17 in Washington.

Although six states voted, Michigan, with its 125 delegates, got most of the attention. Trump won the state by only 10,704 votes during the general election, his closest margin of victory among Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Those states gave Trump the narrow edge in the 2016 Electoral College after Clinton won the popular vote.

Sanders has vowed not to drop out regardless of Tuesday’s results and frequently railed against the “Democratic establishment” that he says has aligned against him.

In addition to the powerful groups now siding with Biden, the former vice president has picked up the endorsements of many of his former presidential rivals, including Sen. Kamala Harris, Sen. Cory Booker and, as of Tuesday, entrepreneur Andrew Yang. Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, sometimes mentioned as a possible vice presidential choice, also endorsed Biden and campaigned with him ahead of Tuesday’s primary.

Biden also gave a nod to all his former competitors, saying, “We’re bringing this party together.”

“That’s what we have to do,” he said.

Not every Democrat was lining up behind Biden, though. Michigan Rep. Debbie Dingell, who represents a sprawling district from the college town of Ann Arbor to the Detroit suburbs, said Tuesday that she’s staying neutral.

“I remember what it was like four years ago and the vitriol and the anger, the people mad at each other the whole election cycle. We can’t afford that,” Dingell said. “It’s about getting out and voting in November.”

Like Sanders, Biden has no public events scheduled for Wednesday. And though he’s celebrating a growing delegate lead, he’s still confronting voters who question his positions, which include a gun control plan that reinstates an assault weapons ban and includes a voluntary buyback program for assault weapons.

That issue was at the center of a testy exchange with a worker while Biden was rallying earlier Tuesday in Detroit. The man accused him of “actively trying to end our Second Amendment right.” Biden shot back, “You’re full of shit,” but went on to say that while he supports the Second Amendment, “Do you need 100 rounds?”

___

Associated Press writers Mike Householder in Detroit and Seth Borenstein in Washington contributed to this report.

The post Joe Biden has another big primary night, wins 4 more states appeared first on TheGrio.



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Black Beauty Founders Join Sephora’s Women’s Business Accelerator

Black Beauty Founders

Sephora is more than a one-stop-shop for beauty products. Over the past five years, Sephora has made a commitment to help women entrepreneurs in the beauty industry grow and accelerate their businesses through Sephora Accelerate.

Sephora Accelerate is dedicated to building a community of innovative female founders in beauty. The six months-long program begins with a one-week boot camp where founders acquire the necessary skills to create a successful business. Throughout the program, participants will receive one-on-one mentoring for specific business challenges from Sephora leaders and beauty industry experts; business grants; and the opportunity to pitch at the Sephora Accelerate Demo Day, where they present their company to industry experts, venture partners, and Sephora leaders to gain investments, advice on business growth tactics, and partnership.

Black Beauty Founders

Sephora Accelerate (Image: SephoraStands.com)

This year’s cohort includes women founders from Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Mexico, Singapore, Germany, the US, and the UK. In the fifth year of the program, Sephora has reached its goal of supporting 50 business women-led businesses by 2020.

In a statement released by Corrie Conrad, vice president of Sephora Stands (D &I, Social Impact, and Sustainability) she said, “Our goal with the Sephora Accelerate program was to not only help 50 + high-potential, women-led businesses get their big break, but to also create a lasting and sustainable community for all those involved to benefit from long after their participation in the program.”

Conrad went on to say, “We are proud of what this program has accomplished in five short years, from helping dozens of individual businesses thrive, to creating personal and professional connections and education for all. The program is ever-expanding, and with brands from Germany and Singapore on board for the first time this year, we look forward to building an even richer and more diverse experience now and into the future.”

Meet the Founders

Kymberlee Hill, a co-founder of Curl IQ; Helena Mendes, founder of Mawena; and Dawn Myers, founder of THE MOST, are among the 13 founders participating in the accelerator.

Curl IQ
Curl IQ

(Image: Curl-IQ.com)

Curl IQ turns photos of textured hair into personalized product recommendations, offering consumers with textured hair an easy and personalized shopping experience, and helping brands drive customer interaction and conversation.

Mawena
Black Beauty Founders

(Image: Mawena/Instagram)

Mawena is a vegan, cruelty-free, organic skincare line created through the prisms of green beauty for all, engagement, and inclusivity. The brand has a 100% Mayan Women’s cooperative in Mexico and donates a percentage of proceeds for each product sold.

THE MOST
Black Beauty Founders

(Image: Themostcurls.com)

THE MOST Mint is an all-in-one styling tool, which streamlines the process of detangling and applying product(s) to highly textured hair, making the process faster, easier, and more convenient.

Sephora’s Impact 

The accelerator programming focuses on guiding founders on their journey of achieving individual business goals through a multi-month program led by Sephora executives including but not limited to mentorship, marketing stewardship, networking, social media training, growth plans and funding strategy planning.

Over the past five years, women have received more than $850K in grants and funding to participating founders, with funds going toward things like fulfilling purchase orders, purchasing inventory, scaling operations, and new hires. Founders have also received assistance with securing space in major retailers including Sephora.

To learn more about Sephora Accelerate, click here.



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In Human Nature, Crispr's Origin Story Comes to Life

Human Nature takes a closer look at the scientists who founded the world-altering field of gene editing—and revels in the science.

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The US-China Feud Makes It Harder to Fight Coronavirus

Ian Bremmer, founder of the risk consultancy Eurasia Group, says popularism, nationalism, and distrust are feeding the spread of disease.

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Netgear Arlo Q Camera Review: Old but Dependable

This popular camera isn't the latest and greatest, but it still holds its own among newer models.

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'Hi Dad, It's Me. Please Buy Lots of Soup'

As the coronavirus spreads, telling your physician ox of a father to wash his hands and stockpile beans feels abnormal. But these are abnormal times.

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Giant Report Lays Anvil on US Cyber Policy

Released today, the bipartisan Cyberspace Solarium Commission makes more than 75 recommendations that range from common-sense to befuddling.

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Sports competitors barred from leaving Kenya for a month

Kenya's Sports Ministry bars travel to international events for Kenya's sports competitors for at least the next month.

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Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Why are workers getting smaller pieces of the pie?

It’s one of the biggest economic changes in recent decades: Workers get a smaller slice of company revenue, while a larger share is paid to capital owners and distributed as profits. Or, as economists like to say, there has been a fall in labor’s share of gross domestic product, or GDP.

A new study co-authored by MIT economists uncovers a major reason for this trend: Big companies that spend more on capital and less on workers are gaining market share, while smaller firms that spend more on workers and less on capital are losing market share. That change, the researchers say, is a key reason why the labor share of GDP in the U.S. has dropped from around 67 percent in 1980 to 59 percent today, following decades of stability.

“To understand this phenomenon, you need to understand the reallocation of economic activity across firms,” says MIT economist David Autor, co-author of the paper. “That’s our key point.”

To be sure, many economists have suggested other hypotheses, including new generations of software and machines that substitute directly for workers, the effects of international trade and outsourcing, and the decline of labor union power. The current study does not entirely rule out all of those explanations, but it does highlight the importance of what the researchers term “superstar firms” as a primary factor.

“We feel this is an incredibly important and robust fact pattern that you have to grapple with,” adds Autor, the Ford Professor of Economics in MIT’s Department of Economics.

The paper, “The Fall of the Labor Share and the Rise of Superstar Firms,” appears in advance online form in the Quarterly Journal of Economics. In addition to Autor, the other authors are David Dorn, a professor of economics at the University of Zurich; Lawrence Katz, a professor of economics at Harvard University; Christina Patterson, PhD ’19, a postdoc at Northwestern University who will join the faculty at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business in July; and John Van Reenen, the Gordon Y. Billard Professor of Management and Economics at MIT.


An economic “miracle” vanishes

For much of the 20th century, labor’s share of GDP was notably consistent. As the authors note, John Maynard Keynes once called it “something of a miracle” in the face of economic changes, and the British economist Nicholas Kaldor included labor’s steady portion of GDP as one of his often-cited six “stylized facts” of growth.

To conduct the study, the researchers scrutinized data for the U.S. and other countries in the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). The scholars used U.S. Economic Census data from 1982 to 2012 to study six economic sectors that account for about 80 percent of employment and GDP: manufacturing, retail trade, wholesale trade, services, utilities and transportation, and finance. The data includes payroll, total output, and total employment.

The researchers also used information from the EU KLEMS database, housed at the Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies, to examine the other OECD countries.

The increase in market dominance for highly competitive top firms in many of those sectors is evident in the data. In the retail trade, for instance, the top four firms accounted for just under 15 percent of sales in 1981, but that grew to around 30 percent of sales in 2011. In utilities and transportation, those figures moved from 29 percent to 41 percent in the same time frame. In manufacturing, this top-four sales concentration grew from 39 percent in 1981 to almost 44 percent in 2011.

At the same time, the average payroll-to-sales ratio declined in five of those sectors — with finance being the one exception. In manufacturing, the payroll-to-sales ratio decreased from roughly 18 percent in 1981 to about 12 percent in 2011. On aggregate, the labor share of GDP declined at most times except the period from 1997 to 2002, the final years of an economic expansion with high employment.

But surprisingly, labor’s share is not falling at the typical firm. Rather, reallocation of market share between firms is the key. In general, says Autor, the picture is of a “winner-take-most setting, where a smaller number of firms are accounting for a larger amount of economic activity, and those are firms where workers historically got a smaller share of the pie.”

A key insight provided by the study is that the dynamics within industry sectors has powered the drop in the labor share of GDP. The overall change is not just the result of, say, an increase in the deployment of technology in manufacturing, which some economists have suggested. While manufacturing is important to the big picture, the same phenomenon is unfolding across and within many sectors of the economy.

As far as testing the remaining alternate hypotheses, the study found no special pattern within industries linked to changes in trade policy — a subject Autor has studied extensively in the past. And while the decline in union power cannot be ruled out as a cause, the drop in labor share of GDP occurs even in countries where unions remain relatively stronger than they do in the U.S. 

Deserved market power, or not?

As Autor notes, there are nuances within the findings. Many “superstar” firms pay above-average wages to their employees; it is not that these firms are increasingly “squeezing” their workers, as he puts it. Rather, labor’s share of the economic value added across the industrial sectors in the study is falling because market-leading “superstar” firms are now a bigger piece of all economic activity.

On a related note, Autor suggests that the growth in market power is related to technological investment by firms in many sectors.

“We shouldn’t presume that just because a market is concentrated — with a few leading firms accounting for a large fraction of sales — it’s a market with low productivity and high prices,” Autor says. “It might be a market where you have some very productive leading firms.” Today, he adds, “more competition is platform-based competition, as opposed to simple price competition. Walmart is a platform business. Amazon is a platform business. Many tech companies are platform businesses. Many financial services companies are platform businesses. You have to make some huge investment to create a sophisticated service or set of offerings. Once that’s in place, it’s hard for your competitors to replicate.”

With this in mind, Autor says we may want to distinguish whether market concentration is “the bad kind, where lazy monopolists are jacking up prices, or the good kind, where the more competitive firms are getting a larger share. To the best we can distinguish, the rise of superstar firms appears more the latter than the former. These firms are in more innovative industries — their productivity growth has developed faster, they make more investment, they patent more. It looks like this is happening more in the frontier sectors than the laggard sectors.”

Still Autor adds, the paper does contain policy implications for regulators.

“Once a firm is that far ahead, there’s potential for abuse,” he notes. “Maybe Facebook shouldn’t be allowed to buy all its competitors. Maybe Amazon shouldn’t be both the host of a market and a competitor in that market. This potentially creates regulatory issues we should be looking at. There’s nothing in this paper that says everyone should just take a few years off and not worry about the issue.”

“We don’t think our paper is in any sense the last word on the topic,” Autor notes. “We think it adds useful paragraphs to the conversation for everybody to listen to and grapple with. We’ve had too few facts chased by too many theories. We need more facts to allow us to adjudicate among theories.”

Support for the research project was provided by Accenture LLC, the Economic and Social Research Council, the European Research Council, IBM Global Universities Programs, the MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy, the National Science Foundation, Schmidt Futures, the Sloan Foundation, the Smith Richardson Foundation, and the Swiss National Science Foundation.



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Blasian dating in South Africa: ‘Will my Asian family accept my black boyfriend?’

Blasian - black and Asian - couples now exist in South Africa... but they don't always have an easy time.

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Vanessa Bryant’s Net Worth at $600 Million Following Kobe Bryant’s Death

Vanessa Bryant

Vanessa Bryant is now worth $600 million after her husband, Kobe Bryant, died along with their 13-year-old daughter, Gianna, in a helicopter crash earlier this year. The couple had no prenuptial agreement, according to the International Business Times.

At the time of his death, Bryant had reportedly earned anywhere from $600 to $770 million throughout his professional basketball career, according to Forbes and other sources. In his 20-year NBA career, Bryant had earned more than $323 million in NBA salary and about $350 million from various endorsements.

According to data that was compiled by Spotrac and Basketball-Reference in December 2018, Bryant ranked number two among the 25 highest-paid NBA players of all time. His highest paying single-season salary was at $30.5 million during the 2013 to 2014 playing season. When he started, he had a yearly salary of $1 million back in 1996 during his rookie year in the league. By the time he retired, he was earning more than $25 million per year in base salary alone.

Bryant was the highest-paid athlete in the history of team sports when he finally hung up his sneakers and retired in 2016. His annual salary with the Los Angeles Lakers was the highest in the NBA in the final six seasons of his 20-year career. Although Bryant‘s salary was the highest in the NBA at the time, he was the second-highest-paid NBA player in his career behind former Minnesota Timberwolves/Boston Celtics’ player Kevin Garnett, who earned $334.3 million in his 21 NBA seasons. Garnett’s highest single-season salary was $28 million.

Earlier last month, attorneys for Vanessa Bryant filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against the company that operated the helicopter. Bryant’s complaint, which was filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court, was filed against Island Express Helicopters, Island Express Holding Corp. and the estate of the pilot, Ara Zobayan.

Bryant was a five-time NBA champion, a two-time Finals MVP, and the 2008 Most Valuable Player. During Bryant’s career, he made the All-Star team 18 times. He was the youngest player to ever reach 30,000 points. Bryant retired from the NBA in 2016, and scored an NBA-season high 60 points in his final game.



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Construction Workers Embrace the Robots That Do Their Jobs

A robotic excavator can dig a pipeline trench without a human in the cab. An engineers' union is partnering with the company that makes the tech.

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How Long Could the World Run on Geothermal Power?

If everyone went 100 percent geothermal today, Earth’s store of thermal energy would still outlive the sun.

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South African court clears Cyril Ramaphosa over donation

The high court dismisses the public protector's findings over a donation to President Ramaphosa.

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Ethiopian Airlines crash: 'I saw body parts being taken in white bags'

The BBC's Emmanuel Igunza reflects a year on from the deadly Ethiopia Airlines Boeing 737 Max crash.

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Dyson Corrale Hair Straightener: Features, Release Date, Price

We tried the company’s $500 Corrale straightener, which claims to smooth hair with more precision—and less damage.

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An Interview With James Dyson: Hair Care Products, EVs, Sustainability

In a wide-ranging interview, the British entrepreneur talks about hair dryers, plastics, electric cars, and why he's not bothered by political controversy.

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Trailer for LeBron James’ I PROMISE School documentary series is out

The first academic year of LeBron James’ I Promise school is featured in a new documentary.

Quibi and the I PROMISE school dropped the new trailer for the documentary on Monday. The film gives viewers an in-depth view of the school’s first year and tells “the story of LeBron James’ efforts to close the achievement gap in his hometown of Akron, Ohio through the eyes of the inspiring students who are resetting expectations of their futures,” according to a released put out by James’ SpringHill Entertainment and Quibi.

READ MORE: Kent State will provide free tuition for eligible students from LeBron James’ I Promise School

“The series will explore the day-to-day trials, triumphs, and life-changing impact of the school staff, students and families working together in a unique, family-first educational environment that embraces the trauma and challenges many face in Akron,” James added in the statement, according to WKYC.

The documentary also includes footage from when the school opened in July 2018, as well as snippets from classrooms and comments from the Lakers star.

“When you grow up in the inner-city, in the projects, no one cares about you,” James says in the trailer, reported WKYC. “The goal of this school is to have these kids feel like super heroes.”

Now in its second full year, the I PROMISE school continues to set high marks. Recently, it was announced that Kent State University had partnered with the LeBron James Family Foundation to offer free, four-year tuition to eligible students from the I Promise school. Students receiving the scholarships are also eligible to receive free room and board for one year.

READ MORE: LeBron James says it’s OK for men to cry: ‘It’s a different time’

Marc Levin, who did Brick City and Chicagoland, is directing the documentary series and James’ SpringHill Entertainment is producing it, along with Verizon Media’s RYOT and Blowback Productions.

Last fall, James announced the next phase of the school is to provide needed housing for transitional students and their families. The I PROMISE Village is expected to open in July.

The post Trailer for LeBron James’ I PROMISE School documentary series is out appeared first on TheGrio.



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VR Was Supposed to Help Us Work Remotely. So Where Is It?

Shuttered offices and social isolation. Working from home was supposed to be great, but the only thing worse than conference rooms is conference calls.

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Gayle King discusses ‘painful’ Kobe Bryant interview backlash with Oprah Winfrey

Gayle King said she has moved on from the public thrashing she received from rappers like Snoop Dogg and 50 Cent after she asked a question about Kobe Bryant’s past rape case during an interview with the NBA legend’s friend.

In a sit down with her bestie during the last stop of Oprah Winfrey’s “2020 Vision: Your Life in Focus Tour” this past Saturday, King said the aftermath of asking former WNBA star Lisa Leslie about the sexual assault case and its impact on Bryant’s legacy was “very painful” and left her with some scrapes.

However, King says she is forging ahead.

READ MORE: OPINION: The Gayle King vs Snoop Dogg debacle woke up cells of pick-me’s & Black woman haters

“I have moved on,” King, 65, told Winfrey, 66, reported PEOPLE, which obtained an advanced clip of the exchange. “Is there a scab? Yeah. But I have moved on.”

“I put on my game face and my big girl pants because I never lost sight of who I was, what I believe I am, and my intention. I’ve never lost sight of that. But it certainly was a learning curve, and it was very painful,” King added.

Bryant pleaded not guilty to felony sexual assault in 2003 after a 19-year-old Denver woman accused him of sexually assaulting her. Criminal charges against Bryant were later dropped, but a civil suit was settled out of court.

In the days after Bryant, his daughter, Gianna and seven other passengers were killed in a helicopter crash on Jan. 26, King interviewed Leslie on the full scope of Bryant’s legacy. CBS promoted the interview with the clip of King asking Leslie about Bryant’s rape case, which King slammed as “out of context” of her wide-ranging interview.

After the clip surfaced, Snoop Dogg, who was still mourning Bryant’s death, took to social media and posted a profanity-laced video directed at King for what he said was her insensitivity to Bryant’s widow, Vanessa, and their daughters. Snoop’s comments received backlash and were taken as a threat against King. The rapper later apologized and went on Jada Pinkett Smith’s Red Table Talk to further express his intentions.

In the PEOPLE clip from Winfrey’s Denver tour stop, the media mogul said what made matters worse for King was the “good people” who remained mum during her ordeal.

“In every circumstance, I think this is something for us to remember,” Winfrey said. “It’s not the people who are being mean, it’s not the badness, it’s not the vitriol that’s being put into the world, but it’s the good people who remain silent that becomes so hurtful.”

“I think we can disagree politically, we can disagree socially, if you want to, but I just think humanity should prevail always,” King added, according to PEOPLE. “I think we still have to figure out a way to navigate that with each other. That we can disagree, and you can be mad at me even, but you can’t speak to me the way I was spoken to and threatened.”

Winfrey also commended King for not allowing the hardship to make her doubt herself.

“No, I absolutely didn’t, Oprah,” King replied, according to PEOPLE.

The duo also discussed their life-long friendship, navigating relationships, and their various careers.

READ MORE: ‘The Oprah Winfrey Show The Podcast’ kicks off on March 3

Winfrey told King that she “never needed therapy” because she had King as a friend.

“We have talked about everything and nothing,” King replied. “You’ve never had therapy, but I’ve been to five therapists when I was married. And may I just say this? Nobody has been a better therapist than Oprah!”

Winfrey’s entire interview with King airs 8 p.m. tomorrow on Oprah’s Facebook Channel and the WW Now Facebook Channel.

The post Gayle King discusses ‘painful’ Kobe Bryant interview backlash with Oprah Winfrey appeared first on TheGrio.



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Despite Coronavirus, Washington Isn't Worried About Its Primary

The state conducts its elections almost entirely by mail. The rest of the country should pay attention. 

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Nigeria's dethroned Emir of Kano accepts removal

Muhammadu Sanusi II says the new emir should be embraced after he is ousted for "insubordination".

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The National Council of Negro Women is Helping HBCU Bethune-Cookman University in $8M Fundraising Effort

Bethune-Cookman University

The National Council of Negro Women Inc. (NCNW) has announced that in conjunction with HBCU Bethune-Cookman University (B-CU), they have launched “Advancing the Legacy,” a celebration of the accomplishments of Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune, who is the founder of both the NCNW and B-CU.

“Advancing the Legacy,” is an awareness and fundraising initiative to help raise money to provide ongoing support of Dr. Bethune’s lifelong mission of ensuring access to higher education for African American students. “It’s only appropriate that during Black History Month we recognize and honor all of Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune’s accomplishments because they are many and they are as relevant and important today as when she began in 1904,” said Dr. LaBrent Chrite, B-CU president in a written statement.

“We have accomplished so much over the past year in terms of preparing for B-CU’s future, and we just have one last bridge to cross,” Dr. Chrite added. “Everything we have done and will continue to do is intended to protect and advance Dr. Bethune’s legacy and ensure access to higher education for African American students.”

NCNW National Chair and President Dr. Johnnetta Cole and B-CU President Dr. LaBrent Chrite, announced the initiative to protect the vision and mission of Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune. Cole and Chrite were joined by Judge Belvin Perry, Ret., and Chair, B-CU Board of Trustees; Janice Mathews, Esq., and NCNW Executive Director; students from B-CU along with members of the B-CU Washington, D.C. Metro alumni chapter.

“Dr. Bethune fearlessly and successfully surpassed countless obstacles faced by a black woman, who was raised by former slaves. Even during her childhood in South Carolina, she understood the power of education and made her life’s work to provide access to young black men and women,” said Dr. Cole. “She also understood the importance of empowering black women which is why she established the NCNW. B-CU and NCNW are forever connected by her vision and legacy.”

One of the purposes of the initiative is to raise $12 million for Bethune-Cookman University and so far, the school has achieved one-third of its $12M campaign goal. They still need $8 million to close the gap in scholarship funding. The Advancing the Legacy campaign includes a digital element, asking people to make a financial donation online at advancingthelegacy.com and to assist in sharing their support on social media by using the hashtag #AdvancingBCU. All funds will be allocated in support of students, to reduce the cost of access and to strengthen retention and graduation rates.

Dr. Bethune will be formally recognized later this year when her statue will become part of the National Statuary Hall Collection in the Capitol Rotunda. This will mark the first time there will be an African American to have a state-commissioned statue in Statuary Hall.



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Can't Stop Touching Your Face? Science Has Some Theories Why

Ground squirrels do it. So do human fetuses. How did we all end up with this unhygienic habit?

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These Industrial Robots Get More Adept With Every Task

Vicarious, a secretive 10-year-old startup backed by Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, and Jeff Bezos, reveals its progress and an initial customer.

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*Call of Duty* Will Launch a Free-to-Play, Cross-Platform Game

*Warzone*, whose existence leaked a month ago, was finally announced on the official Activision blog.

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Jack Dorsey's Reprieve as Twitter CEO May Not Last

A deal with activist investor Elliott Management preserves Dorsey's job. But it gives him—and Twitter—tough targets to meet this year.

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Most Medical Imaging Devices Run Outdated Operating Systems

The end of Windows 7 support has hit health care extra hard, leaving several machines vulnerable.

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How plants protect themselves from sun damage

For plants, sunlight can be a double-edged sword. They need it to drive photosynthesis, the process that allows them to store solar energy as sugar molecules, but too much sun can dehydrate and damage their leaves.

A primary strategy that plants use to protect themselves from this kind of photodamage is to dissipate the extra light as heat. However, there has been much debate over the past several decades over how plants actually achieve this.

“During photosynthesis, light-harvesting complexes play two seemingly contradictory roles. They absorb energy to drive water-splitting and photosynthesis, but at the same time, when there’s too much energy, they have to also be able to get rid of it,” says Gabriela Schlau-Cohen, the Thomas D. and Virginia W. Cabot Career Development Assistant Professor of Chemistry at MIT.

In a new study, Schlau-Cohen and colleagues at MIT, the University of Pavia, and the University of Verona directly observed, for the first time, one of the possible mechanisms that have been proposed for how plants dissipate energy. The researchers used a highly sensitive type of spectroscopy to determine that excess energy is transferred from chlorophyll, the pigment that gives leaves their green color, to other pigments called carotenoids, which can then release the energy as heat.

“This is the first direct observation of chlorophyll-to-carotenoid energy transfer in the light-harvesting complex of green plants,” says Schlau-Cohen, who is the senior author of the study. “That’s the simplest proposal, but no one’s been able to find this photophysical pathway until now.”

MIT graduate student Minjung Son is the lead author of the study, which appears today in Nature Communications. Other authors are Samuel Gordon ’18, Alberta Pinnola of the University of Pavia, in Italy, and Roberto Bassi of the University of Verona.

Excess energy

When sunlight strikes a plant, specialized proteins known as light-harvesting complexes absorb light energy in the form of photons, with the help of pigments such as chlorophyll. These photons drive the production of sugar molecules, which store the energy for later use.

Much previous research has shown that plants are able to quickly adapt to changes in sunlight intensity. In very sunny conditions, they convert only about 30 percent of the available sunlight into sugar, while the rest is released as heat. If this excess energy is allowed to remain in the plant cells, it creates harmful molecules called free radicals that can damage proteins and other important cellular molecules.

“Plants can respond to fast changes in solar intensity by getting rid of extra energy, but what that photophysical pathway is has been debated for decades,” Schlau-Cohen says.

The simplest hypothesis for how plants get rid of these extra photons is that once the light-harvesting complex absorbs them, chlorophylls pass them to nearby molecules called carotenoids. Carotenoids, which include lycopene and beta-carotene, are very good at getting rid of excess energy through rapid vibration. They are also skillful scavengers of free radicals, which helps to prevent damage to cells.

A similar type of energy transfer has been observed in bacterial proteins that are related to chlorophyll, but until now, it had not been seen in plants. One reason why it has been hard to observe this phenomenon is that it occurs on a very fast time scale (femtoseconds, or quadrillionths of a second). Another obstacle is that the energy transfer spans a broad range of energy levels. Until recently, existing methods for observing this process could only measure a small swath of the spectrum of visible light.

In 2017, Schlau-Cohen’s lab developed a modification to a femtosecond spectroscopic technique that allows them to look at a broader range of energy levels, spanning red to blue light. This meant that they could monitor energy transfer between chlorophylls, which absorb red light, and carotenoids, which absorb blue and green light.

In this study, the researchers used this technique to show that photons move from an excited state, which is spread over multiple chlorophyll molecules within a light-harvesting complex, to nearby carotenoid molecules within the complex.

“By broadening the spectral bandwidth, we could look at the connection between the blue and the red ranges, allowing us to map out the changes in energy level. You can see energy moving from one excited state to another,” Schlau-Cohen says.

Once the carotenoids accept the excess energy, they release most of it as heat, preventing light-induced damage to the cells.

Boosting crop yields

The researchers performed their experiments in two different environments — one in which the proteins were in a detergent solution, and one in which they were embedded in a special type of self-assembling membrane called a nanodisc. They found that the energy transfer occurred more rapidly in the nanodisc, suggesting that environmental conditions affect the rate of energy dissipation.

It remains a mystery exactly how excess sunlight triggers this mechanism within plant cells. Schlau-Cohen’s lab is now exploring whether the organization of chlorophylls and carotenoids within the chloroplast membrane play a role in activating the photoprotection system.

A better understanding of plants’ natural photoprotection system could help scientists develop new ways to improve crop yields, Schlau-Cohen says. A 2016 paper from University of Illinois researchers showed that by overproducing all of the proteins involved in photoprotection, crop yields could be boosted by 15 to 20 percent. That paper also suggested that production could be further increased to a theoretical maximum of about 30 percent.

“If we understand the mechanism, instead of just upregulating everything and getting 15 to  20 percent, we could really optimize the system and get to that theoretical maximum of 30 percent,” Schlau-Cohen says.

The research was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.



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Exclusive: How Google Uses Machine Learning to Analyze Soccer Moves

How powerful is your kick? Did you pass effectively? The latest Jacquard wearable uses machine learning to scrutinize a player’s footwork in real time.

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Monday, March 9, 2020

Why do banking crises occur?

Why did the U.S. banking crisis of 2007-2008 occur? Many accounts have chronicled the bad decisions and poor risk management at places like Lehmann Brothers, the now-vanished investment bank. Still, plenty of banks have vanished, and many countries have had their own banking crises in recent decades. So, to pose the question more generally, why do modern banking crises occur?

David Singer believes he knows. An MIT professor and head of the Institute’s Department of Political Science, Singer has spent years examining global data on the subject with his colleague Mark Copelovitch, a political scientist at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.

Together, Singer and Copelovitch have identified two things, in tandem, that generate banking crises: One, a large amount of foreign investment surges into a country, and two, that country’s economy has a well-developed market in securities — especially stocks.

“Empirically, we find that systemic bank failures are more likely when substantial foreign capital inflows meet a financial system with well-developed stock markets,” says Singer. “Banks take on more risk in these environments, which makes them more prone to collapse.”

Singer and Copelovitch detail their findings in a new book, “Banks on the Brink: Global Capital, Securities Markets, and the Political Roots of Financial Crises,” published by Cambridge University Press. In it, they emphasize that the historical development of markets creates conditions ripe for crisis — it is not just a matter of a few rogue bankers engaging in excessive profit-hunting.

“There wasn’t much scholarship that explored the phenomenon from both a political and an economic perspective,” Singer adds. “We sought to go up to 30,000 feet and see what the patterns were, to explain why some banking systems were more resilient than others.”

Where the risk goes: Banks or stocks?

Through history, lending institutions have often been prone to instability. But Singer and Copelovitch examined what makes banks vulnerable under contemporary conditions. They looked at economic and banking-sector data from 1976-2011, for the 32 countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

That time period begins soon after the Bretton Woods system of international monetary-policy cooperation vanished, which led to a significant increase in foreign capital movement. From 1990 to 2005 alone, international capital flow increased from $1 trillion to $12 trillion annually. (It has since slid back to $5 trillion, after the Great Recession.)

Even so, a flood of capital entering a country is not enough, by itself, to send a banking sector under water, Singer says: “Why is it that some capital inflows can be accommodated and channeled productively throughout an economy, but other times they seem to lead a banking system to go awry?”

The answer, Singer and Copelovitch contend, is that a highly active stock market is a form of competition for the banking sector, to which banks respond by taking greater risks. 

To see why, imagine a promising business needs capital. It could borrow funds from a bank. Or it could issue a stock offering, and raise the money from investors, as riskier firms generally do. If a lot of foreign investment enters a country, backing firms that issue stock offerings, bankers will want a piece of the action.

“Banks and stock markets are competing for the business of firms that need to raise money,” Singer says. “When stock markets are small and unsophisticated, there’s not much competition. Firms go to their banks.” However, he adds, “A bank doesn’t want to lose a good chunk of its customer base to the stock markets. … And if that happens, banks start to do business with slightly riskier firms.”

Rethinking Canadian bank stability

Exploring this point in depth, the book develops contrasting case studies of Canada and Germany. Canada is one of the few countries to remain blissfully free of banking crises — something commentators usually ascribe to sensible regulation.

However, Singer and Copelovitch observe, Canada has always had small, regional stock markets, and is the only OECD country without a national stock-market regulator.

“There’s a sense that Canada has stable banks just because they’re well-regulated,” Singer says. “That’s the conventional wisdom we’re trying to poke holes in. And I think it’s not well-understood that Canada’s stock markets are as underdeveloped as they are.”

He adds: “That’s one of the key considerations, when we analyze why Canada’s banks are so stable. They don’t face a competitive threat from stock markets the way banks in the United States do. They can be conservative and be competitive and still be profitable.”

By contrast, German banks have been involved in many banking blowups in the last two decades. At one time, that would not have been the case. But Germany’s national-scale banks, feeling pressure from a thriving set of regional banks, tried to bolster profits through securities investment, leading to some notable problems.

“Germany started off the period we study looking like a very bank-centric economy,” Singer says. “And that’s what Germany is often known for, close connections between banks and industry.” However, he notes, “The national banks started to feel a competitive threat and looked to stock markets to bolster their competitive advantage. … German banks used to be so stable and so long-term focused, and they’re now finding short-term trouble.”

“Banks on the Brink” has drawn praise from other scholars in the field. Jeffry Frieden, a professor of government at Harvard University, says the book’s “careful logic, statistical analyses, and detailed case studies make compelling reading for anyone interested in the economics and politics of finance.”

For their part, Singer and Copelovitch say they hope to generate more discussion about both the recent history of banking crises, and how to avoid them in the future.

Perhaps surprisingly, Singer believes that separating commerical and investment banks from each other — which the Glass-Steagall Act used to do in the U.S. — would not prevent crises. Any bank, not just investment banks, can flounder if profit-hunting in risky territory.

Instead, Singer says, “We think macroprudential regulations for banks are the way to go. That’s just about capital regulations, making sure banks are holding enough capital to absorb any losses they might incur. That seems to be the best approach to maintaining a stable banking system, especially in the face of large capital flows.”



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How the brain encodes landmarks that help us navigate

When we move through the streets of our neighborhood, we often use familiar landmarks to help us navigate. And as we think to ourselves, “OK, now make a left at the coffee shop,” a part of the brain called the retrosplenial cortex (RSC) lights up.

While many studies have linked this brain region with landmark-based navigation, exactly how it helps us find our way is not well-understood. A new study from MIT neuroscientists now reveals how neurons in the RSC use both visual and spatial information to encode specific landmarks.

“There’s a synthesis of some of these signals — visual inputs and body motion — to represent concepts like landmarks,” says Mark Harnett, an assistant professor of brain and cognitive sciences and a member of MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain Research. “What we went after in this study is the neuron-level and population-level representation of these different aspects of spatial navigation.”

In a study of mice, the researchers found that this brain region creates a “landmark code” by combining visual information about the surrounding environment with spatial feedback of the mice’s own position along a track. Integrating these two sources of information allowed the mice to learn where to find a reward, based on landmarks that they saw.

“We believe that this code that we found, which is really locked to the landmarks, and also gives the animals a way to discriminate between landmarks, contributes to the animals’ ability to use those landmarks to find rewards,” says Lukas Fischer, an MIT postdoc and the lead author of the study.

Harnett is the senior author of the study, which appears today in the journal eLife. Other authors are graduate student Raul Mojica Soto-Albors and recent MIT graduate Friederike Buck.

Encoding landmarks

Previous studies have found that people with damage to the RSC have trouble finding their way from one place to another, even though they can still recognize their surroundings. The RSC is also one of the first areas affected in Alzheimer’s patients, who often have trouble navigating.

The RSC is wedged between the primary visual cortex and the motor cortex, and it receives input from both of those areas. It also appears to be involved in combining two types of representations of space — allocentric, meaning the relationship of objects to each other, and egocentric, meaning the relationship of objects to the viewer.

“The evidence suggests that RSC is really a place where you have a fusion of these different frames of reference,” Harnett says. “Things look different when I move around in the room, but that’s because my vantage point has changed. They’re not changing with respect to one another.”

In this study, the MIT team set out to analyze the behavior of individual RSC neurons in mice, including how they integrate multiple inputs that help with navigation. To do that, they created a virtual reality environment for the mice by allowing them to run on a treadmill while they watch a video screen that makes it appear they are running along a track. The speed of the video is determined by how fast the mice run.

At specific points along the track, landmarks appear, signaling that there’s a reward available a certain distance beyond the landmark. The mice had to learn to distinguish between two different landmarks, and to learn how far beyond each one they had to run to get the reward.

Once the mice learned the task, the researchers recorded neural activity in the RSC as the animals ran along the virtual track. They were able to record from a few hundred neurons at a time, and found that most of them anchored their activity to a specific aspect of the task.

There were three primary anchoring points: the beginning of the trial, the landmark, and the reward point. The majority of the neurons were anchored to the landmarks, meaning that their activity would consistently peak at a specific point relative to the landmark, say 50 centimeters before it or 20 centimeters after it.

Most of those neurons responded to both of the landmarks, but a small subset responded to only one or the other. The researchers hypothesize that those strongly selective neurons help the mice to distinguish between the landmarks and run the correct distance to get the reward.

When the researchers used optogenetics (a tool that can turn off neuron activity) to block activity in the RSC, the mice’s performance on the task became much worse.

Combining inputs

The researchers also did an experiment in which the mice could choose to run or not while the video played at a constant speed, unrelated to the mice’s movement. The mice could still see the landmarks, but the location of the landmarks was no longer linked to a reward or to the animals’ own behavior. In that situation, RSC neurons did respond to the landmarks, but not as strongly as they did when the mice were using them for navigation.

Further experiments allowed the researchers to tease out just how much neuron activation is produced by visual input (seeing the landmarks) and by feedback on the mouse’s own movement. However, simply adding those two numbers yielded totals much lower than the neuron activity seen when the mice were actively navigating the track.

“We believe that is evidence for a mechanism of nonlinear integration of these inputs, where they get combined in a way that creates a larger response than what you would get if you just added up those two inputs in a linear fashion,” Fischer says.

The researchers now plan to analyze data that they have already collected on how neuron activity evolves over time as the mice learn the task. They also hope to perform further experiments in which they could try to separately measure visual and spatial inputs into different locations within RSC neurons.

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the McGovern Institute, the NEC Corporation Fund for Research in Computers and Communications at MIT, and the Klingenstein-Simons Fellowship in Neuroscience.



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Hundreds of billions of locusts swarm in East Africa

East Africa could be on the verge of a food crisis, if swarms of locusts are not controlled.

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Senator Cory Booker proudly endorses Joe Biden for president

Senator Cory Booker (D-N.J.) endorsed Joe Biden for president on Monday, calling him “the answer to hatred & division” and the person who will “restore honor to the Oval Office.”

Just a day after Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) announced her support for Biden, Booker threw his backing the former vice president’s way. Both senators will campaign in Detroit with Biden tonight and Booker will also join Biden in Flint, Michigan and attend a fundraiser with him – one day before Michigan’s crucial primary vote, reported The New York Times.

READ MORE: Cory Booker gets support from girlfriend Rosario Dawson after he exits 2020 race

The timing of Booker and Harris’ endorsements and their proximity to the Michigan primary is reminiscent of the moderate democrat support Biden received a week ago when Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), former South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg, and former Rep. Beto O’Rourke of Texas all endorsed Biden just before Super Tuesday.

Michigan is a critical state and Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) are both putting tremendous effort into the state and hoping to score a victory. Sanders canceled events over the weekend in Mississippi to concentrate efforts in Michigan, The New York Times reported.

Biden has said he would most likely choose a woman as his vice president, however, Booker’s support raises questions as to whether Booker could be a potential running mate. Booker, the former mayor of Newark, was elected to the Senate in 2013.

On Twitter, Booker said he chose Biden because he brings the stability and experience the country needs.

READ MORE: NYC Mayor de Blasio implies Black voters are ignorant of Joe Biden’s full record

“The answer to hatred & division is to reignite our spirit of common purpose. @JoeBiden won’t only win – he’ll show there’s more that unites us than divides us. He’ll restore honor to the Oval Office and tackle our most pressing challenges. That’s why I’m proud to endorse Joe,” Booker tweeted.

Booker is up for re-election to the Senate this year. Although his favorability dipped a bit when he temporarily dropped out of the race to campaign for president, he is still popular across New Jersey.

The post Senator Cory Booker proudly endorses Joe Biden for president appeared first on TheGrio.



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Tennis Exec Katrina Adams Has Learned to Enjoy the Battle

Portraits of Power Katrina Adams

Featuring a broad cross-section of women who have distinguished themselves across a rich variety of careers, our Portraits of Power series is a celebration of the 50th Anniversary of Black Enterprise, and of black women. It’s a place for today’s businesswomen to share their own favorite images and their own stories, in their own words. Today’s portrait is Katrina Adams, tennis’s first African American president.

Katrina M. Adams

Nickname Kat

Title Past Chairman/President, USTA; Executive Director, Harlem Junior Tennis and Education Program; VP, International Tennis Federation (ITF)

My first job was pro tennis player

My big break came when I became a professional tennis player and later, an analyst on the Tennis Channel

I’ve had to work hardest at communicating my personal feelings/emotions

I never imagined I would write a book or become the Chairman, CEO and President of the United States Tennis Association

I wish I’d learned a second language sooner.

The risk I regret not taking is mastering a second language.

If I could design my fantasy self-care day, it would be spent with a large latte in the morning and a large freshly squeezed orange juice. A light cardio workout, a mani/pedi and late lunch to follow. Perhaps a round of golf, followed by a massage and then a nice glass of champagne before dinner with friends.

The passing of my mother in August and the physical and mental health of my father keeps me up at night.

When I’m struggling, I say to myself, embrace the path that you lead and enjoy the battle. Take it one issue at a time, one day at a time.

I am unapologetically confident and unwavering.


Portraits of Power is a yearlong series of candid insights from exceptional women leaders. It is brought to you by ADP.



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With So Many Streaming Services, What Really Sets Them Apart?

For those who want limitless options—and have a limitless budget—the market is heaven. But to pick between, say, Netflix or Hulu, what's on offer is a little ... vague.

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TikTok Has a Pro-Anorexia Problem

The go-to social media platform for teens needs to improve its recommendation algorithm and partner with eating disorder experts.

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Jay-Z Owned Tidal Now Offering 20% Discounts to Come Back

Jay-Z Tidal Discount

Tidal is living up to its name, but not in the way it hoped. A tidal wave of U.S. subscribers left Jay-Z’s music streaming service in 2018 and he returned to Spotify at the end of 2019. Now Tidal is offering former customers a 20 percent discount to return to the platform.

According to Music Business Worldwide, Tidal reported “a record operating loss in 2018 of $36.7 million and a net loss of $36.9 million” in the United States. The report also said the streaming service lost over 100,000 U.S. subscribers that same year.

When Jay made the move back to Spotify on his birthday in December 2019, some wondered whether that signaled the impending end for the once promising venture.

Forbes even said Jay-Z’s Spotify return “could be the nail in Tidal’s coffin.” “Is it genius marketing for the Tidal owner, or does this show he’s throwing in the streaming wars towel, as his company continues to struggle with growth?” CultureBanx CEO and contributor Kori Hale asked.

But recently released documents by Tidal’s parent company, Project Panther Bidco (PPB), painted a more optimistic picture. They reported “annual revenues in territories outside the US and UK rose considerably in 2018 – more than doubling to $84.5m.” They also expanded to Africa and in Europe and Latin America.

Despite this – and boasting a catalog of $60 million songs and having a presence in 54 countries – the company has still struggled to keep up with competitors Apple and Spotify. Hence the need for more subscribers.

The self-described “artist-owned global music and entertainment platform” sent an email to former subscribers Thursday, Feb. 27. It read “get 20% off a standard or family plan for 3 months” and reiterated the benefits of subscribing.

Is it the beginning of the end for Tidal? Only time will tell.

This article was written by Isheka N. Harrison for The Moguldom Nation.



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Blue Ivy and her dad, Jay-Z, steal the show at the Lakers-Clippers game

Jay-Z brought his daughter, Blue Ivy Carter, to the cross-town basketball rivalry of the L.A. Lakers against the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday and the father-daughter pair seemed to enjoy themselves.

READ MORE: Blue Ivy Carter wins her first NAACP Image Award at 8-years-old

The two sat courtside at the Staples Center, with photographers snapping Blue, 8, snacking on potato chips and laughing with her 50-year-old dad as they took in the excitement of the game. Babygirl wore a stylish denim jacket emblazoned with the words: “Blue is my name” on the back. She also had on chic black leggings and finished her casual outfit off with some ultra-stylish Fendi combat boots.

Jay opted for casual gear as well, donning a gray sweater with the words “Avant-Garde” written in black on it. He also wore black joggers, a white t-shirt and sneakers. He wrapped up his look with a gold chain and Rhude hat by Los Angeles designer, Rhuigi Villaseñor, reported E News!

Even Twitter couldn’t deal.

“Something about the fact that Blue Ivy is mature enough to be sitting court side with her legs crossed is sending me,” tweeted Sylvia Obell.

After the Lakers win, Blue and Jay posed for photos with a few of the players, including LeBron James and JaVale McGee.

But it was the exchange with LeBron James that had us all proud of the budding starlet. Before James went into the locker room, Blue appeared to ask him for a signed basketball.

“You want a ball from me? Okay, I got you! I got you!” LeBron could be heard telling babygirl, as he further inquired about whether she has school on Monday and then promised to get her the ball after school, reported Hollywood Life.

READ MORE: New photo of Blue Ivy released on her 8th birthday by grandfather, Mathew Knowles

Blue’s mom, Beyoncé, and siblings, twins Rumi and Sir Carter, were not at the exciting game.

Other stars, however, showed up and showed out, including Chrissy Teigen and John Legend, who were also courtside. 2 Chainz, Maverick Carter and his daughter, Lyra Carter, were also in attendance.

The post Blue Ivy and her dad, Jay-Z, steal the show at the Lakers-Clippers game appeared first on TheGrio.



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Nigeria's Zainab Bulkachuwa retires after 45 years in the judiciary

After 45 years in service, Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa is looking forward to her retirement.

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Two Physicists Bet Over a Quantum Computing Moon Shot

Topological quantum computing has long been a beautiful dream. Two top scientists are now facing off over whether it will exist by 2030.

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