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Wednesday, August 12, 2020

How MIT built its own Covid-19 testing trailer

In mid-March, in response to the unfolding Covid-19 pandemic, MIT Medical quickly set up testing tents where essential workers and others who remained on campus could be safely screened for the novel coronavirus. In the tents, nurses and physicians administered nasal swabs while dressed in full personal protective equipment, or PPE.

It soon became clear that to safely test on a daily basis, medical workers needed to regularly replenish their PPE — a resource in short, desperate supply. There was also the possibility that, in doffing all that PPE at the end of an eight-hour shift, a nurse could risk inhaling any infectious particles that might cling to gowns, surgical masks, and face shields.

“One of the biggest challenges in Covid testing is [that] you place the one doing the testing at a not-insignificant risk,” says Brian Schuetz, MIT Medical’s chief of staff.

Weather conditions were also a challenge, as a late-March noreaster threatened to upend the tents. Looking to the hot summer months, Schuetz and his medical team knew that major adjustments would have to be made to improve the safety and comfort of both patients and staff.

“We made a decision early on that we had to think differently about how we did things,” Schuetz says.

Over two months, he and experts from across campus worked tirelessly to design and build MIT’s newest testing facility — a 60-foot trailer that is now operating as the main test site for asymptomatic members of the MIT community who need to return to campus.

Inside, the renovated trailer accommodates a check-in station and six testing bays. Floor-to-ceiling plastic partitions run the length of the trailer, keeping medical staff on one side, and those getting tested on the other. In each testing bay, a tester on one side of the partition can fit her arms into large rubber gloves that extend out to the other side, so that she can perform a nasal swab without either party coming in physical contact.

The trailer is also equipped with an upgraded HVAC system, calibrated so that the air on either side of the partitions will not mix. The two separate spaces within the trailer make it possible for medical staff to safely test people while wearing a simple surgical mask, rather than full PPE.

“The result is: The folks behind that plastic are very safe,” Schuetz says. “If we can make our team comfortable and patients comfortable, we can help everyone be safer.”

The trailer began operating in early July, with the capacity to test up to 1,500 people per day. MIT’s Information Systems and Technology group wired the trailer to MIT’s Covid Pass system, which allows an MIT member to access campus facilities if they have tested negative for the coronavirus. The trailer is designated as a testing site for asymptomatic members with access to the Covid Pass app.

The entire experience takes about two minutes. The nasal swabs are analyzed at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, and results are entered into the Covid Pass system; those who have been tested can check their results via the app.

“One of the biggest challenges in this whole effort was figuring out how to get all these disparate pieces put together, and I think we’ve created a solution that works together to help the campus be safe,” Schuetz says. “It’s really an example of MIT at its best — innovation from the ground up.”

A race against time

That ground-up effort took off quickly, when Schuetz first approached Elazer Edelman, director of the Institute for Medical Engineering and Science, looking for additional sources of PPE for the medical tents that were used initially.

“And Elazer said, ‘Wait a minute — MIT is the best place in the world to find people that can make exactly what we want,” recalls Martin Culpepper, professor of mechanical engineering and a member of MIT’s governance team on manufacturing opportunities for Covid-19.

So the medical team refocused their vision to test the MIT community, not in tents with medical staff in full PPE, but in a well-ventilated, weather-protected space.

Edelman connected with Culpepper, who reached out to campus workshops for material resources and expertise. Meanwhile, Schuetz worked with the Department of Facilities to acquire two trailers.

“We order trailers for construction projects all the time, and it’s nothing out of the norm, except now we’re in the middle of a pandemic, and there are not a lot of trailers out there,” recalls Paul Murphy, director of special projects in the Facilities Campus Construction team. “But everyone stepped up and knew how important this was, and within four days, we had two trailers, which normally could take months with this type of fit-out.”

Culpepper met with Tasker Smith, technical instructor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, and Jennifer O’Brien, technical instructor in the Department of Architecture, who together drew up a testing space designed for the larger, 60-foot trailer, based on initial conversations with medical staff. 

“The early stages were all about napkin sketches, cardboard, duct tape, and bubblegum — whatever it takes to help you wrap your mind around this thing quickly,” Smith says.

O’Brien built a rough model of a testing bay and invited several nurses and physicians to test it out.

“Having experience building custom furniture, I thought there might be needs they will find that they have, that they weren’t going to think of ahead of time,” O’Brien recalls. “I realized that, for example, based on the wide range of height and shoulder width of testers, that existing designs found online at the time might not be comfortable for everyone.”

So she made a crucial adjustment to the final design, building the gloves into an extra panel in each bay’s window that can be adjusted up and down to accommodate a tester’s height. The team then worked with Culpepper to acquire materials for the actual build.

“At that time, the whole world was realizing they needed to source clear-sheet plastic to shield people interacting with one another, like cashiers and students, so there was a big scramble,” O’Brien says. “We were racing against time, and had to get this thing up and running as fast as possible, to manage a larger MIT population as soon as they started returning to campus.”

While she and Smith started building out the trailer’s physical layout with the help of campus construction crews, Culpepper worked with Facilities engineers to optimize the trailer’s HVAC system.

“We ran all sorts of calculations on how much air had to be turned over at a certain time, with the number of individuals who would occupy both sides of the trailer,” Murphy says.

The team designed a positive pressure HVAC system that pumps 700 cubic feet per minute of outdoor air through one side of the trailer’s plastic partition, in a way that keeps one side at positive pressure, and the other at negative pressure — a balance that prevents air on either side from mixing. A large, custom-built exhaust stack blows the air out about 12 feet above the trailer.

So far, about 4,000 people have been tested in the trailer. The eventual goal is to have all members of the community working and living on campus be tested up to twice a week, with the trailer as a key component of that stategy. Schuetz notes, however, that the evolution of testing technologies, medical guidance, and prevalence of Covid-19 in the broader Massachusetts community will likely result in changes to the testing strategy over the coming months.  

Looking to a hopeful future, Schuetz suggests the trailer can be configured for other purposes, such as testing people for antibodies, or even, administering a vaccine.

“It’s not over now that it’s built,” adds O’Brien, who with Smith, is assembling a packet of sharable specs for anyone interested in building similar facilities. “It continues to be a versatile design, and we are still here on campus if needed, to update it.”



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Over 1,000 students in Georgia school district under quarantine

Several teachers protested the district’s plan to reopen schools on Aug. 3, some even resigned due to safety concerns.

More than 1000 students have been quarantined in a Georgia school district due to possible coronavirus exposure since in-person classes resumed last week.

The Cherokee County School District, which serves more than 42,000 students and is located north of Atlanta, is also closing a second high school due to a COVID-19 outbreak, Business Insider reports. 

“Since we’ve reopened, and as of this morning, there have been 59 positive COVID-19 tests confirmed among our students and staff, which have led us to mandate two-week quarantines for 925 students and staff,” Superintendent Dr. Brian V. Hightower said in a Facebook post. 

Read More: Companies test antibody drugs to treat, prevent COVID-19

“We are not hesitating to quarantine students and staff who have had possible exposure – even if the positive test was prompted by possible exposure rather than symptoms, as all positive cases can lead to the infection of others,” he added.

“Our transparency to our community is far beyond any requirements by the Department of Public Health, but we believe our community benefits from our longstanding commitment to transparency. We don’t need social media to tell us to be transparent – it’s who we are because we care about our community,” said Hightower.

Read More: Nearly 100K children test positive for COVID-19 as schools reopen

The message below is from Superintendent of Schools Dr. Brian V. Hightower:When we announced plans to reopen schools…

Posted by Cherokee County GA School District on Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Several teachers and parents protested the district’s plan to reopen schools on Aug. 3, some even resigned due to safety concerns, others criticized the county’s refusals to ‘made masking for students.”

“My personal fear is that I’m going to die before my career is over, that this tiny virus is what’s going to take me out, and not old age or some horrific accident,” said science teacher Olivia Vacid. “I don’t understand the county’s refusal to mandate masking for students”

According to a list the district created, nearly 1,200 students and staff are currently under a mandatory two-week quarantine, NBC News reported.

The state Department of Public Health reports that Georgia is currently averaging more than 60 COVID-19 related deaths a day.

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Stepmom of officer who killed Rayshard Brooks accused of racist conduct

The complaint alleges she ‘engaged in blatantly racist conduct’ and suggested one staffer stop dating Black men.

Melissa Rolfe, the stepmother of the former Atlanta, Georgia, police officer involved in the shooting death of Rayshard Brooks, is being sued for defamation. 

In June, Rolfe was fired from her HR position at Equity Prime Mortgage LLC following complaints of creating an “uncomfortable and hostile working environment,” according to the lawsuit filed by the Atlanta-based firm on Tuesday, New York Post reports.

The complaint alleges she “engaged in blatantly racist conduct,” called employees “savages,” “dingbats” and “f–king bitches,” and suggested one black staffer “upgrade [her] standards” and stop dating Black men because they’re “weak.” She also claimed an employee was hired because she “must suck d–k really good.” 

Read More: Officer who shot Rayshard Brooks files lawsuit, vacations in Florida

“Not surprisingly, Rolfe lost people’s confidence in her ability to perform her job as an HR Director and was fired,” the lawsuit states.  

The termination sparked outrage among conservatives on social media after Rolfe embarked on a “smear campaign” with congressional candidate Marjorie Taylor Greene. They launched “a national media firestorm” to push the lie that she was fired because of her stepson, former officer Garrett Rolfe, was charged with the murder of Brooks, the filing says.

Rolfe and Greene are accused of “seeking to exploit the death of Rayshard Brooks for their own personal gain.”

Read More: Former Atlanta officer who shot Rayshard Brooks released on bond

Rayshard Brooks theGrio.com
Rayshard Brooks (Screenshot from Reconnect documentary)

“The smear campaign mobilized a furious social media mob and prompted death threats, a boycott, and enormous reputational and financial harm to [Equity Prime Mortgage],” the firm said in the lawsuit.

The pair “knew that their smear campaign was based on a lie, but they intentionally disregarded the truth to capitalize on national attention related to Rayshard Brooks’s death,” the lawsuit claims.

“We were targeted with death threats, hate mail, and a boycott because of a national media firestorm based on statements by Marjorie Greene’s campaign and Melissa Rolfe,” said the company’s CEO, Eddy Perez.

“We are committed to setting the record straight and defending our good name.”

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3 men arrested for harassing, threatening R. Kelly’s accusers

The singer’s defense attorney said the artist had ‘no involvement whatsoever’ in a plot to silence victims.

Several of R. Kelly’s associates have been arrested for allegedly threatening, harassing and trying to bribe women who accused the singer of sexual abuse. 

According to a complaint filed by U.S. attorneys, three men connected to the disgraced R&B star tried to intimidate several women by firebombing a victim’s father’s car, offering a half-million-dollar bribe, and releasing sexually explicit photos online, NBC New York reports. Richard Arline Jr., Donnell Russell and Michael Williams were charged Wednesday for “re-victimizing his accusers.” 

Arline is said to be a longtime friend of Kelly, who offered one accuser $500,000 to keep quiet about her experience with the hitmaker. Russell, a former manager and adviser to the artist, released sexually explicit photos of a victim after she filed a lawsuit against R. Kelly. He reportedly published the images on a Facebook page and shared them during a YouTube live vlog in January.

Read More: Prosecutors want R. Kelly jury to be anonymous

Williams is related to Kelly’s former publicist. In June, he set fire to an SUV belonging to the father of an accuser, according to prosecutors.

“These crimes shock the conscience,” said Peter Fitzhugh, a special agent-in-charge with Homeland Security Investigations, who worked on Kelly’s sex crimes case in New York. “The men charged today allegedly have shown that there is no line they will not cross to help Kelly avoid the consequences of his alleged crimes—even if it means re-victimizing his accusers.”

Defense attorney Steve Greenberg said on Twitter that R. Kelly had “no involvement whatsoever” in a plot to silence victims.

Read More: ‘Surviving R. Kelly’ producer Dream Hampton to helm Tulsa race massacre docu-series

As theGRIO previously reported, Kelly is currently awaiting trial in Chicago’s Metropolitan Correctional Center. After the coronavirus pandemic hit America, he asked a judge for bail in April in fear of contracting the virus. U.S District Judge Ann Donnelly denied the request on April 7, concluding that she had “no compelling reasons” to release Kelly and that he was still a flight risk, according to USA Today.

R. Kelly is also facing racketeering and sex crime charges in New York.

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The last Blockbuster store will become movie-themed Airbnb

The movie rental giant was eclipsed by streaming media sites and went out of business but there’s one store still standing

Before there was Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, Apple+ and Amazon Prime, there was Blockbuster. The video rental company with its familiar blue and yellow sign was everywhere. Depending on your location, it had an array of newly released and classic DVD’s and videos. Even the slogan “Be kind, rewind,” referred to making sure you returned VHS tape rentals rewound to the beginning.

As a source of the night’s or weekend’s entertainment choices, the local Blockbuster was a brightly lit, happy place where you might start up a conversation with a fellow lover of French film, or even buy your popcorn and snacks as though you were heading out to the movie house instead of your own couch.

Read More: Controversial ‘Black-ish’ episode to air on Hulu

At one point, Blockbuster had 9,000 stores nationwide with 60,000 employees.

But Netflix, which first made it easy to watch and return videos and DVD’s by mail, then moved on to streaming media. It turned out to be the Blockbuster killer. And though many of its locations were bought up by eager developers in search of retail space, a few remained.

Now, there’s just one and it’s being converted into a special, albeit temporary, Airbnb. According to NBC News, the very last remaining Blockbuster store in Bend, Oregon will become a 90s themed Airbnb, complete with the feel of the original locations.

In September, visitors can check-in for three one-night stays, Blockbuster announced this week. The cost will be a mere $4, just one penny more than the store’s $3.99 movie rental. An unlimited movie marathon is included.

Unfortunately, though, if Blockbuster nostalgia had you planning a flight to Bend, the promotion is limited to residents of Bend and Deschutes County. It is to minimize any coronavirus risks, the store said in the release.

Read More: Michael B. Jordan creates summer drive-in movie series

But you may still be able to visit, even if you can’t stay.

“After the final guests check out, BLOCKBUSTER customers can check out the living room space during store hours for a limited time,” the store said. The store still sells Blockbuster branded items.

As the last Blockbuster in the world, the store even had a documentary made about it released last month.

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Google Is Launching a Global Earthquake-Detection Network

A new feature will allow Android devices to collect readings from smartphone sensors and warn users when a tectonic shake-up is imminent.

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AI Magic Makes Century-Old Films Look New

Denis Shiryaev uses algorithms to colorize and sharpen old movies, bumping them up to a smooth 60 frames per second. The result is a stunning glimpse at the past.

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Cannondale Quick Neo SL Review (2020): A Fast, Fun E-Ride

This is a powerful electric bike for fun, mostly on-road romps around town.

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Coronavirus pushes classic car collectors online

The Monterey Auction for classic cars will be virtual this year, raising some questions about the classic car economy in the age of coronavirus. CNBC's Robert Frank reports.

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How to Make Remote Learning Work for Your Children

If you're preparing for yet another round of homeschooling, we've identified a few ways to make this school year suck just a little bit less.

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How Facebook and Other Sites Manipulate Your Privacy Choices

Social media platforms repeatedly use so-called dark patterns to nudge you toward giving away more of your data.

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Scientists Put Masks to the Test—With an iPhone and a Laser

When it comes to blocking germs, not all cloth masks are created equal. A new, low-cost testing device literally illuminates which ones won’t get the job done.

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Mauritius oil spill: Rush to pump out oil before ship breaks

The MV Wakashio ran aground on a coral reef on 25 July, and has leaked oil into the ocean.

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The Furious Hunt for the MAGA Bomber

Scarred by trauma and devoted to Trump, a man began mailing explosives to the president’s critics on the eve of an election. Inside the race to catch him.

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Disabled during lockdown: We don’t have the support we need

Cassandra is visually impaired and learning remotely during lockdown in Nigeria has presented several problems.

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Netflix on YouTube

Freaks | Official Trailer | Netflix
What if for your entire life you had superpowers you weren’t aware of? Wendy (Cornelia Gröschel), a young working class mom, realizes that years of medication have suppressed her latent supernatural powers. She meets a stranger, Marek (Wotan Wilke Möhring), with the same background, and finds out that her co-worker, Elmar (Tim Oliver Schultz), is also similarly gifted. Question is: what will she do with her new powers? SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/29qBUt7 About Netflix: Netflix is the world's leading streaming entertainment service with 193 million paid memberships in over 190 countries enjoying TV series, documentaries and feature films across a wide variety of genres and languages. Members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on any internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments. Freaks | Official Trailer | Netflix https://youtube.com/Netflix


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Tuesday, August 11, 2020

5 Best CLI Tools to Search Plain-Text Data Using Regular Expressions

This guide takes a tour of some of the best command-line tools that are used for searching matching strings or patterns in text files. These tools are usually used alongside regular expressions – shortened

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Rebuilding cultures through art, design, and community

In the spring of 2016, a striking art installation was constructed outside MIT’s building E15. The work consisted of 20,000 small green plexiglass squares, with intricate holes cut in each one, depicting vanished or endangered pieces of global cultural heritage, including buildings, monuments, and sculptures. Attached to fencing about 40 feet high, the squares collectively formed an image of the Arch of Triumph from Palmyra, Syria, an ancient treasure destroyed by fundamentalists in 2015.

Lit up at night or shimmering in daytime, this installation — the “Memory Matrix” — was a powerful reminder of the fragility of our cultural creations in the face of conflict and strife. But it also represented human resilience and the strength of collaboration: About 700 people helped construct it, including MIT community members from 11 different departments and programs, and participants from Egypt and Jordan.

“That project was amazing, because of the solidarity-building it created across campus and internationally,” says MIT Associate Professor Azra AkÅ¡amija, who created the idea for the installation.  

Akšamija is an uncommonly versatile artist, architect, and scholar whose work explores cultural identity and conflict. Her own career exemplifies resilience: Akšamija experienced displacement as a Bosnian Muslim whose family left in the early 1990s to escape the war at home. Having spent much of her life in Austria, the United States, and Germany, her work frequently explores encounters between Islam and the West.

Among other distinctions, AkÅ¡amija was given the 2013 Aga Khan Award for Architecture for her design of a prayer space’s symbolic elements, at Austria’s first-ever Muslim cemetery, in Altach (the cemetery itself was designed by Bernardo Bader). Some of her best-known designs are wearable art, including her “Frontier Vest” from 2006, a garment that works as a jacket for refugees and can be transformed into a Jewish prayer shawl or an Islamic prayer rug. AkÅ¡amija has detailed many of her ideas in a 2015 book, “Mosque Manifesto — Propositions for Spaces of Coexistence.”

She has also been a program-builder at MIT, founding the Future Heritage Lab (FHL), which focuses on cultural preservation. At the Al Azraq Refugee Camp in Jordan, FHL members, along with their partners at German-Jordanian University, have helped Syrian refugees document their lives through photography, design, and poetry; the work was displayed at the 2017 Amman Design Week.

Over the past three years, camp residents, FHL members, and MIT students have developed a book about refugee inventions, which will be used in MIT’s first design studio-based online course, “Design and Scarcity” (co-taught by AkÅ¡amija and FHL program director Melina Philippou). The book will also be translated for the camp and the wider region.

The Al Azraq camp refugees, AkÅ¡amija says, “design artifacts that are partly utilitarian, but are about preserving human dignity and memory, and keeping the feeling of who you are. It’s powerful.”

“Making things since I could think”

AkÅ¡amija grew up in Sarajevo, now part of Bosnia and Herzegovina. One of her grandfathers was an accomplished architect who had studied in Prague and, she says, “brought Czech modernism back to Bosnia.” Design grabbed AkÅ¡amija’s interest from a young age.

“I have been making things since I could think about myself,” AkÅ¡amija says. “As a child I was completely obsessed with drawing and sculpture, which I would do for hours. Also, to get out of my piano lessons, I would make these plasticine sculptures and then display them on the piano, to distract the piano teacher.”

At the time, Sarajevo was part of the larger republic of Yugoslavia. But in 1992, after war broke out in the Balkans, AkÅ¡amija and her family moved to Germany, then Austria, to escape the conflict. As an undergraduate, AkÅ¡amija studied architecture at the Graz University of Technology. Still, she says, the university “had these awesome art classes,” and she wanted to incorporate art into her career.

AkÅ¡amija attended graduate school at Princeton University, receiving her MArch in 2004, while becoming active artistically; by 2004, her work had been displayed in high-profile institutions and exhibitions in Vienna, Valencia, Leipzig, and Liverpool. Joining MIT’s PhD program in the history and theory of architecture, AkÅ¡amija continued to create art; in addition to “Frontier Vest,” she produced noted works such as “Survival Mosque” (2005), a wearable and portable mosque equipped with a copy of the U.S. Constitution, earplugs (to block out the insults Muslims might hear), books, and more. Soon her work was exhibited in major art museums in London, New York, and Berlin.

Some of AkÅ¡amija’s projects from this period went in novel directions. With nine other artists and architects, AkÅ¡amija co-curated the “Lost Highway Expedition” in 2006, a trek in which 300 people walked the Highway of Brotherhood and Unity that connects the capitals of the former Yugoslavia.

“After the war I had thought, ‘I’m never going to Serbia again in my life,’” AkÅ¡amija says. However, for the trek, “we had events in cities and you had to find your own way, you had to make friends. And this is the way I went for the first time to the territories my country had the war with.” Though the project was challenging, she says, “It was important to start discussing difficult topics. It doesn’t mean they’re fully resolved. Unfortunately, there are still many people denying that genocide happened in Bosnia.”

For her dissertation, working with MIT professors Nasser Rabbat and Caroline Jones, as well as Harvard University’s András Riedlmayer, AkÅ¡amija looked at the systematic targeting of cultural heritage in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the 1992-95 war, examining how Bosnian Muslims restored mosques that had been destroyed.

“These buildings were attacked because nationalists wanted to revise history and alienate people to an extent that they would never want to live together in the future,” AkÅ¡amija says.

The questions driving her research apply anywhere, AkÅ¡amija says. “From the Balkans we can learn important lessons about how we live in spaces of fragmented commons. When that falls apart, how do you reconnect? What kinds of cultural institutions do we need to bridge divides and hold governments accountable? It is relevant globally. Who has the right to write their history, to be visible in public space, and who decides those things?”

After joining the MIT faculty, Akšamija earned tenure in 2019.

Becoming yourself

At MIT, AkÅ¡amija has found it gratifying to see students gravitate to her classes, to projects like “Memory Matrix,” and to the Future Heritage Lab.

“MIT students care,” AkÅ¡amija says. “They really want to do something to contribute to this world. This place is so inspiring.”

At the same time, she notes, the Institute can be an intense academic setting, and instructors need to help sustain the sheer enjoyment of learning.

“You [can] lose sight of why you started doing things and what initially drew you to them, and it can be overwhelming,” AkÅ¡amija says. “You see it with students. I like to create joy in things, especially in classes. That’s why it’s so amazing to teach here, because the students are so full of enthusiasm and joy. But also sometimes anxiety, and I think we all have responsibility here as teachers to take care of that. It’s not about students performing for someone else, but becoming better versions of themselves.”

AkÅ¡amija calls the current direction of her research “Performative Preservation.” This is an approach to cultural preservation that uses “methods of contemporary arts and participatory art.” She emphasizes that participation and co-creation are crucial to cultural restoration; physical structures can be rebuilt, but they will lack meaning without community involvement.

Her work is now on view at the Gallery for Contemporary Art, in Leipzig, Germany, and at the Aga Khan Museum in Toronto, with a new work slated for the 17th International Architecture Exhibition for the Venice Biennale, in May 2021. Curated by Hashim Sarkis, dean of MIT’s School of Architecture and Planning, the Biennale’s theme is “How Will We Live Together?” AkÅ¡amija’s project, “Silk Road Works,” a symbolic construction site for a pluralist society, will be part of a section at the Arsenale titled, “Among Diverse Beings.”

As always, Akšamija hopes for a thoughtful response from her audience, without knowing exactly what that will be.

“When you work in public space, it’s not about finding a consensus, where we all have the same opinion and are happily living together,” AkÅ¡amija says. “It’s about accepting and coming to terms with conflicting attitudes and ideas, and making space for them.”



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Luxury durag store to open on Melrose Ave in Los Angeles

20-year-old Atira Lyons has been documenting her journey on social media since earlier this year.

A young entrepreneur from Southern California has opened the first ever durag store located on Melrose. 

20-year-old Atira Lyons has been documenting her journey on social media since earlier this year. Many of her followers have been spreading the word about the luxury durag collection in an effort to encourage others to support Black businesses amid COVID-19, especially those owned by Black women. 

“I HAVE A STORE ON MELROSE AVE IN LOS ANGELES!!!!!!! My 20 year old a** got a f*cking store on MELROSE,” she tweeted in March. “Grand opening in a month in a half. I can’t believe I did it. Unreal. Thank you EVERYONE for your support and business.”

When one critic suggested she change her ‘brand font’ because it’s illegible, Lyons fired back with: “My store is on one of the most well know streets in LA. If you don’t know what it is, it’s very easy to find. And literally can come and buy something and then be given the website. Please save your opinion.” 

Read More: Coronavirus pandemic has eliminated almost half of Black small businesses

In an August 10 post, she thanked her supporters and noted that she’s been planning for her grand opening for “over a year and a half.”

Lyons added, “I did this with my money. No loans.”

Her self-made success comes as Black-owned small businesses across the nation continue to suffer during the COVID-19 crisis. 

According to Forbes, Black small businesses are more than twice as likely to shut down compared to their white counterparts.

“Nationally representative data on small businesses indicate that the number of active business owners fell by 22% from February to April 2020—the largest drop on record,” the report said.

“Black businesses experienced the most acute decline, with a 41% drop. Latinx business owners fell by 32% and Asian business owners dropped by 26%.”

The number of white-owned small businesses fell just 17%, the report states. 

This stark contrast is being attributed to institutional racism. 

Read More: Interest in Black-owned businesses increased 7,000 percent, study shows

“Volumes of COVID-19 cases coincide with Black-owned business locations: two-thirds of counties with high levels of Black business activity pre-COVID-19 are in the top 50 COVID-affected areas,” according to a New York Fed report.

Many Black-owned businesses were also left out of the Paycheck Protection Program. 

“These loans reached only 20% of eligible firms in states with the highest densities of Black-owned firms, and in counties with the densest Black-owned business activity, coverage rates were typically lower than 20%,” the report showed.

“Even the healthiest Black firms were financially disadvantaged at the onset of COVID-19,” said the report.

Meanwhile, Lyons gushed in a August 9 tweet about “the furniture” she designed for the store, and noted that the “BATHROOM IS AVAILABLE FOR MY CUSTOMERS,” she shared in a March 7 tweet.

Lyons’ range of durags are offered in multiple colors and are available in silk and velvet. 

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Lauryn Hill’s daughter opens up about absent dad Rohan Marley

The 21-year-old says she’s ‘hurting’ over the trauma she suffered as a child.

Selah Marley, the 21-year-old daughter of Lauryn Hill and Rohan Marley, took to Instagram on Monday to share a video in which she gets candid about her relationship with her parents. 

In the now-deleted clip, Marley called her mother an “amazing woman” but revealed she was also “very angry” and oftentimes impossible to talk to. 

“She was just very angry. So, so, so, so, so, so angry. She was literally not easy to talk to and then half the time we didn’t live with her,” she said. “I lived with my grandparents half the time… It’s crazy, I’m playing this trauma back in my head as I speak to you.”

Marley also recalled how the singer would spank her children with a belt, which she described as “slave sh*t,” The Source reports.

Read More: Lauryn Hill pens empowering letter to Temple University class of 2020

Glastonbury Festival 2019 - Day Three
(Photo by Ian Gavan/Getty Images)

“And then the threats, the constant threats… That belt man. That’s that slave sht. That was some slavery sht. All Black parents were on that sh*t,” she continued.

Marley also confessed to having daddy issues due to her father being absent, and touched on the negative effects her parents arguing had on her.  

In the video, she notes that her parents “didn’t really get to know each other” and that “they were always arguing, always fighting” and that was why she didn’t see “much peace.”

“I’d just be crying and crying and crying and crying…” she said about listening to the arguments.

“Honestly guys, I’m just hurting. I can’t even front that I’m not,” Marley said. “I’ve been hurting for so much of my life and so much of my life has been me avoiding how much I’m really hurting just from the circumstances.”

On Tuesday (Aug. 11), Rohan Marley, son of reggae icon Bob Marley, apologized to her daughter and noted in a statement that her “expression on Instagram is a healing process for her,” Rohan said in a statement released through his rep, Hollywood Life reports. “I’m very happy that she is fearless in her expression.”

“I love her very much and do apologize for any contributions I may have added by arguing in front of her as a child,” he continued. “I’ve grown as a man, a spiritual being and a father. I am constantly growing and will teach my children to always take the higher road in any disagreements.  I will be there for her no matter how many hours, days, months or years it will take. I will be the best Dad that I can be. One Love.”

Read More: Bob Marley’s son, Rohan, applies to open N.J. medical marijuana dispensary

2013 Consumer Electronics Show Highlights Newest Technology
Rohan Marley, son of late Reggae musician Bob Marley. (Photo by David Becker/Getty Images)

Marley also returned to social media Tuesday to defend her parents from criticism following the coverage of her initial video. 

“My mother is a human, she’s not a perfect person but I’m not going to feed off all the negativity,” she said. “In the past 10 years she’s healed so much and I’ve watched her evolve and the same thing with my father. I mean he did some BS lately but my father, he’s healing as well. I came on and saw how the media misconstrued what I said, that is why I came on live it was a one dimensional narrative.”

Marley also made clear that her relationship with her mother got better during her teen years and now they are very close. 

“Me and my mother are very close. She’s texting me as we speak,” she said. “Anger is a secondary emotion for sadness. I think for me growing up, remember I grew up with all brothers, so I’m like we’re fighting, we are fighting so I just learned how to be tough, I was always tough. So now coming back I’m learning how to cry again,” she confessed.

“Learning how to forgive is a big one, learning how to love, learning how to not be angry. And what I’m even learning now is how many walls I put up,” Marley added.

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Barack Obama shows support for Harris VP selection

The California Senator is the first mixed race woman to be selected as a running mate for a major party candidate. 

Former President Barack Obama said Tuesday that Joe Biden “nailed it” by choosing Senator Kamala Harris as his running mate.

Obama took to social media to praise Biden’s pick, noting that choosing a vice president is “the first important decision a president makes.”

“When you’re in the Oval Office, weighing the toughest issues, and the choice you make will affect the lives and livelihoods of the entire country — you need someone with you who’s got the judgment and the character to make the right call,” Obama said in the Instagram statement

Read More: Trump takes aim at Kamala Harris, calls her ‘nasty’ after VP announcement

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Choosing a vice president is the first important decision a president makes. When you’re in the Oval Office, weighing the toughest issues, and the choice you make will affect the lives and livelihoods of the entire country – you need someone with you who’s got the judgment and the character to make the right call. Someone whose focus goes beyond self-interest to consider the lives and prospects of others. @JoeBiden nailed this decision. By choosing Senator @KamalaHarris as America’s next vice president, he’s underscored his own judgment and character. Reality shows us that these attributes are not optional in a president. They’re requirements of the job. And now Joe has an ideal partner to help him tackle the very real challenges America faces right now and in the years ahead. I’ve known Senator Harris for a long time. She is more than prepared for the job. She’s spent her career defending our Constitution and fighting for folks who need a fair shake. Her own life story is one that I and so many others can see ourselves in: a story that says that no matter where you come from, what you look like, how you worship, or who you love, there’s a place for you here. It’s a fundamentally American perspective, one that’s led us out of the hardest times before. And it’s a perspective we can all rally behind right now. Michelle and I couldn’t be more thrilled for Kamala, Doug, Cole, and Ella. This is a good day for our country. Now let’s go win this thing.

A post shared by Barack Obama (@barackobama) on

“By choosing Kamala Harris as America’s next vice president he’s underscored his own judgement and character. Reality shows us that these attributes are not optional in a president,” he added. “They’re requirements of the job. And now Joe has an ideal partner to help him tackle the very real challenges America faces right now and in the years ahead.”

Obama, who served two terms in the White House with Biden as his vice president, said Harris “is more than prepared for the job.”

Harris is the first mixed race woman to be selected as a running mate for a major party candidate. 

As theGrio previously reported, in March, the presumptive Democratic nominee pledged to pick a woman as his running mate during a one-on-one presidential debate with Sen. Bernie Sanders.

“There are a number of women who are qualified to be president tomorrow,” Biden said at the time.

He added, “I would pick a woman to be my vice president.”

Read More: Joe Biden announces Kamala Harris as VP pick

Sens. Kamala Harris And Cory Booker Join Candidate Joe Biden At Michigan Campaign Rally On Eve Of Primary
(Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

Obama said that Harris has “spent her career defending our Constitution and fighting for folks who need a fair shake.” 

As the daughter of immigrants, he described her life story as “one that I and so many others can see ourselves in.”

Harris’ mother Shyamala Gopalan, was a cancer researcher from India, and her father, Donald Harris, an economist from Jamaica. They migrated to the U.S. in the early 60’s and met at UC Berkeley while pursuing graduate degrees. They divorced when Harris was 7-years-old. 

“[It’s] a story that says that no matter where you come from, what you look like, how you worship, or who you love, there’s a place for you here,” Obama said. “It’s a fundamentally American perspective, one that’s led us out of the hardest times before. And it’s a perspective we can all rally behind right now.”

“This is a good day for our country,” Obama concluded. “Now let’s go win this thing.” 

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Trump takes aim at Kamala Harris, calls her ‘nasty’ after VP announcement

During a press conference in the press briefing room, the president called the California senator ‘the most disrespectful of anybody in the US Senate.’

During his first press conference since Joe Biden announced Kamala Harris as his vice-presidential running mate on Tuesday, President Donald Trump took aim at Harris and gave a preview of what to expect from the Trump campaign with less than 90 days until Election Day on Nov. 3.

Standing at the podium in the press briefing room, Trump attempted to show a sense of confidence when asked on his thoughts about Biden’s VP selection, telling reporters that Harris was his “number one draft pick.”

Read More: Joe Biden announces Kamala Harris as VP pick

“We’ll see how she looks. She did very, very poorly in the primaries,” Trump said. He went on to call the California senator “nasty” and accused of her of being “disrespectful” toward members of his cabinet and his Supreme Court nominee Justice Brett Kavanaugh during the Senate hearings over claims that he sexually assaulted Christine Blasey Ford.

“I won’t forget that,” he said.

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference in the briefing room of the White House August 11, 2020 in Washington, DC. Trump discussed the coronavirus and several other topics, including the announcement by Democratic presidential candidate, former Vice President Joe Biden that he has chosen Sen. Kamala Harris to be his running mate in the 2020 general election. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Trump continued to assail Harris, calling her “the meanest, the most horrible, most disrespectful of anybody in the U.S. Senate.” He also said she was the “most liberal” person in the Senate.

What’s more, Trump attempted to use Harris’ jab at Biden over desegregation busing during a Democratic primary debate as a way to draw a wedge within the ticket.

“She was probably nastier than even Pocahontas to Joe Biden. She was very disrespectful to Joe Biden,” Trump said, using the racist nickname he’s lodged at Sen. Elizabeth Warren over the years. “It’s hard to pick somebody that said disrespectful things during the Democratic primary debates that were horrible about Sleepy Joe.”

Trump also attempted to call out Harris on her policy positions, an apparent tactic to provoke Republican and conservative-leaning voters to show up at the polls on Nov. 3.

Read More: Calling Kamala Harris ‘too ambitious’ is a lesson for young Black girls

Kamala Harris thegrio.com
U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) takes a question during a town hall meeting. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

“She wants to slash funds for our military at a level that nobody’s can even believe … she is against fracking … I mean, how do you do that and go into Pennsylvania or Oklahoma or the great state of Texas?” Trump said.

“She in favor of socialized medicine, where you’re gonna lose your doctors, you’re going to lose your plans. She wants to take your health care plans away from 180 million Americans.”

Trump has a history of calling women “nasty.” He infamously used the term during a debate against his then-Democratic presidential opponent Hillary Clinton.

Harris, 55, is the first Black and Indian American woman to be selected as a vice-presidential pick in the nation’s history. If elected, she will become the first woman and the first woman of color to serve as the 49th vice president of the United States.

“.@JoeBiden can unify the American people because he’s spent his life fighting for us. And as president, he’ll build an America that lives up to our ideals,” Senator Harris tweeted shortly after Biden made his announcement.

“I’m honored to join him as our party’s nominee for Vice President, and do what it takes to make him our Commander-in-Chief.”

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Enoch Adeboye sexism row: Why the Nigerian pastor is popular

Enoch Adeboye riles social media critics with his views on women, but this has not dented his standing.

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With VP Pick Kamala Harris, Joe Biden Gets a Digital Juggernaut

The senator and her team have earned a reputation for savvy online organizing. That could come in handy for a socially distanced presidential campaign.

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dplyr arrange(): Sort/Reorder by One or More Variables

dplyr, R package part of tidyverse suite of packages, provides a great set of tools to manipulate datasets in the tabular form. dplyr has a set of core functions for “data munging”,including select(),mutate(), filter(), summarise(), and arrange().

And in this tidyverse tutorial, we will learn how to use dplyr’s arrange() function to sort a data frame in multiple ways. First we will start with how to sort a dataframe by values of a single variable, And then we will learn how to sort a dataframe by more than one variable in the dataframe. By default, dplyr’s arrange() sorts in ascending order, we will also learn to sort in descending order.

Let us get started by loading tidyverse, suite of R packges from RStudio.

library("tidyverse")

We will use the fantastic Penguins dataset to illustrate the three ways to see data in a dataframe. Let us load the data from cmdlinetips.com’ github page.

path2data <- "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cmdlinetips/data/master/palmer_penguins.csv"
penguins<- readr::read_csv(path2data)
## Parsed with column specification:
## cols(
##   species = col_character(),
##   island = col_character(),
##   bill_length_mm = col_double(),
##   bill_depth_mm = col_double(),
##   flipper_length_mm = col_double(),
##   body_mass_g = col_double(),
##   sex = col_character()
## )
head(penguins)

## # A tibble: 6 x 7
##   species island bill_length_mm bill_depth_mm flipper_length_… body_mass_g sex  
##   <chr>   <chr>           <dbl>         <dbl>            <dbl>       <dbl> <chr>
## 1 Adelie  Torge…           39.1          18.7              181        3750 male 
## 2 Adelie  Torge…           39.5          17.4              186        3800 fema…
## 3 Adelie  Torge…           40.3          18                195        3250 fema…
## 4 Adelie  Torge…           NA            NA                 NA          NA <NA> 
## 5 Adelie  Torge…           36.7          19.3              193        3450 fema…
## 6 Adelie  Torge…           39.3          20.6              190        3650 male

How To Sort a Dataframe by a single Variable with dplyr’s arrange()?

We can use dplyr’s arrange() function to sort a dataframe by one or more variables. Let us say we want to sort Penguins dataframe by its body mass to quickly learn about smallest weighing penguin and its relations to other variables.

We will use pipe operator “%>%” to feed the data to the dplyr function arrange(). We need to specify name of the variable that we want to sort dataframe. In this example, we are sorting by variable “body_mass_g”.

penguins %>% 
  arrange(body_mass_g)

dplyr’s arrange() sorts the dataframe by the variable and outputs a new dataframe (as a tibble). You can notice that the resulting dataframe is different from the original dataframe. We can see that body_mass_g column arranged from smallest to largest values.

## # A tibble: 344 x 7
##    species island bill_length_mm bill_depth_mm flipper_length_… body_mass_g
##    <chr>   <chr>           <dbl>         <dbl>            <dbl>       <dbl>
##  1 Chinst… Dream            46.9          16.6              192        2700
##  2 Adelie  Biscoe           36.5          16.6              181        2850
##  3 Adelie  Biscoe           36.4          17.1              184        2850
##  4 Adelie  Biscoe           34.5          18.1              187        2900
##  5 Adelie  Dream            33.1          16.1              178        2900
##  6 Adelie  Torge…           38.6          17                188        2900
##  7 Chinst… Dream            43.2          16.6              187        2900
##  8 Adelie  Biscoe           37.9          18.6              193        2925
##  9 Adelie  Dream            37.5          18.9              179        2975
## 10 Adelie  Dream            37            16.9              185        3000
## # … with 334 more rows, and 1 more variable: sex <chr>

How To Sort or Reorder Rows in Descending Order with dplyr’s arrange()?

By default, dplyr’s arrange() sorts in ascending order. We can sort by a variable in descending order using desc() function on the variable we want to sort by. For example, to sort the dataframe by body_mass_g in descending order we use

penguins %>%
 arrange(desc(body_mass_g))

## # A tibble: 344 x 7
##    species island bill_length_mm bill_depth_mm flipper_length_… body_mass_g
##    <chr>   <chr>           <dbl>         <dbl>            <dbl>       <dbl>
##  1 Gentoo  Biscoe           49.2          15.2              221        6300
##  2 Gentoo  Biscoe           59.6          17                230        6050
##  3 Gentoo  Biscoe           51.1          16.3              220        6000
##  4 Gentoo  Biscoe           48.8          16.2              222        6000
##  5 Gentoo  Biscoe           45.2          16.4              223        5950
##  6 Gentoo  Biscoe           49.8          15.9              229        5950
##  7 Gentoo  Biscoe           48.4          14.6              213        5850
##  8 Gentoo  Biscoe           49.3          15.7              217        5850
##  9 Gentoo  Biscoe           55.1          16                230        5850
## 10 Gentoo  Biscoe           49.5          16.2              229        5800
## # … with 334 more rows, and 1 more variable: sex <chr>

How To Sort a Dataframe by Two Variables?

With dplyr’s arrange() function we can sort by more than one variable. To sort or arrange by two variables, we specify the names of two variables as arguments to arrange() function as shown below. Note that the order matters here.

penguins %>% 
   arrange(body_mass_g,flipper_length_mm)

In this example here, we have body_mass_g first and flipper_length_mm second. dplyr’s arrange() sorts by these two variables such that for each value the first variable, dplyr under the good subsets the data and sorts by second variable.

For example, we can see that starting from second row body_mass_g has the same values and the flipper_length is sorted in ascending order.


## # A tibble: 344 x 7
##    species island bill_length_mm bill_depth_mm flipper_length_… body_mass_g
##    <chr>   <chr>           <dbl>         <dbl>            <dbl>       <dbl>
##  1 Chinst… Dream            46.9          16.6              192        2700
##  2 Adelie  Biscoe           36.5          16.6              181        2850
##  3 Adelie  Biscoe           36.4          17.1              184        2850
##  4 Adelie  Dream            33.1          16.1              178        2900
##  5 Adelie  Biscoe           34.5          18.1              187        2900
##  6 Chinst… Dream            43.2          16.6              187        2900
##  7 Adelie  Torge…           38.6          17                188        2900
##  8 Adelie  Biscoe           37.9          18.6              193        2925
##  9 Adelie  Dream            37.5          18.9              179        2975
## 10 Adelie  Dream            37            16.9              185        3000
## # … with 334 more rows, and 1 more variable: sex <chr>

Notice the difference in results we get by changing the order of two variables we want to sort by. In the example below we have flipper_length first and body_mass next.

penguins %>%
  arrange(flipper_length_mm,body_mass_g)

Now our dataframe is first sorted by flipper_length and then by body_mass.

## # A tibble: 344 x 7
##    species island bill_length_mm bill_depth_mm flipper_length_… body_mass_g
##    <chr>   <chr>           <dbl>         <dbl>            <dbl>       <dbl>
##  1 Adelie  Biscoe           37.9          18.6              172        3150
##  2 Adelie  Biscoe           37.8          18.3              174        3400
##  3 Adelie  Torge…           40.2          17                176        3450
##  4 Adelie  Dream            33.1          16.1              178        2900
##  5 Adelie  Dream            39.5          16.7              178        3250
##  6 Chinst… Dream            46.1          18.2              178        3250
##  7 Adelie  Dream            37.2          18.1              178        3900
##  8 Adelie  Dream            37.5          18.9              179        2975
##  9 Adelie  Dream            42.2          18.5              180        3550
## 10 Adelie  Biscoe           37.7          18.7              180        3600
## # … with 334 more rows, and 1 more variable: sex <chr>

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Fisk president named in restraining order filed by alleged ex-lover

Fisk President Dr. Kevin Rome Sr. is accused of harassment

The president of Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee has just been placed under a restraining order after claims of harassing an alleged ex-lover.

Dr. Kevin Rome, Sr. is being accused of harassing the man to the point he longer felt safe, News 4 reports. According to the unidentified man, he and Rome spent the night together after meeting on the dating app Grindr.

Rome became Fisk’s 16th president in 2017, previously serving as president of Lincoln University from 2013-2017. He is married to Stephanie Rome and they share two children.

Read More: Teen sentenced to life in prison for killing Black trans woman, 2 gay men

The restraining order claims that Rome gave the man the drug GHB which rendered him unconscious when they hooked up in May. Afterward, Rome “invited other people over to have sex” with the man while he was drugged.

Kevin Rome Fisk thegrio.com
Kevin and Stephanie Rome (Credit: Dr. Kevin Rome Sr.)

The anonymous man further told police that after his sexual encounter with Rome, whom he knew as “Rob,” he was sent messages to “Stay away from his people.”

He was also warned that he’d be killed if he “continued to date Black men.” He allegedly received the threats on August 6 after a man who was at the May encounter recognized him.

The man is also claiming that his apartment was broken into on June 14 and 15 and that Rome and an accomplice were responsible. He alleges that homophobic slurs were written on the wall and that the plumbing was tampered with so that sewage destroyed his apartment.

Read More: Billy Porter speaks up for Black LGBTQ: ‘Our lives matter too’

The petitioner is now living in a hotel due to the damage and the threats he believes are motivated by jealousy because he’s dating Rome’s alleged ex.

“I have learned that my boyfriend that I was dating at the time of this incident is “Rob’s” ex, and I was afraid that “Rob” did all of this out of jealousy,” the victim wrote in his complaint.

“I am now terrified to leave my house because of the threat on my life. I am very fearful that “Rob” may follow through on the threat to kill me and I want him to stay away from me and not contact me.”

Fisk University Dr. Kevin Rome thegrio.com
Official complaint obtained by Scoop Nashville

A judge granted the restraining order but Rome has denied the allegations in their entirety.

“I’m just as shocked as you, I have no idea who this person is and I can’t even respond to it because I don’t even know who they are,” Rome told Scoop Nashville in a phone call.

Read More: NY candidates poised to become first Black gay men in Congress after primary vote

Jay Steed, who is representing Rome, said that Rome intended to fight the case in court to clear his good name, and thanked his supporters.

“It is important to note that these are merely civil accusations. Dr. Rome has not been charged with any crime. Dr. Rome is most concerned for his family, friends, and the community at Fisk University for any harm they are experiencing as a result of these spurious charges.

“He expresses his deepest thanks to all those who have reached out to him over the past few days expressing their support,” Steed said in a statement to News 4.

The university has yet to comment on these allegations.

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