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Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Two people killed in 3rd night of unrest over Jacob Blake shooting

Cellphone video of at least two of the shootings shows a white man with a semi-automatic rifle

KENOSHA, Wis. (AP) — Two people were killed and another was wounded as shots were fired late Tuesday in Kenosha during the third night of unrest in Wisconsin following the police shooting of a Black man, Jacob Blake, authorities said.

The shootings were reported at about 11:45 p.m. in an area where protests have taken place, Kenosha police Lt. Joseph Nosalik said in a news release. They happened after police drove away protesters from in front of a courthouse that had been the site of the main clashes between protesters and authorities.

Kenosha County Sheriff David Beth said one victim was shot in the head and another was shot in the chest, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported. Beth didn’t know where the other person was shot, but his or her injuries were not believed to be life-threatening.

Read More: Jacob Blake left paralyzed after shot from behind by police, father says

Beth told the Journal Sentinel that armed people had been patrolling the city’s streets in recent nights, but he did not know if the shooter was among them.

“They’re a militia,” Beth said. “They’re like a vigilante group.”

Cellphone video of at least two of the shootings that was posted online shows what appears to be a white man with a semi-automatic rifle jogging down the middle of a street as a crowd and some police officers follow him. Someone in the crowd can be heard asking “What did he do?” and another responds that the man had shot someone.

GRAPHIC WARNING: This video contains extreme violence that may be triggering for viewers.

The man with the gun stumbles and falls, and as he’s approached by people in the crowd, he fires three or four shots from the seated position, hitting at least two people, including one who falls over and another who stumbles away to frantic shouts of “Medic! Medic!”

With the crowd scattering, the shooter stands up and continues walking down the street as police cars arrive. The man puts up his hands and walks toward the squad cars, with someone in the crowd yelling at police that the man just shot someone, but several of the cars drive past him toward the people who had been shot.

Beth told the Journal Sentinel that no one had been detained over the shootings, but that he thought at least one person would be soon based on video police had reviewed.

“I feel very confident we’ll have him in a very short time,” he said.

Read More: Wisconsin woman set on fire by four white men, police say

Protester Devin Scott told the Chicago Tribune that he witnessed one of the shootings.

“We were all chanting ‘Black lives matter’ at the gas station and then we heard, boom, boom, and I told my friend, that’s not fireworks,” said Scott, 19. “And then this guy with this huge gun runs by us in the middle of the street and people are yelling, ‘He shot someone! He shot someone!’ And everyone is trying to fight the guy, chasing him and then he started shooting again.”

Demonstrators raise their fist in the air, in front of law enforcement, on August 25, 2020 in Kenosha, Wisconsin. As the city declared a state of emergency curfew, a third night of civil unrest occurred after the shooting of Jacob Blake, 29, on August 23. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

“I was cradling him in my arms. I was trying to keep this kid alive and he wasn’t moving or nothing. He was just laying there,” Scott said. “I didn’t know what to do and then this woman starts performing CPR. There was no pulse. I don’t think he made it.”

The shooting victims have not been identified.

Earlier Tuesday, the lawyer for Jacob Blake’s family said Blake was shot multiple times by police on Sunday and that it would “take a miracle” for him to walk again. He called for the officer who opened fire to be arrested and others involved to lose their jobs.

The shooting of Blake — apparently while three of his children looked on — was captured on cellphone video and ignited new protests over racial injustice in several cities, coming just three months after the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police touched off a wider reckoning on race.

George Floyd Minneapolis police reform thegrio.com
(Photo by Jeenah Moon/Getty Images)

Earlier Tuesday, Blake’s father spoke alongside other family members and lawyers, telling reporters that police shot his son “seven times, seven times, like he didn’t matter.”

“But my son matters. He’s a human being and he matters,” said Blake’s father, who is also named Jacob Blake.

The 29-year-old was in surgery Tuesday, said attorney Ben Crump, adding that the bullets severed Blake’s spinal cord and shattered his vertebrae. Another attorney said there was also severe damage to organs.

“It’s going to take a miracle for Jacob Blake Jr. to ever walk again,” Crump said.

The legal team plans to file a civil lawsuit against the police department over the shooting. Police have said little about what happened, other than that they were responding to a domestic dispute. The officers involved have not been named. The Wisconsin Department of Justice is investigating.

Jacob Blake thegrio.com
Jacob Blake, 29, was shot several times by a Wisconsin police officer on Sunday. Aug. 23. (Photo: Twitter)

Read More: Jacob Blake’s family hopes he can have ‘great quality of life,’ uncle says

Police fired tear gas for a third night Tuesday to disperse protesters who had gathered outside Kenosha’s courthouse, where some shook a protective fence and threw water bottles and fireworks at officers lined up behind it. Police then used armored vehicles and officers with shields pushed back the crowd when protesters ignored warnings to leave a nearby park.

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers had called for calm Tuesday, while also declaring a state of emergency under which he doubled the National Guard deployment in Kenosha from 125 to 250. The night before crowds destroyed dozens of buildings and set more than 30 fires in the city’s downtown.

“We cannot allow the cycle of systemic racism and injustice to continue,” said Evers, who is facing mounting pressure from Republicans over his handling of the unrest. “We also cannot continue going down this path of damage and destruction.”

Blake’s mother, Julia Jackson, said the damage in Kenosha does not reflect what her family wants and that, if her son could see it, he would be “very unpleased.”

She said the first thing her son said to her when she saw him was he was sorry.

“He said, ‘I don’t want to be a burden on you guys,’” Jackson said. “’I want to be with my children, and I don’t think I’ll walk again.’”

Three of the younger Blake’s sons — aged 3, 5 and 8 — were in the car at the time of the shooting, Crump said. It was the 8-year-old’s birthday, he added.

The man who said he made the cellphone video of the shooting, 22-year-old Raysean White, said he saw Blake scuffling with three officers and heard them yell, “Drop the knife! Drop the knife!” before the gunfire erupted. He said he didn’t see a knife in Blake’s hands.

In the footage, Blake walks from the sidewalk around the front of his SUV to his driver-side door as officers follow him with their guns drawn and shout at him. As Blake opens the door and leans into the SUV, an officer grabs his shirt from behind and opens fire. Seven shots can be heard, though it isn’t clear how many struck Blake or how many officers fired.

Blake’s father told the Chicago Sun-Times that his son had eight holes in his body.

Anger over the shooting has spilled into the streets of Kenosha and other cities, including Los Angeles, Wisconsin’s capital of Madison and in Minneapolis, the epicenter of the Black Lives Matter movement this summer following Floyd’s death.

People hold signs during the second day of protests in Minneapolis on Wednesday, May 27, 2020, over the death of George Floyd. George Floyd died in police custody in Minneapolis on Monday night, after an officer held his knee into Floyd’s neck for more than 5 minutes. (Photo by Jordan Strowder/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Hundreds of people again defied curfew Tuesday in Kenosha, where destruction marred protests the previous night as fires were set and businesses vandalized. There were 34 fires associated with that unrest, with 30 businesses destroyed or damaged along with an unknown number of residences, Kenosha Fire Chief Charles Leipzig told the Kenosha News.

“Nobody deserves this,” said Pat Oertle, owner of Computer Adventure, surveying the damage on Tuesday. Computers were stolen, and the store was “destroyed,” she said.

“This accomplishes nothing,” Oertle said. “This is not justice that they’re looking for.”

U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson and U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil, both Republicans, called on the governor to do more to quell the unrest. Steil said he would request federal assistance if necessary.

Evers continued to call for protesters to be peaceful.

“Please do not allow the actions of a few distract us from the work we must do together to demand justice, equity, and accountability,” he said.

Blake’s family also called for calm.

“I really ask you and encourage everyone in Wisconsin and abroad to take a moment and examine your hearts,” Blake’s mother said. “Do Jacob justice on this level and examine your hearts. … As I pray for my son’s healing physically, emotionally and spiritually, I also have been praying even before this for the healing of our country.”

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Best Sonos Setup: Which Speakers and Soundbars Should You Buy?

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Queer Eye for the Straight Guy has emerged in a couple different forms over the years. One genre it hasn't crossed yet is into the world of animation. Luckily, we're here to help you imagine what that might look like. See the animated versions of Antoni, Karamo, Jonathan, Bobby, and Tan and find out what avocado toast looks like as a cartoon with this video! Watch Queer Eye, Only on Netflix: https://ift.tt/3fAuQLK 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. What Would an Animated Queer Eye Look Like? | Netflix https://youtube.com/Netflix The Fab Five are back in Kansas City, Missouri! Join Antoni, Bobby, Jonathan, Karamo and Tan for even more inspiring makeovers and big emotions.


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Mauritius oil spill: Dead dolphins found after shipwreck

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The Last Word | Official Trailer | Netflix
In their 25 years of marriage they've shared wonderful moments and good times, had children, fought, and made up. But when her husband Stephan (Johannes Zeiler) dies unexpectedly, Karla (Anke Engelke) is quickly confronted with secrets they had never discussed. Her shock, pressing financial worries and her doubts over her husband's loyalty push Karla to rush into applying to work with funeral director Borowski (Thorsten Merten) as a eulogist. She's unapologetic, loud, and unconventional. Karla ignores her own life until she's surrounded by total chaos and has to ask herself: is there a right way to grieve? And if there is, what's her right way? The Last Word – September 17 on Netflix. 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. The Last Word | Official Trailer | Netflix https://youtube.com/Netflix Suddenly a widow, a woman rekindles her thirst for life by becoming a eulogist while navigating the existential landscape of death, grief and love.


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Tuesday, August 25, 2020

Face-specific brain area responds to faces even in people born blind

More than 20 years ago, neuroscientist Nancy Kanwisher and others discovered that a small section of the brain located near the base of the skull responds much more strongly to faces than to other objects we see. This area, known as the fusiform face area, is believed to be specialized for identifying faces.

Now, in a surprising new finding, Kanwisher and her colleagues have shown that this same region also becomes active in people who have been blind since birth, when they touch a three-dimensional model of a face with their hands. The finding suggests that this area does not require visual experience to develop a preference for faces.

“That doesn’t mean that visual input doesn’t play a role in sighted subjects — it probably does,” she says. “What we showed here is that visual input is not necessary to develop this particular patch, in the same location, with the same selectivity for faces. That was pretty astonishing.”

Kanwisher, the Walter A. Rosenblith Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience and a member of MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain Research, is the senior author of the study. N. Apurva Ratan Murty, an MIT postdoc, is the lead author of the study, which appears this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Other authors of the paper include Santani Teng, a former MIT postdoc; Aude Oliva, a senior research scientist, co-director of the MIT Quest for Intelligence, and MIT director of the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab; and David Beeler and Anna Mynick, both former lab technicians.

Selective for faces

Studying people who were born blind allowed the researchers to tackle longstanding questions regarding how specialization arises in the brain. In this case, they were specifically investigating face perception, but the same unanswered questions apply to many other aspects of human cognition, Kanwisher says.

“This is part of a broader question that scientists and philosophers have been asking themselves for hundreds of years, about where the structure of the mind and brain comes from,” she says. “To what extent are we products of experience, and to what extent do we have built-in structure? This is a version of that question asking about the particular role of visual experience in constructing the face area.”

The new work builds on a 2017 study from researchers in Belgium. In that study, congenitally blind subjects were scanned with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) as they listened to a variety of sounds, some related to faces (such as laughing or chewing), and others not. That study found higher responses in the vicinity of the FFA to face-related sounds than to sounds such as a ball bouncing or hands clapping.

In the new study, the MIT team wanted to use tactile experience to measure more directly how the brains of blind people respond to faces. They created a ring of 3D-printed objects that included faces, hands, chairs, and mazes, and rotated them so that the subject could handle each one while in the fMRI scanner.

They began with normally sighted subjects and found that when they handled the 3D objects, a small area that corresponded to the location of the FFA was preferentially active when the subjects touched the faces, compared to when they touched other objects. This activity, which was weaker than the signal produced when sighted subjects looked at faces, was not surprising to see, Kanwisher says.

“We know that people engage in visual imagery, and we know from prior studies that visual imagery can activate the FFA. So the fact that you see the response with touch in a sighted person is not shocking because they’re visually imagining what they’re feeling,” she says.

The researchers then performed the same experiments, using tactile input only, with 15 subjects who reported being blind since birth. To their surprise, they found that the brain showed face-specific activity in the same area as the sighted subjects, at levels similar to when sighted people handled the 3D-printed faces.

“When we saw it in the first few subjects, it was really shocking, because no one had seen individual face-specific activations in the fusiform gyrus in blind subjects previously,” Murty says.

Patterns of connection

The researchers also explored several hypotheses that have been put forward to explain why face-selectivity always seems to develop in the same region of the brain. One prominent hypothesis suggests that the FFA develops face-selectivity because it receives visual input from the fovea (the center of the retina), and we tend to focus on faces at the center of our visual field. However, since this region developed in blind people with no foveal input, the new findings do not support this idea.

Another hypothesis is that the FFA has a natural preference for curved shapes. To test that idea, the researchers performed another set of experiments in which they asked the blind subjects to handle a variety of 3D-printed shapes, including cubes, spheres, and eggs. They found that the FFA did not show any preference for the curved objects over the cube-shaped objects.

The researchers did find evidence for a third hypothesis, which is that face selectivity arises in the FFA because of its connections to other parts of the brain. They were able to measure the FFA’s “connectivity fingerprint” — a measure of the correlation between activity in the FFA and activity in other parts of the brain — in both blind and sighted subjects.

They then used the data from each group to train a computer model to predict the exact location of the brain’s selective response to faces based on the FFA connectivity fingerprint. They found that when the model was trained on data from sighted patients, it could accurately predict the results in blind subjects, and vice versa. They also found evidence that connections to the frontal and parietal lobes of the brain, which are involved in high-level processing of sensory information, may be the most important in determining the role of the FFA.

“It’s suggestive of this very interesting story that the brain wires itself up in development not just by taking perceptual information and doing statistics on the input and allocating patches of brain, according to some kind of broadly agnostic statistical procedure,” Kanwisher says. “Rather, there are endogenous constraints in the brain present at birth, in this case, in the form of connections to higher-level brain regions, and these connections are perhaps playing a causal role in its development.”

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health Shared Instrumentation Grant to the Athinoula Martinos Center at MIT, a National Eye Institute Training Grant, the Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute’s Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center, an Office of Naval Research Vannevar Bush Faculty Fellowship, an NIH Pioneer Award, and a National Science Foundation Science and Technology Center Grant.



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Wisconsin residents file lawsuit over mask mandate

Three residents seek to challenge the governor’s emergency health order, claiming it violates the ‘rule of law’ in the state.

Three residents of northwestern Wisconsin have filed a lawsuit to throw out Governor Tony Evers’ (D) health order mandating masks statewide amid the ongoing COVID-19 crisis.  

On Tuesday, the conservative legal firm Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty (WILL), filed a lawsuit on behalf of the three individuals seeking to challenge Evers’ emergency health order, claiming it violates the “rule of law” in the state, The Hill reports. 

“This lawsuit is not about whether masks are good or bad, or whether Wisconsin ought to do more, or less, to address COVID-19. It isn’t even about whether the state should have a mask mandate. This lawsuit is about our system of government and the rule of law,” Rick Esenberg, WILL president and general counsel said in a statement, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

Read More: Wisconsin police shoot Black man several times from behind, sparking protests

Evers first issued the statewide mask mandate on July 30, it went into effect Aug. 1, and is set to run until Sept. 28. The order requires all residents over the age of 5 to wear facial coverings inside indoor spaces ( except for at home), and enclosed outdoor areas. Violators face a $200 fine. 

The lawsuit calls out Evers’ authority, suggesting he should have sought legislature’s approval to enact a mask mandate. 

The governor declared a public health emergency in March related to the coronavirus, which expired on May 11. The lawsuit alleges his latest statewide mask requirement is illegal because it is based on the same threat of the order issued in May.

“State law forbids a governor from unilaterally extending a public health emergency beyond 60 days or skirting the law by declaring multiple 60-day emergencies for the same crisis,” WILL wrote in a press release. “Governor Evers cannot seize emergency powers more than once to address the same crisis. To interpret the law otherwise, would allow one-person rule by the Governor for what could be a virtually unlimited amount of time whenever the vague statutory definition of a “public health emergency” or “disaster” can be said to be present. The result would be the total breakdown of our constitutional order.”

In an email sent to Newsweek, Evers spokeswoman Britt Cudaback, stated that “Republicans and their allies have tried at every turn to prevent the governor from keeping Wisconsinites healthy and safe.”

She added, “From safer at home to the April election and now masks, they’ve filed more lawsuits than they have passed bills during this pandemic.”

Wisconsin is one of 34 states requiring residents to wear masks in public.

A similar lawsuit was recently filed in Michigan against Governor Gretchen Whitmer, for her mask mandate. 

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Ciara uplifts Vanessa Bryant during play date: ‘The toughest mama I know’

The singer spent some quality time with the widow of the late Los Angeles Lakers star on August 24, dubbed ‘Kobe Bryant Day’.

Ciara and Russell Wilson gifted Kobe Byrant’s 3-year-old daughter with an adorable hot pink toy Range Range rover on Mamba Day. 

The singer spent some quality time with the widow of the late Los Angeles Lakers star on August 24, dubbed “Kobe Bryant Day” due to the date 8/24 reflecting both jersey numbers that he wore during his time with the Lakers. 

Vanessa Bryant posted a video on Instagram of her attempting her give her baby girl Bianka Bella driving lessons in her posh toy car. But the feisty tot is not having it. Check out her hilarious reaction via the Instagram video below. 

Read More: Vanessa Bryant writes heartwarming birthday message to late husband, Kobe Bryant

“It’s like arguing with myself. My little negotiator. Auntie @ciara and Uncle @dangerusswilson thank you or the RR for BB – ‘I guess’ you’ll be taking over driving lessons. BB mastered it though. #Thatsmirk #MamaMentality #KobeBryantDay #Age3 #DaddysTwin,” Bryant captioned the post.  

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Ciara also took to Instagram to share a picture of herself, along with Vanessa and her daughters, Bianka, 3, and Capri, 1. She captioned the image with a touching message of support for the family. 

“Seeing you and the girls smile makes my heart smile,” Ciara wrote. “You’re the toughest mama I know. Seeing you put one foot forward each day is admirable. It ain’t easy, but if I know one thing, Mamba Queen’s capable of it all.” 

Vanessa shared the same photo along with the caption, “It takes a village,” she wrote. “Thank you to all my loving family, amazing friends and wonderful fans for your love and support. One day at a time.”

Check out the family photo below.

Read More: Natalia Bryant pays tribute to dad Kobe on birthday: ‘I love you forever’

Kobe and his daughter Gianna Bryant were killed along with the seven others in a helicopter crash on Jan. 26 in Los Angeles. As theGRIO previously reported, seven months following their untimely death, officials in Orange County decided to honor his legacy with a day in his name. The community’s Board of Supervisors voted to officially make August 24th Kobe Bryant Day.

The California resolution, published on Aug. 11, reportedly passed without hesitation. 

The resolution states, “During his career, Kobe Bryant’s numbers on his jerseys were 8 and 24, therefore a fitting day to celebrate his legacy would be August 24.”

“Kobe Day” falls one day after his birthday. Bryant was born on August 23, 1978.

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Detroit Lions cancel football practice in protest of Jacob Blake shooting

The Detroit Lions made a stand for justice over Jacob Blake’s shooting with the blessing of their coach

Despite the coronavirus pandemic, the NFL has chosen to play the upcoming season with some protocols in place to mitigate infections among its ranks. But as many of its players know, the COVID-19 virus is not the only virulent one spreading throughout the nation and the world.

Read More: NBA, NFL on the Jacob Blake shooting: ‘Why does this keep happening?’

Racism is as insidious as any virus, and like it, can prove fatal. That is why one NFL team took an unusual step to acknowledge the shooting of Jacob Blake, the 29-year-old father who was shot by police in Kenosha, Wisconsin on Sunday.

The team cancelled Tuesday’s practice, lining up outside their practice facility in a united front with the full support of their coach Matt Patricia.

The Lions, owned by the famed automotive Ford Firestone family, likely surprised the league by their stance, as neither the team nor any of its players have previously been known as vocal public activists in the social justice realm.

ESPN reported that Lions players Trey Flowers, Taylor Decker, and Duron Harmon spoke to the media to explain why the team decided to cancel the practice.

Players stood in front of whiteboards that usually display football plays but on Tuesday said ‘The World Can’t Go On’ and ‘We Won’t Be Silent.’

“As a team, we looked each other in the eyes and realized that football isn’t important today,” Harmon said to assembled media. “We have a platform that we are able to use not just to raise awareness but to create change.”

The players spoke addressed the media for about ten minutes and then spoke further on Zoom calls afterwards.

The Blake shooting resonated with players in the locker room as safety Tracy Walker is a cousin of Ahmaud Arbery, who was fatally shot after an altercation with two white men in Satilla Shores, Georgia.

The protest was an outgrowth of an open discussion fostered by Patricia that led to multiple players discussing racist incidents, some that happened to them as young as 7-years-old, multiple reports say.

“Talk about brave,” Patricia said. “Guys going out there and certainly young men who are much more involved with the social media world (more) than I am. They all know there’s immediate feedback. They all know there’s immediate response. But the strength and the power and unity — I think that was unbelievable today.”

Several white players said they understood what their African-American teammates were dealing with and wanted to show they were allies. Decker, an offensive tackle, shared that although he recently drove home with a broken headlight, holding a Florida license and driving a car with a Michigan plate, he never once worried about getting home safely.

“I’m fortunate to be in a locker room with white, Black, brown, different socioeconomic backgrounds, guys from all over the country, and they are guys that I care about,” Decker said.

“… Just to hear the pain and fear from people that I care about, people that I love, are going through, I know it’s not my reality, but they shouldn’t have to go through that. They shouldn’t have to have that fear.”

Quarterback Matthew Stafford, who is also white, said he’s never been more proud of being a Detroit Lion or of being a member of the National Football League.

The team says that they want to do more to continue their effort to advocate for social justice going forward.

Read More: NFL partners with three organizations to get out the vote

“We can’t be silent,” Flowers said. “We can’t say silent. We cannot be going on in the world with our regular day. So today, unified we stand here and we came up with these words, these slogans, and we spread the message, spread the word.”

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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s son charged after allegedly stabbing his neighbor

Adam Abdul-Jabbar has been charged with three felony counts of assault with a deadly weapon, and faces nearly 10 years in prison if convicted.

The son of NBA legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is facing 10 years in prison after being charged with several felonies for allegedly attacking his neighbor with a knife during a dispute.

The incident went down in San Clemente, Calif. in June. According to TMZ, 28-year-old Adam Abdul-Jabbar was arrested after he attacked his 60-year-old neighbor during an argument over trash cans.

The neighbor, Ray Winsor, told CBS Los Angeles, that he complained to Abdul-Jabbar about helping his grandma take out the trash… but the request set Adam off and he allegedly threatened Winsor. 

“Shut your f’**king mouth or I’m gonna stick this knife through your teeth and cut your throat out,” Abdul-Jabbar allegedly told him. 

Read More: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar gives praise to Black remakes of white films in column

“I turned, and he was on me,” Winsor said of Abdul-Jabbar. “I thought he was punching me, but he actually had a knife. After the fourth punch, I felt a very sharp pain and noticed blood coming out of me, and then I had one to the top of my head, and I was trying to get back to my house and he was in front of me.”

Winsor suffered a fractured skull, brain bleed and required a three-day hospital stay. He has since filed a civil lawsuit against Abdul-Jabbar, claiming he’s experiencing sleepless nights, shock, anxiety, and depression. He wants Abdul-Jabbar to pay for his medical expenses. 

The son of the basketball legend is facing three felony counts of assault with a deadly weapon, felony count of carrying a dagger, and three enhancements of inflicting great bodily injury, per TMZ Sports

“A dispute between neighbors should never escalate to violence, much less the ruthless nature of this attack,” Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said Tuesday. 

“Violence of any kind will not be tolerated in Orange County and those who choose to inflict violence on others will be prosecuted by the Orange County District Attorney’s Office to the fullest extent of the law.”

If convicted on all counts, Abdul-Jabbar faces a maximum of nine years and eight months in prison, according to the report.

“Mr. Winsor has given several different and inconsistent stories about what happened that night to various television media outlets,” Shawn Holley, an attorney for Abdul-Jabbar, said in a statement. “What he has conveniently failed to mention in each of them is that he provoked the incident by physically attacking Adam first.”

Abdul-Jabbar is scheduled to be arraigned in court next month.

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South Africa's sugar cane murders: Living in fear of serial killings

A farming community in South Africa is reeling after the bodies of five women were recently discovered.

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Melania Trump’s ex-advisor reportedly taped the first lady bashing Trump

In yet another taped conversation, Trump’s wife is recording saying some unflattering things about her husband

Melania Trump‘s former adviser and close friend has reportedly come forward with recordings she secretly taped of the first lady making “disparaging remarks” about President Donald Trump and his adult children.

READ MORE: Melania Trump appears to avoid holding Trump’s hand again in video

According to a newsletter published Monday by Huffpost’s Yashar Ali, Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, an event planner and former confidante to Mrs. Trump, has an upcoming book in which she plans to outline what she saw within the first lady’s inner circle and what led to the eventual demise of their friendship.

Simon & Schuster has already released a synopsis of the book, “Melania and Me: The Rise and Fall of My Friendship with The First Lady,” that says the book will mainly focus on how Wolkoff aided Mrs. Trump and helped produce the president’s inauguration back in 2017.

But sources say that in the memoir Wolkoff also plans to reference audiotapes of the current FLOTUS speaking negatively about both her husband and stepdaughter, Ivanka Trump.

“It’s unclear what exactly Wolkoff is alleging that the First Lady said about the president and his adult children but two sources familiar with the contents of her book confirmed that she reveals the details in her book including harsh comments about Ivanka Trump, the president’s eldest daughter, and senior advisor,” reads Ali’s newsletter.

The column continues: “It’s also unclear if Wolkoff reveals in the book that she was taping her conversations with the First Lady but I’m told by sources that the comments published in the book are based on audiotapes.”

READ MORE: Mary Trump says Trump is ‘virulently racist,’ has used racial slurs

This isn’t the first time reports of a secret recording in the Trump administration has made headlines this summer. As theGrio previously reported, in July, Mary Trump, the president’s niece, slammed her uncle for being ‘virulently racist,’ and released audio of her secretly recorded conversations with Maryanne Trump Barry, the president’s eldest sister.

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Kalamazoo pastor accused of sexual assault, paying teens to have sex with wife

The Rev. Stricjavvar “Strick” Strickland of Kalamazoo’s Second Baptist Church has been charged with 11 felonies

A pastor in Kalamazoo is alleged to have sexually abused four teenage boys and paid them to have sex with his wife.

The Rev. Stricjavvar “Strick” Strickland was charged last week with 11 felonies, including four counts of human trafficking of a minor for commercial sexual activity and three counts of child sexually abusive activity, MLive reported Tuesday.

Read More: Liberty University president Jerry Falwell, Jr. reveals wife’s affair after he says couple was blackmailed

The pastor of Kalamazoo’s Second Baptist Church in Michigan has also been charged with two counts of third-degree criminal sexual conduct on a student.

The probable cause affidavit claims the incidents took place between Aug. 1, 2015- Aug. 31, 2018. The minors involved were between the ages of 15 and 17.

Michigan State Police Detective Sgt. Scott Ernestes detailed the allegations in an Aug. 18 filing. He says he was contacted by two of the boys and one of their fathers with the allegations in 2018.

Two of the juveniles were students at Phoenix High School when they met Jazmonique Strickland and her husband during the 2017-18 school term. They were both allegedly paid $100 to have sex with Jazmonique as her husband watched.

Kalamazoo pastor Rev. Stricjavvar “Strick” Strickland thegrio.com
(Credit: Rev. Stricjavvar “Strick” Strickland)

The pastor is alleged to have also requested nude pictures of a 16-year-old boy in exchange for money and of sexually assaulting another boy and then paying him.

Strickland is also accused of coercing one of the boys to allow the pastor to perform oral sex on him when he was 17 in exchange for use of the pastor’s vehicle. A 15-year-old also claims that the pastor paid him $200 to have sex with his wife on the couple’s couch.  

An arrest warrant was issued on Aug. 21 for Strickland, 37, who has yet to turn himself in to authorities. His lawyer, Michael Hills, says that arrangements were being made for him to do so and denied all charges on his client’s behalf.

“It has been two years since these allegations first came forward and Pastor Strickland has remained in contact and available. He is not running from this,” Hills told MLive. “Pastor Strickland remains ready to turn himself in and deal with these charges accordingly.”

In February of 2019, Strickland and his attorney held a press conference to deny the accusations.

Strickland repeated his innocence after being contacted by MLive on Tuesday. He insisted the charges were “absolutely preposterous” and that he hadn’t been given any new information concerning the allegations.

He added, “All I can say for now is that we are prepared for this fight. God will prevail.”

Kalamazoo County Assistant Prosecutor Christin J. Mehrtens-Carlin stated in the arrest affidavit that Strickland used his position as a pastor and access to the school to exploit the children. She also accused the pastor of engaging in similar behavior with his ex-wife when the then-couple lived in Mississippi.

“Per the reports, the defendant and his wife would use their employment at Phoenix High School (in Kalamazoo) and to some extent, the defendant would use his work as a pastor, to find male teens to engage in sexual activity with the wife, while the defendant watched and masturbated,” Mehrtens-Carlin wrote in the bond recommendation.

Mehrtens-Carlin is requesting a $500K bond in the case. Mehrtens-Carlin also wants him not to have any contact with the alleged victims, any minors under 18, and his wife, who does not face any charges.

Read More: Michigan pastor says white woman coughed on him for not wearing mask

Strickland’s issues with the law also extend to his church members. He’s been charged with assaulting a deacon at his church. His trial for the one misdemeanor count of assault and battery case begins on Sept. 30.

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How to Undo Gender Stereotypes in Math—With Math!

A mathematician uses her craft to unravel arguments about differences between men and women.

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Amazon and FedEx Push to Put Delivery Robots on Your Sidewalk

The companies are backing bills in more than a dozen states that would legalize the devices. Some bills would block cities from regulating them at all.

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Mike Pompeo lands in Sudan after 'historic' flight

The visit comes as the Secretary of State urged more Arab states to make a peace deal with Israel.

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12 Open Source/Commercial Software for Data Center Infrastructure Management

When a company grows its demand in computing resources grows as well. It works for regular companies as for providers, including those renting out dedicated servers. When the total number of racks exceeds 10

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What are the major differences between Python and R for data science?

Both Python and R have vast software ecosystems and communities, so either language is suitable for almost any data science task. That said, there are some areas in which one is stronger than the other.

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10 Open Source/Commercial Control Panels For Virtual Machines (VM’s) Management

Automatic creation and management of virtual machines is a topical issue for any company that provides VPS services. If you manage a large number of machines, a command line is definitely not the only

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Costa Rica is allowing U.S. travelers again — but only if they come from the right states

Rather than permitting or banning American travelers as a whole, Costa Rica is taking a piecemeal approach by allowing residents of six U.S. states to enter this September.

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Uganda: A factory provides accommodation for workers during Covid-19 lockdown

A factory in Uganda is providing accommodation for workers so that they could keep working during lockdown.

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The killing of Hachalu Hundessa and Ethiopia's identity strife

The killing of Hachalu Hundessa laid bare the deep-seated ethnic animosity in Ethiopia.

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Netflix on YouTube

The Gift S2 | Official Trailer | Netflix
Every choice leads to a new possibility. 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. The Gift S2 | Official Trailer | Netflix https://youtube.com/Netflix Reckoning with a different world, Atiye races against time to realize her destiny as the mysterious syndicate behind Serdar threatens the future.


View on YouTube

Monday, August 24, 2020

Africa to be declared free of wild polio in 'milestone'

Rumours and misinformation about the vaccine slowed down immunisation efforts.

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How to Install Linux Mint 20 Alongside Windows 10 or 8 in Dual-Boot UEFI Mode

Linux Mint 20 has been released in wild by the Linux Mint project development team as a new long term support edition which will receive support and security updates until 2025. This tutorial will

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What is MariaDB? How Does MariaDB Work?

MariaDB, a fork of MySQL is one of the most popular open-source SQL (Structured Query Language) relational databases management systems, made by the original developers of MySQL. It is designed for speed, reliability, and

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Uncertainty, belief, and economic outcomes

In late 1994 Mexico suffered a severe currency crisis, with attacks on the peso by international traders that led to inflation, bailouts, and macroeconomic woes. Some experts had thought Mexico was ripe for a currency crisis a couple of years before it happened. So if the peso was already vulnerable to attack, why didn’t that occur earlier?

Stephen Morris has some ideas about that. Influential ideas. The MIT economist is the co-author of “Unique Equilibrium in a Model of Self-Fulfilling Currency Attacks,” a widely cited 1998 paper co-authored with economist Hyun Song Shin, who is now at the Bank of International Settlements. The paper changed the way many people in economics and finance think about market dynamics.

Before Morris and Shin published their paper, a common line of thought was that there were multiple points of equilibrium at which currencies (among other tradeable things) would rest. Investors might short-sell a currency, leading to its collapse — which would establish one equilibrium. Alternately, the currency might avoid attacks and remain robust — representing another equilibrium. Either way, large numbers of people would be acting similarly based on the same information.

But Morris and Shin posited a new, more realistic view about how events like this happen. They stipulated that there is often uncertainty about some of the fundamentals concerning a country’s currency, and also uncertainty among investors about what other investors will do.

“If you say there are multiple equilibria, and everybody attacks or doesn’t attack, that’s on the assumption that [there] is common knowledge among the agents,” Morris says. “And that’s surely not going to be true in reality. In reality, there is going to be uncertainty about what other people think about the situation and what they think other people think.”

For that very reason, Morris says, “An attack would tend to occur when it made sense for you to attack, when you were very uncertain about what other people were doing.”

His paper with Shin codified this point, modeling how the behavior of investors hinges greatly on their beliefs about what other investors will do — and laying out how, in this situation, a single equilibrium for a given currency will result. The model made waves: The finance world used the paper by applying the model to their own decisions, while scholars used it to rethink, in general terms, existing assumptions about the way markets work. The model helped persuade people that markets did not operate with utmost efficiency and that “higher-order” beliefs among investors — what you think I will do, or what I think you think — matter hugely.

“I think people liked it because under some circumstances it delivered a unique prediction,” Morris says. “So it got widely used — people could use this and plug it in to different economic problems. I was happy for people to do that, but what got lost a little bit was the idea about people’s higher-order beliefs and the rich modeling of the information structure lying behind this.”

That kind of work is the through-line in Morris’ career: He takes thorny problems about information and beliefs, and finds sophisticated yet useful ways of modeling them, in areas applicable to finance, central banking, firm decisions, and even nonfinancial markets such as school-choice plans.

“I’ve always been very interested in information,” Morris says. “And in trying to take a richer perspective on information and how that affects economic outcomes.”

With a broad and deep portfolio of research that he is still building upon, Morris was hired with tenure at MIT, joining the Institute’s Department of Economics in 2019. He was recently named the inaugural Peter A. Diamond Professor in Economics.

Morris did not always think economics was something he would pursue. As an undergraduate at Cambridge University, he studied math and, for the first time, economics.

“I think I have an origin story which a reasonable number of economists have,” Morris says. “You’re interested in math and analytical reasoning, and then you discover you’re interested in the world and social science as well, and then you discover economics is a subject addressing big, real-world problems where these analytical tools are being used in a significant way.

Still, Morris did not instantly jump into graduate work in economics. First he attended Yale University as part of an exchange program, then spent two years in Uganda, working as what he calls a “practicing development economist,” before entering Yale’s PhD program in economics.

“At the end of the day I missed academia, came back, and did a very different type of economics,” Morris says. “I do theoretical microeconomics.”

Morris obtained his PhD from Yale, then joined the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania straight out of graduate school. He subsequently taught at Yale and at Princeton University, before joining MIT.

In his years as a practicing theoretical microeconomist, Morris’ work has ranged across a number of problems and bridged the gap between pure theory and more applied theoretical endeavors. A 2002 paper he wrote with Shin, “The Social Value of Private Information,” looked at the ways different market participants may coordinate, crowd out useful public information, and limit the spread of useful knowledge in markets — a work that has also been widely cited, and which generated considerable follow-up research among economists.

On a different note, a 2005 paper Morris wrote with economist Dirk Bergemann, “Robust Mechanism Design,” was influential in the field of mechanism design — the development of nonfinancial markets that apply to things like school choice or medical matches. In it, Morris and his colleagues queried whether such markets can reach optimal outcomes for everyone in them. One key point of the paper was to question how well we can know, and model, the beliefs of — say — parents choosing schools for children. The paper did not lead to a single outcome in the way the currency-attack model did, but it also generated a large follow-up literature in the field about assumptions inherent in mechanism-design work.

“To me it’s all unified,” Morris says of the different branches of his work. “What people may remember from the currency attack paper was that this was a useful trick to get the unique equilibrium. Whereas the robust mechanism design paper was saying there are lots of different things that can happen. So in that sense they may seem to be going in different directions, but in my mind, it was all about taking a richer perspective on information structures and what their consequences are.”

At MIT, he is returning to the question of when the economy switches between equilibria, started in his 1998 “Unique Equilibrium” paper, sometimes in tandem with MIT economist Muhamet Yildiz. Morris is also interested in the crossover between his work and that of computer scientists, and views MIT as a place with significant potential for collaborative, interdisciplinary research. He also finds the Department of Economics to be a highly productive place for him to work. 

“It’s collegial, but in particular that means there are more intellectual interactions as well,” Morris observes.

He notes that he came to the Institute partly for the teaching opportunities, as well. In his first semester at MIT, Morris taught MIT second-year PhD students in a course about writing effective papers; he anticipates extensive advising of graduate students, as well as good in-class experiences.

“The main thing that drew me to be here was the PhD program,” Morris says. “I’d heard great things about it over the years.”

Between research and teaching, Morris will no doubt find his own unique equilibrium at MIT, too.



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Kobe Bryant to have street named after him near Staples Center

Figueroa St. in Los Angeles will be named after the late NBA star, between Olympic and MLK.

A street next to the Staples Center in Los Angeles will be named after Lakers legend Kobe Bryant

President of the Los Angeles City Council Herb J. Wesson Jr. announced Monday that Figueroa Street between Olympic Boulevard and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard will be renamed in honor of the five-time NBA champion. 

Kobe Bryant Blvd and Chick Hearn Ct will intersect outside Staples Center, home of the LA Lakers, Yahoo reports. 

Read More: Allen Iverson pens heartfelt letter to Kobe Bryant: ‘I love you, brother’

“Championship parade after championship parade, Kobe Bryant led the procession down Figueroa St, from MLK to Olympic,” Wesson Jr. tweeted Monday. “After the @Lakers win this year, they will be marching down #KobeBryantBlvd.”

News of the street renaming comes a day after Bryant’s widow, Vanessa Bryant, took to social media to pen a touching message on what would have been her late husband’s 49th birthday, theGRIO previously reported. 

“To my baby – Happy birthday. I love you and miss you more than I can ever explain. I wish you and Gigi were here to celebrate YOU. I wish i could make your fav food or a birthday cake with my Gigi. I miss your big hugs, your kisses, your smile, your loud ass deep laugh. I miss teasing you, making you laugh and bursting your bubble. I miss you sitting on my lap like my big baby that you are. I think about your tenderness and patience all the time. I think about everything you would do in situations to help me deal with everything thrown my way,” said Vanessa in a post.

Kobe Bryant, his 13-year-old daughter, Gianna and seven other passengers were killed in the Los Angeles area in January 2020 after their helicopter crashed.

Read More: Natalia Bryant pays tribute to dad Kobe on birthday: ‘I love you forever’

Earlier this month, officials in Orange County declared August 24, the day after Bryant’s birthday, “Kobe Bryant Day.”

In related news, the Lakers wore “Black Mamba” uniforms to honor Bryant for their Aug. 24 game against the Portland Trail Blazers. The uniform also featured a special heart patch bearing the number 2 to honor Gianna, per NBA.com.

Gianna wore the number while forging her own path as a budding basketball player.

“This day and [Monday] where we’re going to wear the uniforms, it brings back a lot of the emotions of what happened,” Lakers coach Frank Vogel said Sunday. “We’re all still very sad about his loss and Gigi’s loss. It’s just a tough thing for all of us to handle and to go through.”

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Shaquille O’Neal signs entertainment, sports deal with WarnerMedia

The four-time NBA Champion will continue to appear on Inside the NBA and develop a show titled The Business of Basketball.

Shaquille O’Neal has reached a multi-year extension with Turner Sports that will see him expand his role as a studio analyst for NBA games. 

The four-time NBA Champion will continue to appear on Inside the NBA, along with the NBA on TNT Tuesday Night franchise. O’Neal will also contribute to NBA.com, and he is developing a show titled The Business of Basketball for NBA TV, per Variety

“Turner Sports is family to me – and I’m looking forward to working alongside my talented colleagues as we create many more Shaq-tastic moments in the years to come,” said O’Neal in a statement

Read More: Shaq pays for the funeral of Louisiana boy killed in car crash

The 15-time NBA All-Star, who has been with Turner Sports since 2011, will executive-produce projects for the company’s Bleacher Report; participate in CNN’s New Year’s Eve coverage as a DJ, and his podcast will be distributed via WarnerMedia; the report states. There’s also the possible appearance in TNT’s coverage of All Elite Wrestling.

“Shaq is so critical to our success, and such a huge part of the heart and soul of our coverage,” said Jeff Zucker, Chairman, WarnerMedia News and Sports, in a statement.  “We are lucky to be able to have him as part of our family every single day, and I am personally so thrilled to see that continue for a long time to come.”

“Shaquille’s tenacity as a player and loyal teammate made him one of the best to ever do it on the court, and those skills have translated to his contributions as a broadcaster,” said Tara August, Senior Vice President of Talent Services & Special Projects, Turner Sports. “His fun, infectious personality is engaging, entertaining and beloved by fans. We’re thrilled to extend and deepen our relationship with him for many years to come.”

“I definitely want to get a cartoon going,” O’Neal told The Associated Press. “Turner has a lot of entities under their umbrella. Who knows? I might have to put ”Kazaam” under the Turner Movie Classics library.”

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University of Pittsburgh mandates anti-racism class for incoming freshman

The University of Pittsburgh will offer the new course, Anti-Black Racism: History, Ideology and Resistance in the fall

The University of Pittsburgh will require all incoming first-year students to complete a course on anti-Black racism.

Read More: Indiana teen accepted into 65 colleges chooses Howard University

Provost and senior vice chancellor Ann E. Cudd wrote in a letter to students on Monday that the course, Anti-Black Racism: History, Ideology, and Resistance, is intended to be an introduction to the Black experience. Students will be automatically enrolled for the class in the fall which will count towards one academic credit.

Roots, ideology, and resistance to anti-Black racism will be the central tenets of the course. Other themes that will be covered include pre-colonial African history, race, policing and mass incarceration, health disparities, and racial capitalism. There will be required reading in most weeks and a different scholar will present the discussions.

“This multidisciplinary course seeks to provide a broad overview of this rich and dynamic history. Built around the expertise of Pitt faculty and Pittsburgh area activists, this course will introduce students to the established tradition of scholarship focused on the Black experience and Black cultural expression,” the course overview read.

“It also seeks to examine the development, spread, and articulations of anti-Black racism in the United States and around the world. The course will grapple with three key areas of inquiry: the roots, ideology, and resistance to anti-Black racism.”

Cudd cited the recent social uprisings that have followed the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, and others as one of the motivators for this curriculum. The students at Pitt were another contributing factor.

George Floyd's Brother Attends Unveiling Of Memorial Portrait In Brooklyn
A mural painted by artist Kenny Altidor depicting George Floyd is unveiled on a sidewall of CTown Supermarket on July 13, 2020 in the Brooklyn borough New York City. George Floyd was killed by a white police officer in Minneapolis and his death has sparked a national reckoning about race and policing in the United States. (Photo by Stephanie Keith/Getty Images)

“This summer, we have also spent considerable time reckoning with societal injustice in the form of police brutality and systemic anti-Black racism throughout society,” Cudd wrote. “We have heard from our Black students, as well as Black faculty and staff, that our campus is not the safe, inclusive and equitable place for all that we are committed to creating.”

Yolanda Covington-Ward, chair of the Department of Africana Studies in the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences, took the lead in helping to develop the course. The faculty and students involved wanted the course to be a reflection and response to anti-Black racism.

“We wanted to make sure that the course provided some historical context, while also looking at ideologies of race and contemporary struggles against anti-Black racism locally in Pittsburgh, nationally and globally as well,” Covington-Ward told PittWire.

“We also wanted to focus on the humanity of Black people in creating a course that emanates from their own perspectives, experiences and agency.”

The ultimate grade will be determined as satisfactory/non-credit, but for many of the students on campus, the course is long overdue. This summer, students, including medical students, sent a letter demanding more transparency with campus police. They also wanted a better system to report racial inequities.

“This is something that should already exist,” Morgan Ottley, president of Pitt’s Black Action Society, told The Pittsburgh TribuneReview.

Ottley added that the work being done was not new by any means.

“Our presenting the demands is just a continuation of everything that’s led us to this point,” she said.

Margo Shear Fischgrund, a university spokeswoman, acknowledged that students spearheaded the decision to make the anti-racism course mandatory.

“Student leaders at Pitt absolutely played a role in the activism that resulted in the development of this course,” Shear Fischgrund told The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. “This course came out of conversations with Black student leaders on campus.”

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