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Chicago Now’s Best Posts for June 2021on July 6, 2021 at 6:00 pm

Margaret Serious

Chicago Now’s Best Posts for June 2021

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Chicago Now’s Best Posts for June 2021on July 6, 2021 at 6:00 pm Read More »

On the fiftieth anniversary of “At Fillmore East”, by the Allman Brothers Band, can you still handle twenty-two minutes of “Whipping Post?”on July 6, 2021 at 6:33 pm

I’ve Got The Hippy Shakes

On the fiftieth anniversary of “At Fillmore East”, by the Allman Brothers Band, can you still handle twenty-two minutes of “Whipping Post?”

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On the fiftieth anniversary of “At Fillmore East”, by the Allman Brothers Band, can you still handle twenty-two minutes of “Whipping Post?”on July 6, 2021 at 6:33 pm Read More »

Angel Bat Dawid finds creative kinship in Sistazz of the Nitty GrittyHannah Edgaron July 6, 2021 at 5:00 pm

Brotherhood, meet sisterhood. Those who know clarinetist, composer, and self-described “sonic archaeologist” Angel Bat Dawid from the incisive October release LIVE likely associate her with her stalwart seven-piece band, Tha Brotherhood, which backs her on that album. It was recorded during a fraught, frustrating 2019 European tour, but when the pandemic shuttered venues and stilled plane engines, Dawid turned her sights to more intimate musical ventures. So far they’ve included a duo act with galaxy-brained synth wizard Oui Ennui (cleverly christened Daoui), a one-shot spring 2021 release on Australian label Longform Editions, and, on Juneteenth, the astonishing Hush Harbor Mixtape Vol. 1: Doxology, which in its scale comes as close to 2019’s single-handed The Oracle as anything in her discography thus far. During the same time span, she also convened Sistazz of the Nitty Gritty, a gorgeously generative trio with pianist-vocalist Anaiet Sivad (who makes music under her first name) and bassist Brooklynn Skye Scott. So far the trio have mostly streamed their performances (under the auspices of Chicago presenters Elastic Arts and Fulcrum Point, New York’s Kaufman Center, and others), and those online sets showcase a languid, sumptuous sound. Anaiet lays out a plush foundation behind the keyboard, and her velvety vocals make a satisfying foil to Dawid’s full-throated, huskier singing. Whether walking or riffing, Scott’s bass is dusky, alluring, and quietly probing. The Sistazz performed live at Oak Park art space Compound Yellow last month, and later this summer they’ll open for the Sun Ra Arkestra in Central Park. This Hideout show is the Sistazz’ first in-person-only outing in the city since COVID–if you catch them now, you can say you saw them before all New York’s jazz cats knew their name. v

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Angel Bat Dawid finds creative kinship in Sistazz of the Nitty GrittyHannah Edgaron July 6, 2021 at 5:00 pm Read More »

Chicago’s most violent weekend of 2021: 104 shot, 19 of them killed. 13 kids among the woundedMadeline Kenneyon July 6, 2021 at 4:52 pm

In the deadliest and most violent weekend this year in Chicago, over 100 people were shot over the long Fourth of July weekend, 19 of them killed.

Among the wounded were at least 13 children and two Chicago police supervisors. Five of the kids were shot within nine hours Sunday evening through early Monday.

Both the number of fatal shootings and the number of shootings overall are highs for 2021, according to a Chicago Sun-Times database of shootings.

Through July 4, the most recent city data available, 2,019 people have been shot in Chicago this year, an increase of almost 13 percent compared to the year before, and a 58 percent increase in shootings compared with 2019.

In one of the weekend attacks, a 15-year-old boy was critically hurt in a drive-by shooting Monday evening at 5:50 p.m. when a dark-colored car drove by and someone from inside pulled out a gun and fired shots in the 6600 block of South Langley Avenue in Woodlawn, police said.

About a half-hour earlier, a 48-year-old was arguing with a person in a home about 5:20 p.m. in the 8600 block of South Aberdeen Street when he was shot and killed, police said.

That followed an attack when two people were killed and four wounded, including a 12-year-old girl and a 13-year-old boy in Washington Park on the South Side.

That happened around the same time that a 6-year-old girl and a woman were shot in West Pullman and about four hours after an 11-year-old boy and a man were shot in Brainerd on the South Side. And late Sunday afternoon, a 5-year-old girl was shot in a leg, also in West Pullman.

The Washington Park shooting happened around 1:05 a.m. Monday in the 6100 block of South Wabash Avenue, where a large group of kids and adults gathered outside in a parking lot outside an apartment building to socialize and light off fireworks. Someone inside a car that drove by a group of people there started shooting, according to the police.

A 21-year-old man, shot twice in the head, and a 26-year-old man, shot in the torso, were pronounced dead at the University of Chicago Medical Center, police said.

The 12-year-old was struck in the buttocks and taken to Comer Children’s Hospital, according to the police, who said the 13-year-old was shot in a hand and also taken to Comer to be treated.

A woman, 29, was struck in the elbow and taken to the hospital in good condition, and the sixth victim, a 34-year-old woman, suffered two graze wounds, according to the police.

“I wish that whatever this madness is going on, I wish that it would stop,” said Toni Watkins, who lives in an apartment complex that overlooks the parking lot where the shooting was and has lived in the area for seven years. “Usually, I feel safe around here. But now this has me questioning it because it’s close to home right now.”

Blood stains the parking lot next to an apartment building in the 6100 block of South Wabash Avenue where six people were shot, two of them fatally.
Blood stains the parking lot next to an apartment building in the 6100 block of South Wabash Avenue where six people were shot, two of them fatally.
Brian Rich / Sun-Times

She said she’s fearful for her own 16-year-old daughter.

“I tell her every day, ‘If you’re going out or going to work, please be careful, and come back home to me. Stay away from those knuckleheads,’ ” Watkins said.

Watkins said she cried when she heard about an earlier shooting in which a 1-month-old baby was shot last week while in a car. She said she’s distraught over kids being shot: “They didn’t ask to be hurt. I just pray and hope that the kids are OK that got hurt.”

The parking lot next to an apartment building in the 6100 block of South Wabash Avenue where six people were shot, two of them killed.
The parking lot next to an apartment building in the 6100 block of South Wabash Avenue where six people were shot, two of them killed.
Brian Rich / Sun-Times

Several people who live near the parking lot where the shootings happened said groups of 100 or more people often gather there.

A 27-year-old man who said he has lived on that block for 15 years said that “street beefs” mean “everything revolves around retaliation.” But what he said he can’t understand is, “You see a whole bunch of kids, something should click in your head saying not to shoot.”

Shelley Childs recently moved with her 9-year-old son into a lower-level apartment that overlooks the parking lot.

“We’re sitting up there, having a good time, enjoying ourselves, celebrating Fourth of July, and you’re out [there] plotting to kill people,” Childs said of whoever was behind the shootings. “That’s why I’m getting my son and myself away.”

Childs, 25, said she had left the neighborhood Sunday, and, “Something told me don’t come home, it’s so crazy.”

Childs said the violence is “becoming normal.” She said someone was shot and killed about a month ago outside her mother’s house in Hyde Park.

“I saw the body,” her son said.

The 9-year-old said that he tried “to stay calm, think of something else and think of something peaceful.”

“It’s scary,” said his mother, who’s working toward a nursing degree. “I feel like I need to carry a gun, and I don’t want to. But it’s been a trend of kids and women being shot more and more and more around here. And it’s scary. I cannot wait to leave.”

Police commander, sergeant shot on West Side

A Chicago police commander and a sergeant were shot and wounded early Monday after the police disperse a crowd on the West Side.

The officers were hit when someone on foot fired shots around 1:30 a.m. in the 100 block of North Long Avenue, police said.

The commander was struck in the foot, and the sergeant was grazed in the leg, according to police.

Driver fatally shot in Little Village

A man was killed while driving Monday in Little Village on the Southwest Side.

He was driving a gray SUV about 9:15 a.m. in the 3400 block of West 26th Street when someone fired shots at his vehicle, striking him multiple times, police said.

The 34-year-old crashed into a parked car after the shooting, police said. He was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

1 killed, 1 hurt in Lawndale shooting

A man was killed and another man wounded in a shooting Monday morning in Lawndale on the West Side.

The men were outside just after 2 a.m. in the 1800 block of South Kildare Avenue when they were struck by gunfire, police said.

One man, about 30 years old, suffered multiple gunshot wounds to the body and was pronounced dead at Mount Sinai Hospital, according to police. He has not yet been identified. The other man, 62, suffered a gunshot wound to the knee and was taken to the same hospital where his condition was stabilized, police said.

Woman shot to death in Austin

One person was killed and three others wounded in a shooting Sunday night in Austin on the West Side.

About 10:45 p.m., two men and a woman were standing in an alley in the first block of North Menard Avenue when a 33-year-old man began shooting at them, police said.

A woman, 30, suffered a gunshot wound to the head and was pronounced dead at the scene, according to police.

A man, 32, was struck multiple times in the body and taken to Stroger Hospital where his condition was stabilized, police said.

Another man, 49, suffered a gunshot wound to the buttocks and was taken to the same hospital where his condition was also stabilized, police said.

A 49-year-old man, who was a concealed carry license holder, witnessed the incident and shot at the offender, according to police.

The offender, a 33-year-old man, was struck in the arm and hip, police said. He was placed into custody and taken to Stroger Hospital in serious condition.

Old Town fatal shooting

Just after 6 a.m. Sunday, a man was walking across the street in the 200 block of West Division Street when someone approached him and the two exchanged words, police said. The other person then began firing several shots towards the man, striking him in the torso, police said.

He was taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital where he later died, police said.

Teen killed on Near West Side

A 19-year-old man was killed while riding in a vehicle late Saturday on the Near West Side.

Just after 11 p.m., the teen was riding as a passenger in a vehicle in the 2600 block of West Van Buren Street when someone fired several shots, police said.

He suffered five gunshot wounds throughout his body and was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said.

Another teen fatally shot in West Pullman

A 17-year-old boy died after he was shot Saturday night at a West Pullman neighborhood home on the Far South Side.

About 9:30 p.m., the teenager was in the basement of the home in the 12000 block of South Yale Avenue with several others when someone opened fire, police said. He was shot twice the head and was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn.

The teen, identified as Amari Brown, was pronounced dead at 7:50 a.m. Sunday at the hospital, the Cook County medical examiner’s office said.

Little Village shooting

A man was killed and two others wounded in a shooting Saturday evening in Little Village on the Southwest Side.

About 7 p.m., a concerned citizen called in a tip about a vehicle driving slowly and bumping against a curb, police said. Responding officers found the man, thought to be about 20 years old, inside the vehicle in the 4200 block of South Cicero Avenue with three gunshot wounds to the torso, police said.

He was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said. His name hasn’t been released.

Two other men, 32 and 27, were struck in the arm and taken to the same hospital, where they were listed in good condition, police said.

Teen shot to death in Belmont Cragin

A member of the National Guard and aspiring Chicago police officer was found shot to death early Saturday in Belmont Cragin on the Northwest Side.

Chrys Carvajal, of Portage Park, had attended a house party Friday night with his girlfriend and at one point went to get something from his car, his sister Jennifer Ramirez said.

About 1:25 a.m., officers responded to a call of shots fired in the 2200 block of North Lockwood Avenue and found Carvajal, 19, lying unresponsive on the sidewalk with gunshot wounds to the back and abdomen, police said. He was transported to Illinois Masonic Medical Center where he was pronounced dead, according to police.

Carvajal was found early Saturday lying unresponsive on the sidewalk in the 2200 block of North Lockwood Avenue with gunshot wounds to the back and abdomen, police said. He was transported to Illinois Masonic Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.

“We are all very upset and we’re heartbroken,” Ramirez said Sunday. “My mom, she’s really devastated, too. She’s been crying. She has a sore throat because of all the crying, she’s just heartbroken.”

Ramirez said it’s hard to imagine life without her brother, whom she’ll remember as a man with a “big loving heart” who was always willing to help others. She pleaded for anyone with information to come forward.

“We just want people to help. If they saw something, if they know something to help, because if it was their family member, and we saw something, and my family saw something or witnessed something, we would speak up,” she said. “That’s the right thing to do.”

“The finger-pointing must end”

Last weekend, 10 people were killed and 68 others wounded in shootings across Chicago.

Amid the notoriously violent weekend, the Rev. Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow PUSH Coalition on Sunday hosted a Fourth of July cookout and party at the Concordia Place Apartments on the Far South Side.

At the event, Jackson urged people to put down their guns and called on city officials, including Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Chicago Police Supt. David Brown, to actively work together to tamp down gun violence.

“The finger-pointing must end,” Jackson said.

He later added that, “We need better and we deserve better.”

Jackson’s comments come two days after City Council members spent six hours interrogating Brown over his plans to curb the latest surge in summertime gun violence.

“We urge people… to put down their guns, stop the violence. Of course, when they see violence — [an] attempt to overthrow our government and they’re treated with kid gloves, it decreases the message: If you pick up a gun and shoot somebody, you’re not walking away,” Jackson said. “We deserve a better America.”

Read more on crime, and track the city’s homicides.

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Chicago’s most violent weekend of 2021: 104 shot, 19 of them killed. 13 kids among the woundedMadeline Kenneyon July 6, 2021 at 4:52 pm Read More »

An unbeatable sprinter is defeated by an irrational prejudiceJacob Sullumon July 6, 2021 at 5:07 pm

President Joe Biden’s take on American sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson’s one-month suspension for marijuana use was similar to hers and correct as far as it went. “Rules are rules,” he said on Saturday, and “everybody knows what the rules are going in.”

Biden added that “whether that should remain the rule is a different issue.”

But as the collapse of pot prohibition continues apace in the United States, that issue is unavoidable: Now that 44% of Americans live in states that treat marijuana like alcohol, the lingering distinction between these two intoxicants makes less sense than ever before.

Richardson, who tested positive for an inactive THC metabolite during U.S. Olympic Team Trials on June 19, said she used marijuana in Oregon, where voters approved legalization in 2014, after learning about her biological mother’s death. Had she reacted by having a drink or two, that choice would have had no impact on her athletic career.

But under the 2021 World Anti-Doping Code, which the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) enforces, THC is considered a “substance of abuse,” so designated because it is “frequently abused in society outside of the context of sport.” Although the same obviously could be said of alcohol, that drug is not considered a “substance of abuse.”

Counterintuitively, Richardson’s infraction had nothing to do with “doping” as it is usually understood, since the USADA concedes that her marijuana use was “unrelated to sport performance.” Nor does her positive test result indicate that she was under the influence of marijuana during competition, since the THC metabolite cited by the USADA can be detected in a cannabis consumer’s urine for days or weeks after the last dose.

Richardson’s cannabis consumption nevertheless had severe consequences. It nullified her first-place finish in the 100-meter trials, making her ineligible for that event at this summer’s Olympics, where she had a good shot at winning a gold medal.

The 21-year-old runner responded to this crushing disappointment with remarkable grace. “As much as I’m disappointed, I know that when I step on the track I represent not only myself, I represent a community that has shown great support, great love,” she said on NBC’s Today show. “I apologize for the fact that I didn’t know how to control my emotions or deal with my emotions during that time.”

The USADA said Richardson’s suspension was reduced from three months to one “because her use of cannabis occurred out of competition and was unrelated to sport performance, and because she successfully completed a counseling program regarding her use of cannabis.” The idea that Richardson needed “counseling” because of her perfectly understandable response to her mother’s death, as if that decision revealed her as an incipient drug addict, is irrational and more than a little insulting.

Other athletic organizations have recognized that arbitrary rules like the USADA’s can no longer be justified (if they ever could). In 2019 the National Hockey League and Major League Baseball stopped testing players for marijuana.

Businesses also are adapting to the new reality of widely legal cannabis. Last month Amazon, the nation’s second-largest private employer, announced that it would no longer test job applicants for marijuana and would instead treat cannabis consumption “the same as alcohol use.”

The Biden administration initially indicated that it also would take a more tolerant approach, saying in February that it would allow people with a “limited” history of marijuana use — a description that encompasses at least half of American adults — to work in the executive office of the president. A month later, however, The Daily Beast reported that “dozens of young White House staffers have been suspended, asked to resign, or placed in a remote work program due to past marijuana use.”

Repealing the federal ban on marijuana would greatly simplify decisions like these. But since Biden opposes that change and Democratic legislators who favor legalization are not making a serious effort to attract Republican support, it seems unlikely that will happen anytime soon.

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine.

Send letters to [email protected].

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An unbeatable sprinter is defeated by an irrational prejudiceJacob Sullumon July 6, 2021 at 5:07 pm Read More »

Hand health is the key to keeping a grip in Olympic climbingAssociated Presson July 6, 2021 at 4:58 pm

SALT LAKE CITY — The skin stretches taught, veins pouring in tributaries over the linear lines of the carpals and metacarpals.

The phalanges fall into line like a picket fence with boards of varying lengths, the knuckles unknobby. They’re long, yet not spindly, even muscular — if fingers can be muscular.

The palms are proportional, powerful like mini car compactors. The fingernails are closely cropped, tips arching in unblemished partial ellipses.

The cue is in the cuticles, chalky halos announcing these are the hands of a climber.

Flip over Kyra Condie’s appendages and find more proof: calluses not quite on the fingertips, not quite centered on the final pad of each digit.

“Honestly, my hands are less ugly than people would think they are,” said Condie, one of four American climbers headed to the Tokyo Olympics. “People picture like torn apart, bloodied everywhere. That does happen, but it’s not like a daily occurrence.”

Baseball players need bats and gloves, tennis players racquets, golfers their clubs.

Climbers’ instruments are their hands.

Hands are the main contact point to the only obstacle in the sport, a sheer wall freckled with holds set at an array of angles, some no wider than a fingertip.

Strength, in muscle and skin, is paramount. A breakdown in either is disastrous.

“The hands are our main tool,” U.S. Olympian Nathaniel Coleman said. “Every little muscle in our forearms, in our hands are essential for using our entire body to climb.”

Serious climbing is a constant full-body workout hinged at the fingers.

Those pullups most of us struggle to do more than a couple? Climbers do it from their fingertips, sometimes one handed — over and over again.

They practice on hang boards bolted to walls, dangling by nothing but their fingers. Rest during a climb constitutes clinging to holds with hands and feet.

Climbing’s Olympic debut in Tokyo this month will include three disciplines: lead, bouldering and speed.

All three will take walnut-cracking hand strength.

“Almost more important than anything else is your hands being able to have good finger strength, healthy fingers so you don’t pop a tendon or anything like that,” American Olympic climber Collin Duffy said. “Every single time you’re on the wall, you’re using your hands in some fashion.”

The minutes and hours between those times on the wall are spent making sure their hands aren’t too battered to do it again.

A football or basketball player might be able to tape up an injured digit and keep playing.

Climbers don’t have that luxury. A skin breakdown could mean the end of a competition, a finger pulley injury up to a year on the shelf.

No wonder climbers treat their hands like they have a pair of priceless vases at the end of their arms.

“Imagine if you were an F1 driver and didn’t get to choose your tires, so next time you go out, you have completely burned out tires for the next race,” Condie said. “That’s kind of like what skin is. It’s like, OK, this time the track is wet, but you have no control over it at all.”

Sweat is every climber’s enemy, so they coat their hands in chalk before every climb to prevent slippage. Some take it a step further, bringing battery-operated fans to dry their hands before attacking the wall.

The problem: All the drying can lead to cracking.

Lotions, balms and salves are essential to most climbers’ hand-care toolkits, but there is a fine line. Too soft and the callouses break down, maybe even break off.

Adam Ondra, of the Czech Republic, climbs during the men's boulder finals at the climbing World Cup in Salt Lake City, in this May 22, 2021, file photo
Adam Ondra, of the Czech Republic, climbs during the men’s boulder finals at the climbing World Cup in Salt Lake City, in this May 22, 2021, file photo
AP

Soaking in water has the same effect, so climbers do dishes wearing rubber gloves or, better yet, leave it to someone else. Climbers have been known to wear rubber gloves in the shower before climbing. Find yourself soaking in a hot tub with a group of climbers and you’ll likely be the only person whose hands are in the water.

Files, razors and sandpaper also are essential.

Not for the nails. For the callouses.

An imperfection on a callous can catch on a crystal in the rock or a sharp edge, so those have to be sanded down or trimmed off. Files and sandpaper can prevent cuts from opening up. Razors are good for trimming because fresh skin heals faster than callouses.

Some climbers walk around with rocks in their pocket to try making their skin hard. One climber supposedly burned his fingertips on a hot tea kettle to make his skin harder.

There are even reports of climbers immersing their hands in water and running an electrical current to cut down on excessive sweating.

“People try control it as much as possible,” Condie said. “There are some interesting methods out there, but whatever it takes.”

Those hands are a precious commodity in the climbing world.

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Hand health is the key to keeping a grip in Olympic climbingAssociated Presson July 6, 2021 at 4:58 pm Read More »

DeSantis si, Trump nah.on July 6, 2021 at 4:53 pm

The Barbershop: Dennis Byrne, Proprietor

DeSantis si, Trump nah.

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DeSantis si, Trump nah.on July 6, 2021 at 4:53 pm Read More »

Best/Worst States for Teen Driverson July 6, 2021 at 5:15 pm

Girls Go Racing

Best/Worst States for Teen Drivers

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Best/Worst States for Teen Driverson July 6, 2021 at 5:15 pm Read More »

Nikole Hannah-Jones chooses Howard over UNC-Chapel HillAssociated Presson July 6, 2021 at 4:04 pm

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Investigative journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones says she will not teach at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill following an extended fight over tenure there, and instead will take a tenured position at Howard University.

The dispute over whether North Carolina’s flagship public university would extend the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist a lifetime faculty appointment has prompted weeks of outcry from within and beyond its Chapel Hill campus. Numerous professors and alumni voiced frustration, and Black students and faculty questioned during protests whether the school values them.

“These last few weeks have been very dark. To be treated so shabbily by my alma mater, by a university that has given me so much and which I only sought to give back to, has been deeply painful,” Hannah-Jones said in a written statement.

Hannah-Jones — who won the Pulitzer Prize for her work on The New York Times Magazine’s 1619 Project focusing on America’s history of slavery — said Tuesday that her tenure application had stalled after political interference by conservatives and objections by a top donor at the journalism school. She lamented the “political firestorm that has dogged me since The 1619 Project published,” with conservatives including former President Donald Trump criticizing the work.

Hannah-Jones will instead accept a tenured position as the Knight Chair in Race and Investigative Journalism at Howard, a historically Black university in Washington, D.C., which also announced Tuesday that it had recruited award-winning journalist and author Ta-Nehisi Coates to join its faculty.

Coates won a National Book Award for “Between the World and Me,” which explores violence against Black people and white supremacy in America. Both have been given MacArthur “genius” grants for their writings.

Hannah Jones’ tenure application at UNC’s journalism school was submitted to the school’s trustees last year, but it was halted after a board member who vets the lifetime appointments raised questions about her nonacademic background, university officials have said. Instead, she was initially offered a five-year contract. Then last week, amid mounting pressure, the trustee board finally took up her submission and voted to offer her tenure.

“To be denied it (tenure) to only have that vote occur on the last possible day, at the last possible moment, after threat of legal action, after weeks of protest, after it became a national scandal, it’s just not something that I want anymore,” Hannah-Jones said on “CBS This Morning,” which first broke the news of her decision.

Officials at UNC didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

Hannah-Jones and Coates’ Howard appointments are being supported by nearly $20 million donated by the Knight Foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Ford Foundation, as well as by an anonymous donor, to support Howard’s continued education of and investment in Black journalists, the university said.

“It is my pleasure to welcome to Howard two of today’s most respected and influential journalists,” Howard President Wayne A. I. Frederick said in a news release. “At such a critical time for race relations in our country, it is vital that we understand the role of journalism in steering our national conversation and social progress.”

Coates celebrated his return to Howard, which is his alma mater.

Ta-Nehisi Coates speaks during the Celebration of the Life of Toni Morrison at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York Nov. 21, 2019.
Ta-Nehisi Coates speaks during the Celebration of the Life of Toni Morrison at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York Nov. 21, 2019.
Mary Altaffer/AP

“I heard a wise man once say, ‘A man who hates home will never be happy.’ And it is in the pursuit of wisdom and happiness that I return to join the esteemed faculty of Howard University. This is the faculty that molded me. This is the faculty that strengthened me,” Coates said. “Personally, I know of no higher personal honor than this.”

UNC had announced in April that Hannah-Jones, who received a master’s degree from the university, would be joining the journalism school as a Knight Chair. It was later revealed that she had been given a contract position, despite the fact that her predecessors were granted tenure when appointed.

On Tuesday, Hannah-Jones cited political interference and the influence of a powerful donor to the journalism school, a reference to Arkansas newspaper publisher Walter Hussman, who revealed that he had emailed university leaders challenging her work as “highly contentious and highly controversial” before the process was halted.

Hussman, whose name adorns the UNC journalism school after he pledged a $25 million donation, didn’t immediately reply to a message seeking comment.

“I cannot imagine working at and advancing a school named for a man who lobbied against me, who used his wealth to influence the hires and ideology of the journalism school, who ignored my 20 years of journalism experience, all of my credentials, all of my work, because he believed that a project that centered Black Americans equaled the denigration of white Americans,” Hannah-Jones said in her statement, which was released by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

“Nor can I work at an institution whose leadership permitted this conduct and has done nothing to disavow it.”

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Nikole Hannah-Jones chooses Howard over UNC-Chapel HillAssociated Presson July 6, 2021 at 4:04 pm Read More »

Julianna Zobrist responds to accusationsSun-Times staffon July 6, 2021 at 4:04 pm

Julianna Zobrist, estranged wife of former Cubs player Ben Zobrist, commented on the public drama her family has endured in an Instagram post Tuesday morning.

“It’s tempting to retaliate or seek revenge when someone decides to hurt, slander, or lie about you. Especially in public,” she wrote. “It’s difficult to remember that those who harm us are acting out of their own pain. Wounded people need healing, and that’s what I pray finds every person who is so lost in their pain that they resort to inflicting harm on others”

Ben Zobrist filed a lawsuit in May alleging Julianna was having an affair with their minister, according to court documents. The minister, Byron Yawn, was also accused of defrauding Zobrist’s charity foundation, for which he worked.

Now retired after a 13-year major-league baseball career, Ben Zobrist is seeking $6 million in damages from Byron Yawn, the CEO of Forrest Crain & Co., a Nashville-area business-consulting firm.

Yawn also is a former pastor and elder at Community Bible Church in Nashville. In that position, Yawn met Zobrist and his wife, the former Julianna Gilmore, about 16 years ago. The Zobrists, who were married in 2005, have three children.

Ben Zobrist paused his 2019 Cubs season for about four months as he and Julianna, a contemporary-Christian singer, addressed their marital problems.

“There have been many ugly accusations made about me publicly in recent days,” Julianna Zobrist posted on Tuesday. “And this has created an expectation that I should respond by defending myself–and maybe even offering a few ugly accusations in return. Isn’t that how these kinds of things always play out? …

“I am choosing to protect my children’s hearts by not saying hurtful things about their father in public. My attention is focused on caring for them during this difficult time, and I refuse to divert my energy to slinging mud and publicly reveal personal details of my previous relationship in order to score sympathy points.”

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Julianna Zobrist responds to accusationsSun-Times staffon July 6, 2021 at 4:04 pm Read More »