Sunday, November 30, 2014

Where to Fill Up Your Tank in Illinois for Low Gas Prices This Holiday Weekend

More Americans travel around the Thanksgiving holiday than during any other time of the year. According to the United States Department of Transportation, long-distance travel during the six-day Thanksgiving holiday period increases 54 percent. That's more even than the Christmas travel period, when long-distance travel increases only 23 percent.



The USDOT reminds us that it's not only public transportation hubs that see an influx of users-individual travel also shoots up during that time. Ninety-one percent of travel during this period happens in personal cars.



And although heavy media attention focuses on crowded airports and bus and train stations on the Wednesday before and Sunday after Thanksgiving, when personal vehicle trips are added to the mix the National Household Travel Survey (NHTS) reveals that Thanksgiving Day is actually a heavier long-distance travel day than Wednesday.





All that driving around eats up a lot of gasoline, which eats up a lot of money. But there are ways to save money on gas, like figuring out which areas along your travel route might have the lowest prices, or even making a pit stop a few miles out of the way to save on the green.



AAA Insurance says that the 2014 Thanksgiving weekend will see the lowest gas prices in four years. The current national average price of a gallon of gas is $3.24, says AreaVibes.com. Illinoisgasprices.com says the current average price of a gallon of gas in Illinois is $2.90.



Check out which areas in Illinois have the highest gas prices as of the afternoon of Nov. 24 according to Illinoisgasprices.com. The prices may change as the holiday approaches.



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See the complete infographic showing which parts of Illinois have the lowest gas prices leading up to the Thanksgiving holiday at Reboot Illinois:



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College Disciplinary Boards Impose Slight Penalties For Serious Crimes

The University of Toledo found a student responsible for his role in the stabbing death of his roommate, but he wasn’t expelled from the school or charged criminally.



The University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh found a student responsible for sexual assault and gave him a written reprimand, kicked him out of his dorm for a month and ordered him not to have any minors as guests.



After Miami University found a student responsible for assaulting one woman and stealing another woman’s pizza on the southwestern Ohio campus, it placed him on probation and ordered him to write an essay.



Colleges across the country use campus disciplinary boards to pass judgment on students accused of violent crimes, including rape and assault. Sometimes, schools handle crime and punishment without ever reporting violations to police. Most cases never go to court.



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Midway Airport Security Line Reportedly Over 1 Mile Long

Holiday travelers faced a literal nightmare on Sunday morning when the line for security checks at Midway Airport in Chicago was reportedly over a mile long.



KOMO reporter Denise Whitaker said that the line was 1.2 miles long. An airport spokespersonsaid that she wasn't surprised by the crowds.



“This happens sometimes,” Chicago Aviation Department rep. Karen Pride told the Chicago Sun-Times. “There was a period of time earlier this morning, between 6 a.m. and 8 a.m., that lines were long because that is when most people are traveling for the holiday period.”



Twitter users posted pictures of the hellish scene. The end of the line was literally outside of the airport.































Twitter user TumbleDry said that it took 75 minutes to get through the line. According to ABC7 Chicago, the airport cleared up by 9 A.M.



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Saturday, November 29, 2014

Woman Shot By Ex-Boyfriend At Chicago Nordstrom Store Dies

CHICAGO, Nov 29 (Reuters) - A Nordstrom worker shot by her former boyfriend in a Chicago store died on Saturday, police sources said.



The Cook County Medical Examiner's office identified the victim as Nadia Ezaldein, 22, of Hialeah, Florida. The man, identified as Marcus Dee, 31, shot himself and was declared dead at the scene, police said. His place of residence was not known.



The shooting, on the second floor of the high-end retailer in the popular "Magnificent Mile" shopping district, sent Black Friday customers scattering from the store.



The woman's family said Dee had physically abused her throughout their relationship, and had harassed both the woman and her family since their breakup last December, the Chicago Tribune reported. (Reporting by Mary Wisniewski; Editing by Dan Grebler and Clarence Fernandez)



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College Presidents Promise To Help The Poorest, Then Do The Opposite

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Decked out in black tie and formal dresses, guests at Mr. Jefferson’s Capital Ball finished their salmon with horseradish sauce just as the band lured them onto the dance floor with classics including “Shout” and “My Girl.” Some of the people who paid up to $400 a couple to attend the event in the Grand Ballroom of the historic Mayflower Hotel joined in the Electric Slide.



The ball was more than just another Friday night party to ease Washington into the weekend. It had the commendable purpose of raising money for scholarships to the University of Virginia.



But not the kind of scholarships that go to low-income students based solely on their financial need. The proceeds from Mr. Jefferson’s Capital Ball are destined for merit aid for applicants who have the high grade-point averages and top scores on entrance tests that help institutions do well on college rankings. Merit aid can also attract middle- and upper-income students whose families can pay the rest of the tuition bill and therefore furnish badly needed revenue to colleges and universities.



As institutions vie for income and prestige in this way, the net prices they’re charging the lowest-income students, after discounts and financial aid, continue to rise faster on average than the net prices they’re charging higher-income ones, according to an analysis of newly released data the universities and colleges are required to report to the U.S. Department of Education.



This includes the 100 higher-education institutions whose leaders attended a widely publicized White House summit in January and promised to expand the opportunities for low-income students to go to college. In fact, the private universities in that group collectively raised what the poorest families pay by 10 percent, compared to 5 percent for wealthier students, according to the analysis by The Dallas Morning News and The Hechinger Report based on information the U.S. Department of Education released this month covering 2008-09 to 2012-13, the most recent period available.



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Not only did the White House pledge schools raise their net prices faster for the poorest than for higher-income families on a percentage basis, the new figures show; nearly a third increased the actual dollar amount more quickly for their lowest-income than their higher-income students.



At the University of Virginia, for instance, the poorest students saw their net price climb $4,313 over that period, compared to $2,687 for students in the top earning bracket.



“Institutions need to remain vigilant in making sure that the students with the highest need have the highest access to aid,” U.S. Under Secretary of Education Ted Mitchell said when asked about the disparity between the promises made by institutions and their real-world performance.



The White House has scheduled a follow-up summit for Thursday on the issue of keeping college affordable for the lowest-income students.



At the first summit, UVA President Teresa Sullivan was among the leaders who pledged to help poor families afford the price of college. From the start of the economic downturn through 2013, however, UVA raised the net price for its very poorest students by 69 percent, more than three times faster than for wealthier students, whose tuition increased 21 percent, the federal figures show. And even since January, beginning with the class that entered this fall, the public university dropped a policy of meeting full need for the lowest-income students without requiring them to take out loans and now asks in-state families to borrow up to $14,000 over four years and out-of-state families up to $28,000.



“All too many elite, extremely wealthy colleges and universities that should be operating as engines of socioeconomic mobility are instead calcifying inequality,” said Michael Dannenberg, director of higher education at the nonpartisan think tank The Education Trust.



What’s “Net Price”?



Colleges are required to annually report their average net prices—the total cost of tuition, fees, room, board, books, and other expenses, minus federal, state, and institutional scholarships and grants -- to the Education Department. They must also break down those prices based on students’ family income, from the lowest -- $30,000 or less -- to the highest -- $110,000 or more.



There are limitations to the data. They cover only full-time freshmen who get federal grants, loans, or work-study jobs. The most recent figures cover the period ending more than a year before that January White House summit. And some schools dispute how net price should be determined and use their own calculations that are different from the federal formula.



But the figures give the only available picture of what students from different income brackets pay to study at the same university or college. The data also make clear that, while lower-income students at many of the institutions represented at the White House summit still pay less than higher-income ones, their net prices are rising faster on an inflation-adjusted percentage basis than the net prices charged to students more able to pay. In some cases, costs for the wealthier families are actually falling.



Even at the 36 taxpayer-supported public universities that signed the White House pledge, poor students paid an average net price of about $8,000 in 2008-09 and almost $10,000 in 2012-13. That’s a 25 percent increase. During the same period, wealthier students at those schools saw their average net price go from about $18,000 to $21,000, a 16 percent increase. The figures have been adjusted for inflation.



Universities “are giving lots of merit aid to kids who don’t need it,” and less financial aid to those who do, said Richard Kahlenberg, a senior fellow at the nonpartisan think tank The Century Foundation.



In fact, Kahlenberg said, “There are powerful incentives for universities to avoid admitting and enrolling low-income students. The way that universities compete is on prestige and on the U.S.News & World Report rankings, and you get no credit for having a generous financial aid program that brings in more low-income students.”



Colleges Respond



A UVA spokesman stressed that Mr. Jefferson’s Capital Ball is run by an independent foundation of alumni and other supporters, not by the university itself. He also said the elimination of the no-loan policy for low-income students was unavoidable because the cost of assisting them exclusively with grants had nearly doubled since 2008. Requiring all students to borrow is projected to save the university more than $10 million through 2018.



“UVA has committed to providing the necessary need but also needs to ensure that the program is sustainable,” the spokesman, McGregor McCance, said.



Heated protests over the changes, however, brought attention to the fact that, even as it was cutting the cost of providing financial aid to its poorest students, UVA was spending $12 million on a new squash facility and increasing its marketing budget by $18 million annually. Since then, a member of the Board of Visitors, Blue Ridge Capital president John Griffin, has pledged $4 million for scholarships for high-achieving low-income students and to seed an endowment for financial aid for top low-income undergraduates.



A few other universities and colleges that were represented at the White House “Improving College Opportunity” summit said their net prices for low-income students appeared to be increasing more quickly than they really have because they use different formulas than the federal government does to calculate whether or not a student has financial need.



For example, while the government takes into account only the income of the custodial parent in the case of a divorce, these colleges also factor in the income of the parent who does not live at home, and often the value of real estate and other holdings. This means they do not necessarily regard as low income the same students the federal government does, and may not provide them with much financial aid.



That’s one reason Claremont McKenna College said it appeared to have more than doubled its net price for its poorest students -- 10 times as fast as for their richer classmates -- in spite of also signing the White House pledge, spokesman Max Benavidez said.



“Moving from one formula in reporting aid to another completely different methodological formula may account for the misimpression of a large increase,” Benavidez said, though he would not provide the formula the college uses.



Another White House-pledge college that uses its own formula to calculate need, Oberlin, did provide specifics. While federal figures show it doubled the net price for its poorest students at a rate 10 times as fast as for the highest group, Oberlin’s own calculations -- which include the earnings of both parents in cases of divorce, making fewer students qualify as low income than the federal method—show that the net price for the poorest students hardly budged in the last three years and fell in 2012-13, said Debra Chermonte, dean of admissions and financial aid.



Nor are seemingly wealthier families always necessarily able to afford tuition without help. Some may live in places with high costs of living, leaving them less disposable income, or have children close in age who go to college at the same time.



“You might be making $200,000 a year, but you just got divorced and that’s a factor and this is a factor and there are other factors,” said Michael Crow, president of Arizona State University.



Another president, Patrick Leahy of Wilkes University, said, “There’s plenty of aid going to the $80,000 [earners] and below, but once you get to $80,000 it’s not like it’s some magic number and you can suddenly afford tuition.”

Other universities and colleges at which the net price for low-income students has shot up faster than for higher-income ones conceded that financial aid based on merit, as opposed to need, is increasingly important to their bottom lines.



“Tuition-driven schools like UVM must think holistically about the entire undergraduate population and use more merit aid than in the past,” said Enrique Corredera, spokesman for the public University of Vermont, another school that signed the White House pledge but has more than doubled the net price for its poorest students, from $4,500 in 2008-09 to $11,000 in 2012-13. Meanwhile, the net price for students in top income group stayed flat at $21,000 a year. “We do this to attract academically talented students, who play a significant role in determining our ability to attract other students.”



Corredera said wealthier students, whose families can afford to pay at least some of the tuition, also subsidize financial aid for their poorer classmates.



That subsidy is under attack in some states. The board of governors of North Carolina’s public universities, for example, is considering capping the proportion of tuition revenue that could be applied toward financial aid for low-income students, arguing that more affluent students shouldn’t be forced to cover the costs of their less affluent classmates. Iowa has already stopped its universities from using any of their in-state residents’ tuition toward financial aid.



Cuts in state allocations for higher education have also reduced the money available for financial aid for low-income students, said some other public universities, including the University of Arkansas.



“People who come from at-risk families are just as smart, just as talented as anyone else, and should have the same opportunities,” the university’s chancellor, G. David Gearhart, said at the time that he, too, signed the White House pledge. “A flagship, land-grant university should take this responsibility. It’s a big obligation but it’s one that is part of our heritage.”



Yet the University of Arkansas raised its net price for the poorest families by 9 percent while lowering it 6 percent for wealthier ones between 2008-09 and 2012-13. The lopsided changes in cost there came even before the Arkansas State Lottery Scholarship was cut last year by more than 50 percent, said university spokeswoman Laura Jacobs, threatening to reduce even more funding reserved for low-income students.



“There’s a glaring lack of political leadership around this in the states,” said Michael McLendon, professor of higher-education policy at Southern Methodist University. Rather than in need-based financial aid, McLendon said, “It’s politically popular to invest a lot of state money in merit-based aid. It’s very appealing to the middle class.” But, he said, “It’s not helpful for boosting higher-education access or completion for the poorest kids.”



There’s at least one glimmer of promise for critics of current aid practices. As the heat on this matter is being turned up, states, on average, slightly increased the share of financial aid they allocated for low-income students, as opposed to other students, in 2012-13, the latest year for which that figure is available, according to the National Association of State Student Grant and Aid Programs.



On the other hand, the inflation-adjusted total amount of aid declined.



This story was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet affiliated with Teachers College, Columbia University, in collaboration with the Dallas Morning News and the Education Writers Association.




Related stories:

College, federal financial aid increasingly benefits the rich

Poorer families are bearing the brunt of college price hikes, data show

Spiraling graduate student debt raises alarms

College-rating proposal shines spotlight on powerful lobby

The real cost of college? It’s probably even higher than you think





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1 Dead, 1 Injured In Shooting At Chicago Nordstrom

A man shot a female seasonal employee at a busy Nordstrom store in Chicago on Friday night before turning the gun on himself, police said.










The man was pronounced dead at the scene, and the woman was taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in critical condition, said Officer Jose Estrada, a spokesman for the Chicago Police news affairs office.










The incident that left the 31-year-old man dead and the 22-year-old woman critically injured appeared to be related to a domestic dispute, Officer Estrada said. The man is believed to be the current or ex-boyfriend of the woman, Chicago Police Chief of Detectives John J. Escalante told the Chicago Sun-Times. The identities of the man and woman have not been released. [Update: The Chicago Tribune reports that the gunman has been identified as Marcus Dee. See below for additional details.]



The shooting at the Nordstrom store on the first block of E Grand Ave. in Chicago was reported shortly after 8:30 p.m. local time, police said. Photos posted on social media showed police responding. The store was evacuated following the shooting on Black Friday, witnesses told The Chicago Tribune. "It was a pow and a pow," alleged witness Michelle Smith said, "It was a stampede coming down the escalator," told the paper.










Update, Nov. 29 -- The Chicago Tribune reports that the gunman has been identified as Marcus Dee, 31. The woman's brother told the Chicago Sun-Times that Dee had put the woman through "months of psychological torment" prior to the shooting.



This is a developing story. Check back for updates.



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Black Friday Crowds Thin After Thanksgiving Shopping Rush

(Reuters) - Mall crowds were relatively thin early on Black Friday in a sign of what has become the new normal in U.S. holiday shopping: the mad rush is happening the night of Thanksgiving and more consumers are picking up deals online.



Most major retailers now open their doors Thursday evening and offer extended holiday deals rather than limiting them to one day. The result is a quieter experience on what has traditionally been the busiest, and sometimes most chaotic, shopping day of the year.



"It just looks like any other weekend," said Angela Olivera, a 32-year old housewife shopping for children's clothing at the Westfarms Mall near Hartford, Connecticut. "The kind of crowds we usually see are missing and this is one of the biggest malls here. I think people are just not spending a lot."





The crowds normally reserved for Black Friday morning appeared Thursday night. Over 15,000 people lined up for the opening of the flagship store of Macy's Inc (M.N) in New York on Thursday, Chief Executive Officer Terry Lundgren told CNN. Police responded to a handful of incidents at Wal-Mart Stores (WMT.N) on Thursday, including to break up a fight over a Barbie doll in Los Angeles, CNN said.



Target Corp (TGT.N) CEO Brian Cornell told Reuters he was encouraged by early indicators for a holiday season that "has moved from an event on Black Friday morning to a multi-day event."



"The consumer clearly enjoys shopping on Thanksgiving," Cornell said, noting the retailer was selling 1,800 televisions per minute nationwide between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. last night.



Wal-Mart said Thursday was its second-highest online sales day ever after last year's Cyber Monday, which is the Monday following Thanksgiving when online retailers promote bargains. Cornell said Target rang up a record day of online sales on Thursday.



Overall Thanksgiving Day online sales rose 14.3 percent from a year earlier, according to IBM Digital Analytics Benchmark.



The National Retail Federation is projecting that sales for November and December will rise 4.1 percent to $616.9 billion, which would mark the most bountiful holiday season in three years. Holiday sales grew 3.1 percent in 2013.



It was unclear what impact a movement to boycott Black Friday in protest of a grand jury's decision not to indict the police officer who shot and killed an unarmed black teenager in Missouri might have on the holiday season. The movement has gained some momentum on Twitter and Facebook.



OUR Walmart, a group of Wal-Mart employees pushing for higher wages and benefits, is also hoping to use Black Friday to spread its message with protests planned at 1,600 stores across the country.



(reporting by Nandita Bose and Nathan Layne; Editing by Jilian Mincer and Paul Simao)



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Ferguson: Where Do We Go From Here?

The November 24th grand jury decision to not file charges against Ferguson, Missouri police officer Darren Wilson in the August shooting death of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown sent shockwaves across the nation and made me, like many others, angry, frustrated and heartbroken.



Although I was disappointed, I was not surprised. Historically, there has been no justice for unarmed black males killed by white police officers. There are numerous black men who have fallen victim to the "shoot first, ask questions later" practices of authorities who, after investigations, were not held accountable for their actions. Now we must add Michael Brown's name to that list.



Many people took to the streets in and around Ferguson and in cities across the country to protest the grand jury decision. Most were peaceful in their response. However, a small group chose to vandalize, loot and set buildings ablaze. While I fully support peaceful protests, the destruction of property and endangering the lives of others is unacceptable.



All of us who value life and seek justice have an obligation to honor Michael Brown's memory with peaceful demonstrations and community action. Anything less undercuts his memory in a way even harsher than last week's decision.



Like many of you, I had hoped that Brown's death would not be in vain and that it would lead to a national dialogue about how to reverse this trend of deadly police force that disproportionately impacts communities of color.



I wonder, will we look back on the Brown decision for years to come with regret over the missed opportunity to push for real changes in the way law enforcement officers engage in our communities, regard Black men and value life? Will we address the lack of economic opportunities, troubling public policies and lack of meaningful civic engagement that dominates life in Ferguson? Or will burnt-out properties and shuttered business corridors become landmarks for that community's tragic shortcomings?



Where do we go from here to make sure these things don't come to pass?



At the Chicago Urban League we believe that, out of every situation that seems hopeless, there is an opportunity to dig deeper and work harder to find solutions. In Ferguson and in Black communities everywhere, particularly those where the police force doesn't mirror the community, we must demand that police officers treat everyone they encounter with basic human dignity, and enforce consequences against those who do not. We must tell our own stories and not leave them to individuals with unrighteous agendas and media outlets that are narrow-minded and limited in their thinking.



It's time to set some ground rules for how we're going to proceed going forward. First, if you're at the table, you must come in peace, not simply in anger. We have to make room for young leaders. They deserve to be respected and to be heard. And finally, we must commit ourselves to turning our conversations into meaningful, strategic community action.



Here are some proposed outcomes that a solutions-driven conversation can be built around:



1) Establish a national network of organizations that stand for justice and equality to support communities in conflict. Let's discuss ways we can bring together all groups who fight for equality, including the Latino community, the LGBT movement and women's rights groups to create cross-sectional dialogue on how we can collectively respond to unfair treatment by those in power or anyone who dares to deny their human value.



2) Advocate for economic opportunities in underserved communities. Discontent in communities such as the one Brown lived in grows out of lack of access to a quality education and good-paying jobs. We can eliminate the societal 'other' by ensuring communities of mostly Black residents aren't wanting for jobs and support for business ownership.



3) Encourage full civic engagement. When people don't exercise their right to vote, they are more than likely to be disenfranchised and treated unfairly. The prosecutor in the Brown case ran unopposed, for instance. We must encourage African American voters to turn out for every election and support candidates that have their best interests at heart.



Where do we go from here? What has happened in Ferguson can either move us forward or push us back. Most of its residents are reasonable, peaceful people who want change. But right now, the fact is whatever happens in Ferguson affects black people everywhere as it relates to this singular issue of deadly police force. Police can either continue to act aggressively toward us, and the black community can remain distrustful and bitter toward law enforcement. Or we can use our collective voice, our vote and our right as citizens to peacefully assemble to make sure Michael Brown didn't die in vain.



Andrea L. Zopp is president and CEO of the Chicago Urban League




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Mom: Missing Ohio Sate Football Player Texted About Concussions

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A missing Ohio State University football player told his mother in a text message the day he disappeared that concussions had his head messed up, according to a report filed with police.




Kosta Karageorge, a 22-year-old senior defensive tackle from Columbus, was last seen at his apartment around 2 a.m. Wednesday. Team spokesman Jerry Emig confirmed that Karageorge missed practice Wednesday and Thursday, which his family says was uncharacteristic.




Karageorge's parents filed a missing-person report Wednesday evening, listing him as white, 6-foot-5, 285 pounds, bearded and bald.




His mother, Susan Karageorge, told police he has had several concussions and a few spells of being extremely confused, according to the report. She said at about 1:30 a.m. Wednesday he texted a message that cited the concussions and said, "I am sorry if I am an embarrassment."




The team's physician, Dr. Jim Borchers, said Friday that he could not comment on the medical care of student athletes. But, he said, "We are confident in our medical procedures and policies to return athletes to participation following injury or illness."




The player's sister, Sophia Karageorge, told The Columbus Dispatch that he apparently was upset, and roommates said he went for a walk, dressed in black from his hat to his boots.




"We're very concerned that he's not himself and that he maybe doesn't know what's going on," she told the newspaper.




She said after each concussion he followed trainers' instructions and received proper care but "his repercussions from (concussions) have been long-term or delayed."




She said he was without his wallet and his motorcycle.




Columbus police are investigating Karageorge's disappearance as a missing-person case, the Dispatch reported.




"Certainly a young adult male is allowed to go off the grid for any period of time," police spokesman Sgt. David Pelphrey told the newspaper. "At this point, the family has expressed some concerns, and in response to their concerns we're ramping up our efforts."




Kosta Karageorge, a former Buckeyes wrestler, joined the football team as a walk-on this season. He has played in one game and is among two dozen seniors slated to be recognized at their final home game Saturday against rival Michigan.




Ohio State coach Urban Meyer described him as a hard worker and an important player in practice.




"Our thoughts continue to be with the family of Kosta Karageorge, and we pray that he is safe and that he is found soon," Meyer said in a statement.




During halftime at the No. 16 Ohio State men's basketball game against James Madison in Columbus, pictures of Karageorge were shown and an announcement was made urging people with any information to contact police.




About 100 people gathered Friday afternoon in Columbus to spread fliers with his photo and description.




___




Associated Press writers Rusty Miller and Kantele Franko contributed to this report.






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Friday, November 28, 2014

Women in College Leadership

As you explore options for college, you are likely to ask about programs, affordability, facilities, housing, sports, and safety. Are you, though, asking about leadership?



I believe you should, for who leads our colleges and universities affects decisions from how endowments are invested to which academic programs are prioritized.



Demographics aren't everything. As a college president and a woman, however, I am aware that there are not many of us. According to a 2012 report on American college presidents from the American Council on Education, only 26% are women. Moreover, the rate of change has stalled since the 1990s. "report on American college presidents".



These figures reflect a more general social gender disparity that is important to address because female leadership is critical for building better, more balanced institutions.



A few years ago, a study out of Berkeley showed that companies with one or more women on their corporate boards are significantly more likely to engage in practices that are linked to corporate sustainability, "engage practices that are linked to corporate sustainability". By analogy, colleges and universities may perform better -- educate better -- with more women in leadership positions, including at the top and on the Board of Trustees.



Another kind of leadership to pay attention to as you research colleges is that of students. Here, too, the playing field is unsurprisingly lop-sided. A 2011 report on undergraduate women's leadership at Princeton "report on undergraduate women's leadership at Princeton" (under the leadership of President Shirley M. Tilghman) showed that undergraduate women were less likely to win the highest-level academic honors and fellowships and stand for visible positions like president of co-curricular organizations, even though women were outpacing men academically except at the highest levels and did a large portion of the important behind-the-scenes work for those organizations in which they participated. The report issued a number or recommendations, from leadership training and orientation activities for students to building faculty awareness.



Initiatives on behalf of undergraduate women such as those undertaken by Princeton are important, since leadership opportunities for women in college may correlate to leadership roles after graduation. But the representation of female leaders in college clubs as in corporate boardrooms ultimately benefits men and women alike. So, as you narrow down your choices for college, pay attention to who the leaders are.



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How can Illinois trim its massive amount of local government bodies?

With 7,000 bodies of government, Illinois leads the nation by a long shot for number of taxing entities. By contrast, Texas ranks second with 5,000.



Mandy Burrell Booth of the Metropolitan Planning Council asks how the state can consolidate those numbers to be more streamlined and efficient:



How can we change this? How are some communities creatively and efficiently meeting the needs of residents? In the greater Chicago region, we have seen both an increase in collaboration between governments, as well as a growing interest in consolidation. Findings from the Illinois Local Government Consolidation Task Force suggest that consolidation does not always result in cost savings, and that collaboration is challenging to sustain. How do communities choose the best pathway? Are there other routes to improving government efficiency and service quality?





See the rest of her thoughts about government at Reboot Illinois to find out how you can get involved with discussing government consolidation in Illinois.



Beyond Illinois' many local taxing government bodies, the state government also levies an income tax, currently at 5 percent (thought it is set to roll back to 3.75 percent by Jan. 1 if the legislature doesn't extend the current rate). A new report by the National Center for Children in Poverty found that Illinois taxes its low-income residents at a higher rate than almost any other state in the country. More families of four living at the national poverty level have a high state income tax burden in Illinois than every other state besides Alabama, Hawaii and Montana. Find out how the numbers break down at Reboot Illinois.



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Walmart Black Friday Protests Hit Major Cities With Calls For '$15 And Full Time'

WASHINGTON -- Dirk Rasmussen had Friday off and could have slept in if he wanted to. Instead, the Maryland resident and Teamster rose early and drove to downtown Washington, eager to join a post-Thanksgiving protest against Walmart.



"Our local [union] president encouraged us to take part," said Rasmussen, 58, who works in a lumber and building-supply warehouse. "I raised eight children on a Teamsters benefit package and Teamsters wage. I'm a firm believer in collective bargaining, and I'm very concerned about the security of this next generation."



Black Friday may be most famous for doorbuster shopping deals, but among progressives it's becoming a regular holiday for labor demonstrations. Friday marked the third consecutive year of scattered but highly visible protests against Walmart. Demonstrators, along with an unknown number of Walmart strikers, are calling for better pay and scheduling practices from the world's largest retailer.



On Thursday and Friday, photos on Twitter tagged with #walmartstrikers showed sizable protests in D.C., Pittsburgh, Northern New Jersey, Los Angeles, Long Beach, Calif., and St. Paul, Minn., among other areas. The protests were led by OUR Walmart, a union-backed worker group, alongside community and labor groups in different cities.










Dan Schlademan, campaign director of Making Change at Walmart, a project of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union, said on a call with reporters Friday that he expects the number of strikers to be in the hundreds by the end of the day, though the group could not provide a specific number of workers who'd submitted strike notices to their bosses.



"All the signs that we're seeing is that this is going to be the biggest day ever," Schlademan said.



Brooke Buchanan, a spokeswoman for Walmart, told HuffPost ahead of Black Friday that the retailer was more concerned with serving its customers than with protests it views as union stunts. According to Buchanan, roughly 2.2 million shoppers came to Walmart stores for Black Friday last year.



"We're really focused on our customers," Buchanan said. "We've got millions of customers coming in [on Thanksgiving] and Friday, and we're making sure they have a safe and exciting shopping experience."



In D.C., a crowd estimated at 200 to 400 people assembled outside the Walmart store on H Street Northwest, calling on the retailer to commit to "$15 and full time" -- a wage of $15 per hour, the same rate demanded by fast-food strikers, and a full-time schedule for those who want it. One of OUR Walmart's top criticisms of the retailer is that part-time workers don't get enough hours.



The protest was large enough to draw the D.C. police, who stood at the store's doors and dispersed the crowd after about an hour.



Melinda Gaino, an employee at the store, said she would be missing three shifts this week while on strike. Gaino took part in a sit-down strike on Wednesday inside the H Street store, where she and other protesters sat on the floor with tape over their mouths, calling on Walmart to end what they called the silencing of workers.



Gaino, a 45-year-old mother of four, said she joined OUR Walmart in August out of concern with some of the challenges faced by her colleagues. Many workers, she said, don't get enough hours to support their families.



"This has given me more confidence," Gaino, who earns $9.90 per hour, said of going on strike. "I said I've come this far, so I may as well go all in."










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Illinois' pension reform questions mean the state's financial future is uncertain

Illinois' December 2013 pension reform law was deemed unconstitutional Nov. 21 by a Sangamon County Circuit Court judge.



The issue is likely headed to the state Supreme Court by way of appeal by Attorney General Lisa Madigan. The Illinois Policy Institute's Scott Reeder said he thinks the coming decision about the law is going to have far-reaching consequences throughout Illinois.



From Reeder:



Faced with more than $111 billion in unfunded pension liabilities, Illinois is in the worst fiscal condition of any state.



And Belz's ruling sets the stage for the crisis to deepen.

While government worker unions were touting the ruling as a victory, it's actually sowing despair for many current employees and sets the stage for generational warfare.



If the high court upholds this ruling, tax dollars that would be go to support schools, prisons and other state services will be diverted to fund pensions.



Look for teachers, prison guards and other state workers to receive pink slips to free up money for increased pension payments.





Check out the rest of his thoughts on the pension ruling at Reboot Illinois.



That's not the only problem Illinois is facing, according to the National Center for Children in Poverty. A study by the center found that Illinois taxes its low-income families at a higher rate than most other states in the country. For a family of two adults and two children living at the national poverty level, Illinois levies a state income tax burden of more than $200, which is lower only than Alabama, Hawaii and Montana. Check out how the numbers break down at Reboot Illinois.



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Family Of Rekia Boyd, Chicago Woman Slain By Police, Gives Guidance To Michael Brown's Family

Rekia Boyd was only 22 when she was shot in the back of the head and killed by an off-duty Chicago police detective .



The detective, Dante Servin, had gotten into a verbal altercation with one person among a group of individuals Boyd was standing with in Douglas Park, located on the South Side. From his unmarked car, Servin turned the wrong way on a one-way street and fired five rounds over his left shoulder out the window.



One of the rounds struck the hand of a man in the group; another hit Boyd in the back of the head. She died less than 24 hours later.



Police initially claimed a man in the group approached Servin with a weapon, prompting Servin to fire, "fearing for his life." The Independent Police Review Authority later stated they found no weapon at the scene and that the man was reportedly holding a cell phone -- not a gun.



Servin was charged that November with involuntary manslaughter, reckless discharge of a firearm and reckless conduct. He faces trial on Dec. 3.



In 2014, Boyd's family was awarded a $4.5 million wrongful death settlement by the City of Chicago.



Rekia's older brother, Martinez Sutton, 31, was the first family member to learn she had been shot. In the wake of the Ferguson, Missouri grand jury's decision not to indict Darren Wilson for the shooting death of Michael Brown, Sutton

told The Huffington Post "they have to keep fighting."



rekia boyd lawsuit





SUTTON: My sister’s birthday just passed on the 5th. She would have been 25. Thanksgiving is tomorrow; she stayed with me on holidays.



We miss her presence. Sometimes you can feel her in the room, but you miss the physical presence.



[The day Rekia was shot], I was looking at the news around 7 in the morning. I think I went for a bike ride. And when I get back I’m watching the TV and there’s a surgeon on the news — WGN or CLTV — and he comes on and talks about this lady who was shot in the back of the head and how no doctors would work on here because it’s so severe.



I thought, ‘Dang, that’s so sad.' I sent my prayers out to the family.



But about three hours later, I hear a knock on the door. Two detectives knocked on the door and asked me if I was the brother of Rekia Boyd.



They said ‘Your sister's been involved in a crime.' I’m thinking 'Where is she, where’s she at?’ I’m thinking she’s in jail.



The police said, ‘Well, she’s been shot in the back in the head. Here's a number for the hospital she’s at. Sorry...'



And then they kinda just walked away.



When I got to the hospital, I saw her laying on the table. Her body was already going cold.



A woman asked me ‘Is that your sister?’ She told me, ‘A police officer shot her in the head.’ I asked, ‘A police officer?'



I had no idea. No one told me that and the news hadn’t picked it up yet.



After that, I stopped watching everything on TV because everything was so negative: Murders, violence, killing. Not only by police but in our community.



I wasn’t too interested in following the grand jury decision [in Ferguson] because I already knew what it was going to be. I just looked at Darren Wilson and I thought, 'they’re just going to let him go.' I already knew the end of the story.




As for what Sutton would tell Michael Brown’s family, he said:



No words. There are just no words that I can really say. I lost a son to heart surgery six months before my sister [died]. I had been hurt, but I never lost a child. But to have someone take a child off this earth? What can I say other than thoughts and prayers?



More On Ferguson From HuffPost:

Photographic Evidence Revealed | 'First Year Law Student Could Have Done Better Job' | Ferguson Smolders After Night Of Fires | Protest Locations | Americans Deeply Divided | What You Can Do | Darren Wilson Interview | Darren Wilson Could Still Face Consequences | Timeline | Students Protest | Shooting Witness Admitted Racism In Journal | Peaceful Responses Show The U.S. At Its Best | Reactions To Ferguson Decision | Prosecutor Gives Bizarre Press Conference | Jury Witness: 'By The Time I Saw His Hands In The Air, He Got Shot' | Thousands Protest Nationwide | Ferguson Unrest Takes Over Newspaper Front Pages Across The Country | Grand Jury ‘Should Be Indicted,’ Brown Lawyer Says | Grand Jury Documents Reveal Mistakes, Questionable Testimony | Parents Bring Young Kids To Bear Witness To Ferguson Protests | 12 Sobering Numbers That Define The Fight To Get Justice For Michael Brown | Saints Player's Moving Reflection On Ferguson Goes Viral | Amid Ferguson Cleanup, Locals Look For Their Community To Rise Above The Damage | 'They're Murdering Our Kids And Getting Away With It' |





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Black Friday From Start To Finish

NEW YORK (AP) — The traditional kick-off to the holiday shopping season has become a two-day affair with stores opening earlier on Thanksgiving. Here's a look at what's happening on Black Friday:



___ Best Buy Site Down



Not the best time for technical issues.



Best Buy's website was down at around 10:00 a.m. Friday with a message that read, "WE'RE SORRY." It noted that the site was currently unavailable and to "Check back soon."



A Best Buy representative wasn't immediately available for comment.



_____



Biggest Shopping Day of the Year?



Since 2005, Black Friday has held the crown for the top sales day of the year, according to ShopperTrak, which tracks data at 70,000 stores globally.



That could change this year. The earlier openings on Thanksgiving are eating into Black Friday sales. As a result, the last Saturday before Christmas may edge out Black Friday as the biggest shopping day of the year.



Still, Bill Martin, co-founder of ShopperTrak, believes Black Friday and the Saturday before Christmas will be a close tie. He estimates both sales days will be in the $9 billion range.



Over at Macy's, CEO Terry Lundgren tells The Associated Press he thinks Black Friday will still be the company's biggest sales day of the year.



____



Ferguson Protests Hit Stores



Dozens of protesters interrupted Missouri shoppers on Thanksgiving to speak out about a grand jury's decision not to indict the white officer who fatally shot Michael Brown, a black teenager.



Demonstrations took place at a Target and multiple Wal-Mart stores in the St. Louis area, according to Johnetta Elzie, who tweeted and posted videos of the protests.



Protesters spent a few minutes shouting inside at each store. After police moved them out of one Wal-Mart, protesters chanted, "no justice, no peace, no racist police" and "no more Black Friday."



There was no immediate word of arrests. More demonstrations are expected Friday.



___



Marathon Shopper



At Westfield Fox Valley mall in Aurora, Illinois, the mood was calm Friday morning. Parking spaces were plentiful and lines in many stores short or non-existent. Some groggy shoppers were still in their pajama pants, coffee in hand.



Kimberly States said it was noticeably quieter at the mall than it had been the night before, when she made her first trip to the mall.



"It was a zoo last night around 10 p.m.," she said. "Now it seems like more of the old folks."



States and her 11-year-old daughter were shopping mostly for clothes. She planned to return later Friday with her 19-year-old son, who will be shopping for a gift for his girlfriend.



She said she thinks people are feeling more confident about the economy, but she still plans to spend about the same amount on Christmas gifts — or maybe less — compared with last year.



___



Some Quiet Time



At around 5:30 a.m. Friday, a Target store in the suburb of Mission, Kansas, was mostly empty.



Bridget McNabb, 55, was disappointed when a worker told her the $119 TV she wanted sold out shortly after the store opened the evening before.



In Manchester, Connecticut, a Wal-Mart store was also quiet around 5:30 a.m. A few security guards stood on the sidewalk outside the front doors. And the nearby Shoppes at Buckland Hills had few customers at around 6:30 a.m.



Shopper Rachel Cormier was looking at clothing for one of her four grandchildren. She said the economy isn't an issue.



"I'm fortunate because my husband and I are both employed," she said.



___



U.K. Gets Black Friday, Shoving Included



Black Friday is becoming a tradition in the United Kingdom, too, and businesses there are finding the shopping derby can lead to chaos.



Early Friday morning, police were called to help maintain security at some supermarkets and shopping outlets that offered deep discounts starting at midnight.



"This created situations where we had to deal with crushing, disorder and disputes between customers," said Peter Fahy, police chief for greater Manchester.



Greater Manchester Police said there were two arrests as police closed some stores to prevent more severe problems. One woman was injured by a falling television set.



Online retailer Amazon is believed to have introduced the concept of Black Friday to the U.K. four years ago, with more businesses joining every year since.



___



Crowd Control



Back in the U.S., businesses are taking steps to keep crowds under control. Such efforts were stepped up after 2008, when a Wal-Mart worker died after a stampede of shoppers.



Best Buy, for instance, has a ticketing and line process to ensure an orderly entrance into its stores. The company also says stores held training sessions to prep for this weekend's rush.



At Target, deals are spread throughout stores and signs direct shoppers to hot items. And the company says every store has a crowd-management captain for inside and outside the store.



That doesn't mean everyone remembers their manners.



Wendy Iscra noted it got a little competitive at Wal-Mart in a Chicago suburb where she where she was shopping on Thanksgiving.



"People were shoving each other in there," the 40-year-old said.



___



A New Tradition, For Workers



Wal-Mart is expected to be the target of another round of protests calling on the company to pay its workers $15 an hour. The union-backed group Our Walmart says demonstrations are planned at 1,600 stores around the country. Organizers say workers started walking off the job on Wednesday and some staged a sit-down strike at a store in Washington, D.C.



Brooke Buchanan, a Wal-Mart spokeswoman, played down the impact of the protests. She said past protests have focused on a handful of locations with a handful of workers.



"Perception is not reality in this case. We've seen this story before," she said.



___



Sales Bang



Black Friday is also one of the biggest days of the year for gun sales.



That puts pressure on the system for background checks. Researchers with the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, which is overseen by the FBI, have until the end of the third business day following an attempted firearm purchase to determine whether a buyer is eligible. After that, buyers have the right to get their guns even if the check wasn't completed.



Last year, the clock ran out more than 186,000 times.



The problem is the records submitted by states, which aren't always updated to reflect restraining orders or other reasons to deny a sale.



NICS did about 58,000 checks on a typical day last year. The figure surged to 145,000 on Black Friday.



___



It May Be Too Late



Those waking early for some Black Friday shopping may have missed the boat.



It turns out the hottest deals of the season may be on Thanksgiving, according to an analysis of sales data and store circulars by two research firms.



This year, Target, Macy's and Kohl's opened at 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving.



Others started dishing out deals even earlier. Amazon.com and Best Buy started introducing Black Friday deals last week. On Wednesday, Target also gave early access to some of the specials reserved for the holiday shopping kickoff both in stores and online.



___



Early Bird Special



The National Retail Federation expected 25.6 million shoppers to head to stores on Thanksgiving, which would be slightly down from last year. The numbers aren't in yet, but there were crowds across the country.



Macy's said more than 15,000 people were lined up outside its flagship location in New York City's Herald Square when the doors opened at 6 p.m. Last year, the retailer said there were 15,000 people.



In the Chicago suburb of Naperville, Illinois, the parking lot of a Wal-Mart store was full about a half hour before deals started at 6 p.m., including $199 iPad minis.



And thousands of people were at Citadel Outlets in Los Angeles, which opened at 8 p.m. on Thanksgiving for a "Moonlight Madness" all-night sale. Hordes of cars inched past rows of palm trees wrapped in red and white lights.



____



Buyer's Remorse?



When stores first started opening on Thanksgiving a few years ago, the move was met with resistance by those who thought the holiday should remain sacred.



Some Thanksgiving shoppers still felt a tinge of guilt even as they snagged deals on the holiday. "I think it's ridiculous stores open on Thanksgiving," said Reggie Thomas, 44, a director who bought a Sony sound bar for $349, about $100 off, at Best Buy in New York on Thanksgiving.



Cathyliz Lopez, 20, who spent $700 at Target on Thanksgiving, agrees. "It's ruining the spirit of Thanksgiving," she said Thursday. "But ... the best deals were today."



___



A Visit From the Boss at Target



Target CEO Brian Cornell was at a store in New York City's East Harlem neighborhood for its opening at 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving.



Cornell, who became chief executive in August, said the kickoff to the season is off to a good start based on early reads around the country.



"The baskets are full," he said as he watched shoppers filling their carts with TVs, clothing and toys. He noted people were buying more than just deals.



Cornell told The Associated Press he feels encouraged by what he has seen at stores and online. The holiday kickoff has changed, he said. "It's been more of a week event," he said.



____



Anne D'Innocenzio and Mae Anderson in New York; Sara Burnett in Chicago; Dan Sewell in West Chester, Ohio; Heather Hollingsworth in Kansas City, Kansas and Robert Jablon in Los Angeles contributed to this report.



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Ohio State Football Player Kosta Karageorge Reported Missing By Family, Sister Says

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The sister of an Ohio State football player says his family has reported him missing after he left his apartment, then uncharacteristically missed two practices and didn't check in.



She tells The Columbus Dispatch (http://bit.ly/1zZXTgq ) 22-year-old Kosta Karageorge was last seen at his apartment around 2 a.m. Wednesday. Sophia Karageorge says her brother apparently was upset, and roommates said he went for a walk, dressed in all black.



Police were looking for the 6-foot-5 senior defensive tackle, but weren't available for comment Thursday.



His sister says he didn't take his wallet or motorcycle. She says he has a history of sports-related concussions, including one a month ago, and his family was concerned that he might have become disoriented.



The former wrestler joined the football team as a walk-on this season.



There was no immediate comment by Ohio State on Karageorge.



___



Information from: The Columbus Dispatch, http://www.dispatch.com



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5 Ways The Boomer Generation Changed Sex Forever

Yes, Virginia, there was a time when everyone waited until their wedding night to have intercourse. And perhaps even more shocking: Yes, that's actually what they called it. For real. Everything about what currently occurs in our bedrooms has completely changed since boomers came of age -- including the fact that "what we do in our bedrooms" is no longer only being done in our bedrooms. Sex has spilled over on to our kitchen counters, our beaches and the front seat of our Ferraris if "The Wolf of Wall Street" is to be believed.



While boomers may not have invented sex (the way we did the Internet), we certainly pushed its envelope and altered the way it is done, with whom, when and where, and even why. Here are five things boomers have done to change the course of the history of sex:



1. Boomers made outdoor sex OK.

What? You thought Woodstock was about the music? Sorry to disappoint, but nobody was really listening to Jimi Hendrix. That's right. And while the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame knows of no head count of babies born nine months later, 1969 wasn't dubbed "The Summer of Love" because of Ritchie Havens singing "Freedom."



But freedom was at the core of things. In 1965, five years after oral contraception got FDA approval, 6.5 million American women were on the pill, making it the most popular form of birth control in the U.S. and freeing a generation from the fear of unwanted pregnancies.



2. Boomers made indoor sex more interesting.

Anyone remember Plato's Retreat? Me neither. But the notorious swingers' club epitomized the free-sex atmosphere of pre-AIDS New York City. Clothing was optional, only couples were admitted (although encouraged to mingle), and the centerpiece of the experience was a public "mat room" for exhibitionist sex. Going to the mats took on a whole new meaning when Plato's opened in 1977.



AIDS, of course, changed everything.



3. Boomers took honoring thy neighbor to the biblical level.

Long before car keys were collected at parties from those who drank too much, suburban swingers in the 1970s collected them for a different reason. As they entered the party, the men would deposit their car keys in a bowl by the front door. On the way out, the women would fish a set of keys from the bowl and that's who they'd go home with.



Boomers invented the American Swinger.



A Psychology Today report in 2013 dubbed the 1971 study by Gilbert D. Bartell "the most in-depth look on the swinging culture to date." And here's what Bartell found: Of the estimated one to two million American Swingers, most were middle-class suburbanites. In a fact that can only amuse, the Bartell study found that a whopping 42% of the male Swingers were salesmen. More than three-fourths of the female Swingers were stay-at-home housewives, most of them with kids. Contrary to what some critics believed, Swingers tended to be anti-drug and “anti-hippie,” not at all aligned with the lifestyle or values of the counterculture. Swinging, Bartell found, was something quite different than the “free love” of the sexual revolution, and its advocates wanted to have little to do with the rebellious, anti-establishment youth culture. Mostly, they just wanted to have sex with someone other than their spouses.



4. Boomers changed the language of sex.

Calling sex "intercourse" went out the window long before Bill Clinton wished Monica Lewinsky would have. While our former Prez "didn't have sex with that woman," the term for doing the nasty (that'd be circa 1977) used to be balling in the 1960s. For a while, women were "boinked," "porked" or "got laid." Sometimes, we got "nookie" or were "screwed" and occasionally they had a "slap and tickle." Today people "hook up." And of course, the F-word has been around since the cavemen and that's probably who still uses it the most.



5. Boomers changed dating rituals.

Because we fumbled them so badly, obviously! Aside from inventing the Internet, which made it possible for online dating sites to exist, boomers totally blew dating. We may have originated the one-night stand, but we always struggled with long-lasting relationships. Maybe the bad bar scene and the people our mothers fixed us up with were just the kiss of dating death. Admit it: If anyone today bellied up to the bar next to you and asked you what your astrological sign was, you'd probably run for the exits, right? Yes, much safer to sit with your tablet swiping Tinder prospects to the side.



Nowadays, you see someone's profile and start following them on Twitter. You check out their LinkedIn profile and see who they're friends with on Facebook. One of the selling points of some dating apps is that they actually show whether you have friends in common so you can do some real-time investigating. The result is that long before you meet the person, you know his or her online persona, which as one younger friend noted, sometimes is a total disconnect from the real person.



Still, we think it probably beats putting your keys in a bowl.









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Thursday, November 27, 2014

Racism: It's the Law

Smoke and fire, sirens blaring, horns honking, a sudden hail of bullets. This is what passes for the American dialogue on race and justice.



It's hidden until it explodes.



"By 10 p.m., a St. Louis County Police squad car burned just down the street from the Ferguson Police Department, with spare ammunition 'cooking off' or exploding in the car," the Wall Street Journal informed us.



Those who want to shake their heads in disgust can do so. American institutional racism conceals itself so neatly from those who prefer not to see it and, of course, aren't victimized by it. And then every so often something sets off the public trigger -- an 18-year-old young man is shot and killed by a police officer, for instance -- and the reality TV that is our mainstream news brings us the angry, "violent" response, live. And it's always one side against another, us vs. them. It's always war.



"But what is justice in a nation built on white supremacy and the destruction of black bodies?" Mychal Denzel Smith wrote in The Nation the day after the grand jury announced that police officer Darren Wilson would not be indicted. "That's the question we have yet to answer. It's the question that shakes us up and makes our insides uncomfortable. It's the question that causes great unrest."



What is justice, indeed? And beyond that question are the real questions, perhaps unanswerable. What is healing? What is peace?



If the officer had been indicted for Michael Brown's killing and then convicted on one charge or another, maybe that would have been justice, in a "case closed" sort of way. In our limited legal bureaucracy, "justice" means nothing more than punishment. Even when such justice is done, it changes nothing. The state's "interest" has been satisfied, and that's all that matters. The terrible loss suffered by parents, friends and community would remain a gaping wound. And beyond that, the social brokenness and racism that caused the tragedy in the first place would remain unaddressed, unhealed.



But not even that minimal justice was in the cards for the loved ones of Michael Brown or the occupied community in which he lived -- because that's not how it works. Officer Wilson, whatever he did inside or outside the state's rules on the use of lethal force when he confronted Brown on the afternoon of Aug. 9, was just doing his job, which was controlling and intimidating the black population of Ferguson. He was on the front line of a racist and exploitative system -- an occupying bureaucracy.



The New York Times, in its story about the grand jury's decision, began thus: "Michael Brown became so angry when he was stopped by Officer Darren Wilson on Canfield Drive here on Aug. 9, his face looked 'like a demon,' the officer would later tell a grand jury."



This sort of detail is, of course, of immense value to those who sympathize with the police shooting and accuse the black community of endemic lawlessness. See! Michael Brown wasn't just a nice, innocent boy minding his own business. He and his companion were trouble incarnate, walking down the middle of the street spoiling for a fight. He was Hulk Hogan. The cop had no choice but to shoot, and shoot again. This was a demonic confrontation. Politeness wouldn't have worked.



If nothing else, such testimony shows the stark limits of our "who's at fault?" legal system, which addresses every incident in pristine, absurd isolation and has no interest beyond establishing blame -- that is to say, officially stamping the participants as either villains, heroes or victims. Certainly it has no interest in holistic understanding of social problems.



Taking Wilson's testimony at face value, one could choose to ask: Why was Michael Brown so angry?



Many commentators have talked about the "anger" of Ferguson's black community in the wake of the shooting, but there hasn't been much examination of the anger that was simmering beforehand, which may have seized hold of Brown the instant the police officer stopped him.



However, an excellent piece of investigative journalism by Radley Balko of the Washington Post, "How municipalities in St. Louis County, Mo., profit from poverty," which ran in September, addresses the issue head-on. He makes the point that local municipal governments, through an endless array of penny-ante citations and fines -- "poverty violations" -- torment the locals for the primary, or perhaps sole, purpose of keeping their bureaucracies funded.



"Some of the towns in St. Louis County can derive 40 percent or more of their annual revenue from the petty fines and fees collected by their municipal courts," Balko writes. The fines are mostly for traffic offenses, but they also include fines for loud music, unmown lawns, "wearing saggy pants" and "vague infractions such as 'disturbing the peace,'" among many others, and if the person fined, because he or she is poor, can't pay up, a further fine is added to the original, and on and on it goes.



"There's also a widely held sentiment that the police spend far more time looking for petty offenses that produce fines than they do keeping these communities safe," Balko writes. "If you were tasked with designing a regional system of government guaranteed to produce racial conflict, anger, and resentment, you'd be hard pressed to do better than St. Louis County."



Regarding the anger and resentment in communities like Ferguson, he quotes a longtime racial justice activist, Jack Kirkland, who says, "I liken it to a flow of hot magma just below the surface. It's always there, building, pushing up against the earth. It's just a matter of time. When it finds a weak point, it's going to blow."



And when it blows, we get to watch it on TV: the flames, the smoke, the rage, the ammo "cooking off." This is what institutional racism looks like when we finally notice it.



Robert Koehler is an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist and nationally syndicated writer. His book Courage Grows Strong at the Wound (Xenos Press) is still available. Contact him at koehlercw@gmail.com, or visit his website at commonwonders.com.



© 2014 TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, INC.




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Archbishop Publicity

2014-11-27-SpokaneArchbishopCupich.jpg

Credit: Eric Meisfjord/Inland Register





No, Sightings will not turn provincial and even local on its readers, but this week it is hard to resist comment on news of the nearby. I can look out my windows and behold one synagogue and two cathedrals -- one Episcopal and one Roman Catholic. It was the latter that buzzed this week with the arrival of a new archbishop.



This news was not only easy to sight; it was impossible to avoid, given the stir and the publicity, a combination that prompts our topic of the week. Chicago's two metro papers devoted front pages and much more for two days: "Blase Cupich Installed as 9th Archbishop of Chicago." Two full pages of pictures and an eight-page special section bannered, "Catholics at a Crossroads." Which they are.



Some of the attention was of the "sigh-of-relief" sort on the part of newspaper editors and TV news programmers who welcomed an alternative agenda to the wearying fare otherwise before them: describing the Chicago Bears' dismal -- nay, disastrous -- season or, in the religious news category, stories of clerical abuse.



A few leads were substantive: "Cupich to his new flock: Don't fear change." One headline announced, "Archbishop Cupich speaks of protecting children, holding others accountable," and an editorial lifted up a promised focus for the new man in town: "Fighting Illegal Guns Is God's Work." Then there is this personal column-head: "Reach Out to Those Not in the Pews," atop Sue Ontiveros' subheaded prayer, "please God, let his actions show me I can return to church" as she seeks ever more frank addresses to clerical abuse and other demoralizing activities and trends.



Our readers in Anchorage or Key West may think that news of change in Chicago is not as big a deal as it is in this, the nation's third largest archdiocese. Still, here is a good case study. The papers and broadcasters, while understandably excited by this Catholic news, are also realistic. A graph reveals that 37 percent of Cook County people are still numbered as Catholic: 2,203,000. But the graph lines in general all curve down; parishes from 450-plus in 1975 to 358 today. Priests? From over 1,250 back then to 771 (many, many near retirement) now. Baptisms then safely in the 40,000s, only 31,725 now. Weddings, disastrously down, as fewer march down the aisle to the altar.



Archbishop Cupich, an "open" pastoral leader, who is attractive and who attracts, is also deservedly being welcomed by thousands and thousands of the 63 percent who are non-Catholics. What is striking is that the huge media attention being given the Catholic leader would, once upon a time, have been treated grudgingly by non-Catholics. There is no doubt envy among some in non-Catholic religious circles, which receive far less attention, but they recognize something that adds to the attraction in this largest believing community. To wit:



If there are signs of life in the Catholic population, they carry over beyond them and their Church. On Sunday morning we personally pass tens of thousands of dwellings from which there are few people exiting, unless in track clothes for marathons or parental gear for soccer, etc. If and as Catholic parking lots attract more, and if churchgoing and religious news become visible, others may have second thoughts about their own loss of interest or their alienation. Only a foolish optimist would expect a big and sudden turnaround, but much of the cheering is a signal of hope.



"It's nice to have Old Trinity to remind us of Divinity" was jingled years ago. The arrival of Archbishop Cupich will not necessarily produce hordes of the born-again, or of believers who are recovering community, but it won't hurt. Hence the warm applause in a spiritually chilly season.



Sources:



Pashman, Manya Brachear. "Blase Cupich becomes Chicago's archbishop."
Chicago Tribune, November 18, 2014.



"Archbishop Blase Cupich Installed at Holy Name." ABC7News, November 18, 2014, Religion & Spirituality.



"Catholics at a Crossroads."
Chicago Sun-Times.com, November 18, 2014.



Knowles, Francine. "Cupich to his new flock: Don't fear change."
Chicago Sun Times, November 18, 2014, Trending newsfeed.



AP. "Archbishop Cupich speaks of protecting children, holding others accountable."
Daily Herald, November 19, 2014, Lifestyle.



"Fighting illegal guns is God's work."
Chicago Sun Times, November 18, 2014, Editorials.



Ontiveros, Sue. "Reach out to those not in the pews."
Chicago Sun Times, November 17, 2014. Updated November 18, 2014.



Moser, Whet. "Cook County: Under 2 Million Catholics For First Time in Decades, Still Very Catholic."
Chicago Magazine, May 8, 2012, Politics & City Life.



This post originally appeared in Sightings, an online publication of the Martin Marty Center for the Advanced Study of Religion, University of Chicago Divinity School.



NOTE: This post is not available for republication without the consent of Sightings. Please contact Managing Editor Myriam Renaud at DivSightings@gmail.com.



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Here's What The Obamas Are Eating For Thanksgiving Dinner

This year, President Barack Obama and his family are spending Thanksgiving at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, where they'll dine on turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes -- and six kinds of pie.



Here's this year's menu, as provided by the White House press office:



Dinner:



Thyme Roasted Turkey

Honey-Baked Ham

Cornbread Stuffing

Oyster Stuffing

Braised Winter Greens

Macaroni and Cheese

Sweet Potato Gratin

Mashed Potatoes

Green Bean Casserole

Dinner Rolls



Dessert:



Banana Cream Pie

Coconut Cream Pie

Pumpkin Pie

Apple Pie

Pecan Pie

Cherry Pie



As the Associated Press notes, it's Obama's responsibility to pick up the tab for the meal -- as he does every other day of the year:



Gary Walters, who was chief White House usher for many years, said the payment rule dates back to 1800 when the White House was first occupied by President John Adams and there was no staff. Presidents brought staff with them and paid for everything.



Congress gradually began spending money to maintain an official White House staff to oversee operations and maintenance, but presidents continued to pay for personal expenses.





What it boils down to, Walters said, is that the White House is first and foremost the president's home.





"On behalf of the Obama family – Michelle, Malia, Sasha, Bo, and Sunny – I want to wish you a very happy Thanksgiving," Obama said in his Thanksgiving address to the nation. "Like many of you, we’ll spend the day with family and friends, catching up, eating some good food and watching a little football. Before we lift a fork, we lend a hand by going out into the community to serve some of our neighbors in need. And we give thanks for each other, and for all of God’s blessings."



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8 Things Everyone Who Doesn't Own A Dishwasher Should Know

We here at HuffPost Home want your adventures in entertaining to go as smoothly as possible this holiday season, so we decided to call in the experts to dish (see what we did there?) on the best way to go about the dreaded task that is hand washing stacks and stacks of dirty plates.



We spoke with Jolie Kerr, Deadspin columnist and the author of "My Boyfriend Barfed In My Handbag ... And Other Things You Can't Ask Martha," as well as Dr. Kelly Reynolds, a professor at The University of Arizona and a public health educator specializing in food safety and disease transmission.



Behold, eight things everyone who doesn't own a dishwasher should know.



1. Start with a sanitizing rinse.



Creating a sanitizing rinse will mimic part of the process dishes go through in a dishwasher. (If you don't use a sanitizing rinse, your dishes will be clean, but just won't have as much bacteria removed as if they were in a dishwasher.) Before washing, dip your plates in one gallon of water with one tablespoon of bleach. Reynolds says you can also use this solution to clean your dish sponge and your sink.



In fact, it's a good practice to sanitize your sink before you start washing your dishes, both for odor removal and cleanliness. "We've done lots of studies at The University of Arizona looking at bacterial buildup in the sink," says Reynolds. "If you're not sanitizing your sink before you actually wash your dishes, then you could be contaminating your dishwashing water with whatever contaminants were already in your sink." Reynolds says they have found that E. coli and Salmonella bacteria accumulate in dirty sinks.



2. Make sure you use the right kind of dish soap.



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Look for antibacterial soaps with lactic acid, which provides antibacterial benefits, and those with lauramine-oxide for good grease-cutting power.



"Essentially you want something that has good sudsing power," says Kerr. "If you're using a dish soap and you're noticing that you've cleaned one dish and you've already had to put soap onto your sponge then it isn't the best dish soap. More diluted products are generally not as effective at cutting grease and producing suds."



3. If you have a lot of dishes, fill up your sink with sudsy hot water and wash things under the water.



Before you do this, Kerr smartly advises to make sure to take out anything sharp that may be hanging around at the bottom of your sink. Then you should scrub all the dishes under the water, unplug your sink and let the water drain out. "Those couple minutes of soaking time are going to go a long way in making things a lot easier to clean," says Kerr.



Reynolds also says that having this hot water bath will help remove food particles that may be stuck to your dishes. (Use cold water if you're washing off a lot of starchy foods.) However, she advises to make sure you watch what happens to your water over time. "If you're washing a lot of dishes that have grease and food particles on it, then you're going to have that greasy residue in your water," says Reynolds. "So it's a good idea to wash your cleaner dishes first, like cups, and then move onto the pots and pans that have more residue."



4. To get stubborn food off pots and pans use a special scrubbing pad and baking soda.



You could try doing what the person above did with a screwdriver, but Kerr swears by the Dobie Pad sponge. "It's covered in a plastic netting that allows you to scrub like a Brillo but it doesn't cause any scratching," says Kerr. "They are great for your roasting pan and your casserole dishes that have food stuck to the side." For really bad sticky food, Kerr says you can sprinkle baking soda over the areas that have caked on food and then pour boiling water over it. "I'll just keep water in my tea kettle and then pour it on the dish," says Kerr. "You let it sit until the water is cool enough for you to handle and then you just go in with your sponge and the food should literally just fly off."



5. Avoid piling things up in your drying rack.



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It may be obvious, but there's a method to avoiding the dreaded "mountain of dishes" as you clean up: Dry as you go instead of piling wet dishes on top of one another? "It sounds worse than it actually is," says Kerr. "It's actually not as much of interruption as you think it would be. And it gives your hands a break."



6. Change your dish towels as much as possible.



Reynolds says to be wary of dirty dish rags as there have been many studies on "common use towels" in the kitchen for hand drying and dish drying that "accumulate germs over time." Reynolds says you should use a clean dish towel every single time you wash your dishes. And here's Kerr's rule of thumb on dish towels: "Figure out how many dish towels you need and then double that amount."



7. If you're having a get together, don't let people put their dirty dishes in your sink.



Have your guests leave their dishes on the counter next to the sink. Remember: You need to leave your sink open so that you can actually wash those dishes. The other reason why you need to keep your sink open and organized is that if you're using delicate dishes for a special event, you want to make sure you can efficiently separate your silverware from your dishes in order to prevent scratches. "You don't want to wash all of your silverware while all of your fine China is sitting in the sink right next to it," says Kerr. "If a knife slips out of your hand and lands smack on one of those plates, now there's a chip in your good China and no one wants that."



8. If someone offers to help you with the dishes, take them up on it.



washing



While there is such thing has having "too many cooks in the kitchen," Kerr says this really only applies to clearing the table. "If someone offers to help, take them up on it, but give them a job," says Kerr. "One specific job I like to give to people is help me dry the dishes. And if no one volunteers, volunteer someone."



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