Archive for February, 2017

‘Black Lives Matter’ Conference Talks Race, Music Studies – Harvard Crimson

Hundreds of attendees from across the United States gathered in Paine Concert Hall Friday and Saturday for Black Lives Matter: Music, Race, and Justice, a conference examining the intersection between black culture and race relations.

The conference, hosted by the Harvard Graduate Music Forum, featured a faculty panel, discussions of academic papers, and a musical performance. Ian R. Copeland and Laurie Lee, two Harvard graduate students who study music, said they organized the conference to highlight a lack of academic attention paid to black music. Copeland added that music often plays a large role in American race relations and discrimination against black people.

We were inspired by and also troubled by... police shootings throughout the United States, but also what seemed to be increasing hostility to the Black Lives Matter movement in the political sphere, Copeland said.

Copeland added that music is often a powerful tool in dealing with painful events.

Music is a big resource for people dealing with trauma and finding expression, he said. Popular music in particular can be a way to bring people together and to call people to action.

On Friday, the conferences first paper session examined three academic papers which centered on inclusion of black people in music, academia, and music education.

The next event discussed the role academics can play in political activism around race. The panel featured four speakers from New York University, Dartmouth College, the Ohio State University, and a local Black Lives Matter chapter in Cambridge, Mass.

Treva Lindsey, a professor of womens, gender, and sexuality studies at Ohio State University and a current Harvard W.E.B. DuBois fellow, described her response as a professor to Michael Browns shooting on Aug. 9, 2014. Lindsey said many black people reacted to Brown's death at the hands of a police officer with an exasperation that was built for hundreds of years." She said she saw her role after the shooting as a caregiver to students in distress.

What is my responsibility in this moment? To speak to my students in this moment, to care for my students in this moment, to show up for my students in this moment, to speak directly to my students on campus in this moment, Lindsey said.

Regarding the current role of music studies in race relations, NYU professor Matthew D. Morrison said he believes that music studies needed to benefit from the activism and passion of Black Lives Matter.

Morrison stated that academics have the responsibility to realize that because we have a position as writers, as cultural thinkers, as all of these things, to be active in making sure that things that we feel like are important to the larger community and society are reflected in music studies. If they are not, Morrison said, organizing outside of academic institutions is necessary.

There are various ways of organizing, various ways of dealing with history, various ways of finding ways to deconstruct the institution in the cause that you can learn from, Morrison said.

Saturdays events featured three paper sessions: Black Religion, Black Space, and Black Speech, Improvisation, Struggle, and Liberation, and Vernacular Culture and the Power of Celebrity. The conference concluded with a piano performance from Karen Walwyn, an Associate Professor of Music at Howard University, and a keynote lecture from Morrison.

In the weekends last paper session, Kimberlee D. Sanders, a Harvard graduate student in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilization, presented her paper: Sorry/I Aint Sorry: Beyoncs 'Lemonade,' Southern Gothic Temporality, and Reclaiming the Angry Black Woman. Sanders proposed that the role of anger in "Lemonade" fostered a sense of community and empowered women of color, asserting that it reclaims a space for black female anger.

Sanders discussed the underrepresentation of black female contributions in the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s.

Their marginalization becomes this vortex that generates a righteous anger of saying look at the trauma that Ive endured. Look at the things I have done. Look at me. Let me occupy space, Sanders said in an interview.

Staff writer Alice S. Cheng can be reached at alice.cheng@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter at @alicescheng.

Staff writer Kristine E. Guillaume can be reached at kristine.guillaume@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter @krisguillaume.

Women's Rugby Splits Squad for Senior Day Tournament

On Saturday afternoon, snow flurries may have delayed the start of the Crimson Sevens womens rugby tournament, but the wintry weather couldnt keep the host team from lighting up the scoreboard beneath the bubble of Harvard Stadium.

For Grandma

When black people get killed, my white Facebook friends from home get to be upset about riots. They get to post videos of black people weeping, and shouting, and setting shit on fire and call it foolishness, quietly tsk-ing their tongues and shaking their heads from the safety of their dorm rooms. They get to believe the newscasters and feel bad for all those poor, poor windowpanes and police cars and doorknobs that are clearly the main victims of police brutality. Meanwhile, Im starting to look a lot like my grandma, rocking silently in front of my laptop as she did in front of the radio, or the stove, waiting for all her babies to come home.

"Black Sea" Surfaces with Quality Acting

"Black Sea" does not offer anything new, but it offers the old quite well: a stellar performance from Jude Law brings this submarine thriller safely to port.

The Apolitical Hubris of Black Progressivism

Like many democratic socialists, Sanders prefers to view Americans as populating classes, not racesand like many conservatives incidentally, he views employment as the most effective solution to addressing the litany of woes touted by black and Latino progressives.

Conviction Intriguing, Amusing, and Emotionally Lacking

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'Black Lives Matter' Conference Talks Race, Music Studies - Harvard Crimson

Bush-Nominated Judge Who Blocked Trump’s Ban Also Declared ‘Black Lives Matter’ – Daily Beast

President Trump predictably lashed out at the federal judge who blocked his travel ban, but it isn't the judge's first time in the public eye.

This weekend, President Donald Trump returned to an old habit: attacking a federal judge. This time, it was for getting in the way of Trumps Muslim ban, the executive order on refugees and immigration.

On Friday, Seattle federal judge James Robart granted a temporary nationwide restraining order blocking the Trump administration order banning those from seven predominantly Muslim countries from entering the United States. Robart ruled in favor of a legal challenge to the order, which was brought by the state of Washington and then by the state of Minnesota, ruling that states have standing to sue the administration.

The State Department consequently announced on Saturday morning that it has reversed 60,000 visa revocations for people impacted by the presidents highly controversial executive order.

On Saturday morning, Trump predictably lashed out at Robart on Twitter, tweeting that "the opinion of this so-called judge, which essentially takes law-enforcement away from our country, is ridiculous and will be overturned!"

The Washington-based judge, who was nominated by President George W. Bush in 2004, is almost certain to remain in national headlines, as a latest target of Trumps ire. The last time Trump, then a Republican presidential candidate, started picking a public fight with a federal judge, Trumps openly racist attack on the judge dominated news cycles and became a major talking point for the Hillary Clinton campaign.

This wouldnt even be the first time Robart received national media attention regarding a hot-button political issue. In August, during a court hearing for a 2012 lawsuit filed by the Obama administration against the Seattle Police Department, Robart declared that "black lives matter," and sharply criticized the Seattle police union for holding the city hostage.

According to FBI statistics, police shootings resulting in deaths involved 41 percent black people, despite being only 20 percent of the population living in those cities, Robart said during last years hearing. 41 percent of the casualties, 20 percent of the population. Black. Lives. Matter."

Robarts declaration drew a startled, audible reaction in a courtroom listening to the words coming from a federal judge sitting on the bench, The Seattle Times reported at the time.

To hide behind a collective- bargaining agreement is not going to work, the judge continued. The court and the citizens of Seattle will not be held hostage for increased payments and benefitsIm sure the entire city of Seattle would march behind me.

Trump, for his part, has repeatedly made clear that his administration would be an all lives matter one.

Furthermore, Robarts past pro bono work with Southeast Asian refugees is another sharp contrast between the Trump White House and its latest addition to its rapidly growing list of enemies. Of course, Robarts past legal work does not have any relevance to his current job as a federal judge. However, it is safe to assume that the presidentwho famously went after Judge Gonzalo Curiel simply for being of Mexican heritagewill not care.

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Bush-Nominated Judge Who Blocked Trump's Ban Also Declared 'Black Lives Matter' - Daily Beast

Key Democrat: Gorsuch Should Get ‘A Full And Fair Hearing’ [VIDEO] – Daily Caller

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Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, ranking Democrat on the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, told Fox News Sunday she believes the presidents Supreme Court nominee should get a full and fair hearing before her panel.

President Donald Trump nominated Gorsuch to succeed the late Justice Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court Tuesday night. Senate procedure requires that judicial nominees give testimony and answer questions before the judiciary committee. The panel then decides by majority vote whether to recommend the nominees confirmation to the full Senate.

I view the minority partys challenge is to do a full and fair hearing and to have time to garner the facts to really understand the history of this nominee, Feinstein said. And we will do that.

WATCH:

The senator declined to say whether or not she believes Gorsuch is a mainstream jurist. Senate Democrats, including Feinstein, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, and Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin, have pledged total resistance to a candidate they deem extremist or partisan. However, they have been rather elusive as to their definition of mainstream.

A handful of Democratic senators, including Sens. Elizabeth Warren, Sherrod Brown, Jeff Merkeley, and Ron Wyden announced they would stage a filibuster just minutes after the president submitted Gorsuchs name for nomination. Merkeley anticipated their filibuster will draw support from most of the Democratic caucus.

Speaking on the same program, Vice President Mike Pence lavished praise on Gorsuch, and thanked Senate Democrats who have already signaled their support for a floor vote.

Over the course of the campaign President Trump made it clear that he was going to appoint for the vacancy on the Supreme Court a jurist in the tradition of the late great Justice Antonin Scalia, he said. And in Judge Neil Gorsuch he has done that.

He literally was 10 years ago confirmed unanimously by the United States Senate and we are very encouraged at this point that more than at half a dozen Democrats have committed themselves to an up or down look on the floor of the Senate, he added.

Feinstein will meet with Gorsuch Monday.

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Key Democrat: Gorsuch Should Get 'A Full And Fair Hearing' [VIDEO] - Daily Caller

Abandoned mercury mines dot Lake, Sonoma, Napa counties – Santa Rosa Press Democrat

(1 of ) The Sulphur Bank Mercury Mine, in Clearlake, is a source of mercury that leaches into the water of Clear Lake. (Christopher Chung/ The Press Democrat) (2 of ) The Sulphur Bank Mercury Mine, foreground, in Clearlake, is a source of mercury that leaches into the water of Clear Lake. The town of Clearlake Oake is seen in the background. (Christopher Chung/ The Press Democrat)

CLARK MASON

THE PRESS DEMOCRAT | February 5, 2017, 9:57AM

| Updated 8 hours ago.

The Sulphur Bank mine was part of the quicksilver, or mercury mining boom that took hold in the 1870s in Lake County, as well as Sonoma and Napa counties.

Hundreds of mines dotted the coast mountain ranges during the rush to extract mercury from the areas reddish deposits of cinnabar ore. Mercury was used to refine gold and silver, but also was employed as an ingredient for wood processing, early photography and medical uses.

The mining claims in the Mayacmas Mountains had fanciful names like Fandango, Mohawk, Socrates, Rattlesnake and Silverado, the hideaway for Robert Louis Stevenson on the flanks of Mount St. Helena.

The workers at Sulphur Bank were mostly Chinese, but there were also immigrants from Sweden, Norway, Ireland and Mexico, according to 1880 census records.

Partially an open pit and partially a tunneling operation, the mine yielded the cinnabar ore, or mercury sulfide, which was treated in furnaces and retorts, turning it into gas and recondensed as elemental mercury.

Flasks of the silvery fluid were hauled by horse wagon on a long hilly ride, to be shipped out by train in Calistoga.

There were incidents of mercury miners being poisoned by toxic gas with their eyes swelling shut for a week or more. Mercury exposure also caused a condition known as salivation, where workers lost their teeth from receding gums.

Today, abandoned mercury mines in Sonoma County and their potential for contamination occasionally get renewed scrutiny from officials.

Claudia Villacorte, a supervising engineer with the North Coast Regional Water Quality Board, said her agency needs more staff members to assess abandoned mines in the region and determine which need attention.

But, she said, the majority of them are pretty stable, from what I grasp, in terms of active leeching into waterways.

An exception appears to be the area surrounding Jackson Mercury Mine, 4 miles north of Guerneville, that was tested in 2015 for mercury in the soil. The mine operated from 1946 to 1971.

Water-quality regulators said the dilapidated mine buildings off Sweetwater Springs Road drew attention because of their high visibility. Heavy winter rains raised questions about the possibility of contaminants from the large mining waste piles making their way into nearby Wilson Creek, which flows to the Russian River.

Mining wastes were evident in the creek bed, and sampling of creek bank soils indicated mercury concentrations above hazardous thresholds.

A staff report concluded further investigation may be warranted along with creek clean-up and erosion control, to keep more waste from going into the creek.

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Abandoned mercury mines dot Lake, Sonoma, Napa counties - Santa Rosa Press Democrat

How Would Republican Plans for Medicaid Block Grants Actually Work? – New York Times


New York Times
How Would Republican Plans for Medicaid Block Grants Actually Work?
New York Times
The federal government picks up between 50 percent and 100 percent (depending on the population and the per-person income) of whatever it costs to provide health care to a state's population. Many, if not most, Republican plans would like to change that.

and more »

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How Would Republican Plans for Medicaid Block Grants Actually Work? - New York Times