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Wednesday, January 29, 2020

Powering the planet

Before Fikile Brushett wanted to be an engineer, he wanted to be a soccer player. Today, however, Brushett is the Cecil and Ida Green Career Development Chair, and associate professor of chemical engineering. Building 66 might not look much like a soccer field, but Brushett says the sport taught him a fundamental lesson that has proved invaluable in his scientific endeavors.

“The teams that are successful are the teams that work together,” Brushett says.

That philosophy inspires the Brushett Research Group, which draws on disciplines as diverse as organic chemistry and economics to create new electrochemical processes and devices.

As the world moves toward cleaner and sustainable sources of energy, one of the major challenges is converting efficiently between electrical and chemical energy. This is the challenge undertaken by Brushett and his colleagues, who are trying to push the frontiers of electrochemical technology.

Brushett’s research focuses on ways to improve redox flow batteries, which are potentially low-cost alternatives to conventional batteries and a viable way of storing energy from renewable sources like wind and the sun. His group also explores means to recycle carbon dioxide — a greenhouse gas — into fuels and useful chemicals, and to extract energy from biomass.

In his work, Brushett is helping to transform every stage of the energy pipeline: from unlocking the potential of solar and wind energy to replacing combustion engines with fuel cells, and even enabling greener industrial processes.

“A lot of times, electrochemical technologies work in some areas, but we'd like them to work much more broadly than we've asked them to do beforehand,” Brushett says. “A lot of that is now driving the need for new innovation in the area, and that's where we come in.”



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Florida third-grader charged with attempted murder after admitting to stabbing his 5-year-old sister with kitchen knife

An Ocala, Fla., boy is facing charges of attempted murder after he allegedly stabbed his little sister with a kitchen knife while chanting “die, die, die.”

In an alleged incident so horrific that some of the police who responded are receiving counseling, a 9-year-old third-grader appeared in court Tuesday to face charges related to his attack of his 5-year-old sister, WESH is reporting. The incident took place Monday at an apartment complex in Ocala, Fla., where the family lives. The little girl is expected to survive, although details on her condition were not available.

READ MORE: Rae Sremmurd’s stepdad was reportedly murdered by their half-brother

Police said everything unfolded after the children’s mother left them alone in the apartment for a few minutes to get the mail and collect some candy for them from a neighbor, according to the news organization. When she returned, she found her son in the bedroom stabbing the little girl with a large kitchen knife, WESH reported.

The mother struggled to breathe as she frantically called 9-1-1.

“An emergency, emergency,” WESH reports she said to the dispatcher. “My daughter —my son stabbed my daughter.”

Police said the boy told them that he had been thinking about killing his little sister for two days. He tried to get the thought out of his head but he couldn’t, he told them.

The boy grasped his moment at a point when the little girl was bent over and trying to show him something on the floor, police said. He “grabbed his sister by the back of her neck” and “began stabbing her” as he repeated “die, die, die,” WESH reports police said.

READ MORE: Gifted student fatally stabbed over boy at school

A judge is ordering psychological evaluation for the boy, who is in juvenile detention. Doctors, lawyers, representatives with the Florida Department of Children and Families and family members are working together to figure out what happened and what would be a productive next step for the child, according to WESH.

The boy’s next appearance in court will be next week.

The post Florida third-grader charged with attempted murder after admitting to stabbing his 5-year-old sister with kitchen knife appeared first on TheGrio.



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Aaron Hernandez’s fiancee says she would have accepted his bisexuality

Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez, the fiancee of late New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez, has some choice words for the recently released Netflix docuseries about the football player’s murder of Odin Lloyd.

The grieving girlfriend and mother of Hernandez’s daughter told ABC’s Good Morning America that Netflix should have been careful about exploring questions of Hernandez’s sexuality without him around to respond. She said she never had any indication that he might be gay or bisexual, or that he might be trying to figure out his sexuality.

READ MORE: Family of Aaron Hernandez’s victim reportedly being harassed in wake of Netflix doc

“If he did feel that way or if he felt the urge … I wish that I was told,” said Jenkins-Hernandez, 30, as she fought back tears. “I wish that he would have told me because I would not have loved him any differently. I would have understood. It’s not shameful. I don’t think anybody should feel shameful for who they are inside, regardless of who they love. I think it’s a beautiful thing. I just— I wish I was able to tell him that.”

She continued, “It would’ve been hard to watch somebody walk away or to live a different life, but it’s not shameful.”

ABC News released the segment of Jenkins-Hernandez’s interview on social media, and the full interview was to air Wednesday morning.

“You can’t describe someone’s sexuality without them being there,” she said.

In the past, Jenkins-Hernandez has expressed harsh words about those questions, and once said that she would have “disowned him” if he told her he was gay.

Netflix released Killer Inside: The Mind of Aaron Hernandez on Jan. 15 amid much fanfare. The docuseries explores the life of Hernandez and alleges he engaged in a same-sex relationship before he committed suicide in 2017. Hernandez was convicted of the 2013 murder of soccer player Odin Lloyd in 2015. Two years later, he hanged himself in his prison cell. He was 27.

READ MORE: Ex-Patriots’ Aaron Hernandez reportedly sexually abused, beaten as a child

Netflix so far has not released any comment on Jenkins-Hernandez’s interview. The organization indicates on its website that the three-episode series was built from interviews with “friends, players and insiders.”

The post Aaron Hernandez’s fiancee says she would have accepted his bisexuality appeared first on TheGrio.



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'Kingdom Hearts III Re: Mind' Is the Antidote to Bad Endings

In a cultural moment where franchises like Star Wars and Game of Thrones don't know how to end well, Kingdom Hearts says: Why end at all?

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6 Best Gaming Desktop PCs (2020): Custom, High-End, Cheap

I assure you, these PC battle stations are fully armed and operational. They're also WIRED Recommended.

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Pioneering DR Congo forward Leon Mokuna dies aged 90

The first player from the DR Congo to play in Europe, Leon Mokuna, dies at the age of 90.

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Walmart Pays Homage the Legacy of HBCU Football at the Celebration Bowl

HBCU Football

There’s no experience like sitting in the stands at an HBCU football game. It is a sporting event, concert, fashion show, and family reunion all wrapped up into one affair.  Every year in December, two HBCU football teams go head-to-head at the Celebration Bowl.

And for the coaches, players, and fans alike; it is more than just a game. It’s about honoring the legacy of those who came before them.

The Celebration Bowl is a post-season college football game featuring the conference champions from the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) and the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC). The event’s mission is to provide the schools, alumni, fans, and sponsors with a first-class bowl experience while continuing to celebrate the heritage, legacy, pageantry, and tradition of historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs). It is managed by ESPN Events, a subsidiary of ESPN, which owns and operates a large portfolio of collegiate sporting events worldwide, including 13 post-season bowl games.

Related: 5-Year-Old Drummer Receives Full Band Scholarship To HBCU

On Dec. 27, 1892, the journey to The Celebration Bowl and its trophy began when the first black intercollegiate football game was played between Biddle College (now Johnson C. Smith University) and Livingstone College. On the snowy front lawn of Livingstone College in North Carolina, the teams played for nothing more than the love of the game. The young women of Livingstone’s industrial department made the players’ uniforms and equipped their street shoes with cleats. The two teams put their money together to purchase a regulation football. The Celebration Bowl trophy is a symbol of the HBCU football tradition that was started on that day. The trophy commemorates the inaugural game, its players: J.W. Walker (captain); W.J. Trent (manager); R.J. Rencher; Henry Rives; C. N. Garland; J. R. Dillard; J.B.A. Yelverton; Wade Hampton; Charles H. Patrick; J.J. Taylor; and F.H. Cummings, and those who continue the tradition of HBCU Football.

Related: Jemele Hill Suggests Black Athletes Leave White Colleges to Attend HBCUs 

This year, Walmart was a proud sponsor of the event. And as a part of their participation in the Bowl, Tony Waller, senior director of Constituent Relations at Walmart, sat down with Samuel Lee Washington Jr., head coach at North Carolina A&T State University; Fred McNair, head coach at Alcorn State  University; Jory Luster, CEO of Luster’s Curls; and Dr. Charles McClelland, commissioner of SWAC for the “Real Talk at the Barber Shop” series.

In their own words, each of the men shares what the legacy of historically black colleges and universities and the Celebration Bowl means to them.

Take a look:

Dr. Charles McClelland, Commissioner of SWAC

 


 

Samuel Lee Washington Jr., Head Coach at North Carolina A&T State University


Fred McNair, Head Coach at Alcorn State


 

Related: 5-Year-Old Drummer Receives Full Band Scholarship To HBCU

Jory Luster, CEO of Luster’s Curls


 

Congratulations to the North Carolina A&T Aggies on winning the 2019 Celebration Bowl Championship!

 



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Michelle Obama Won Her First Grammy Award

michelle obama book

Michelle Obama just can’t lose these days! The former first lady won a Grammy Award for her audiobook Becoming on Sunday.

Obama was in competition with the Beastie Boys, Eric Alexandrakis, John Waters, and Sekou Andrews & The String Theory. This is Obama’s first Grammy win and her second nomination. She was previously nominated for 2013’s American Grown: The Story of the White House Kitchen Garden and Gardens Across America.

“Thank you to the Recording Academy for this honor! I had plenty of doubts about sharing so much of myself in Becoming, but this moment is another reminder that when we own the truth of who we are, we give ourselves the chance to connect with others in real, meaningful ways.” Obama says in a press release.

Since Becoming was released on Nov. 13, 2018, it has “sold more than 12 million units worldwide across print, digital, and audio formats, including more than 7.5 million units in the U.S. and Canada alone, and has been published in 46 languages. The audiobook has also been on the New York Times Audio Nonfiction Best Seller List for 14 straight months since its publication, including 7 months in the #1 slot.”

Obama’s latest book, Becoming: A Guided Journal for Discovering Your Voice, was released on Nov. 19 as a companion piece to her critically-acclaimed memoir, Becoming, and features an “intimate introduction” from Obama, herself.

The Becoming journal includes more than 150 inspiring questions and quotes that resonate with key themes in Obama’s memoir. It was also designed to help readers reflect on their personal and family history, goals, challenges, dreams, motivation, hopes, and what future they imagine for themselves and their community.

In a statement, Obama explained that she hopes people will use the Becoming journal, “to write down your experiences, thoughts, and feelings, in all their imperfections, and without judgment.” She continued, “We don’t have to remember everything. But everything we remember has value.”

Obama was recently named the “most admired woman” in the world for the second time in as many years in the annual Gallup Poll. The former first lady was also named one of the 2019 People of the Year by People magazine



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How to Get the Most Out of Your Smartphone's Encryption

Both iPhones and Androids are encrypted by default. But there are steps you can take to safeguard your data on backups and messaging apps.

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The 10,000-Year Clock Is a Waste of Time

It's less a monument to long-term thinking than a Gilded Age distraction.

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The 6 Best TVs for Every Budget (2020): TCL, Samsung, LG

The best, boldest, and most budget-friendly 4K and 8K TVs WIRED has seen, from OLEDs to LCDs.

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When ‘Ghost Kitchens’ Become Mystery Grubhub Listings

A takeout mix-up in San Francisco revealed a dirty secret of the food-delivery business: restaurants listed without their permission.

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The Tragedy and Mystery of the ‘Best Game of the Decade’

Now that the fifth and final chapter of *Kentucky Route Zero* is out, we know how it ends—and have more questions than ever.

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Comic Book Artists on Parenthood, Creativity, and Cry-Barfing

Having a kid doesn’t extinguish inspiration. Three cartoonists share how becoming parents radically transformed their art—and everything else. 

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Inside SpinLaunch, the Space Industry’s Best Kept Secret

The company is building a massive centrifuge to accelerate rockets and send them screaming into space.

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Hubert Velud: Sudan appoint former Togo boss as new manager

The Sudan Football Association names Frenchman Hubert Velud as their new coach to replace Zdravko Logarusic.

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AI Helps Warehouse Robots Pick Up New Tricks

Backed by machine learning luminaries, Covariant.ai's bots can handle jobs previously needing  a human touch. 

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Wilfried Bony: Ivory Coast forward excited about move to Saudi Arabia

Ivory Coast striker Wilfried Bony is looking forward to playing competitive football again as he joins Saudi Arabian club Al-Ittihad.

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Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Aston Villa 2-1 Leicester City (Villa win 3-2 on aggregate): Villa into Carabao Cup final

Trezeguet's dramatic injury-time winner puts Aston Villa into the Carabao Cup final with victory over Leicester City.

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UK Has a Plan to Corral Huawei. But Security Concerns Linger

Peripheral equipment can be vulnerable, and even partial network surveillance could pose a threat, experts warn.

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