Daily Archives: February 17, 2022

Sapphic historical fiction about the founder of Shakespeare and Company – The Michigan Daily

Posted: February 17, 2022 at 8:37 am

Paris, 1917 an era of bold artistic exploration, a voguish intellectual scene, post-WWI excesses and a thriving queer culture. Into all of this enters Sylvia Beach, a 30-year-old American woman looking to finally make something of herself in the City of Light. When she stumbles into a bookstore in the Latin Quarter, she does not expect to fall in love with the shop owner, nor to be absorbed into her circle of influential French authors and intellectuals. And Sylvia certainly does not expect to become one of the most distinguished women of her time, battling the U.S. governments censorship of literature and owning one of the most famous bookstores in the world. Kerri Mahers The Paris Bookseller tells the fictionalized story of this remarkable woman through the most exciting and tumultuous years of her life.

The beginning of this book does no credit to the rest. It is better remembered in hindsight, when you understand the story and the tenuous first chapters attempt to set up the literary world. Sylvias character is rushed and half-formed; for example, she moves all the way from New Jersey to Paris, which she has longed to return to ever since she was a teenager, and yet within months, she has signed up to volunteer on a Serbian farm for a year. Shes supposedly leaving Paris to run away from her feelings for the bookstore owner, Adrienne, who has a long-term partner, yet it is never made clear why Sylvia is so suddenly in love. Adrienne is described by others as charming, but Adrienne herself is only given a few lines of dialogue to prove that shes deserving of this adoration. She doesnt at least, not the sort of unrequited love that drives someone out of the country to a Serbian village.

Forty pages in, you still dont have a sense of who Sylvia really is or why she makes the decisions she does. You do, however, get the sense that Adriennes lover must not have been all that important to her after all, given how little Adrienne mourns her when she dies and how quickly she develops feelings for Sylvia instead. Everything happens abruptly, the twists and turns lacking emotional depth and the romance feeling forced.

Once you get into the meat of the story, you understand that these chapters are just the prologue to the real narrative and only serve to tell you what you need in order to understand the rest. The strategy makes sense logistically but it makes for a rocky start.

All that being said, the rest of the book is beautiful.

Some of the biggest names in English literature find their way into Sylvias life (Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, F. Scott Fitzgerald and the like). From public readings in Adriennes bookstore to wild nights in Parisian clubs, high society dinners to heated debates over artistic movements and law, we get to peer into the (fictionalized) lives of the Lost Generation writers who would go on to change the literary world. To see them portrayed not as heroic geniuses but as people the rivalry between Hemingway and Fitzgerald, Joyces health problems and alcoholism, Hemingways many failed romantic ventures enriched my understanding of their work.

This is particularly the case with Joyces Ulysses, which poses the central conflict of the book. In the 1920s, America was undergoing a crisis of censorship (one of many in its history). The New York Society for the Suppression of Vice, headed by John Sumner, was granted legal powers of search, seizure and arrest by the New York state government. Sumner took particular issue with Ulysses, which was written in a controversial new style that focused on telling the whole truth of the characters day-to-day life, every intimate detail and unfiltered moment even when it came to so-called obscene topics like masturbation, which ultimately led to the novel being put on trial. This work was massively influential for contemporaneous and future writers, including other greats like Virginia Woolf, but it faced years of censorship and legal troubles. Sylvia saved it from censorship and the resulting obscurity through great personal sacrifice, yet she was never truly given credit for it by the broader public in the story or in real life.

Women were (as they too often still are) disregarded as foolish or, worse, utterly unimportant. In the legal battles against censorship and plagiarism, Sylvia was written off as a secretary, despite playing the second most important role (after Joyce) in the conception of this book. She alone agreed to publish it against the law; she alone organized the herculean effort it took to parse through and type up his scribbles; she alone hounded his former lawyer for lost pages; she alone raised the money to pay for the printing. Thats not to mention the efforts from the three women arrested and brought to trial over its distribution (two editors that published it as a periodical in their journal and one bookstore owner who distributed it), or the woman who financially supported his work year after year or the woman Joyces partner who raised his children so that he could focus on writing. When we think of mans great achievements, we often forget that they are womens as well. Maher is determined to make us remember.

The Paris Bookseller is brimming with famous names, legal intrigue and dramatic fights between friends, family and strangers alike. Yet it is also fundamentally a very human story, one that digs deeply into how good people can be at such odds with one another, and how we love, use and neglect one another.

There is genuine character development, spanning years, that embodies perfectly the way life so often feels that combination of grief, nostalgia and growth that defines change. Twenty years pass: friends move away, couples divorce and the city in which you live turns from new to familiar to new again as the world advances around you. The changes that occur in Sylvias life are sometimes big and grand, but sometimes they are so subtle that all of a sudden you find yourself asking: How did we get here? How is everything so different than it was?

Closing this book, I was filled with a sense of longing a longing for a life as well-lived as Sylvias. Her life is not always hopeful; things do not always work out as planned, and there is far more pain than anyone would wish for (as is the case in most lives). But Maher has shone a light on a figure more pivotal than anyone gives her credit for, this woman who just wanted to own a little bookstore in Paris.

Daily Arts Writer Brenna Goss can be reached at bregoss@umich.edu.

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Rutgers stuns No. 12 Illinois with 70-59 win – On The Banks

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Rutgers made history once again on Wednesday night with a program record fourth consecutive win over a ranked foe. The Scarlet Knights also became the the first unranked team all-time to play four straight regular season games against AP-ranked opponents and beat all of them.

The gauntlet that was the February schedule has been handled to perfection by the Scarlet Knights. It was capped off with a 70-59 victory over No. 12 Illinois at Jersey Mikes Arena in Piscataway.

They have reached double-digit victories in the Big Ten for the third straight season and are now on solid ground to return to the NCAA Tournament for a second consecutive year.

Ron Harper Jr. led Rutgers with 16 points and 8 rebounds while Cliff Omoruyi went toe-to-toe with one of the best centers in the nation in Kofi Cockburn from the opening minutes. He logged 15 points and 13 rebounds. Harper Jr. would leave the game late with a left hand injury and its unclear the severity of it.

It was clear that Kofi Cockburn was going to get his for Illinois (18-7, 11-4) but the Illini struggled outside of their big man. Cockburn finished with 20 points on 8-for-14 from the field but the rest of the team was just 14-for-44.

Rutgers (16-9, 10-5) jumped out to a double-digit lead just six minutes into the game after yet another strong start. It got as high as 11 in the first half before heading into the locker room with a 33-24 lead. The Scarlet Knights used a 10-1 run early in the second half to break the game open and go up 19.

The Scarlet Knights were up by as much as 21 in the second half but the No. 12 team in the nation had one more run in them. The Illini used turnovers and some late three-pointers to keep their head above water but the lead did not get within nine.

If there was a knock on Rutgers on Wednesday night, it was that they turned the ball over 13 times. Aside from that, Steve Pikiells squad continued to defend at a high level and that was the difference. Against one of the best rebounding teams in the Big Ten, Rutgers was +18 on the boards (46-28).

Rutgers shot 47% from the field and went 9-for-14 from the free throw line, including three from Geo Baker down the stretch. Paul Mulcahy continues to shine adding 13 points and 7 more assists.

The schedule remains difficult for Rutgers as it prepares to take on No. 5 Purdue in West Lafayette before a trip to Michigan and a rematch with Wisconsin. After these last two weeks, looks more manageable in a way it never did before.

Not only was this the fourth consecutive victory against a ranked opponent for Rutgers. It was not only the biggest home game in the Pikiell era or needle moving win to the big dance. This was the cap on what has been the best month of basketball in program history for the Scarlet Knights.

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OPINION | Joe Rogan controversy is reminder that censorship laws are bad idea that will backfire – The Livingston Parish News

Posted: at 8:37 am

Spotifys decision to resist calls by powerful voices to remove Joe Rogan from its platform offers a good reminder that Americans must firmly reject government interference in private business decisions, including social media companies. Coverage of Neil Young and Joni Mitchell have buried far more concerning voices attacking Spotify for hosting Rogan: those coming from the Biden administration.

Administration officials calling for censorship of dissenting voices, as U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy has done, should outrage all Americans. Yet this is the kind of government power state governors across the U.S. are trying to capture with social media regulations.

Last year, courts blocked legislation in Texas and Florida to prevent social media companies from monitoring content on their platforms but 19 other states have followed with bills in the same vein. Legislatures from coast to coast including Kentucky, California, Utah, Iowa, Arizona, Georgia, Tennessee, New York, Alabama, Indiana, South Carolina, Michigan, Ohio, W. Virginia, Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Mississippi, and Idaho are considering similarly unconstitutional bills.

Such bills are a flagrant assault on the First Amendment, effectively putting government officials in control of online speech and private businesses. This is exactly the kind of control Murthy and other government officials crave, and the kind of government control Americans must fight. Its not just a bad idea from a Constitutional standard, its a bad policy idea to have the government determine what information is suitable for Americans to see online.

These bills are being sold as a way to prohibit social media businesses like Facebook and Twitter from removing conservative content. While this may be appealing to some, what it would mean in practice is that the government would determine what private businesses can and cant say. That means Murthys tweets would become commands.

Facebook, Twitter, and other social media companies are private businesses and as frustrated as conservatives are that some conservative speech is removed, as private businesses social media businesses have that right. Frustration and ire has sparked the rise of conservative social media platforms like Rumble, Parler, and Trumps new platform, and that is exactly the result the free market enables.

And just like Facebook and Twitter, these conservative social media sites shouldnt be forced by the government to host content they dont want like opinions from Rachel Maddow or Elizabeth Warren. Inviting the government in to be the referee and create the rules of the game is wrong headed and illegal. If conservative states were able to tell social media sites what news and views they can host, so could liberal states.

This is not a hypothetical threat to free speech. A bill introduced in New York state this year would punish social media sites for hosting alleged misinformation. Clearly, access to information should never be determined by the political party in power.

And censorship is only one of the threats social media censorship bills pose to private businesses. They would also strip social media companies of the freedom to remove content at their discretion. These bills would make it illegal for Facebook and Twitter to remove content that most of us dont want to see or want our children to see like hate speech, violent content, X-rated content, and more.

Despite conservatives frustration about social media censorship, we cannot allow private businesses to become vessels for the governments preferred messaging. Both blue and red states have realized the internets power and want to harness it for their own agendas and are seizing on the opportunity to use public frustration to seize more power.

I will continue to fight tooth and nail against legislation that violates First Amendment protections that prevent lawmakers from using the governments coercive powers to settle scores against Americas leading technology businesses. At the end of the day, whether it is the Biden Administration telling Joe Rogan what not to say, or the state-level administrations telling Facebook what is must say, we should all let private businesses decide what is best for their customers and let us vote with our feet not let politicians dictate to us the speech we should hear.

Carl Szabo is vice president and general counsel for NetChoice.

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OPINION | Joe Rogan controversy is reminder that censorship laws are bad idea that will backfire - The Livingston Parish News

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Sen. Rand Paul is tired of being treated like crap on planes and wants an end to mask mandates – Business Insider Africa

Posted: at 8:37 am

Sen. Rand Paul said he wants to force a vote on his legislation to end mask mandates on airplanes because he's tired of being "treated like crap" as a passenger and he wants to eat his peanuts in peace.

"It's a joke, it's theater, and there's no reason to be wearing them on the planes," the senator from Kentucky said on Newsmax. "We are just punishing ourselves. And I for one, I'm tired of paying the airlines to be treated like crap when I get on the plane."

Paul, a physician and senior member of the Senate Health, Education and Labor Committee, said he wants to be treated "like a paying customer."

"And I want them to bring me at least a glass of water and peanuts and I don't want somebody jammering at me to put my mask on in between peanuts," he added during the Tuesday interview.

Airline passengers are required to wear masks in airports and on airlines as a precaution against COVID-19. In July, Paul introduced legislation to prohibit the imposition of mask mandates on public transportation to "put a stop to this nanny state mandate" and saying then that "we've already reached herd immunity."

Republicans are fighting efforts to create a "no fly" list for unruly passengers. In a Monday letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland, eight Republican senators wrote that most infractions on airplanes are related to mask mandates and creating a no-fly list for them would "seemingly equate them to terrorists."

"We've been punched, kicked, spit on, and sexually assaulted," she said in a statement. "This puts everyone at risk and disrupts the safety of flight, which is never acceptable and every single one of the Senators who signed this letter knows full well what is at stake if we leave a gap in aviation safety and security."

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Paul Dunkelman, chief judge of the 5th Judicial District, is ready to make an impact in new role – Summit Daily

Posted: at 8:37 am

Paul Dunkelman stepped into the role of chief judge as an interim position after former Chief Judge Mark Thompson was placed on administrative leave in October. Now that Dunkelman has officially been named to the position for the 5th Judicial District hes ready to continue leading the district in providing equitable access to justice so community members have confidence in their legal system.

Dunkelman got his start in the legal field when he attended Colgate University in Hamilton, New York, where he earned a bachelors in economics and political science. He officially made the jump to Colorado when he earned his Juris Doctor from Sturm College of Law at the University of Denver in 1993.

Shortly thereafter, Dunkelman moved to Frisco where he opened a practice with two other attorneys, Ron and Judy Carlson. During this time, the trio practiced criminal law, domestic relations and civil law. The firm, named Carlson, Carlson & Dunkelman, LLC, was where Dunkelman said he first experienced the true reward of working in this field.

I (think) most of the cases we handle are good people going through the worst time in their lives, and when you help them through that, at the end of the that, (whether) they say thank you, dont say thank you, thats not the issue, but they sort of appreciate and understand that you helped them through the most difficult time in their life, he said.

Dunkelman said this feedback, whether positive of negative, is something that sticks with him long into the future. One such comment occurred after he had been appointed district court judge in 2013. Dunkelman said shortly after being appointed as a judge, he was overseeing a divorce case that was emotional and stressful to each party.

I thought Id explained the process well to them, I thought they understood the process After I made my ruling, the wife asked me when she got her chance to explain her side of the story, Dunkelman said. It didnt affect the ruling, the issues were limited, but it affected her confidence in my decision that she didnt think she was heard, and it was upsetting to me and really eye opening to me.

There are others Dunkelman said hes had the chance to learn from, including his former partners, Ron and Judy Carlson; former District Court Judge David Lass; and Summit County Court Judge Edward Casias.

Michael Pisciotta, court executive for the 5th Judicial District, has worked with Dunkelman for seven years. Pisciotta noted one example of Dunkelmans character from his time as a district court judge. During the pandemic, many courts put their dockets on hold, but there was one high-profile murder case Dunkelman oversaw where he took extra measures and precautions so the trial could move forward safely and efficiently. For this work, Dunkelman was selected the Colorado Judicial Institutes district court judge of the year in 2021.

In my seven years, we hadnt had a 5th District judge that had received that type of an award and it was very well deserved because he was courageous enough to move forward and smart enough and wise enough to implement as many precautions as we could to protect the public, Pisciotta said.

Though Dunkelman stepped into the role of chief judge at a difficult time for the court, he said the role of chief judge was already on his radar and something he was interested in pursuing. As chief judge, he is still responsible for a full docket, but now his role is to oversee the administration of the 5th Judicial District, which serves Clear Creek, Eagle, Lake and Summit counties. This means overseeing personnel and the budget, but it also means meeting with stakeholders and being accessible to the community.

With a few months under his belt already, Dunkelman said hes not interested in making any major changes immediately. Instead, hes interested in focusing on ways the court system can better provide access to needed services.

I want to continue to be innovative in how we provide access to justice to all parties, regardless of whether you can afford an attorney, not afford an attorney, whatever your role is and whatever your issue is that we provide a means to access the court system, Dunkelman said.

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Park County man wants to test paper ballots – Wyoming Tribune

Posted: at 8:37 am

CODY South Fork resident Boone Tidwell is fed up with voting machines.

We need to put elections back in the hands of the body, he said. Im not pointing my finger at anybody. People have serious anxiety and concerns over election security.

In an effort to restore the confidence of their vote to electors, Tidwell hopes to test the feasibility of running a hand-count election in Park County. To do this, he hopes to provide education and a testing ground, by holding mock elections at local high schools where students can simultaneously be taught an American civics lesson and also be used as test subjects to help orchestrate his study.

It puts kids in the polling booth and they do have to put their hands in, Tidwell said.

Using replica ballots from the 2020 election cycle, students would have the opportunity to experience the voting process, while adult volunteers from local communities would process and hand-count their ballots. Students would get to see the tabulation process take place and gain some familiarity with lesser-known, local races.

Its a great opportunity for the kids to see the process in action, said Scott McBride, principal of the Meeteetse Schools.

He said he supports the idea and is open to doing it in the schools.

Tidwell said he would then extrapolate the time and manpower it takes to tabulate the ballots into a county-sized scale. He said he would expect to draw around 200 students -- mostly American Government students at Cody High School.

Hans Odde, deputy Park County clerk, said for the last election held in 2020, the county had around 135 election judges to help oversee the 16,815 ballots that were cast. Since then, the Park County population has grown, with about 100 more registered voters in the Cody area since spring 2021, Odde said at a recent county commissioners meeting. Tidwell said he expects so many volunteers to help with his project he may have to turn people away.

In Wyoming, people can volunteer to assist with elections at age 16.

Tidwell and members of the Park County Republican Mens Club, which is collaborating on the project, have met with the principals of Cody, Powell, and Meeteetse high schools to propose their idea.

Anytime you can give high school students the practice of participating in an election, I think thats valuable, said Cody High School Principal Jeremiah Johnston.

Johnston said he needs to confer with Powell School District officials about their thoughts on the matter, including the issue of whether such an activity could be enacted successfully without other politically charged motives coming into play.

I certainly would not want that, he said. The reason for the students to be part of this is getting the kids to understand how an election works.

Powell High School Principal Tim Wormald said he supports doing the project, saying as long as theres no political connection its a good experience for the students. He plans on having 60 American Government students participate.

Tidwell and fellow Cody resident Dave McMillan, a committeeman in the Park County Republican Party, presented their proposal to the Park County Democratic Party on Saturday, where they werent met with much enthusiasm.

The Park County Democrats have confidence in the integrity of the current election system, said Jan Kliewer, a Powell resident who is the newly appointed chairman of the Party.

Tidwell plans to make a presentation to the Park County Republican Party at its meeting Thursday night.

Tidwell said he does not trust any voting machine, or any machine, connected to the internet.

When a similar sentiment was brought before the county Republican Party in February 2021, Park County Clerk Colleen Renner defended the security of the 2020 election. Around that time the Wyoming GOP passed a resolution rejecting the use of electronic voting systems, although the resolution didnt say what would be best to use.

To question the integrity of the election in Wyoming would be to question the integrity of thousands of Wyoming citizens who served as election judges, Renner said.

Wyoming Secretary of State Ed Buchanan has agreed, when he spoke to the Natrona County Republican Party in late January, denying the 2020 elections were rigged in Wyoming.

[Elections] are not routine anymore because of misinformation, disinformation and malinformation. Now its easy to cry foul with no real evidence, at least in Wyoming, Buchanan said at the meeting, according to the Casper Star Tribune.

The Wyoming Secretary of States Office has similar language to this on its website, and even has an Election Integrity and Security page dedicated to providing ways for constituents to combat misinformation regarding the election.

Odde said he has received no questions from Tidwell or any member from the Mens Club about how the county would implement a hand-count election, about the countys current election security, or about how it conducts its elections. He said Park Countys elections are not connected to the internet in any way aside from the posting of final results.

A local canvassing board made up by one Democrat, one Republican and Renner certify the results on a local level. These results are emailed to a state canvassing board, which certifies the results on a state level.

Buchanan denied that the Elections Systems and Software voting machines the state uses are connected to the internet, and that although the machines can technically be physically breached, there are a number of extensive security measures in place to prevent this from happening.

Voting machines do not have a flawless record.

ES&S, Dominion Voting Systems and Hart InterCivic, which dominate the American voting machine market, have all said they put modems in some of their tabulators and scanners so that unofficial election results can be determined faster. These modems connect to cellphone networks and are protected by a firewall.

In the 2018 Georgia governors race, ES&S-owned technology was in use when more than 150,000 voters inexplicably did not cast a vote for lieutenant governor, according to ProPublica.

Buchanan is working with the University of Wyoming to audit ballots from all 23 counties as it does after every election to verify the legitimacy of the 2020 election.

Were going to strengthen our elections, Odde said. Were all on board with that.

Park County also performs a test run before each election to ensure all of its machines are working effectively.

Tidwell said its naive to think there wasnt election fraud in Wyoming despite the fact that former President Donald Trump won by a larger margin in Wyoming than any other state. Trump has made many claims without any proven evidence that the 2020 election was stolen from him. Tidwell said he has attempted to draw attention to election fraud in Wyoming by reaching out to prominent election skeptics throughout the country.

Tidwell, a 17-year Park County resident who has never served as an election judge, said he does not identify as a Republican or Democrat, but did vote for Trump. Before that, he said he voted for Ron Paul in 2008 and 2012.

Tidwell said he sees his plan as a call for immediate action, rather than waiting to get involved in the November 2022 election.

We need to get our hands back in the political process, Tidwell.

One of the leading criticisms of voting machines is they can be hacked remotely, a highly unlikely but possible act.

Anythings possible, not probable, Buchanan said.

Tidwell said it would be his preference to move away from voting machines entirely, but is open to other solutions.

Its not that there arent other solutions on the table, Tidwell said. If something else comes around that restores my confidence Ill take it.

Efficiency is the primary reason voting technology has evolved over the years.

According to ProPublica, the first American patents for voting machines were approved in the late 1800s. Machines with push buttons for each candidate rose to the top, seen as the solution to rampant vote buying.

In 1957, the Wyoming State Legislature permitted the use of automated voting machines in the Cowboy State, according to the State Archives.

Punch card voting developed in the 1960s, allowing voters to punch holes in cards to select candidates with a ballot marking device. Around 2004, the State of Wyoming started transitioning to digital voting machines.

Odde said one of the biggest reasons from moving away from the non-digital machines is to have a verifiable paper trail that is not possible with the older, lever-controlled devices.

In 2020, the State signed a $5.4 million contract with ES&S to provide the entire state with voting machines, which was the only type of voting machine used in 2020. Park County received these machines for free from the State.

Wyoming state law does not forbid hand-count elections.

A small number of communities throughout the country perform hand-count elections and according to the Concord Monitor, almost half the polling places in New Hampshire hand-count their ballots.

In that state, the Monitor reports Republican lawmakers have introduced a bill that would outlaw ballot-counting devices and require that all ballots be counted by hand.

Tidwell said he believes Wyoming can lead the nation restoring faith in elections, and hopes to present his project before the Park County commissioners soon.

In 2020 Tidwell made efforts and presented before the Park County commissioners his desire to organize a local militia in response to the civil unrest occurring in cities throughout the U.S.

This is not a Boone Tidwell thing, its a voter-confidence thing, he said. Lets prove it.

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Thursday’s Obituaries and Tributes – GoLocalProv

Posted: at 8:37 am

Thursday, February 17, 2022

GoLocalProv News Team

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Swan Point PHOTO: GoLocal

These are updated throughout the day.

Thursday's - Read them all here.

Normand Albert Rousseau Jr, (Buddy), Formerly of Central Falls, Dies at 67

Air National Guard Veteran, John Jack D. Carberry, Dies at 85

Robert A. Oliver, of Cranston, Dies at 66

Jean Claudette Carroll Callaway Dies at 63

Diana M. (Campanile) Begin, of West Warwick, Dies at 68

Navy Veteran, George Ron Ronald Millican, of West Kingston, Dies at 81

Commander Charles Paul Jaworski, U.S.N., D.D.S., of E. Providence, Dies at 82

Olga (Marshallis) DiChiara, of Providence, Dies at 93

Mrs. Joyce (Ferrara) Wilkins, Dies at 59

Clara Lillian (Ducharme) Virkler Dies at 89

Virginia Jeanie M. Medeiros, of Johnston, Dies at 78

Oscar A. Lemus, of Providence, Dies at 53

Hilda De La Zerda-Chavez, of North Providence, Dies at 77

Army Veteran, Alden Thomas Aldy Lanihan, of Cranston, Dies at 89

Joseph M. Schleifer, Formerly of Cranston, Dies at 51

Alan Uffer, Formerly of Cranston, Dies at 83

Francine R. Puleo, of West Greenwich, Dies at 67

Isaura Gorritz, of Central Falls, Dies at 86

GoLocal partners with 57 funeral homes in Rhode Island to provide this service at no cost to families.

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Rutgers tops No. 14 Wisconsin, 3rd win in row over T25 team – Associated Press

Posted: at 8:37 am

MADISON, Wis. (AP) Rutgers understands it must prove it can beat quality teams on the road to get back into consideration for the NCAA Tournament.

The Scarlet Knights took a giant step in that direction Saturday by winning at Wisconsin for the first time and posting their third straight victory over a ranked opponent. Ron Harper Jr. scored 21 points and Rutgers went on a late 11-0 run in a 73-65 victory over the 14th-ranked Badgers.

It was huge, Harper said. I told the guys its the same 40 minutes of basketball were playing if we were playing in New Jersey. The game is dependent on us. Its not dependent on the crowd. We love our home-court advantage, but were the dudes with the jerseys on. Weve got to make plays.

The Scarlet Knights (15-9, 9-5 Big Ten) knocked off then-No. 13 Michigan State 84-63 a week ago Saturday and No. 16 Ohio State 66-64 on Wednesday.

This marks the first time in program history theyve beaten a Top 25 team in three consecutive games. Of course, part of that is due to a quirk in the schedule enabling Rutgers to face a ranked team in three straight games. The last time Rutgers won three straight matchups with Top 25 foes was back in the 2001-02 season.

I think it shows growth, toughness, togetherness stuff weve been working on, said Paul Mulcahy, who scored 18 points and made a 3-pointer that put Rutgers ahead for good. Guys are playing for each other and playing hard 40 minutes. Im proud of everybody.

Wisconsin (19-5, 10-4) dropped a half-game behind No. 13 Illinois (17-6, 10-3) in the Big Ten standings. Illinois hosts Northwestern on Sunday.

Rutgers has a 4-1 record against Top 25 teams this season and owns four wins over ranked Big Ten teams for the first time ever. Rutgers also beat a top-ranked Purdue team on Dec. 9.

Even so, the Scarlet Knights began the day just 94th in the NET rankings, giving their postseason hopes little margin for error. Rutgers owns a 3-7 road record and dug itself a deep early hole with a three-game November skid that included losses to DePaul, Lafayette and UMass.

I tell these guys every time we go out on the court, were going to fight for our lives, Harper said.

Rutgers has tried to make up for that early slump by stepping up in Big Ten competition. Saturdays game could answer some questions about their road issues.

This marked the highest-ranked team Rutgers has beaten on the road since winning at No. 13 Pittsburgh on Jan. 26, 2008.

In a second half that featured 10 lead changes, Mulcahys go-ahead 3-pointer started the 11-0 spurt that helped Rutgers take control. Geo Baker found Mulcahy for the go-ahead basket after stealing the ball from a driving Johnny Davis on the other end of the floor.

We had some costly mistakes in the second half toward the end of the game, Davis said. I felt like thats what really lost us the game.

Davis scored 11 points nearly 10 below his season average while getting hounded by Rutgers Caleb McConnell, who matched a career high with six steals. Tyler Wahl led Wisconsin with a career-high 23 points and Steven Crowl added 12.

Baker scored 16 and Clifford Omoryui had 10 for Rutgers, which shot 51% from the floor and went 7 of 12 on 3-point attempts. Rutgers built a nine-point lead in the first half before Wisconsin responded.

The start of the game specifically defensively we gave them way too much confidence, Wisconsin coach Greg Gard said. Any mistake we made, they made us pay for. Thats what good teams do.

BIG PICTURE

Rutgers: The Scarlet Knights once again showed they can deliver in crunch time. They beat Ohio State by scoring the final 10 points of the game. Their 11-0 spurt proved decisive Saturday.

Wisconsin: The Badgers hurt their cause with some uncharacteristically sloppy play. Wisconsin entered the day making 74.9% of its free-throw attempts but was just 9 of 17 on Saturday. Wisconsin was committing just 8.3 turnovers per game - the lowest average of any Division I team - but had eight in the second half alone Saturday. The Badgers also were 4 of 19 from 3-point range, with Brad Davison going 1 of 9. Davison, the Badgers second-leading scorer, is 4 of 28 on 3-point attempts over his last four games.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

A road win at No. 17 Michigan State and a home loss to Rutgers could cancel themselves out, causing Wisconsin to pretty much stay put in the next Top 25.

UP NEXT

Rutgers: Hosts Illinois on Wednesday.

Wisconsin: At Indiana on Tuesday.

___

More AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25

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Rutgers tops No. 14 Wisconsin, 3rd win in row over T25 team - Associated Press

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Bored Apes, BuzzFeed and the Battle for the Future of the Internet – VICE

Posted: at 8:36 am

On Friday, February 4, BuzzFeeds Katie Notopoulos published a story that ignited an online war. The reason was simple: In it, the technology reporter revealed the names of the main founders of the Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT collection to be two men named Greg Solano and Wylie Aronow. Almost immediately, the public identification of the previously pseudonymous Solano and Aronow led to self-righteous anger. Many vocal proponents of crypto, NFTs, and/or web3 believed Notopoulos had doxxed the 30-something-year-old menand put their physical safety at risk.

WTF is the point of this? What public interest is served? asked Antonio Garca Martnez, a former Facebook employee who was pushed out of Apple after employees publicly complained about his history of misogynistic statements.

I cant wait to eventually give @BuzzFeed the Gawker treatment, wrote Ryan Selkis, the CEO and co-founder of the web3-focused crypto intelligence company Messari, referring to the Peter Thiel-backed lawsuit that killed the digital news site.

Selkis and Martnez were far from alone in their condemnation. Jordan Fish, the crypto personality who goes by Cobie and runs the popular show UpOnly, called Notopoulos a whore for clicks. The founder of a crypto recruiting firm suggested the Bored Ape community could pool its money together through a decentralized autonomous organization and complete a Gordon Gekko-style hostile takeover of BuzzFeed. People sent Notopoulos threatening messages, saying that they were uncovering the addresses of her home and place of work and those of her parents and siblings. (Your parents [sic] suburbs are not that far away actually, one person told Notopoulos.)

The reaction felt like the next chapter in the web3 movement, which, for the purposes of simplicity, Motherboard will use as a catch-all to describe the heterogeneous community rallying around crypto, NFTs, the "metaverse," and hopes for a more decentralized web. Broadly, the movement has tried to position itselfand largely succeeded at positioning itselfas a collection of Good Guys pushing toward a fairer, more communal form of internet capitalism. But the reaction, in some quarters, to the BuzzFeed story was a dark turn.

To many many of web3s most vocal proponents, the fact that Notopoulos discovered the identities of Solano and Wylie through publicly-available records that linked the men to Yuga Labs did not seem to matter; nor did the fact that Yuga Labs CEO had confirmed the news prior to publication; nor did the fact that Bored Apes had taken the world by storm, helped along by countless celebrity promotions; nor did the fact that Yuga Labs was seeking a $5 billion valuation and in the process of closing a $200 million funding round led by one of the most influential venture firms in the world; nor did the real power Solano and Aronow are accruing, or the way that ramifies out into the real world, or the idea that they should be at least minimally accountable in the public eye.

I've been told on more than a few occasions that it's not okay for me to express my skepticism or opinions. - Software engineer Molly Whiteon the web3 and crypto community

While a few web3 proponents saw the identification (the purported doxxing) as justified, many others expressed strident belief that the only thing that mattered was that Solano and Aronow, perpetuating the fantasy at the heart of web3the idea of a decentralized world in which the ordinary and the powerful alike will only be as accountable as they choose to behad wished to remain anonymous, and that a journalist had not respected those wishes. Such anger around the issue of pseudonymity says a lot about what the next few years could look like.

Tomorrow's culture wars will take placeare already taking placein the world of web3.

The term web3 is often traced back to Gavin Wood, the co-founder of the Ethereum blockchain, who in 2014 wrote an online treatise in which he sketched out his vision for a post-Snowden web. In it, Wood stated that a core tenet of the webs next generation would be privacy, including encrypted communication through identity-based pseudonyms. "Information that we assume to be public, we publish. Information we assume to be agreed upon, we place on a consensus ledger. Information that we assume to be private, we keep secret and never reveal," he wrote.

Such a claim was of a piece with the ideas of the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto, who created Bitcoin and has never revealed their identity. But Edward Snowdens leaks about the true scope and power of the U.S. surveillance state made it even more clear to Wood that no government or organization can reasonably be trusted. In an interview with Wired late last year, Wood said his vision boiled down to less trust, more truth.

What we have to do is activate the web3 community to become a vital source of money, media and votes so that if a member of Congress takes a negative approach, then they pay a price at the polls. - Former presidential candidate Andrew Yang

I have a particular meaning of trust thats essentially faith. It's the belief that something will happen, that the world will work in a certain way, without any real evidence or rational arguments as to why it will do that, Wood said.

Today, Woods words could just as easily be used to explain the armies rallying around his web3 concept. In theory, web3 boils down to an internet do-over, as Brian Morrissey, the former president and editor-in-chief of Digiday Media, has succinctly put it. In it, users are the primary financial beneficiaries of their time, as opposed to the Web 2.0 schema, in which mega corporations like Facebook and Google benefit from a system in which they provide services in exchange for your personal data, to use one description on the Ethereum Foundations website.

Web3, they argue, would eliminate middlemenwhether lawyers or banks or gatekeeping sites run by executives and subject to human error,Charlie Warzel recently wrote in the Atlantic. Instead of relying on the whims of the platforms and their founders design and rules, both creators and consumers of content will own pieces of internet services.

The theoretical lack of central players is why people refer to web3 (and its nebulously associated idea, "the metaverse") as a decentralized vision in which blockchain technology allows people to build businesses and earn money online without needing middlemen like Jamie Dimon and Mark Zuckerberg (and their underlings) to help facilitate transactions and take a cut.

In reality, as tech reporter Mike Elgan has noted, The two biggest buzzwords in tech right nowthe metaverse and Web3describe platforms that dont exist, arent expected to exist even by boosters for a decade at least, and probably will never exist. Phil Libin, a longtime Silicon Valley entrepreneur who immigrated to the U.S. from the Soviet Union, has compared the passionate lobbying campaign for as-of-now theoretical web3 world to communist propaganda.

There is no single site that lets you do anything useful or at scale, Libin recently said. But you are supposed to believe in it like the Soviets were supposed to believe in a communist utopia.

There is no single site that lets you do anything useful or at scale. But you are supposed to believe in it like the Soviets were supposed to believe in a communist utopia. - A Silicon Valley entrepreneur who emigrated from the Soviet Union

To the extent they do exist, they mostly consist of centralized, monolithic institutions and ones that aspire to be. What is manifesting is not a world where middlemen are deprived of their share and data brokers are cut out of the action due to clever, privacy-protecting protocols, but rather a new online world in which seemingly anything can be financialized thanks to blockchain technology, which creates a digital infrastructure in which every product is simultaneously an investment opportunity, as Bloombergs Matt Levine has put it. Such a set-up, which places speculation at the core of digital life (itself becoming increasingly indistinguishable from real life due to various long-term trends accelerated drastically by the pandemic), has fostered an environment in which scammers are luring people into bogus investment opportunities in record numbers, as the Federal Trade Commission warned last year.

But the most visible effect of these developments is that theyve created a world in which the receipt for a crude image of a bored ape can be worth millions.

Difficult as it may be to believe, the Bored Ape phenomenon is less than a year old, although algorithmically-generated NFT collectibles have been around for years. Solano, Aronow, and the other two founding Apescrypto programmers who went by No Sass and Emperor Tomato Ketchup" and have since revealed their identitiesinvested roughly $40,000 upfront to produce the Bored Ape project, most of which went to illustrators. From that, they created a 10,000-image NFT collection that sold out in a single day and quickly became the most well-known symbol of the NFT movement thus far. Since then, celebrities including Stephen Curry, The Chainsmokers, Jimmy Fallon, Post Malone, Timbaland, Logan Paul, Eminem, Serena Williams, Paris Hilton, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Justin Bieber have shoved their way into the club.

Amid their sudden success, Solano and Aronow didnt shy away from the press, money, or notoriety, even if they kept their identities hidden. One of them described the founding Ape team as the Beastie Boys of NFTs and said Yuga Labs hoped to become a Web3 lifestyle company in a pseudonymous interview with Rolling Stone. Yuga Labs signed with the exceedingly well-connected manager of Madonna and U2 in order to pursue opportunities related to movies, music, television, and gaming, and announced plans to launch an Ethereum token. They hosted APE FEST 2021 in New York City, which included a VIP charity dinner at the high-class Carbone restaurant, a merch pop-up store, a Brooklyn warehouse party, and, of course, a Halloween party aboard a 1,000-person yacht. By November, the company's four founding members generated about $22 million from the secondary market alone, according to Rolling Stone. (The lead artist of the Bored Ape movement, Seneca, later described her own compensation as definitely not ideal, which some have used as evidence that NFTs do not always benefit artists as much as its defenders claim.)

The company also caught the eye of the people who run Andreessen Horowitz, the iconic venture firm that is, as of now, the closest thing the concept of web3 has to an institutional voice. The firm, which goes by a16z for short and recently started its own media arm, has not only launched a $2.2 billion crypto fund and invested in more than 50 crypto startupssaying crypto is poised to transform all aspects of our livesbut recently sent representatives on a five-day lobbying blitz in Washington D.C. in support of pro-web3 policies. (We support the appointment of a senior official to serve as a web3 czar, members of the company wrote in a related blog post.) It is no surprise, then, that a16z is reportedly in the process of leading a multi-billion dollar funding round in Yuga Labs that will give the company hundreds of millions of dollars to spend. All of thisthe money, the ties to celebrity, the dealings with the lords of Silicon Valleygives the company and its founders real power, and they're not alone.

The infighting and heterogeneity of the web3/crypto/NFT community can make it appear like anything but a united front. Former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, a Bitcoin devotee, hates web3; Marc Andreessen, of the web3-loving a16z investment firm, subsequently seems not to want anything to do with Dorsey. Moxie Marlinspike, the founder of the encrypted messaging service Signal, helped create the cryptocurrency MobileCoin, but suggested technologies like ethereum have been built with many of the same implicit trappings as web1 in a blog calling out centralization in the space. Selkis, the crypto enthusiast who wants to give BuzzFeed the Gawker treatment, has described Ron Paul as the patron political saint of crypto, while others argue in good faith that they hope to create a more diverse and equitable world in line with leftist tendencies. And technologically, web3 is not one thingthat anybody can agree on, except for that it involves crypto.

A common misconception about web3 is that its one monolithic concept which founders must choose whether to fully embrace, one venture capitalist wrote this month.

But there are signs that the cultural web3 movement could be creating a new alignment. Andrew Yang, the pro-venture, pro-crypto, rapaciously publicity-hungry entrepreneur-turned-twice failed political candidate, argued in a recent interview that the creation of a united front will be critical for the web3 movements move to power.

I worry about it de-humanizing our online world. - A web3 proponent on her concerns about pseudonymity

What we have to do is activate the Web3 community to become a vital source of money, media and votes so that if a member of Congress takes a negative approach, then they pay a price at the polls, Yang told the crypto news site Blockworks. Bitcoin advocates, though they often seem themselves as distinct from the web3 movement and even crypto more broadly, are nevertheless developing the political roadmap to follow.

Predictably, web3s rise has led to a commensurate number of high-profile skeptics long preoccupied with criticizing Bitcoin specifically. Numerous software experts, policy wonks, and artists have made similar arguments, not only about crypto but also NFTs (how sweet, now artists can become little capitalist assholes as well, Brian Eno recently said) and the concept of play-to-earn games so central to idealized visions for web3. There is an argument to be made that perhaps these people are being cynical and unimaginative, as are the many journalists who are prone to poke holes in new ideas. As Warzel recently wrote in the Atlantic, a video of David Letterman guffawing at the idea of the internet during a 1995 interview with Bill Gates (what the hell is that, exactly?) provides proof that the optimists can, in retrospect, be right.

But what has distinguished web3 so far is a unique combination of extreme optimism and self-righteous defensiveness. As Bloombergs Joe Weisenthal has written, the movements most prominent figureheads often seem obsessed with Who is against them. Who is in disagreement with them. Who isn't sufficiently respecting their work. Who hasn't joined them or invested yet. And at no time has that tendency to circle the wagons been more on view than in the aftermath of the BuzzFeed story. There was absolutely no reason to dox these guys, wrote Mike Solana, a vice president at Peter Thiels Founders Fund, soon after Notopouloss story published. Solana considered the argument that the BuzzFeed story was in the public interest to be disgusting and implied that the apparent frivolity of Yuga Labs contenttheyre literally cartoon apesjustified the founders pseudonymity.

Its not difficult to imagine similar arguments could have been leveled in defense of the earliest version of Facebook if Mark Zuckerberg had founded the social media company in 2021 under a pseudonym. Yet the fact that Facebook transformed in a few short years from a way for college students to share party photos to an election-altering juggernaut should provide evidence of the counterpoint: Popular but seemingly trivial internet enterprises can quickly become something much different. Chris Dixon, a partner at a16z and one of web3s most ardent evangelists, has said as much in the past, writing over a decade ago that the next big thing always starts out being dismissed as a toy.

The question then is when, exactly, public due diligence of organizations should begin: Now, or after the consequences of their creation are clear and unavoidable for all of us?

The controversy over Notopoulos's reporting and the ways in which its been expressed have the contours of a battle in a cultural war. The rhetoric, the threats against a female reporter, and the general tone of grievance from a group of people who feel besieged even as society is reordering itself around their whims are all reminiscent of Gamergate, and the many reactionary tendencies in which it culminated. There are real and obvious differences; to compare isnt to equate. A key similarity, though, is that web3 can be defined the same way Deadspins Kyle Wagner defined Gamergate, in a 2014 essay, as, by design, nearly impossible to defineso much so that any discussion of this subject turns into a debate over semantics.

A little over a week later, the reaction to the BuzzFeed story feels like the opening salvo of a new chapter in the battle over internet anonymity, which has long had to do with relatively arcane topics like government attempts to kill end-to-end encryption but is now breaking out into more fundamental questions about where the right to conceal ones identity ends, and why.

The next big thing always starts out being dismissed as a toy. - Chris Dixon, a partner at the venture firm Andreessen Horowitz

The idea that it doesnt end, ever, isnt incidental to web3, but absolutely central, and will probably become more so as more pseudonymous founders nab hundreds of millions in funding and revenue. (As Notopoulos herself pointed out in her story, Its possible that pseudonymous companies could become our new reality.) Yuga Labs offers a blueprint of where the internet economy is headeda world of decentralized autonomous organizations and NFTs and cryptocurrencies in which people cannot be certain who benefits or what anyones true motivations are.

web3 boosters say such pseudonymity is valuable. One venture capitalist argued shortly after the BuzzFeed story that internet pseudonymity is a public good and that journalists need to adapt to the new world. Another at a crypto-focused firm told Notopoulos it could help resolve the longstanding discriminatory issues that founders of color face. Female-led companies nabbed only 2 percent of venture funding last year, and Latinx and Black entrepreneurs received similarly dismal amounts. Considering the barriers women and people or color face, allowing founders to raise under pseudonyms could level the playing field, at least theoretically.

There is, of course, merit to such arguments, and it doesnt take much time to think of a myriad of ways in which technology that facilitates anonymity meaningfully contributes to society. One of the issues with a pseudonymity-prizing tech regime, though, is that it is difficult to discern whether such a system improves or perpetuates societal issues. Another is that it can undeniably serve powerful people who simply dont want anyone to be able to tell what theyre doing.

Its also worth wondering what perceived threat caused people to lash out at Notopoulos. Wanting to avoid NSA surveillance is an understandable goal. But pushing for a pseudonymous corporate power comes with ethical questions worth considering today, before web3 is fully built out. Already, one of the hallmarks of the new economy has been so-called rugpulls, in which the creator of a cryptocurrency project pools together peoples money for some higher cause (or not) and then disappears with it all. Some anonymous teams have been able to do so on numerous occasions, and in a recent instance a web3 architect was able to hide their past financial crimes by remaining anonymous, until they were exposed to the shock of investors. The issue has become significant enough that crypto projects sometimes advertise publicly known doxxed devs to make investors feel confident that their money is in good hands.

Its made running an NFT marketplace just as difficult. This month, the blockchain startup where Jack Dorsey sold his first tweet as an art NFTs for $2.9 million halted the buying and selling of NFTs due to rampant and fundamental issues. The companys CEO told Reuters that he could not figure out a way to stop people from selling NFTs of property they didnt actually own or that could reasonably be called securities.

"It kept happening. We would ban offending accounts but it was like we're playing a game of whack-a-mole, the CEO said. Every time we would ban one, another one would come up, or three more would come up."

In November, Annika Lewis, a self-described "recovering VC, expressed her own reservations about web3s growing acceptance of pseudonymity, even though she now works for GitCoin, a web3-focused platform. First and last names have been replaced with inscrutable .eth & .nft domains, and the faces of the humans behind the accounts have been replaced with cartoon JPEGs, she wrote. It's way under-discussed relative to its prominence, and, in ways, I worry about it de-humanizing our online world.

To the extent that web3 enthusiasts elevate, to a universal principle, the idea that anyone should be able to do anything they want online without anyone knowing about it, they are arguing for a world in which no one has to be wholly accountable for their actions. The evidence that we have, though, suggests that even in its infancy, web3 is creating a class of people who will have a lot to answer for. The system coming into existence, in fact, tends to mirror the one that came before it, with the powerful few controlling the vast majority of the wealth on offer. Blockchain turned out to be the most rapid recentralization of a decentralized technology that I've seen in my lifetime, Tim OReilly, who coined the term Web 2.0, said this week. The top 10 percent of NFT holders own four-fifths of the markets value, and 0.01 percent of Bitcoiners hold 27 percent of all the circulating coins, creating a new online ecosystem that Scott Galloway said described as more of a re-centralization of power into the hands of fewer than anything else.

Every member of Forbess 2021 crypto billionaires list is a man. A third of them attended Stanford or Harvard. Out of the 12 listed, only one isnt white. The web3 narrative feels like a Ted-X talk given to a survivalist group, Galloway added. Some new people have certainly struck it rich, Bored Apes included, but then again, so did the misfits who came to be portrayed in Martin Scorseses Wolf of Wall Street.

Blockchain turned out to be the most rapid recentralization of a decentralized technology that I've seen in my lifetime. - Tim OReilly, who coined the term Web 2.0.

Molly White, a software engineer, last year started documenting the issues she sees with web3 in her sarcastically named blog web3 is going just great. Over email, White told me that the animosity Notopoulos faced didnt surprise her in the least. I actually think the backlash is quite representative of the crypto space, which I've found to be so resistant and hostile towards criticism in ways I'm not sure I've seen before. Some proponents of crypto get enormously angry with those who so much as question the technology, much less criticize it, and I've been told on more than a few occasions that it's not okay for me to express my skepticism or opinions, White said.

Like many of web3s loudest advocates, White can appreciate the value of internet anonymity and privacy. [T]here are lots of very good and noble reasons people might want to stay anonymous: people living under oppressive governments, whistleblowers, journalists and researchers exposing extremists, for example, White wrote. I'm not sure if I'd put want to run a multi-million dollar company without any accountability on that list. I am surprised that so many in the crypto space are so fiercely protective of the anonymity of the people behind these huge, multi-million dollar projects, especially when a lot of the reasons that people involved with them have chosen to be anonymous have turned out to be really shady.

Selkis has positioned himself as one such protector, a particular sort of anti-cancel culture free speech advocate who mostly defends those on his side. One day after Notopoulos story came out, he dug up tweets Notopoulos had posted in 2009 arguing they were proof of some unnamed persistent double standard, then pushed the idea of a activist-oriented policy group with a legal fund that could fund privacy suits against outlets that doxx private citizens.

The sides had been drawn. And by Tuesday, Selkis had been invited onto Tucker Carlsons Fox News show for a jovial conversation. Soon after the segment started, he claimed that crypto media can help with censorship. The question is who hes worried will be censored, and who hed like to shut up.

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Film tells the story of Loyola’s 1963 championship team and its impact – LimaOhio.com

Posted: at 8:36 am

Paul Sullivan: Lucas Williamson narrates The Loyola Project, a new documentary about the 1963 Loyola Ramblers and the fight against racial injustice

Paul Sullivan Chicago Tribune (TNS)

CHICAGO The best documentaries tell you stories you thought you knew and turn them on their head.

The Loyola Project is one of those films.

Thanks to the recent NCAA Tournament success of the Loyola Ramblers, the story of the 1963 mens team that broke racial barriers while winning the national championship has been retold a time or two over the last five years. The 63 Ramblers won behind a coach who ignored the unwritten rules of the era and started four Black players en route to the title, beating a Mississippi State team along the way that defied its states law prohibiting it from playing against integrated teams.

Its a history lesson that melds the sports world with the civil rights movement, a precursor to the real-life struggles against racial inequality that would play out across the nation during the 60s.

The film can be viewed at 7 p.m. March 10 at the Wexner Center on Ohio States main campus. It is also scheduled to be show Feb. 28 at Xavier University in Cincinnati and March 23 at Otterbein University in Westerville.

But The Loyola Project doesnt paint a picture of an avuncular coach fighting for social justice with a group of kids trying to change the world.

Loyolas George Ireland isnt portrayed as a progressive leader but as a regular, veteran coach trying the keep his job the only way he can by recruiting and playing the best players, regardless of race.

Similarly, Loyola players arent portrayed as social justice warriors but as a bunch of college kids trying to win together while navigating the obstacles created by their unique team makeup in tumultuous times.

Despite a similarly happy ending on the court, this is not Hoosiers. And its not a valentine to the university, which cooperated with the filmmakers but did not have any say in its making.

Chicago feted its championship team, the film shows, but eventually turned its back on some of the young men who made it happen. Jerry Harkness, the star of the 1963 team, tells the story of facing discrimination while trying to find an apartment in Chicago after returning to the city after graduation.

Current Ramblers star Lucas Williamson, who received his bachelors degree in journalism last year and is working on a masters degree in marketing, serves as the narrator and a co-writer of the documentary.

Much of the filming took place during the 2020 season that ended prematurely because of the COVID-19 pandemic and fortunately includes Harkness, who died last year.

The blatant racism from that period is explored repeatedly, including a segment on a trip to New Orleans during the 1962-63 season when the white players stayed in a downtown hotel while Black players stayed in private homes in the Algiers neighborhood.

Thats one of my favorite stories, Williamson said in a Chicago Tribune interview. They had to go down South and couldnt stay in the same hotel. Socially, that obviously bothers me. It doesnt make sense. But from a basketball standpoint, there are so many things we need to do as a team when we go on the road watching film, team meals, not to mention team bonding, just hanging out. Its crazy they had to stay in different places.

1963 Ramblers player Ron Miller says in the film that Ireland told players he didnt know about the decision to separate the team until the last minute, an excuse Miller still does not buy. After Loyola won, Ireland denounced New Orleans segregation laws and said the Ramblers would never return.

But it later was revealed Xavier University had offered Loyola the opportunity to house all its players together and that Ireland declined for unknown reasons.

Later in the film, Irelands daughter is shown with a manila envelope with the words Loyola HM on it. The HM stood for hate mail. The film explains that Ireland intercepted 300 pieces of hate mail sent to his players.

Harkness confirmed he received hate mail signed KKK at his dorm. He informed Ireland of the letters, prompting the confiscations of all mail sent to his players.

The filmmakers viewed some of the letters, but the Ireland family denied multiple requests to show any in the film and also declined to return them to the living players. Miller said he has never seen them, even though the players have the right to possess mail addressed to them.

Williamson suggests in the film that Ireland might have seen the letters as a distraction for the players. But he then adds that the problem is, Ireland didnt (move on), pointing out the coach hired security for his daughters but not the Loyola players being threatened.

Miller flatly states in the film Ireland was not interested in race relations and was just thinking about himself, his family and just winning basketball games. He added that he didnt hold that against the coach.

The segment on The Game of Change against Mississippi State doesnt reveal anything new but is the heart of the story and important to retell. And in giving some of the Mississippi State players a chance to provide their perspectives, the film shows how they also were thrown into a situation no one could prepare for. Like Loyolas players, they just wanted to play in March Madness.

The film also documents the bravery of Mississippi State coach Babe McCarthy and his players for sneaking out of the state to play in Michigan knowing they could be arrested. The team was treated like heroes upon its return to Mississippi, the film states.

Unfortunately, there was no available video of the game, but the black-and-white photo of Harkness shaking hands with the white Mississippi State captain at the start of the game says a thousand words.

I said this is more than a game, Harkness recalls in the film. This is history.

Its hard to believe this happened in our lifetime, but it did and deserves to be retold for future generations. Williamson doesnt sugarcoat things at the end of the film, rhetorically asking if the accomplishments of the 1963 team changed anything for Black Americans, then answering his question with two words: Its complicated.

There will always be more work to do, more unwritten rules to break, more ways to make the world better for the next generation, he says in the film.

Loyola coach George Ireland, right, talks to his player during the 1963 NCAA mens basketball national championship game against Cincinnati. Players, from left to right, are: John Egan, Vic Rouse, Jerry Harkness and Ron Miller.

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