Archive for the ‘Tim Wise’ Category

How One Restaurant Is Serving Resistance in the Capitol – Munchies_ Food by VICE

Inside Busboys and Poets. Photo by Andrea K. Castillo.

For a year and a half, Americans endured a political campaign driven by xenophobia, sexism, and the erasure of the cultural, ethnic, and personal diversity upon which this country was built.

Back then, it was just talk. Now, with President Trump having signed more than 22 executive actions in just over two weeks, its policy.

Since Trumps election, the political tenor of the DMV area (DC, Maryland, Virginia) has seen a palpable shift as red-state supporters and lobbyists increasingly inject themselves into largely blue territory. In the belly of this beast lies Busboys and Poets, a restaurant ready and willing to productively channel the chaos and offer up more than just a place to come eat your feelings.

I wanted a place where people could exchange ideas, have a conversation, and have a great meala place to meet people and intersect with different parts of the community that they dont normally intersect with, says Busboys owner Andy Shallal, an Iraqi immigrant who opened his popular DC eatery in 2005 and now boasts six locations. Ive always viewed restaurants here in DC as very segregatedsegregated politically and segregated socially. I viewed [Busboys] as an experiment, to see if it could bring all these people together.

Shallal says he was moved to highlight unityin an industry scene that rarely displays itby offering a space with live events that were artistic in nature along with a menu that juxtaposed visuals and quotes from Black poets like Maya Angelou and Langston Hughes with eclectic food offerings. In addition to typical American fare (burgers, pizza, paninis), Busboys also offers a plethora of thoughtful vegan dishes like coconut tofu bites with plum red-pepper sauce, and a vegan tuna salad sandwich made with chickpeas, relish, nori, carrot, celery and vegan mayo.

Busboys mission goes well beyond the walls of its restaurants. This January marked the third iteration of the Peace Ball, an alternative inaugural celebration that Busboys holds in partnership with the Smithsonian since the days of President George W. Bush. The ball totes the tagline Voices of Hope and Resistance and this year it delivered nothing short of that, with distinguished guests like poet Sonia Sanchez, authors Alice Walker, Zainab Salbi, and Naomi Klein, personalities like Melissa Harris-Perry, Tim Wise, and the legendary Angela Davis, as well as performances by Esperanza Spalding and Solange Knowles.

Set at the National Museum of African American History and Culture, voices rang loudly for resistance against the incoming Trump administration. Alicia Garza, co-founder of the Black Lives Matter movement, remarked, I refuse to go backwards. We stand on the shoulders of giants, people who gave their lives to make sure that we could be in a space like this together. People who gave their lives to make sure that we could live in dignity. That means, for me, I am not ready to go backwards.

Garza added, This is the moment we challenge ourselves to do things differently, to get to know people we didnt know very well before. This is a moment to test our values.

Along with organizing star-studded events like the Peace Ball, Busboys relishes in intersectionality on a smaller scale, within its restaurants. It offers an impressively curated collection of books for sale in collaboration with independent bookstore, Politics and Prose, as well as regular spoken word events and book readings. The goal: encouraging thought while maintaining high-quality and accessible cuisine. Entrees rarely go above $20, with most menu offerings below $15.

We cant be everything for everybody, obviously, says Shallal. But it is possible for two people to share a meal here and spend $10 to $15 dollars, if they order correctly.

Even at those pricesand on top of the food costs of locally sourced ingredientsBusboys is able to ensure fair wages, healthcare benefits, and a safe work environment for its employees.

In light of Trumps nomination of fast food executive Andy Puzder for labor secretary, these arent just small concessions. Puzder, who has opposed minimum wage increases and has advocated replacing human labor with machines, exemplifies the kind of exploitative food industry practices that Shallal refuses to mimic at Busboys.

Trumps actions also strike a personal chord for Shallal. He left Iraqone of the seven Muslim-majority countries included on Trumps recent travel banin the 1960s to make America his home. Immigrants are the insurance policy of this country. They appreciate the values that make this country a place they want to call home, Shallal says. They care about these things and do not take them for granted. We cannot be guided by fear and a false patriotic wreath, but rather by the power of kindness and generosity that has been the hallmark of this nation.

In many ways, Busboys and Poets acts as a tangible expression of social change. Shallal has worked hard at making his restaurants hubs of inclusion under two very different administrationsthough the third may prove to be the most challenging.

At Januarys Peace Ball, Angela Davis took the stage and proclaimed, An inauguration is happening tomorrowso they say. But this is a peoples inauguration. This is an inauguration of the resistance to come. The resistance to those who proliferate Islamophobia and racism, the resistance to the billionaires, and those who are mortgage profiteers and healthcare privateersresistance to this last gasp of a dying white, male supremacy.

With resistance, there must be joya joy that motivates, nourishes, and fuels us to go on. Food, the great unifier, is that joy we all need.

More:
How One Restaurant Is Serving Resistance in the Capitol - Munchies_ Food by VICE

About Town – Emporia Gazette

Flute concert tonight

Celebrated Kansas flutist Nancy Mulholland will perform at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Emporia State Universitys Heath Recital Hall, 120 E. 12th Ave. This free concert two works for piccolo: Desperate Measures: Diary of One Mad Mother and Mike Mowers Sonata for Piccolo. Mulholland will also perform a Mozart Andante, Katherine Hoovers Winter Spirits and, on the contrabass flute, Jonathan Cohens Tiny. Information: 341-5431.

Disaster boot camp

The Kansas Capital Area Chapter of the American Red Cross is offering free disaster response training to interested new volunteers in the Emporia area at an upcoming boot camp event.

The two-day training will be offered from 5 - 9 p.m. Friday, Feb. 24 and again from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 25 at the Lyon County Law Enforcement Center located at 425 Mechanic St. Volunteers will go from zero Red Cross experience to being a fully trained disaster services volunteer in just two days.

For more details and to register for the course, please contact Disaster Programs Specialist Ariane Burson at 785-354-9244 or Ariane.Burson@redcross.org.

City commission meeting

The Emporia City Commission meets at 11 a.m. Wednesday in conference room 1AB, 516 Mechanic St. The agenda includes the fiscal year in review and planning future commission meetings.

Admire UMC breakfast

The Admire United Methodist Church men will serve breakfast from 7 to 9:30 a.m. Saturday at the church. All are welcome to a breakfast of eggs, sausage, biscuits, gravy, pancakes, juice and coffee, all for a donation to church and community projects.

Bread Line

The Salvation Army has a bread line from 1 - 3 p.m. (while supplies last) on Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 327 Constitution St. Information: 342-3093.

Social Equity lecture

Activist and sociologist Tim Wise will speak on social justice and equity 6 - 8 p.m. Thursday in Albert Taylor Hall, Plumb Hall, 1 Kellogg Circle. The talk is free and open to the public. Parking is free in university lots after 5 p.m.

Republicans meet

Kansas State Representative Tony Barton will speak at the monthly meeting of the Lyon County Republican Party 7 p.m. tonight in the Lyon County Courthouse Annex. All interested persons are welcome to attend. For more information visit the Facebook page Lyon County Republican Precinct Committee or call Peggy Mast, 343-2465.

Pancakes in Olpe

The Eagle Creek Saddle Clubs pancake supper is Sunday, Feb. 19 at the Olpe Chicken House. The all-one-can-eat pancakes will be served from 4 - 7 p.m and are $3. The menu also includes smoked sausage patties, scrambled eggs, homemade pies and drink for an additional cost. For more information call 340-3002 or 620-475-3752.

RDA meets Friday

The Regional Development Association of East Central Kansas meets at 7 a.m. Friday in the Trusler Center, 719 Commercial St. The agenda includes an update on the Feb. 3 Rapid Response meeting, a job fair for Feb. 17, a Feb. 16 webinar Promoting Workforce Opportunities for Underutilized Groups and the Emporia Chambers survey of employers.

See the original post:
About Town - Emporia Gazette

Orion mayor: Towns defying proposed fees – Quad-Cities Online

ORION -- Henry County mayors are refusing to pay the countys proposed new charge for police dispatching.

Mayor James Cooper told trustees Monday that a letter to the county which he delivered to the courthouse last week includes the mayors refusal to pay. He said Annawan Mayor Tim Wise gave him the letter, and he collected signatures and turned it in to the county.

Orion is being asked to pay $4,400 to start with this year, eventually working up to an estimated $17,500.

He cited a number of reasons for the refusal. No one had advance warning. The calls include those outside municipal boundaries. There are charges each time an officer logs on and off. In the case of both Orion and Cambridge, the towns already have contracts with the county that include wording about paying for dispatching. Orion is paying about $200,000 per year for police coverage. He said he didnt know how the county distributed the costs or even how it arrived at the original sum for police dispatching. Towns like Bishop Hill, Osco and Lynn Center were not included.

There are just a lot of things in there that need to be addressed and clarified, he said. The only fair way to do this is everyone in the county pays to do this.

We do understand costs are an issue and are willing to be included in that fee, but we need to be included in how youre figuring that, he added.

Trustee Steve Newman suggested the change might cause the village to re-think its mode of policing.

We may bring back the idea of maybe having our own police, maybe having full-time coverage; I dont know, he said.

Mayor Cooper said he felt the county is aware of the unpopularity of its concept, and it may not move forward from a Feb. 9 public safety meeting to the Feb. 16 county board for a vote, but stranger things have happened.

The board also got an update on the failure of the countys storm siren. Mayor Cooper reported Supreme Radio is coming to Orion at no charge to change the radio frequency to enable the fire department to set off sirens. The mayor said he was adamant that this is a temporary fix because the village doesnt have around-the-clock personnel to monitor events.

He said county emergency management director Mat Schnepple and public safety chairman Marshall Jones met with him in Orion and stood by the countys decision to wait for a federal grant to fix the emergency siren. He said he felt if anything were to happen in the interim, residents would blame him as the mayor and his son-in-law as fire chief.

Trustee Bob Mitton said he got blank looks when he first confronted the county after noticing the absence of Tuesday's test sirens. Mayor Cooper repeated his dismay that it had been six months after the county first found out about the problem in July. He said he was confident the three affected villages including Annawan and Woodhull would have come up with the $5,500 to repair the siren had they known about it.

It could be a year before thats fixed is what were looking at now, he said.

Read more from the original source:
Orion mayor: Towns defying proposed fees - Quad-Cities Online

MEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING: Crimson dominate Bulldogs at Kiphuth – Yale Daily News (blog)

Harry Browne Feb 06, 2017

Staff Reporter

Harry Browne

Despite recording its best performance against No. 23 Harvard since 2014, the Yale mens swimming and diving team fell to the Crimson for the 25th consecutive year on Sunday, 225128.

The Bulldogs were overmatched from the beginning, recording just 58 points to Harvards 123 on the first day of competition. The Elis put forth a stronger Sunday effort and scored 70 more points, but it was not enough to overtake the Crimson, which coasted to victory on the back of a deeper squad.

[Im] encouraged. We swam in most cases faster than we have all year, in some cases faster than we swam last year at the end of the season, head coach Tim Wise said. We need to spend the next two and a half weeks getting better. We need to come in here every day focused on training and working hard and doing the little things right. We took a big step forward this weekend.

Competition began Saturday evening and saw Harvard assert its dominance from the get-go. In the opening 200-yard freestyle relay one of four all-important relays that award extra points to the winner the Crimson easily took the top spot, its A relay team finishing 0.71 seconds ahead of Yales. Eli swimmers hung tough in the ensuing 200-yard freestyle, with Kei Hyogo 18, Jonathan Rutter 18 and Adrian Lin 19 taking second, third and fourth, respectively. However, none could match the astonishing speed of Harvards Dean Farris, who roared to a time of 1:34.01 the eighth-fastest time in the country this season. Subsequently, Harvard showed its mettle in the stroke events, taking the top two spots in the 100-yard backstroke and 100-yard breaststroke as well as the top four places in the 200-yard butterfly.

Aaron Greenberg 18 nabbed first in the 50-yard freestyle while Hyogo took gold in the 200-yard IM and the 1650-yard freestyle, winning swimmings longest event by a mere 0.39 seconds, but the Crimson could count on racking up enough points among the lower finishers to counter all of Yales gains. By the end of the evening, Harvard led by 65 points, more than double the Elis total.

Im really proud of the way we competed this weekend even if the final outcome wasnt what we wanted, captain Alex Goss 17 said. Looking ahead to the end of the month, we had a lot of individual successes over the past two days, which bodes very well for our season finale.

On Sunday, the swimmers and divers returned to the Kiphuth Exhibition Pool for another nine events. Once again, Harvard began with an overpowering relay performance, taking first by more than two seconds. Yale, however, put forward a series of impressive showings on the second day. Hyogo and Rutter took gold and silver in the 400-yard IM, leading to an outburst of cheers from the Yale section. Rutter later claimed the top of the podium in the 200-yard breaststroke. Nonetheless, the Crimson held on to its massive lead, cruising to a 225128 victory.

Despite the uneven scoring, the excitement remained on the pool deck, particularly during a riveting 500-yard freestyle. With just 75 yards remaining in the race, Hyogo found himself battling three hard-charging Crimson swimmers in a four-way battle for the top spot. Fans from both teams exploded into deafening cheers as the swimmers crashed towards the finish, but it was the Yale fans that got their wish as Hyogo barely edged Harvards Brennan Novak at the end by 0.09 seconds.

I was able to see Brennan the whole way, Hyogo said. I was quite fatigued after the 400 IM, so I wasnt too sure if I could hold on until the end. Luckily, I was able to hold him off at the end, but he put up a good fight. Its going to be an interesting race come Ivies.

Diving was highlighted by two third-place performances by Chris LaBella 20 in the 1-meter and 3-meter events with scores of 297.52 and 299.93, respectively. Wayne Zhang 18 just missed the podium with a fourth-place finish in the 1-meter.

The Bulldogs conclude their dual-meet season with a record of 92, second in the Ivy League to Harvards 100. All that remains on the schedule are the Ivy League Championships, the NCAA Zone Diving Championships and the NCAA National Championships to which Yale only sent two swimmers last season: former captain Brian Hogan 16 and Hyogo. The Elis will look to improve on 2016s fourth-place finish at the Ivy League Championships, now a likely scenario after a season during which they felled every Ancient Eight opponent other than the Crimson.

The Ivy League Championships will commence on Feb. 22 in Cambridge.

More:
MEN'S SWIMMING & DIVING: Crimson dominate Bulldogs at Kiphuth - Yale Daily News (blog)

Anti-racist talk scheduled at College St. Elizabeth – New Jersey Hills

Tim Wise, an anti-racist writer and activist, will speak at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 16 in Dolan Performance Hall at the College of St. Elizabethat 2 Convent Road in the Convent Station section of Morris Townshipas the second guest in the College Womens Leadership Speaker Series.

His topic will be Speaking Treason Fluently: Anti-Racist Reflections from an Angry White Male. The free event is open to the public.

Wise has trained many different industry professionals on methods for dismantling racism in their institutions, and anti-racism training. He has written seven books, including Under the Affluence: Shaming the Poor, Praising the Rich, and Sacrificing the Future of America.

He has been featured in several documentaries including White Like Me: Race, Racism, and White Privilege in America, released by the Media Education Foundation.

The Womens Leadership Speaker Series will conclude with Marquita Pool-Eckerts Post-Truth: Civic Responsibilities and Human Rights at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, March 15 in Dolan Performance Hall.

Pool-Eckert has recently retired from a 30-year career as an award-winning producer for CBS News Sunday Morning and CBS Evening News.

She has worked in 15 countries covering war, famine, political campaigns, domestic economy issues, the arts and breaking news.

Follow this link:
Anti-racist talk scheduled at College St. Elizabeth - New Jersey Hills