The online editorial staff comprises Betsy Shirley, Jenna Barnett, Josiah R. Daniels, Mitchell Atencio, Heather Brady, Kierra Bennning, and Zachary Lee.

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Death Toll in Haiti Rises to 478 in Wake of Hurricane Matthew

by the Web Editors 10-07-2016

Photo via IFRC

As the east coast of Florida braces for Hurricane Matthew to pass, the people of Haiti are assessing the toll the hurricane has already taken on their country. After the worst storm in more than 50 years ripped through the island nation, Reuters has reported at least 478 have died.

A country all too familiar with natural disasters now faces picking up the pieces again. Some cities like Jérémie saw 80 percent of buildings levelled. 

In Wake of S.C. Shooting, Community Remembers 6-Year-Old — With Superheroes

by the Web Editors 10-05-2016

Image via /Shutterstock.com

On Sept. 28, 6-year-old Jacob Hall was shot on the playground of Townville Elementary School in South Carolina. He died Oct. 1, after spending days on life support.

At his memorial service Oct. 5, Hall, who is said to have loved superheroes, was surrounded by superheroes of his own — family, friends, and classmates of Hall's arrived in capes and costumes to remember his life and to help reassure eachother that "the good will win," reports ABC News. 

Baylor's Former Title IX Coordinator Accuses Senior Leaders of 'Protecting the Brand Instead of Their Students'

by the Web Editors 10-05-2016

McLane Stadium at Baylor University. Image by Rockin'Rita / Flickr.

Baylor University’s former Title IX coordinator, Patty Crawford — who maintained the post during the recent campus sexual assault crisis that resulted in the ouster of president Ken Starr, football coach Art Briles, and athletic director Ian McCaw — resigned earlier this week after filing complaint against the school and refusing to sign a confidentiality agreement. Crawford's resignation came the same day two more women joined a class-action lawsuit against the school for failing to adequately address sexual assault allegations, bringing the total number plaintiffs to eight.

Weekly Wrap 9.30.16: The 10 Best Stories You Missed This Week

by the Web Editors 09-30-2016

1. Using Sound to Explore One of Syria’s Most Notorious Prisons

“The user is immersed in both an auditory and visual experience narrated by the detainees. As you explore the different locations you can hear water dripping through the pipes, the faint sound of birds or the footsteps of approaching guards.”

2. Social Media Got You Down? Be More Like Beyonce.

I mean … isn’t that always the answer to the question? But really, a very important read for the swipe generation.

3. Hip Hop and Liberation of Women in Kabul

How some women are defying deprecated Taliban mores and making their voices heard.

2 Students, 1 Teacher Shot at Elementary School in South Carolina

by the Web Editors 09-28-2016

Image via /Shutterstock.com

Two students and a teacher were injured in a shooting at Townville Elementary School in Anderson, South Carolina on Sept. 28, reports WYFF News 4. The unnamed teenage suspect has been taken into custody. According to authorities, a death at a home three miles away from the school is connected to the shooting.

Video Released Shows the Moments After Terrence Sterling Was Shot By D.C. Officer

by the Web Editors 09-27-2016

Image via ValeStock/Shutterstock.com

On Sept. 27, D.C. officials released video of Terrence Sterling’s final moments after being shot by a police officer on Sept. 11. Sterling was on his motorcycle when it struck the door of a police cruiser. Officer Brian Trainer shot him shortly afterward.

 

Mindfulness Over Matter: Meditation Successfully Replaces Suspension at Elementary School

by the Web Editors 09-26-2016

Image via wavebreakmedia/Shutterstock.com

The number of student suspensions for the 2016-2017 school year at Robert W. Coleman Elementary School in Baltimore, Md., as well as the number of student suspensions at the school for the 2015-2016 school year, is zero. This downward trend began when the elementary school incorporated a focus on meditation into its day-to-day routine. Instead of being punished for disruptions or misbehavior, students are sent to the “Mindful Moment Room” where they meditate and do breathing exercises.

Weekly Wrap 9.23.16: The 10 Best Stories You Missed This Week

by the Web Editors 09-23-2016

1. WATCH: 6-Year-Old Boy Asks Obama to Bring Syrian Boy to Live With Him

You need this today.

2. The Price of Mass Deportation

The U.S. could lose $4.7 trillion if every undocumented worker were deported.

3. Michelle Alexander Leaving Law to Teach at Union Theological Seminary

The New Jim Crow author says, of her decision, “This is not simply a legal problem, or a political problem, or a policy problem. At its core, America’s journey from slavery to Jim Crow to mass incarceration raises profound moral and spiritual questions about who we are, individually and collectively, who we aim to become, and what we are willing to do now.”

Officer Involved in Terence Crutcher Shooting Charged with Manslaughter

by the Web Editors 09-22-2016

Image via jbdphotography/Shutterstock.com

The District Attorney of Tulsa County announced on Sept. 22 that Officer Betty Shelby will be charged with manslaughter in the first degree for fatally shooting Terence Crutcher.

Officer Shelby shot and killed Terence Crutcher on Sept. 16 after Crutcher’s SUV stalled on a street and police arrived to investigate. Dashcam and helicopter footage of the shooting was released by the Tulsa Police Department on Sept. 19.

State of Emergency in Charlotte: 'Release Dashcam...Video ASAP'

by the Web Editors 09-22-2016

Police in riot gear, Oakland, Calif. Image via Thomas Hawk/Flickr

The Los Angeles Times reports one man critically wounded and at least seven more injured in the protests, which continued for a second night in the face of growing tensions and anger over police handling of the circumstances of Scott's death. Protesters threw rocks and smashed windows, and police officers in riot gear fired tear gas and nonlethal bullets into the crowd.

Texas Governor Threatens to Withdraw From Refugee Resettlement Efforts

by the Web Editors 09-21-2016

Image via /Shutterstock.com

On Sept. 21, Texas Governor Greg Abbott released a statement claiming that refugees “pose grave danger, like the Iraqi refugee with ties to ISIS who was arrested…after he plotted to set off bombs at two malls in Houston.”

This announcement comes months after Texas lost a court battle in June, in which the state attempted to keep Syrian refugees out entirely.

Protests Erupt in Charlotte After Fatal Shooting of Keith Lamont Scott by Police

by the Web Editors 09-21-2016

Facebook Live video of the protest from Fox46.

Protests erupted in Charlotte, N.C., after a black man was shot and killed by police while they were serving a warrant to a different person, according to The Root. The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department released a statement saying Keith Lamont Scott, 43, was armed and "posed an imminent deadly threat to the officers who subsequently fired their weapon striking the subject." Witnesses and family members say Scott was unarmed and holding a book, among them, the victim's daughter, Lyric Scott, who streamed via Facebook Live from the scene. 

White Tulsa Police Officer Fatally Shoots Unarmed Black Man

by the Web Editors 09-19-2016

Screenshot, video released by Tulsa police. Image via OklahomaNews9.

On Sept. 19, the police department of Tulsa, Okla., released dashcam footage of a white officer fatally shooting a 40-year-old unarmed black man. Terence Crutcher was shot and killed by Officer Betty Shelby after his SUV stalled on a street. A stun gun was also used on Crutcher by Officer Tyler Turnbough.

Weekly Wrap 9.16.16: The 10 Best Stories You Missed This Week

by the Web Editors 09-16-2016

1. ‘We’re the Only Plane in the Sky’

Where was the president in the eight hours after the Sept. 11 attacks? The strange, harrowing journey of Air Force One, as told by the people who were on board.

2. White House Women Want to Be in the Room Where It Happens

Shine theory in action. (And OK, we know you read this one. But it’s worth re-reading/committing to memory. See you in the boardroom Monday.)

3. The Falling Man

The instantly iconic, excruciatingly terrible photo of a man falling headfirst from a burning World Trade Center ran in many newspapers on Sept. 12, 2001, and then never again. Tom Junod’s heartbreaking quest to identify the man is one of Esquire’s most recognizable pieces (first published in 2003, they bring it out, slightly polished, every Sept. 11). "Maybe he didn't jump at all, because no one can jump into the arms of God. Oh, no. You have to fall."

Sandra Bland's Family Reaches $1.9 Million Settlement

by the Web Editors 09-15-2016

Image via a katz/Shutterstock.com

A wrongful death lawsuit filed by Sandra Bland’s family was settled for $1.9 million, a family attorney announced on Sept. 15. 

Sandra Bland was pulled over by a state trooper in Waller County, Texas for failing to signal before she changed lanes. 

When Bland made an attempt to record the state trooper’s interaction with her, she was arrested. Three days later she was found dead in her cell by hanging.

A Week of Anti-Muslim Attacks Coincides With Sept. 11 Anniversary

by the Web Editors 09-14-2016

Image via miker/Shutterstock.com

"When we allow one faith community to be targets then we open the doors for others to be targeted. I believe the worst is yet to come unless more people actively intervene with their voices, their votes, and in public acts of solidarity with their Muslim neighbors."

#AfterSeptember11: Stories Share the Heavy Cost of U.S. Response to 9/11

by the Web Editors 09-13-2016

Image via /Shutterstock.com

Sept. 11 left the country in shock, raw, reeling, and devastated from the scale of terror and the overwhelming loss of life. The 15-year anniversary of Sept. 11 provided occasion for mourning, weeping, and sitting with the grieved. But on Sept. 12, many took to Twitter to express the catastrophic effects of the U.S. acting out of its trauma and grief for the past 15 years.

Federal Government Temporarily Suspends Dakota Access Pipeline

by the Web Editors 09-09-2016

Image via Sergey_R/Shutterstock.com

An effort by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe to stop the construction of a four-state Dakota Access oil pipeline was denied by a federal judge on Sept. 9, according to the Chicago Tribune.

Shortly following the court decision, the U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Army, and the U.S. Department of the Interior issued a joint statement ordering suspension of the construction of the pipeline.

Weekly Wrap 9.9.16: The 10 Best Stories You Missed This Week

by the Web Editors 09-09-2016

5. Dear Mark Zuckerberg: I Will Not Comply With Your Requirement to Remove This Image

“The media have a responsibility to consider publication in every single case. This may be a heavy responsibility. Each editor must weigh the pros and cons. This right and duty, which all editors in the world have, should not be undermined by algorithms encoded in your office in California.”

6. We All Should Be Watching ‘Atlanta’

Donald Glover said he created his new FX series in part because he “wanted to show white people, you don’t know everything about black culture.”

7. How an End-Times Cult That Believes Cats Are Divine Beings Ended Up in Nashville

Apocalypse meow—

Watch Civil Rights Legend Rep. John Lewis Crowd Surf on 'Colbert'

by the Web Editors 09-08-2016

Screenshot via The Late Show with Stephen Colbert/YouTube

Rep. John Lewis — civil rights leader, gun legislation sit-in organizer, graphic novelist ... crowd surfer.

"Sometimes you have to find a way to get into trouble — good trouble, necessary trouble," Lewis said on a recent segment of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert shortly before diving off the stage, at Colbert's encouragement.