| 10 things you need to know today | | | | | | | | | | | 8.Grandmother of slain Sacramento man calls for police reforms | The grandmother of Stephon Clark, the unarmed 22-year-old black man fatally shot by Sacramento police in his own backyard, called for changes in how the California city's officers confront suspects. She suggested using police dogs, Tasers, or non-lethal fire. Clark was hit with a hail of bullets fired by two officers who, body-cam video showed, appeared to genuinely believe the cellphone he was holding was a gun. "They didn't have to kill him like that, they didn't have to shoot him that many times," his grandmother, Sequita Thompson, said at a news conference. The NAACP has called for the officers to be criminally charged, although independent analysts said the genuine alarm perceived in the video suggests legal consequences are unlikely. [The Associated Press] | | 9.UConn advances to 11th straight women's Final Four | Connecticut crushed defending national champion South Carolina on Monday, 94-65, to advance to the Final Four of the NCAA women's basketball tournament for the 11th straight year. The Huskies (36-0) pulled away with unstoppable perimeter shooting, hitting 12 of 20 three-point shots. UConn will be playing for its 12th national title, and its fifth in six seasons. UConn plays Notre Dame in the national semifinals on Friday. Mississippi State, which ended UConn's 111-game winning streak with an overtime win in a 2017 Final Four game, plays Louisville in the other semifinal game. "I think we definitely have something to prove, not only to the rest of the world, but to ourselves as well," said UConn's Gabby Williams, who had 23 points. [The New York Times] | | 10.Linda Brown, center of Brown v. Board of Education case, dies at 76 | Linda Brown, who as a little girl was at the center of the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision that ended school segregation, has died in her hometown of Topeka, Kansas, her family and the Peaceful Rest Funeral Chapel said Monday. She was 76. Brown, who was African-American, was just 9 when her father tried to enroll her at an all-white elementary school. The school board said no, and her father took it to court. The case was combined with four similar cases and went to the Supreme Court, which ruled that "separate educational facilities are inherently unequal." Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer said Brown's life showed that "by serving our community we can truly change the world." [The Topeka Capital-Journal, CNN] | | | | MOST POPULAR | | | CAPTURED: A PHOTO BLOG | Jacob Lambert | | | | | Is this email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser. Unsubscribe from this list | Update subscription preferences | Privacy Policy © 2015 THE WEEK PUBLICATIONS, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THE WEEK ® IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK OWNED BY FELIX DENNIS. | | |
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