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Tag: University of Chicago

  • Memorial service held for late Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough

    Memorial service held for late Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — The community said goodbye Sunday to Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough.

    Yarbrough’s family held a public memorial service at the University of Chicago in Hyde Park.

    Local leaders paid their respects, including Governor JB Pritzker, along with Senators Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth.

    The politicians said Yarbrough’s legacy will impact generations to come.

    Yarbrough died last weekend at age 73 from an undisclosed illness. She leaves behind six children and 12 grandchildren.

    RELATED | Visitation service held for late Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough in Westchester

    Yarbrough was the first African-American and the first woman to serve as Cook County clerk.

    People paid tribute Friday to Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough.

    READ MORE | Who will replace Karen Yarbrough as Cook County Clerk? Frontrunners include aldermen, commissioners

    Copyright © 2024 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    WLS

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  • Detroit illegally inflated taxes on lowest value homes, study suggests

    Detroit illegally inflated taxes on lowest value homes, study suggests

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    Detroit activists are calling for action after a recent study suggested the city is cheating lower-income residents by illegally and disproportionately overtaxing homes worth less than $35,000.

    By contrast, owners of the highest value homes in Detroit are far less likely to be overtaxed, according to the study by the University of Chicago’s Harris School of Public Policy.

    The study found that Detroit overassessed the value of 72% of the homes worth less than $34,700. A vast majority of the homes worth more than $35,000 were not overassessed, according to the study.

    “We find evidence of systematic regressivity: high-priced homes are more likely to be underassessed and low-priced properties are more likely to be overassessed,” the study states.

    In a statement to Metro Times, Detroit Assessor Alvin Horhn dismissed the claims in the study as “utter nonsense” and “politically driven,” saying that “any claim that homes today are systemically overassessed is just false.”

    Horhn said the methods used by the University of Chicago “violate Michigan tax law and the practices that every assessor in Michigan is legally required to follow.”

    On Monday, activists for the Coalition for Property Tax Justice, a group that advocates for homeowners in Detroit, called on the Detroit City Council to address the overassessments by sending the findings to the Board of Review for inspection.

    The council approved a new property tax ordinance, supported by the coalition, in November 2023 that allows council members to send the data to the Board of Review. In the past, that process had to be initiated by individual homeowners.

    The council will consider the proposal Tuesday, and dozens of residents are expected to speak in support of the measure.

    Activists are also urging Mayor Mike Duggan’s administration to reduce assessments by 30% for all houses valued below $35,000.

    Calling the latest findings “shocking,” Bernadette Atuahene, a property law scholar who has studied Detroit’s property tax foreclosure crisis, pledged to help residents end the overassessments.

    “We now have evidence that the lower value homes continue to be systemically overassessed, and we are here to put a stop to it,” Atuahene said at a news conference on Monday afternoon.

    She added, “We have tens of thousands of homes that are still being overassessed. We need systemic change.”

    Atuahene was among numerous activists who previously called on the city to correct inflated property value assessments that began more than a decade ago. Between 2010 and 2016, the city of Detroit overtaxed homeowners by at least $600 million.

    The Michigan Constitution prohibits property from being assessed at more than 50% of its market value. Between 2010 and 2016, the city assessed properties at as much as 85% of their market value.

    During the same period, roughly one quarter of the homes in Detroit were foreclosed due to delinquent property taxes, a rate not seen since the Great Depression.

    Activists are worried about another wave of foreclosures based on inflated property taxes on the lower value houses, which tend to be owned by people struggling financially. To stem the tide, activists are calling on Wayne County Treasurer Eric Sabree to halt foreclosures of owner-occupied homes.

    “It’s wrong for the county to foreclose on homes that the city has been illegally overtaxing,” AJ Braverman, chief of staff for the Coalition for Property Tax Justice, said.

    Horhn countered that the city has fixed its assessments and stands by them.

    “We spent millions modernizing the process and our new assessments have been reviewed and approved by the State Tax Commission,” Horhn said. “The Assessor’s office has added staff, new technology and has a robust property tax exemption program for low-income residents. The problems of a decade ago have been resolved. For any individual property owner who feels their proposed assessment may be incorrect, we encourage them to file an appeal.”

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Why Marijuana Is Good To Use During A Cleanse

    Why Marijuana Is Good To Use During A Cleanse

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    New year, new you….while we are moving to the later part of the first quarter of the new year, there is still time for healthy habits. Detoxification (detox) diets are more popular than ever. They claim to clean your blood and eliminate harmful toxins from your body. But science and data are still out on effectiveness.  But if you do it, here is why marijuana is good to use during a cleanse.

    Related Story: DIY ‘Dirty Lemon’ Cleanse

    Detoxing is a cleansing to purge yourself of “free radicals,” highly reactive molecules that cause oxidative stress on the body, which can weaken or even kill cells in such vital organs as the heart, lungs, and brain. Oxidative stress can impede the immune system and damage DNA. It may be responsible for some of the effects of aging and other illnesses. It is also reported to be part of weight loss.

    Photo by Jordana – Radiantly Nourished Blog via Unsplash

    Poor diet promotes oxidative stress, so does smoking, drinking alcohol, and exposure to other toxins—hence the case for the occasional detox.

    RELATED: Science Says Medical Marijuana Improves Quality Of Life

    Where does cannabis fit in here? Free radicals are combated by antioxidants, such as Vitamin C, Beta-carotene—and, now apparently, THC, which a clinical study suggests could have some similar benefits as Vitamin C.  A cleanse is also supposed to help with inflammation.  Cannabis via CBD, CBG, and a CBD+THC combination exert a predominantly anti-inflammatory which is a big benefit. In addition, cannabis can be a more healthy alternative from alcohol.  The California sober trend continues to expand, especially among Gen Z.

    “Although it’s not fun, and no one wants to hear it, the thing that we know that works to detox the body is regular exercise, eating healthy, being active, and limiting or avoiding alcohol.” shares Andrew Aronsohn, MD a liver specialist at the University of Chicago

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    Sarah Johns

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  • An Outspoken Professor Criticized His University and His Field. Now He’s Suing for Discrimination.

    An Outspoken Professor Criticized His University and His Field. Now He’s Suing for Discrimination.

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    A longtime law professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder who is also a prolific critic of legal education is suing the institution, saying it is discriminating against him because he is Latino.

    Paul F. Campos alleges that Boulder’s law school has failed to offer an explanation or recourse for a poor evaluation he received last year, and his complaint in the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado stakes that treatment on his ethnicity. Campos has also been an outspoken critic of the legal-education industry and specifically of what he characterized in his lawsuit as the Boulder law school’s “reckless financial behavior,” which he says has made him “quite unpopular” with colleagues.

    To Campos, who has written for The Chronicle, the retaliation he claims to have faced in recent years reflects a decade spent criticizing legal education from the inside, including on a blog he wrote from 2011 to 2015 called Inside the Law School Scam, and pointing out in faculty meetings what he saw as financial mismanagement at his home institution.

    That Campos is Latino only expands the “target on my back,” he told The Chronicle. “If you are a whistleblower, naturally it makes you unpopular in a variety of ways. But if you’re nonwhite and also a whistleblower, that’s kind of two strikes against you,” Campos said. “I think my own experience indicates the extent to which my white colleagues are willing to put up with criticism about the basic finances of the institution from a nonwhite colleague. And the answer is they’re pretty much not.”

    But others say Campos’s history of disparaging his industry and his own institution has damaged his reputation and, in turn, made his lawsuit difficult to take seriously.

    In May 2022, Campos alleges, he received an unusually low grade — three out of five — for his performance in the previous calendar year. Just 2.3 percent of law faculty received a rating that low over a four-year period, Campos alleges in his complaint. That rating came from a peer-review committee that makes recommendations on evaluations to the dean, Lolita Buckner Inniss. It came as a surprise to Campos, who wrote in a blog post that he’d had a particularly successful year in both publishing and service (Campos did not teach in 2021, having been on parental leave during one semester and on sabbatical for the other).

    When Campos asked the reason for the low rating, the chair of the review committee, Pierre Schlag, did not provide an answer, according to Campos’s complaint. Nor did Inniss. In a meeting, Campos told her he believed his rating had been influenced by racial bias and his reputation as a critic of the law school’s financial management, and asked Inniss to independently evaluate his performance.

    If you are a whistleblower, naturally it makes you unpopular in a variety of ways. But if you’re nonwhite and also a whistleblower, that’s kind of two strikes against you.

    Inniss refused, he said, although university policy would have allowed her to do so. In that conversation, Campos told The Chronicle, Inniss said she hadn’t been at the university long enough to evaluate his performance — she arrived at Boulder in July 2021 — and that she was sure the law school “isn’t the kind of place” that would discriminate against him based on his ethnicity.

    Schlag, the review-committee chair, and Inniss did not respond to requests for comment, nor did other members of the review committee contacted by The Chronicle. The university recently became aware of Campos’s lawsuit and “must review it and determine the appropriate course of action,” a spokesperson wrote in an email, saying the institution was unable to comment further.

    ‘Not Afraid of Litigation’

    When Campos told Inniss he was considering legal action, he added, she replied that she was “not afraid of litigation.” From there, in Campos’s telling, the retaliation escalated. Inniss removed him from the law school’s evaluations committee, citing “your recent communications with me regarding your concerns with the law-school evaluation process and your indication of possible litigation,” according to an email quoted in Campos’s complaint. Campos was also removed from teaching a property-law course in the spring of 2023, on grounds that he’d made “racially offensive and gender-biased” comments in class the previous year. (Campos said the university hasn’t provided evidence that he did so and that a thorough review of video recordings of his classes showed he had not.)

    Campos said his history of being discriminated against at Boulder stretches back further. According to the complaint, a university-pay study in 2021 found that he was being underpaid relative to his white colleagues, by $13,756 each year. That discrepancy is even more pronounced, Campos’s lawsuit says, because he is the most-senior law faculty member without an endowed professorship.

    Among those leery of Campos’s lawsuit is Brian Leiter, a professor of jurisprudence at the University of Chicago and a frequent commentator on law-school happenings. In a post on his own blog Monday, Leiter called Campos’s discrimination claims “weak” and his allegations of retaliation “not much stronger.” The former, he said, are undercut by the fact that Inniss is Black and the law school’s previous dean was Native American.

    “But the real question,” he told The Chronicle, “is whether there is a nondiscriminatory explanation for how the school is treating him. It seems to me there’s a pretty obvious one, which is that he’s not doing a lot of legal scholarship.” Instead, Leiter said, Campos has published books on obesity and the experience of being a sports fan.

    “I think you’d be hard-pressed to find a lot of law professors who have a favorable impression of him,” Leiter said of Campos. “The general view is he’s kind of opportunistic. He likes to be in the limelight, he likes to be in the newspapers, he likes to attract attention to himself.”

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    Megan Zahneis

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  • What the New ‘U.S. News’ Law-School Rankings Reveal About the Rankings Enterprise

    What the New ‘U.S. News’ Law-School Rankings Reveal About the Rankings Enterprise

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    U.S. News & World Report published its law- and medical-school rankings on Thursday after several delays and a boycott of the magazine’s data gathering.

    Over this past fall and winter, a fleet of law and medical schools announced they would no longer cooperate with U.S. News’s rankings efforts. Often they cited “perverse incentives” that the rankings created — for example, to admit more privileged students, who have lower debt loads and higher test scores. The publication of this year’s rankings shows the impact of the law-school boycott: U.S. News unveiled details of a new methodology that now places much more emphasis on graduates’ employment and much less on a school’s reputation.

    This year’s lists also offer a hint of how widespread the rankings revolt was. Seventeen medical schools and 62 law schools — nearly a third of the law schools U.S. News ranks — didn’t turn in data to the magazine this year. (It’s not clear what nonparticipation rates have been in the past. Reached by email to request historical context, a spokesperson for U.S. News pointed to webpages that are no longer online. U.S. News ranked law and medical schools that didn’t cooperate this year by using publicly available and past survey data.)

    Despite the upheavals, one important aspect of the rankings remained almost the same. The membership of the top 14 law schools, considered in the field to be the most prestigious, was similar to previous years’, though some institutions swapped places. It was the middle of the list that saw big swings in fortunes. All law schools that rose or fell by more than 20 places were ranked well below the top 14, according to an analysis by Law.com.

    The schools whose placement changed drastically and those that didn’t, which schools cooperated with U.S. News and which didn’t — all underscored power dynamics among the schools themselves, inequalities that rankings reinforce. Here are three takeaways from this year’s law list and what they say about the rankings enterprise.

    The law schools that opted out clustered at certain places on the list. Of the 15 top-ranked law schools, all but one, the University of Chicago, declined to provide data this year. Several schools at the bottom of the list also didn’t return U.S. News’s survey. In the middle, opt-outs were scarcer.

    That pattern reflects the schools’ relationships with the rankings, based on their position on the list. Top schools aren’t thought to “need” U.S. News. “Their reputations are bigger than the rankings,” Michael Sauder, a sociologist at the University of Iowa and co-author of the book Engines of Anxiety: Educational Rankings, Reputation, and Accountability, said in a previous interview. “No one’s going to question that Yale is a good law school.” Midlist schools, by contrast, “rely more on the rankings to solidify their reputations.”

    We decided it was better for the school to ensure that they had the most accurate information that we could provide.

    Antony Page, dean of Florida International University’s law school, said he agreed with many common arguments against the rankings, including that they hampered the legal field’s efforts to open opportunities to lower-income students. Still, he submitted data this year. “We decided it was better for the school to ensure that they had the most accurate information that we could provide,” he said. Florida International rose 38 places, to No. 60, and advertised that fact on its website.

    “We are a relatively new law school,” Page said. Its first J.D.s graduated in 2005. “There are still people out there that don’t know about this public law school in south Florida. We benefit from any additional attention.”

    Meanwhile, at the bottom of the list, Malik C. Edwards, dean of the North Carolina Central University School of Law, said he hadn’t participated in the last three years, because he didn’t see it as worth his time. It wouldn’t be good for the school, either, he said. One straightforward way to rise in the law rankings is to increase the average LSAT scores of incoming students, which used to form 11 percent of the ranking score. (It’s now 5 percent.) But, Edwards said: “If you just increase the LSAT, it’s going to exclude people who we know, from experience, can successfully complete law school, can pass the bar, and can become practitioners.”

    He was concerned about a statistic that suggests about half of African American applicants don’t get into law school anywhere. He didn’t want North Carolina Central, a historically Black institution, to become more selective in pursuit of a higher ranking.

    The top 14 law schools stayed nearly the same. Historically, U.S. News rankings were designed to change only modestly year to year. Editors feared large shifts “could have undermined the credibility of the project,” Alvin P. Sanoff, an early and influential editor, wrote in 2007. Keeping the most scrutinized part of the law-school list — the top 14 — largely the same reflects that dedication to stability.

    In March, The Wall Street Journal reported that Robert Morse, U.S. News’s lead data analyst on the higher-education rankings, told an audience of law-school administrators that the data team didn’t commit to a methodology ahead of time. Instead, analysts ran several scenarios and saw what different hypothetical lists looked like before deciding on a method, which contradicts the usual process in social science. But that practice at U.S. News appears to have a precedent. Sanoff wrote that when U.S. News revamped its undergraduate-program methodology in 1996, editors “pretested the change in weights to make sure that it would not produce an upheaval.”

    “Our expert data team is always modeling to determine the impact of new metrics and data outliers,” Eric J. Gertler, U.S. News’s chief executive officer, told The Wall Street Journal. “We never adjust our methodology to prioritize one school over another in our rankings.”

    Did the rankings protest help right inequities in law education? That was the point of the boycott. Did it work?

    It did and it didn’t, Edwards said. On the one hand, top law schools’ criticisms of U.S. News helped draw public attention to points that law deans had long made to one another, and drove real change in the methodology. On the other hand, problems persist.

    Except for Howard University, no historically Black college or university’s law school ever ranks outside of the unnumbered bottom, Edwards said. But this year, U.S. News decided to give numerical ranks to the top 90 percent of law schools, instead of just the top 75 percent, as was the practice before. North Carolina Central, previously part of the undifferentiated lowest quartile, this year got a rank: No. 175.

    Press materials from the magazine said that giving numbered ranks to more law schools was a move toward transparency. For Edwards, it presented a new worry. Seeing that number, he thought: OK, should I start playing the rankings game?

    “For me, it’s not something I want to do,” he said. But he thought the leaders of other law schools might feel differently.

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    Francie Diep

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  • New Report Exposes Steep Declines in Data Science Skills Among Fourth- and Eighth-Graders Nationwide

    New Report Exposes Steep Declines in Data Science Skills Among Fourth- and Eighth-Graders Nationwide

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    Newswise — CHICAGO – A new report from the Data Science 4 Everyone coalition reveals that data literacy skills among fourth and eighth-grade students have declined significantly over the last decade even as these skills have become increasingly essential in our modern, data-driven society.

    Based on data from the latest National Assessment of Educational Progress results, the report uncovered several trends that raise concerns about whether the nation’s educational system is sufficiently preparing young people for a world reshaped by the rise of big data and artificial intelligence.

    Key findings include:

    • The pandemic decline is part of a much longer-term trend. Between 2019 and 2022, scores in the data analysis, statistics, and probability section of the NAEP math exam fell by 10 points for eighth-graders and by four points for fourth-graders. Declining scores are part of a longer-term trend, with scores down 17 points for eighth-graders and down 10 points for fourth-graders over the last decade. That means today’s eighth-graders have the data literacy of sixth-graders from a decade ago, and today’s fourth-graders have the data literacy of third-graders from a decade ago. 
    • There are large racial gaps in scores. These gaps exist across all grade levels but are at times most dramatic in the middle and high school levels. For instance, fourth-grade Black students scored 28 points lower – the equivalent of nearly three grade levels – than their white peers in data analysis, statistics, and probability. 
    • Data-related instruction is in decline. Every state except Alabama reported a decline or stagnant trend in data-related instruction, with some states – like Maryland and Iowa – seeing double-digit drops. The national share of fourth-grade math teachers reporting “moderate” or “heavy” emphasis on data analysis dropped five percentage points between 2019 and 2022. 

    “The ability to interpret, understand, and work with data is central to so many aspects of our lives and careers today. Data literacy is a must-have for every employee, every business owner, and every participant in our democracy,” said Zarek Drozda, the director of Data Science 4 Everyone, and author of the report. “Schools that prioritize teaching these skills are setting their students up for success in the modern economy, opening doors to a wider variety of options post-graduation, and building confidence for students to pursue these disciplines in higher education, including in STEM.”

    Beyond STEM, the report recommends that schools build data literacy connections within subjects across the curriculum, such as social studies or English. “Digital Humanities” is an emerging field that uses data to reveal new insights into literature and history, for example. Data Science 4 Everyone is similarly encouraging cross-disciplinary collaboration via their lesson plan challenge, which provides cash prizes to teachers working together to teach data science principles.

    To download a copy of the full report, visit Data Science 4 Everyone’s website, or https://tinyurl.com/3ud9mfay.

    About Data Science 4 Everyone

    Data Science 4 Everyone (DS4E) is a coalition and national initiative advancing data science education so that every K-12 student is equipped with the data literacy skills needed to succeed in our modern world. Equitable access to data science education is an opportunity to open doors to higher education, high-paying careers, and an engaged community. DS4E is based at the University of Chicago.

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    University of Chicago

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  • After Law-School Revolt, Harvard Medical School Will Stop Cooperating With ‘U.S. News’ Rankings

    After Law-School Revolt, Harvard Medical School Will Stop Cooperating With ‘U.S. News’ Rankings

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    Harvard Medical School’s dean announced on Tuesday that the institution would no longer send data to U.S. News & World Report for its annual rankings.

    “As unintended consequences, rankings create perverse incentives for institutions to report misleading or inaccurate data, set policies to boost rankings rather than nobler objectives, or divert financial aid from students with financial need to high-scoring students with means in order to maximize ranking criteria,” the dean, George Q. Daley, wrote in a message to the medical-school community.

    The move suggests that institutional protest of the magazine’s ubiquity in higher education may be far from over. Two months ago, deans of top-ranked law schools began announcing they would stop cooperating with U.S. News. Soon after, former deans of the University of Chicago’s School of Medicine published an op-ed in STAT that urged leaders of top medical schools to do the same. Daley wrote that the law-school protest had “compelled” him to act.

    Like Daley, many of the withdrawing law deans cited concerns about how the rankings’ methodology discourages schools from accepting lower-income students. Ultimately two dozen law deans said they wouldn’t cooperate anymore, according to the New York Law Journal. After the law-school revolt, U.S. News promised changes in its methodology.

    Daley was not available for an interview, but his message suggests an algorithm change may not be enough to entice him to start working with U.S. News again. “Educational leaders have long criticized the methodology used by USNWR to assess and rank medical schools,” he wrote. “However, my concerns and the perspectives I have heard from others are more philosophical than methodological.” Rankings can’t tell individual students if a school will be a good fit for them, “no matter the methodology,” he wrote.

    U.S. News did not respond directly to a request for comment on Daley’s announcement. In the past, its editors have said they will continue to rank schools that don’t cooperate, using publicly available data. In a statement late Tuesday, U.S. News’s chief executive, Eric Gertler, said in part that “millions of prospective students annually visit U.S. News medical-school rankings because we provide students with valuable data and solutions.”

    U.S. News has two “Best Medical Schools” lists. Harvard ranks No. 1 on the “Best Medical Schools: Research” list and No. 9 on “Best Medical Schools: Primary Care.”

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    Francie Diep

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  • University of Chicago Launches Polsky Deep Tech Ventures to Accelerate the Commercialization of Innovations in Quantum, Data Science, Clean Tech, and Life Sciences

    University of Chicago Launches Polsky Deep Tech Ventures to Accelerate the Commercialization of Innovations in Quantum, Data Science, Clean Tech, and Life Sciences

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    Newswise — CHICAGO — The University of Chicago today unveiled Polsky Deep Tech Ventures, a new initiative offering a suite of sector-specific accelerators, entrepreneurial training, and funding dedicated to supporting startups that bring world-changing science and technology to market. This effort is aligned with the research strengths of UChicago, Argonne National Laboratory, and Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.

    Drawing on the success of Chicago Booth School of Business’ New Venture Challenge (NVC) and Duality, the nation’s first quantum startup accelerator, Deep Tech Ventures will launch three additional accelerators devoted to specific scientific disciplines, including data science, clean tech and life sciences. By providing sector-specific expertise from University research faculty and industry partners, the accelerators are designed to help startups from across the globe reduce technical and market risk as they position their innovations for real-world impact.

    Each accelerator will leverage the resources of the University and its partners to provide startups with business training, as well as access to faculty advisors, industry mentors, venture capital connections, corporate networking opportunities, funding, and student talent. The programs will be open to UChicago-linked ventures as well as non-University affiliated startups from around the nation and world.

    Distinctively, the initiative will operate out of the Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, elevating the entrepreneurial mindset by incorporating innovative business ideas from Chicago Booth and bringing to market cutting-edge science and technology research from UChicago, the national labs, and beyond.

    “As the home for field-defining science and a world-renowned business school, and as a steward of two U.S. Department of Energy national laboratories, Argonne and Fermilab, UChicago is uniquely positioned to develop and scale technologies that address humanity’s greatest challenges,” said UChicago President Paul Alivisatos.

    The endeavor will be funded by more than $20 million in University and philanthropic investments over the next five years. Once fully deployed, Deep Tech Ventures expects to graduate at least 60 startups annually, with novel approaches to fight disease, address climate change, improve cybersecurity, and more.

    Startups will have access to various funding mechanisms. Deep Tech Ventures expects to raise an external $25 million venture fund in 2023 to support deep tech startups looking for seed-stage and Series A funding. The Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation also operates the well-established George Shultz Innovation Fund (GSIF), which provides up to $250,000 in co-investment funding for early-stage tech ventures arising from UChicago and UChicago-affiliated Argonne National LaboratoryFermi National Accelerator Laboratory and the Marine Biological Laboratory. Over the last 12 years, the George Shultz Innovation Fund has invested $6.8 million in 90+ companies that have gone on to raise $235 million in follow-on funding.

    “We are pioneering a unique approach to the commercialization of next-generation technologies by providing the nation’s only full-spectrum deep tech accelerator and venture support organization,” said Jay Schrankler, associate vice president and head of the Polsky Center. “Given the complexities of these innovations, it is exceedingly valuable to offer startups sector-specific expertise to reduce both technical and market risk.”

    In conjunction with the launch of Deep Tech Ventures, the second industry-specific accelerator, the Data and AI Accelerator, developed in partnership with the University’s Data Science Institute, is accepting applications until January 20, 2023, for a cohort of up to eight startups that will begin programming in mid-March 2023.  The four-month program will be offered twice annually and will offer an intensive curriculum related to venture building as well as funding, space, computing resources, faculty advisors, industry mentors, access to venture capital and corporate partners, and access to student talent across the business, data science, and computer science schools. 

    The clean tech and life sciences accelerators are slated to launch later next year. 

    “As a materials scientist and innovator myself, I know the value of pairing scientific thinking with a business mindset, which is why the work at the Polsky Center is so important,” said Juan de Pablo, UChicago executive vice president for science, innovation, national laboratories, and global initiatives. “The goal is to catalyze innovation and foster more entrepreneurs who can bring their groundbreaking research to the market, where it will have the greatest impact.”

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    University of Chicago

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  • China’s COVID Wave Is Coming

    China’s COVID Wave Is Coming

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    In China, a dam seems on the verge of breaking. Following a wave of protests, the government has begun to relax some of its most stringent zero-COVID protocols, and regional authorities have trimmed back a slew of requirements for mass testing, quarantine, and isolation. The rollbacks are coming as a relief for the many Chinese residents who have been clamoring for change. But they’re also swiftly tilting the nation toward a future that’s felt inevitable for nearly three years: a flood of infections—accompanied, perhaps, by an uncharted morass of disease and death. A rise in new cases has already begun to manifest in urban centers such as Chongqing, Beijing, and Guangzhou. Now experts are waiting to see just how serious China’s outbreak will be, and whether the country can cleanly extricate itself from the epidemic ahead.

    For now, the forecast “is full of ifs and buts and maybes,” says Salim Abdool Karim, an epidemiologist at the Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa. Perhaps the worst can be averted if the government does more to vaccinate the vulnerable and prep hospitals for a protracted influx of COVID patients; and if the community at large reinvests in a subset of mitigation measures as cases rise. “There is still the possibility that they may muddle through it without a mass die-off,” says Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations. “But even the most smooth and orderly transition,” he told me, “will not prevent a surge of cases.”

    China represents, in many ways, SARS-CoV-2’s final frontier. With its under-vaccinated residents and sparse infection history, the nation harbors “a more susceptible population than really any other large population I can think of,” says Sarah Cobey, an computational epidemiologist at the University of Chicago. Soon, SARS-CoV-2 will infiltrate that group of hosts so thoroughly that it will be nearly impossible to purge again. “Eventually, just like everyone else on Earth, everyone in China should expect to be infected,” says Michael Worobey, an evolutionary virologist at the University of Arizona.

    Whatever happens, though, China’s coming wave won’t recapitulate the one that swept most of the world in early 2020. Though it’s hard to say which versions of the virus are circulating in the country, a smattering of reports confirm the likeliest scenario: BF.7 and other Omicron subvariants predominate. Several of these versions of the virus seem to be a bit less likely than their predecessors to trigger severe disease. That, combined with the relatively high proportion of residents—roughly 95 percent—who have received at least one dose of a COVID vaccine, might keep many people from falling dangerously ill. The latest figures out of China’s CDC marked some 90 percent of the country’s cases as asymptomatic. “That’s an enormous fraction” compared with what’s been documented elsewhere, says Ben Cowling, an epidemiologist at the University of Hong Kong.

    That percentage, however, is undoubtedly increased by the country’s ultra-rigorous testing practices, which have been catching silent cases that other places might miss. All of Omicron’s iterations also remain capable of triggering severe disease and long COVID. And there are still plenty of worrying omens that climbing cases could reach a horrific peak, sit on a prolonged plateau, or both.

    One of China’s biggest weak spots is its immunity, or lack thereof. Although more than 90 percent of all people in the country have received at least two COVID shots, those over the age of 80 were not prioritized in the country’s initial rollout, and their rate of dual-dose coverage hovers around just 66 percent. An even paltrier fraction of older people have received a third dose, which the World Health Organization recommends for better protection. Chinese officials have vowed to buoy those numbers in the weeks ahead. But vaccination sites have been tougher to access than testing sites, and with few freedoms offered to the immunized, “the incentive structure is not built,” says Xi Chen, a global-health expert at Yale. Some residents are also distrustful of COVID vaccines. Even some health-care workers are wary of delivering the shots, Chen told me, because they’re fearful of liability for side effects.

    Regardless of the progress China makes in plugging the holes in its immunity shield, COVID vaccines won’t prevent all infections. China’s shots, most of which are based on chemically inactivated particles of the 2020 version of SARS-CoV-2, seem to be less effective and less durable than mRNA recipes, especially against Omicron variants. And many of China’s residents received their third doses many months ago. That means even people who are currently counted as “boosted” aren’t as protected as they could be.

    All of this and more could position China to be worse off than other places—among them, Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore—that have navigated out of a zero-COVID state, says Caitlin Rivers, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. Australia, for instance, didn’t soften its mitigations until it had achieved high levels of vaccine coverage among older adults, Rivers told me. China has also clung to its zero-COVID philosophy far longer than any other nation, leaving itself to contend with variants that are better at spreading than those that came before. Other countries charted their own path out of their restrictions; China is being forced into an unplanned exit.

    What Hong Kong endured earlier this year may hint at what’s ahead. “They had a really, really bad wave,” Kayoko Shioda, an epidemiologist at Emory University, told me—far dwarfing the four that the city had battled previously. Researchers have estimated that nearly half the city’s population—more than 3 million people—ended up catching the virus. More than 9,000 residents died. And Hong Kong was, in some respects, in a better place to ease its restrictions than the mainland is. This past winter and spring, the city’s main adversary was BA.2, a less vaccine-evasive Omicron subvariant than the ones circulating now; officials had Pfizer’s mRNA-based shot on hand, and quickly began offering fourth doses. Hong Kong also has more ICU beds per capita. Map a new Omicron outbreak onto mainland China, and the prognosis is poor: A recent modeling paper estimated that the country could experience up to 1.55 million deaths in the span of just a few months. (Other analyses offer less pessimistic estimates.)

    Lackluster vaccination isn’t China’s only issue. The country has accumulated almost no infection-induced immunity that might otherwise have updated people’s bodies on recent coronavirus strains. The country’s health-care system is also ill-equipped to handle a surge in demand: For every 100,000 Chinese residents, just 3.6 ICU beds exist, concentrated in wealthier cities; in an out-of-control-infection scenario, even a variant with a relatively low severe-disease risk would prove disastrous, Chen told me. Nor does the system have the slack to accommodate a rush of patients. China’s culture of care seeking is such that “even when you have minor illness, you seek help in urban health centers,” Huang told me, and not enough efforts have been made to bolster triage protocols. More health-care workers may become infected; patients may be more likely to slip through the cracks. Next month’s Lunar New Year celebration, too, could spark further spread. And as the weather cools and restrictions relax, other respiratory viruses, such as RSV and flu, could drive epidemics of their own.

    That said, spikes of illness are unlikely to peak across China at the same time, which could offer some relief. The country’s coming surge “could be explosive,” Cobey told me, “or it could be more of a slow burn.” Already, the country is displaying a patchwork of waxing and waning regulations across jurisdictions, as some cities tighten their restrictions to combat the virus while others loosen up. Experts told me that more measures may return as cases ratchet up—and unlike people in many other countries, the Chinese may be more eager to readopt them to quash a ballooning outbreak.

    A major COVID outbreak in China would also have unpredictable effects on the virus. The world’s most populous country includes a large number of immunocompromised people, who can harbor the virus for months—chronic infections that are thought to have produced variants of concern before. The world may be about to witness “a billion or more opportunities for the virus to evolve,” Cowling told me. In the coming months, the coronavirus could also exploit the Chinese’s close interactions with farmed animals, such as raccoon dogs and mink (both of which can be infected by SARS-CoV-2), and become enmeshed in local fauna. “We’ve certainly seen animal reservoirs becoming established in other parts of the world,” Worobey told me. “We should expect the same thing there.”

    Then again, the risk of new variants spinning out of a Chinese outbreak may be a bit less than it seems, Abdool Karim and other experts told me. China has stuck with zero COVID so long that its population has, by and large, never encountered Omicron subvariants; people’s immune systems remain trained almost exclusively on the original version of the coronavirus, raising only defenses that currently circulating strains can easily get around. It’s possible that “there will be less pressure for the virus to evolve to evade immunity further,” says Emma Hodcroft, a molecular epidemiologist at the University of Bern; and any new versions of the virus that do emerge might not fare particularly well outside of China. In other words, the virus could end up trapped in the very country that tried to keep it out the longest. Still, with so many people susceptible, Cobey told me, there are zero guarantees.

    Either way, viral evolution will plod on—and as it does, the rest of the world may struggle to track it in real time, especially as the cadence of Chinese testing ebbs. Cowling worries that China will have trouble monitoring the number of cases in the country, much less which subvariants are causing them. “There’s going to be a challenge in having situational awareness,” he told me. Shioda, too, worries that China will remain tight-lipped about the scale of the outbreak, a pattern that could have serious implications for residents as well.

    Even without a spike in severe disease, a wide-ranging outbreak is likely to put immense strain on China—which may weigh heavily on its economy and residents for years to come. After the SARS outbreak that began in 2002, rates of burnout and post-traumatic stress among health-care workers in affected countries swelled. Chinese citizens have not experienced an epidemic of this scale in recent memory, Chen told me. “A lot of people think it is over, that they can go back to their normal lives.” But once SARS-CoV-2 embeds itself in the country, it won’t be apt to leave. There will not be any going back to normal, not after this.

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    Katherine J. Wu

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  • Julianne Sitch breaks barriers as University of Chicago men’s soccer coach

    Julianne Sitch breaks barriers as University of Chicago men’s soccer coach

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    Julianne Sitch breaks barriers as University of Chicago men’s soccer coach – CBS News


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    The University of Chicago men’s soccer team’s new head coach is breaking some barriers. Earlier this year, Julianne Sitch became one of two women coaching a men’s team in Division III. Now, she is one of the first females to coach a men’s soccer team in a final four. Charlie De Mar has more.

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