Gophers football projected to finish 12th in 18-team Big Ten this fall

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The Gophers football team has been picked to finish in the middle of the newly expanded Big Ten Conference this fall.

Minnesota slotted in 12th out of 18 total teams, receiving 183 total points from media members in the annual Cleveland.com poll released Monday.

With the addition of Oregon, Southern Cal, Washington and UCLA, the Big Ten scrapped its East/West division format for this season, meaning there will be a crowded pecking order in the power conference this fall.

The Gophers have 15 returning starters from a team that finished 6-7 overall and 3-6 in conference play in 2023. With new transfer quarterback Max Brosmer, most oddsmakers have the Gophers finishing with approximately five regular-season wins this year.

The Cleveland.com poll named Oregon quarterback Dillon Gabriel as the preseason offensive player of the year and Michigan cornerback Will Johnson as the preseason defensive player of the year.

Gophers running back Darius Taylor was the only U player to receive a vote for offensive or defensive player of the year. Taylor got one mention after he averaged 5.8 yards per carry across six games last season. As a freshman, he had 138 carries for 799 rushing yards and five touchdowns.

Gophers head coach P.J. Fleck, along with Taylor, Brosmer and linebacker Cody Lindenberg will attend Big Ten Media Days on Thursday in Indianapolis.

Bigger Ten

The 2024 results from the annual Cleveland.com poll:

1. Ohio State (21 first place), 480 total votes
2. Oregon (6), 448
3. Penn State, 418
4. Michigan, 411
5. Iowa, 363
6. Southern Cal, 346
7. Wisconsin, 313
8. Nebraska, 293
9. Rutgers, 249
10. Washington, 236
11. Maryland, 185
12. Minnesota, 183
13. Illinois, 145
14. Northwestern, 138
15. UCLA, 124
16. Michigan State, 119
17. Indiana, 76
18. Purdue, 65

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Their Laws. Our Bodies.

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On the morning of June 24, 2022, the federal courthouse in downtown Dallas was reinforced with boards and fences. Protests were anticipated to follow the news that the Supreme Court had overturned Roe v. Wade. For Texans like me, that would mean already-tight restrictions would turn into a near total ban on abortion. Though it wasn’t a surprise, I still felt shocked when the ruling became reality. Thousands marched on the streets that day and for weeks after. 

In the years following, I’ve met and photographed fellow Texans who were denied abortions despite lethal fetal anomalies that endangered their lives, health, and future fertility. Some were among the 20 women who sued the state in Zurawski v. Texas last year, asking for clarification on the scope of the current ban’s “medical emergency” exception. Another woman, Kate Cox, was pregnant as she sued the state in an attempt to obtain an emergency abortion. She was denied. Another, Miranda Michel, was pregnant with twins with a 0 percent chance of viability. She was left to carry them to term; they died in her arms four hours later. 

As of late May, the Texas Supreme Court had shut down the Zurawksi legal challenge, rejecting a lower court’s clarification of the law’s medical exceptions. Doctors are left with ambiguities and fear of major consequences, including up to 99 years in prison. People with pregnancy complications are left with fewer options, less professional health care guidance, and more questions. They can choose to leave the state (if they’re able) or carry a pregnancy that won’t yield a healthy, living baby—with a risk to their own lives as well. That is never a simple decision to make. 

All these women I met and photographed wanted to be mothers. Helios, Perseus, Chloe, Amelia, and Thomas were among the names they chose to keep their lost babies alive in their hearts. These women are among the millions in Texas who now have substantially less authority over their bodies. Our bodies. 

Linda Coffee, one of two lawyers who represented “Jane Roe” in Roe v. Wade, was 30 when the Supreme Court agreed that the constitutional right to privacy extended to abortion. Now 81, she is one of few who worked on the case who lived to see it overturned.

Ashley Brandt holds her 17-month-old daughter Marley in the family’s nursery. Brandt, one of the Zurawski plaintiffs, had to travel out of state for a selective termination when one of her twins was found to be nonviable. She planted a tree outside the nursery window in honor of the daughter that was aborted. 

Left: Miranda Michel was pregnant with nonviable twins, but, due to Texas laws, she carried the doomed pregnancy to term. Her birth consisted of a hectic C-section as she fought for consciousness. The footprints of her twins, Helios and Perseus, were recorded in ink in the hospital room. Right: Lauren Miller, another of the Zurawski plaintiffs, points to the last images of Thomas. A twin, Thomas was developing without a proper brain, heart, or stomach due to Trisomy 18. Like Brandt, Miller had to travel out of state for a selective fetal reduction—to protect her own life and that of her other twin, Henry.

Lauren Hall, also among the plaintiffs, stands in the room that she and her husband had prepared as a nursery. Hall had to travel to Washington state for an abortion after receiving a diagnosis that her fetus had a fatal anomaly.

Miller, who lost Thomas to Trisomy 18, sits in her home. “You don’t have time to grieve, you’re under a lot of stress, and [I can’t speak for all the plaintiffs, but] on some level we’re all just really mad because we shouldn’t have had to go through that,” she said.

Left: Michel cradles Helios and Perseus Langley in her arms after delivery. From rural northeast Texas, Miranda was surrounded by abortion bans in Oklahoma and Arkansas, and she feared circumventing the law and fleeing the state. The twins died four hours after birth. Right: Helios and Perseus are laid to rest.

Kate Cox, a mother of two, sued Texas late last year seeking legal permission for an emergency abortion. She’d always imagined having more kids, but her fetus had been diagnosed with Trisomy 18. There were so many malformations to her daughter’s brain, spine, and neural tube that the baby would probably die in utero or shortly after being born. Cox’s ability to have future children was also at risk. Her case was shot down by the Texas Supreme Court. She traveled to New Mexico to get the healthcare she needed.

NYC Housing Calendar, July 22-29

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City Limits rounds up the latest housing and land use-related events, public hearings and affordable housing lotteries that are ending soon.

Adi Talwar

Signs about the voting process in the lobby of one of the buildings in NYCHA’s Coney Island Houses complex, where residents can cast ballots through Aug. 15 to choose between three funding models.

Welcome to City Limits’ NYC Housing Calendar, a weekly feature where we round up the latest housing and land use-related events and hearings, as well as upcoming affordable housing lotteries that are ending soon.

Know of an event we should include in next week’s calendar? Email us.

Upcoming Housing and Land Use-Related Events:

All Week: Online voting is underway for residents of NYCHA’s Coney Island Houses and Unity Towers in Brooklyn, who are being asked to vote on which funding model they want for their developments. More here and here.

Monday, July 22 at 1 p.m.: The City Planning Commission will hold a public review session on several proposed land use projects. More here.

Tuesday, July 23 at 4 p.m.: The city’s Department of Housing, Preservation and Development and New York Public Library will host a workshop on navigating housing court at the Hamilton Grange branch in upper Manhattan. More here.

Wednesday, July 24 at 10 a.m.: The City Planning Commission will hold a public meeting, where it will vote on several land use proposals, including a plan to build a new 16-story community facility building at 180 Fort Washington Ave. in upper Manhattan. The Commission will also hold public hearings on several projects. More here.

Wednesday, July 24 at 11 a.m.: The NYC Council’s Subcommittee on Zoning and Franchises will meet to discuss the following land use applications: 500 Kent Avenue, 3033 Avenue V Rezoning, 197 Berry Street Rezoning, 712 Myrtle Avenue, Prince’s Point Development, Prince’s Point Vesting Amendment, Wings & Seafood Sidewalk Cafe Application. More here.

Thursday, July 25 at 6 p.m.: The city’s Department of Housing, Preservation and Development will hold an online webinar for homeowners about how to access and use solar power and other energy efficiency upgrades. More here.

NYC Affordable Housing Lotteries Ending Soon: The New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) are closing lotteries on the following subsidized buildings over the next week.

The MC aka 1100 Myrtle Avenue Apartments, Brooklyn, for households earning between $57,258 – $218,010

138 Brucker Boulevard Apartments, Bronx, for households earning between $105,875 – $218,010

208 East Mosholu Parkway South, Bronx, for households earning between $104,640 – $181,740

12-19 31st Drive Apartments, Queens, for households earning between $89,143 – $218,010

Small businesses grapple with global tech outages created by CrowdStrike

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NEW YORK — An owner of a consumer insights research firm couldn’t pay her employees, make Friday’s deadline to sign a contract for a new business or send key research to a key client. A psychiatrist, who runs a virtual mental health practice in Maryland, saw his business hobbled as some of his virtual assistants and therapists couldn’t either make phone calls or log on to their computers. And a restaurant owner in New York City was worried about how he was going to pay his vendors and his workers.

Businesses from airlines to hospitals have been grappling with a faulty software update that caused technological havoc worldwide on Friday, and its repercussions continued through the weekend. The breadth of the outages highlighted the fragility of a digitized world dependent on a few providers for key computing services.

But the problem appeared to divide those affected into haves and have-nots. Major customers of Microsoft and CrowdStrike are getting IT support to resolve the issues, but many smaller businesses whose Windows PCs may have received the problematic update are still struggling.

Take Tsvetta Kaleynska, owner and founder of the Manhattan-based consumer insights company RILA Global Consulting, which has Fortune 500 clients. As of Saturday, she resolved the payroll issue and she got an extension until Monday on the research project. But the prospective client will not move forward with the new contract, cutting her annual earnings by nearly 25%, she estimated. The problem: she couldn’t sign the contract because Docusign, which runs on Microsoft software affected by the faulty update, was down.

“If I were part of a big company, then I would be able to delegate and get support from computer science or security services,” Kaleynska said. “But as a small business owner, I am depending only on myself. It’s pretty devastating.”

On top of Kaleynska’s business issues, she had to bring her ill daughter to a local hospital Friday because the hospital’s phone lines were down.

Kaleynska, an immigrant from Bulgaria who became a U.S. citizen in 2023, said she’s learned a hard lesson: “Our lives are very fragile because they’re based on technology, and we depend on technology.”

CrowdStrike is one of the largest cybersecurity firms in the U.S. and has a list of customers that includes more than half of the Fortune 500 companies as well as small and medium-sized businesses.

Following the outage, the company provided an initial fix through a software update. But many computers are expected to need hands-on work that could take days, if not longer, to complete.

For many small businesses that are impacted, that could mean working around the clock this weekend to make sure their systems are up and running, said Wedbush tech analyst Dan Ives.

“Small businesses rely on third parties for this not to happen and instead, it became a ‘code red’ situation,” Ives said.

Overall, Ives noted tech problems can be easier to fix for big companies that have a sizable number of experts on their payroll as opposed to small businesses who could face more of an “uphill battle” because they have fewer technical resources.

“The ripple effects from this could be felt for days and weeks ahead,” Ives said. “It’s not just a black eye moment for CrowdStrike, but for the broader industry. You can’t have one fat finger update take down a global ecosystem.”

Ari Lightman, a professor of digital media at Carnegie Mellon University’s Heinz College, agreed, noting the amount of money big companies spend on Microsoft and CrowdStrike is likely a large portion of their IT budget. On the other hand, small businesses can look at information online on how to resolve the outage. CrowdStrike has posted step-by-step manual fixes to its blog, but it can be intimidating for those who are less tech savvy.

Lightman said those corporations could sue for a loss of business, but small ones might use class action suits to go after CrowdStrike for compensatory damages.

The issue is affecting small businesses differently.

Heather Garlich, a spokeswoman at Arlington, Va., grocery industry group FMI, said the outages were “somewhat spotty and inconsistent depending on how businesses use certain Microsoft tools.” She said she was aware of one with an issue with a human resource system, while another had problems with their routing system for distribution. Yet another had issues with its cash registers.

Chris Seabrook, who owns a locksmith services business in Melbourne, Australia, called Asguard Locksmiths, told The Associated Press in a Friday email that the IT outage had thrown a “significant wrench” in his daily operations. He hasn’t been able to send and receive emails, access critical files, manage his schedule or create invoices.

“My Microsoft PC is essential for many important functions in my business,” he wrote. “As a one-man business, every minute counts and this disruption has forced me to adapt quickly to ensure my services remain as uninterrupted as possible.”

To minimize the disruption, Seabrook borrowed a non-Microsoft device from a friend that enabled him to sign into his accounts and access some of his critical tools and information. He’s also using his smartphone for important messages and organizing his schedule. And he’s been contacting clients to update them on the situation. Seabrook didn’t immediately respond to a follow-up email sent by The Associated Press on Saturday.

Some small business owners have improvised to get work done.

Dr. Ozan Toy, a psychiatrist, and chief medical officer at the Maryland-based Telapsychiatry, which has 25 employees across the U.S., said some employees with Microsoft phone lines instead turned to the Ring Central System, while others shifted from Microsoft Teams to Zoom.

Toy said his business was fortunate to have several backups of its electronic medical record system, allowing them to resume communications with each other and their patients. As of Sunday, the practice’s cloud based services were running, he said. Toy noted financial losses were “minimal” as it has an external answering service taking calls from patients.

Chris Delmond, the co-owner of Handcraft Hospitality, which operates three restaurants in Manhattan and one in Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina, said his restaurants remained open for business. But the outage meant he could not have access to his cloud-based accounting software app on the Microsoft platform. That prevented him from seeing receipts and invoices, and slowed his ability to process checks to his employees and suppliers. He had to resort to calling his banks to see whether deposits had been made and check balances.

“I’m a small business owner. I have two other partners and we kind of do everything,” he said. “So it’s up to us to find out what the issues are. I don’t have large platforms that help me track.”

But by late Friday afternoon, all the issues related to his business’ cloud based systems were back to normal, Delmond said. He noted he didn’t suffer any financial losses, but he added, “It’s frustrating, but as a small business owner you deal with the ups and downs.”

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