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Top Notre Dame football target Dre Quinn is transferring Georgia high schools
Top Notre Dame football target Dre Quinn is transferring Georgia high schools

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

Top Notre Dame football target Dre Quinn is transferring Georgia high schools

One of Notre Dame football's top recruiting targets is on the move. Georgia product Dre Quinn is transferring high schools, going from Greater Atlanta Christian to powerhouse Buford (Norcross, GA) to play his senior season. Advertisement The Class of 2026 defensive end, who is one of the top players in the Peach Tree state, has a final six of Notre Dame, Clemson, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Tennessee and Texas. The 6-foot-4, 228-pound three-star product, per the 247Sports Composite Rankings, had 42 tackles (9.5 for loss), 2.5 sacks and a forced fumble last season. His addition is another coup for the Wolves, who finished 12-2 in 2024. Starting quarterback Dayton Raiola is the younger brother of Nebraska sophomore quarterback Dylan Raiola who is committed to the Cornhuskers, now has a new big-time teammate in Quinn. This article originally appeared on Fighting Irish Wire: Dre Quinn, a Notre Dame football target, is transferring to Buford

Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Writer Who Condemned Colonists and Elites, Dies at 87
Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Writer Who Condemned Colonists and Elites, Dies at 87

New York Times

time29-05-2025

  • Politics
  • New York Times

Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Writer Who Condemned Colonists and Elites, Dies at 87

Ngugi wa Thiong'o, a groundbreaking novelist, playwright and memoirist whose writings explored the iniquities and ambiguities of colonialism in his native Kenya as much as the misdoings of the postcolonial elite, and who led a passionate campaign for African authors to eschew the languages of foreign occupiers, died on Wednesday in a hospital in Buford, Ga. He was 87. His son Nducu confirmed the death. Often tipped as a potential Nobel laureate, Mr. Ngugi (pronounced GOO-ghee) spent many years in exile to avoid the wrath of a government he criticized. For several decades, he taught comparative literature and English as a professor at the University of California, Irvine. His work inspired successive generations of African writers along with contemporaries such as Chinua Achebe and Wole Soyinka, both of Nigeria. His canon drew enthusiastic praise, including for his debut novel, 'Weep Not, Child,' in 1964. It is the story of Kenyan brothers whose family must confront the challenges of the Mau Mau rebellion against British rule. The book has been described as the first major novel in English by an East African author. By contrast, 'Devil on the Cross' in 1980, composed in his native tongue as 'Caitaani Mutharaba-Ini,' was regarded as the first modern novel in the Gikuyu language, spoken by the country's largest ethnic group, the Kikuyu. The book, about thieves who vie for supremacy by stealing from the people, sent him on a career writing in his own language and subsequently translating his work into English. He wrote 'Devil on the Cross' on prison toilet paper while detained by Kenyan authorities for a year without trial because of a play he wrote. In a New York Times review in 2018, the writer Ariel Dorfman said the book was a 'narrative of the devilish temptations he faced and the ruses used to thwart his jailers as he sat writing night after night in his cell.' The novel 'shows Ngugi in full command of his craft,' Mr. Dorfman wrote. Mr. Ngugi's life and writing unfolded in lock step with the stirrings of emancipation in British-run East Africa. He lived in Uganda, which secured independence in 1962, and in Kenya both before and after its independence in 1963. It was a life freighted by the subtleties and shifts of a momentous era buffeted by what a British prime minister, Harold Macmillan, in 1960 called 'the wind of change.' While Mr. Ngugi was educated at Kenya's British-run Alliance High School — a prestigious institution designed to mold an African elite in the image of the colonizers — other members of his family were caught up in the Mau Mau uprising against those same outsiders. A brother became a freedom fighter against the British, and another sibling was shot to death. When Mr. Ngugi returned home for the first time from Alliance, he found that his home settlement had been destroyed, its population herded into a so-called protected village set up by the British authorities to cement control of their colonial subjects. 'The hedge of ashy leaves that we planted looks the same, but beyond it our homestead is a rubble of burnt dry mud, splinters of wood, and grass,' he wrote in a memoir, 'In the House of the Interpreter,' published in 2012. 'My mother's hut and my brother's house on stilts have been razed to the ground. My home, from where I set out for Alliance three months ago, is no more.' But colonialism was only one part of his life's trajectory, much of it set against a backdrop of violence. The experience of detention persuaded him to seek exile in 1982, first in Britain and later in the United States. But on his return to Kenya in 2004, he and his family were the victims of a nightmarish attack. Intruders broke into an apartment where they were staying, attacked Mr. Ngugi and raped Njeeri, his wife. The episode was likely rooted in vengeance by his foes, but it also reflecting the criminality that had flourished during Kenya's corrupt independence. 'It wasn't a simple robbery,' Mr. Ngugi told The Guardian in 2006. 'It was political — whether by remnants of the old regime or part of the new state outside the main current. They hung around as though waiting for something, and the whole thing was meant to humiliate, if not eliminate, us.' Indeed, Mr. Ngugi's work was heavily intertwined with the politics of the era, and his thinking about the far-reaching impact of imperialism on African sensibilities played a central role in a much broader debate. In 1986, he published a collection of essays titled 'Decolonizing the Mind,' which traced what he depicted as a corrosive colonial intent to supplant Indigenous languages with the language of the occupier so as to seal the mental subjugation of the colonized. In 2023, Carey Baraka, a Kenyan writer who interviewed Mr. Ngugi for The Guardian, asked whether 'Kenyan English or Nigerian English' had become 'local languages.' Mr. Ngugi rejected the notion. 'It's like the enslaved being happy that theirs is a local version of enslavement,' he replied. 'English is not an African language. French is not. Spanish is not. Kenyan or Nigerian English is nonsense. That's an example of normalized abnormality. The colonized trying to claim the colonizer's language is the sign of the success of enslavement. It's very embarrassing.' Asked if there were such a thing as a 'good colonialist,' he disputed the notion. 'It doesn't matter if you're carrying a gun or a Bible, you are still a colonialist,' he said in the interview. 'Of course I'd rather face the colonialist with the Bible than the one with the gun, but in the end, both the Bible carrier and the gun carrier are espousing the same thing.' Mr. Ngugi was born on Jan. 5, 1938, in the Limuru district, north of Nairobi, the Kenyan capital, then under British colonial rule. He grew up in a large, rural family, the son of a polygamous father and his third of four wives, Wanjiku wa Ngugi, who encouraged him to seek a good education. During his early years, Kenya became convulsed by an uprising against colonialism that the British authorities labeled the Mau Mau revolt. Mr. Ngugi said the name was a misnomer designed to minimize and distract from the rebellion's aims of securing land and freedom for the Kenyan people. The rebels' true name, he said, was the Land and Freedom Army. Like many Kenyan families, his had an ambiguous relationship with the guerrillas fighting British rule. An elder brother, Good Wallace, was a freedom fighter. Another, Kabae, sided with the British, and a third, Tumbo, was a police informant — an activity that inspired 'Grain of Wheat,' Mr. Ngugi's third novel. Another brother, Gitogo, was shot to death in the back by British forces after failing to halt when ordered to because he was deaf. In 1964, he married his first wife, Nyambura. In 2024, one of their sons, Mukoma wa Thiongo, accused his father of abusing and marginalizing her, writing on the social media platform X that she would seek refuge at his grandmother's house. The accusation sparked discussions across literary, cultural and social spheres on whether it was appropriate. Of his 10 children, four are published authors: Tee Ngugi, Mukoma wa Ngugi, Nducu wa Ngugi and Wanjiku wa Ngugi. They survive him, as do his other children, Kĩmunya, Ngina, Njoki, Bjorn, Mumbi and Thiong'o K., as well as seven grandchildren. After his studies at the Alliance, Mr. Ngugi won a place at Makerere University in neighboring Uganda, which at that time was a cultural and intellectual hub of the emerging Africa of independent nations. It was at Makarere that his emergence as a writer began. He recorded this period of his life in a memoir, 'Birth of a Dream Weaver,' in 2016. In a review in The New York Times, Michela Wrong, a British writer, said the book showed Mr. Ngugi finding 'his creative voice just as a continent is finding its freedom.' 'The convictions he forms,' she wrote, 'will last a lifetime: the quest for African dignity and self-realization, a rejection of Western hegemony, a passionate call for Africans to tell their own story in their own Indigenous languages.' Some of those perceptions underpinned his works, including the acclaimed 'Petals of Blood' of 1977, which cast a searing light over the postcolonial era. Mr. Ngugi went by his Western baptismal name, James Ngugi, until after the publication of 'A Grain of Wheat' in 1967. By 1970 he had adopted the name Ngugi wa Thiong'o as an expression of his African heritage and identity, in line with his decision to write only in his native language. He translated most of his work from Gikuyu into English, reaching a much broader audience. His decision to write in Gikuyu determined much of his subsequent output. In 1977, he was a co-author (with Ngugi wa Mirii) of 'Ngaahika Ndeenda,' a drama in Gikuyu with the English title 'I Will Marry When I Want.' It was produced in an open-air people's theater with ordinary Kenyans acting the parts. For six weeks the play had a successful run, but then the authorities chose to demolish the theater and send the author to prison without a trial. That was the beginning of the year in which Mr. Ngugi composed 'Devil on the Cross' on toilet paper. His incarceration also produced a prison diary, published in 1980 under the title 'Detained,' which further cemented his credentials as a writer and an activist seeking to expand Africa's sense of its own freedom. After his release and voyage into exile, he was a rare visitor to Kenya as his global reputation flourished. With 'Wizard of the Crow,' published in English in 2006 and set in a fictional African land called Aburiria, Jeff Turrentine said in a review in The Times, Mr. Ngugi 'has flown over the entire African continent and sniffed out all of the foul stenches rising high into the air.' But 'from that altitude he can also see a more hopeful sign: large masses of people coming together, sharing triumphant stories and casting spells.'

Burk's Buford signs NLI, MSU tennis advances to final four and Bearden is an All-American
Burk's Buford signs NLI, MSU tennis advances to final four and Bearden is an All-American

Yahoo

time23-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Burk's Buford signs NLI, MSU tennis advances to final four and Bearden is an All-American

Burkburnett's Ozavian Buford signed a letter of intent to play basketball at Nelson University in Waxahachie. Buford averaged 17 points a game for the Bulldogs in his senior season. He also averaged five rebounds, 4.5 assists and 3.5 steals per game. In his two seasons with Burkburnett, the Bulldogs went 51-16. Midwestern State golfer Seth Bearden has been named a PING All-American. He becomes the seventh golf in program history to earn the honor. The junior from Crowell High School helped the Mustangs make a 15th straight postseason appearance while winning three events. The 3rd-ranked MSU women's tennis team dispatched Wayne State(MI) is the Division II National Quarterfinals. The Mustangs will now face 2nd-ranked Nova Southeastern on Saturday morning in the national semifinals. Southeastern is the defending national champion. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Felon from Detroit charged after allegedly brandishing firearm at victim in Mon County
Felon from Detroit charged after allegedly brandishing firearm at victim in Mon County

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Felon from Detroit charged after allegedly brandishing firearm at victim in Mon County

MORGANTOWN, (WBOY) — A convicted felon from Detroit has been charged after allegedly brandishing a firearm at a victim and conspiring to sell drugs in Monongalia County. On May 16, deputies with the Monongalia County Sheriff's Department responded to a call of brandishing taking place at an apartment Van Voohirs Road in Morgantown, according to a criminal complaint. When deputies arrived, they spoke with the victim who said that Daron Buford, 34, of Detroit, Michigan, who 'pulled a gun out on him and racked the slide, causing a live round to leave the chamber of the handgun,' deputies said. Deputies then located a .45 caliber 'Blazer round' near the rear driver's side tire of a vehicle which Buford was 'allegedly driving' and were able to obtain a search warrant for the apartment to locate Buford and the firearm, according to the complaint. 8 charged after troopers find drugs, loaded gun within reach of children at Harrison County home During that time, deputies found a gun in a closet 'that had the same ammunition that was found outside in the parking lot'; Buford was previously convicted of a felony, thus prohibiting him from owning firearms, according to the complaint. Also in the residence, deputies located 'multiple' containers of methamphetamine and heroin, as well as packaging materials and sets of scales, deputies said. Buford has been charged with wanton endangerment, being a prohibited person in possession of a firearm and drug conspiracy. He is being held in North Central Regional Jail $60,000 bond. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Georgia football adds commitment from 4-star Buford OL
Georgia football adds commitment from 4-star Buford OL

USA Today

time02-05-2025

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Georgia football adds commitment from 4-star Buford OL

Georgia football adds commitment from 4-star Buford OL The Georgia Bulldogs have added a commitment from class of 2026 Buford High School offensive lineman Graham Houston. Houston committed to Georgia over the Florida State Seminoles, Florida Gators and Ole Miss Rebels. Houston, who was projected to commit to Georgia, is ranked as a four-star interior offensive lineman, per 247Sports. The 6-foot-5, 305-pound offensive lineman could play offensive guard or offensive tackle at the next level. Houston is ranked as the No. 23 player at his position and the No. 33 recruit in Georgia, per 247Sports. Houston is ranked as the No. 297 player in the class of 2026. The Buford star is Georgia's seventh commitment in the class of 2026. He is UGA's first commitment along the offensive line in the 2026 cycle. Head coach Kirby Smart and Georgia have the nation's No. 25 recruiting class following Houston's commitment. "We added another brick in the Great Wall of Georgia!" Georgia offensive line coach Stacy Searels said after Houston's commitment. "Go Dawgs!" Houston plans to visit Georgia, Florida State, Ole Miss and Florida over the upcoming months.

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