Thursday, December 29, 2011

Quincy College considers gun ban

Quincy College?s governing board will consider a policy that would ban everyone other than police officers from carrying a gun on campus, regardless of whether they have a permit.

College President Peter Tsaffaras said the policy was drafted as part of a safety and security review, and that it would give the college grounds to remove someone with a gun from the campus.

?We receive anecdotal evidence sometimes that we have students who are coming to school armed,? Tsaffaras said. ?They?re not hostile and threatening, but they?re armed nonetheless. And we want to have a policy in place to deal with it.?

The policy was unanimously approved Tuesday night by the governing board?s personnel and programs committee. The full board of governors will vote on it next month, by which time language covering other concealed weapons like knives and Mace may be incorporated.

Tsaffaras said the the college will hire a campus safety and security consultant who will advise the board as it considers the policy.

The draft policy approved Tuesday states that no person ?shall have on their person or in their possession a firearm, loaded or unloaded, operable or inoperable, while on any property, including but not limited to, buildings and parking areas, occupied or used by Quincy College.?

Violators will be subject to the college?s ?persona non grata policy,? which allows the president to immediately suspend a student or employee. It also prohibits them from returning without permission. The sanction can be appealed to a hearing board.

The proposed gun ban would not apply to law enforcement personnel on the Quincy College grounds. The college?s security guards do not carry guns.

Board member Joseph Shea, who is also the longtime city clerk, said such policies can be objectionable to staunch defenders of the constitutional right to bear arms.

?You?d be surprised at who carries guns,? Shea said. ?Some people are very aware and very sharp about it, and their reasoning (for carrying). It came up (in Quincy) with employees other than policeman carrying guns. They had laborers carrying guns, people who worked the night shift carrying guns. They had a license to carry them.?

Committee member Barbara Clarke said she was concerned about setting a policy that ?may be legally indefensible or cause us grief over time.? She also called for guidelines that instruct faculty members about how to approach a student who is carrying a weapon.

Tsaffaras, an attorney, said the policy has been reviewed by four lawyers and is ?perfectly reasonable? and defensible.

Committee member Maureen Glynn Carroll said the extension of the campus gun ban to other dangerous weapons should be studied carefully.

?I wouldn?t want to limit someone?s ability to protect themselves walking to the train station with pepper spray or something,? she said. ?There?s got to be some kind of balance.?

As it stands, Tsaffaras said, the college doesn?t have grounds to stand on if it wants to remove from campus someone carrying a gun.

?We could get them out of the classroom, we could talk to them,? he said, but the response might be: ??I have an absolute right; I?m licensed to carry. Where?s the policy that says I?m not (allowed)???

If students are ?sitting in a classroom (where someone is) carrying a handgun in their waistband,? it has ?a chilling effect,? Tsaffaras said.

READ MORE about this issue.

Jack Encarnacao may be reached at jencarnacao@ledger.com.

Source: http://www.wickedlocal.com/quincy/news/x1282427707/Quincy-College-considers-gun-ban

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

The Edge of Space - Astronomers Discover Rare Galaxy at Dawn of Time

Astronomers, including the University of California, Riverside's Bahram Mobasher and his graduate student Hooshang Nayyeri, have discovered that one of the most distant galaxies known is churning out stars at a shockingly high rate. The researchers made the discovery using NASA's Spitzer and Hubble space telescopes. The blob-shaped galaxy, called GN-108036, is the brightest galaxy found to date at such great distances.

The galaxy, which was discovered and confirmed using ground-based telescopes, is 12.9 billion light-years away. Data from Spitzer and Hubble were used to measure the galaxy's high star production rate, equivalent to about 100 suns per year. For reference, our Milky Way galaxy is about five times larger and 100 times more massive than GN-108036, but makes roughly 30 times fewer stars per year.

The discovery is surprising because previous surveys had not found galaxies this bright so early in the history of the universe. According to the researches, GN-108036 may be a special, rare object that they happened to catch during an extreme burst of star formation. The international team of astronomers, led by Masami Ouchi of the University of Tokyo, Japan, first identified the remote galaxy after scanning a large patch of sky with the Subaru Telescope atop Mauna Kea in Hawaii. Its great distance was then carefully confirmed with the W.M. Keck Observatory, also on Mauna Kea.

GN-108036 lies near the very beginning of time itself, a mere 750 million years after our universe was created 13.7 billion years ago in an explosive "Big Bang." Its light has taken 12.9 billion years to reach us, so we are seeing it as it existed in the very distant past. Astronomers refer to the object's distance by a number called its "redshift," which relates to how much its light has stretched to longer, redder wavelengths due to the expansion of the universe. Objects with larger redshifts are farther away and are seen further back in time. GN-108036 has a redshift of 7.2. Only a handful of galaxies have confirmed redshifts greater than 7, and only two of these have been reported to be more distant than GN-108036.

Infrared observations from Spitzer and Hubble were crucial for measuring the galaxy's star-formation activity. Astronomers were surprised to see such a large burst of star formation because the galaxy is so small and from such an early cosmic era. Back when galaxies were first forming, in the first few hundreds of millions of years after the Big Bang, they were much smaller than they are today, having yet to bulk up in mass.

During this epoch, as the universe expanded and cooled after its explosive start, hydrogen atoms permeating the cosmos formed a thick fog that was opaque to ultraviolet light. This period, before the first stars and galaxies had formed and illuminated the universe, is referred to as the "dark ages." The era came to an end when light from the earliest galaxies burned through, or "ionized," the opaque gas, causing it to become transparent. Galaxies similar to GN-108036 may have played an important role in this event. "The high rate of star formation found for GN-108036 implies that it was rapidly building up its mass some 750 million years after the Big Bang, when the universe was only about five percent of its present age," said Mobasher, a professor of physics and astronomy. "This was therefore a likely ancestor of massive and evolved galaxies seen today."

Iqbal Pittalwala writes for EurekAlert, from where this article is adapted.

Source: http://www.thecuttingedgenews.com//index.php?article=53478

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Must See HDTV (December 19th - 25th)

While many programs take a holiday vacay, we've still found a few things to watch including the return of the NBA. Check below for the highlights this week, followed after the break by our weekly listings of what to look out for in TV, Blu-ray and videogames.

NBA
After a delay due to the lockout, the NBA is ready to get underway Sunday by putting its best and brightest under the lights. Lebron, Dwyane, Kevin, Kobe, Dirk and all the rest will be playing so if you're a hoops fan you'll want to have the gifts unwrapped early so you can secure a spot in front of the TV.
(Sunday, ABC/ESPN)

Who's Still Standing
With so much TV programming on winter break, NBC is sliding in this game show all week. It's yet another trivia show, however the twist in this one is that a wrong answer causes contestants to not only be eliminated, but also dropped out of sight below the floor. In a bit of of good or bad news, depending on your perspective, this probably puts us all one step scloser to seeing The Running Man as a real show.
(Monday-Thursday, NBC, 8PM)

The League
If you listen to the podcast, you know how fantasy football obsessed we are. Even if you're not, this show brings a lot more to the table as a group of friends antagonize each other both in their virtual league and in real life. While we don't know who will be league champion, we'd bet on at least one more appearance by El Cunado Rafi during the season finale this week.
(Thursday, FX, 10PM)

Continue reading Must See HDTV (December 19th - 25th)

Must See HDTV (December 19th - 25th) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Dec 2011 18:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/A8GG16ffe3M/

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Friday, December 16, 2011

FACT CHECK: GOP candidates get Obama policy wrong (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Republican presidential candidates have claimed that the Obama administration is cleansing government files of references to radical Islam, an assertion so juicy that politicians keep repeating it ? even though it's a wild exaggeration.

The latest to run with the story is former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who told a crowd in Des Moines that the president "actually ordered all references to Islam and Muslim sanitized out of our national security documents."

And over the weekend, Newt Gingrich told a veterans' forum in Des Moines that the administration has "issued instructions, for example, that in developing training papers on terrorism that no mention should be made of radical Islam."

Rep. Michele Bachmann paved the way on Oct. 28, when she told 75 Republican faithful in Iowa that "Obama is allowing terror suspect groups to write the FBI's terror training manual."

So where is this coming from? Last September, the online publication Wired.com broke a story that an FBI analyst had given a lecture to bureau trainees that was critical of Islam. The publication followed up, disclosing that the same analyst had given a similar lecture to an FBI-sponsored event in New York City. The FBI immediately ordered a comprehensive review of all the materials it uses to train its agents.

It would be hard to overstate the importance the FBI attaches to assistance from the Muslim community in the bureau's terrorism investigations in the United States ? a point that FBI Director Robert Mueller drove home in an appearance Wednesday at the Senate Judiciary Committee.

"We have met with various representatives of the Muslim community" in the aftermath of the inappropriate FBI training to convey just how seriously the bureau takes the matter, said Mueller.

In an effort to ensure that all of its training materials are appropriate, Mueller said, the bureau assembled a five-member panel of experts on Islam ? two people from inside the FBI and three outside scholars ? from Yale, Princeton and Johns Hopkins University.

The review found a very small percentage of material that was either inappropriate or inaccurate or both, and the bureau immediately got rid of it, said a bureau official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to be able to discuss the internal handling of the issue.

"I believe our relationship with the Muslim community is very good," said Mueller. The director told Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., that "we are addressing" the problem and that "it's an anomaly."

A few snippets of the former FBI analyst's assertions reflect the kind of information the bureau regards as inappropriate.

The materials for the FBI analyst's instructional presentation said that mainstream American Muslims are likely to be terrorist sympathizers, that the Prophet Mohammed was a cult leader and that the Islamic practice of giving charity is no more than a funding mechanism for combat.

A video of the New York City lecture included a reference to "an Islamic motivation" for violent acts of terrorism. The analyst no longer teaches training classes.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_el_pr/us_republicans_fbi_fact_check

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

$99 Chinese Tablet Is MIPS-Based, Runs Android 4.0

ingenic_ainovoYou could be forgiven for overlooking the Ainovo Novo7, a 7-inch Chinese Android tablet, as likely just another me-too device to be sold in electronics districts next to fake iPhones and bulk cables. And in a way, that's what it is: at $100, it can't possibly be as well-built as the iPad or newer Galaxy Tabs, and the size and design aren't going to impress anyone. But it's got two things going for it: Ice Cream Sandwich and MIPS. Naturally to many people neither of those terms signify much of anything. Most people only care whether it runs Netflix and Angry Birds. But both these features point at an interesting breakage between the China and US markets, one that will only widen with time.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/u_ORf7hAQig/

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It's Morning in America in Newt's New Iowa Ad (The Atlantic Wire)

A softer, gentler Newt Gingrich was on display in his new Reaganesque TV spot that started running in Iowa today. Since gaining a double-digit lead in the latest poll, Gingrich has apparently decided to take the high road and go positive as frontrunner in this $250,000 television ad, as The New York Times reports. "Some people say that the America we know and love is a thing of the past," Gingrich narrates. "I don't believe that,?because working together I know we can rebuild America." He delivers his rosy message over images literally lifted from "America the Beautiful" -- predawn scenes of "amber waves of grain" and "purple mountains majesties." All that's spliced with scenes of Americans going to work -- at factories, corner stores, flower shops -- with a tone showing a working Main Street America that can't help but remind us for Reagan's famous "It's Morning in America Again."?Not a bad ad to emulate -- except that Newt's America hasn't been saved yet. But he has a plan for that, laying out his talking points in the ad just vaguely enough to upset virtually no one. So he really is acting like a frontrunner. "We can revive our economy to create jobs. Shrink government and the regulations that strangle our businesses. Throw out the tax code and replace it with one that's simple and fair. We can regain the world's respect by standing strong again and being true to our faith and respecting one another. We can return power to the people and to the states we live in so we'll all have more freedom, opportunity, and control over our lives."

Related: Who's Winning the GOP Race on Twitter

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/atlantic/20111205/pl_atlantic/itsmorningamericanewtsnewiowaad45727

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Hezbollah: Israel detonates communications 'spy' device

The Israeli army on Friday detonated an espionage device in southern Lebanon that had been monitoring a communications network, Shia group Hezbollah said.

"The Israeli enemy today detonated an espionage apparatus latched onto a communications network between the villages of Srifa and Deir Kifa by drone after the Islamic Resistance [Hezbollah] succeeded in uncovering the device," read a statement released by the Syrian- and Iranian-backed group.

No one was injured in the explosion east of the coastal city of Tyre, the statement said.

A Hezbollah official in southern Lebanon told AFP the militant movement earlier on Friday had sent five of its members to monitor the area where the device had been planted, which could have alerted the Israelis that their equipment had been exposed.

On December 3, 2010, Israel also detonated two espionage devices in the southern Lebanese village of Wadi al-Qaysiyya.

Friday's incident came days after a rocket launched from southern Lebanon landed in Israel, prompting the Jewish state to respond with a volley of rockets.

No one was injured in the attack, which was claimed by an Al-Qaeda-inspired group that calls itself the Brigades of Abdullah Azzam.

Hezbollah in recent weeks has rekindled a campaign against what it says are US and Israeli espionage networks in Lebanon, with the party recently announcing it had exposed infiltrators in the Shia group working for the Central Intelligence Agency.

Lebanese authorities last year launched a crackdown on alleged Israeli spy rings, arresting more than 100 people on suspicion of spying for the Mossad since April 2009.

The arrests included high-ranking security and telecommunications officials.

Hezbollah, which largely controls southern Lebanon, last fought a devastating war with its arch-foe Israel in the summer of 2006.

-AFP/NOW Lebanon

Source: http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=338833

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Video: Life After Lipitor

Discussing whether Pfizer doing enough to replace the lost revenue from Lipitor, with Tim Chiang, CRT Capital Group, and Catherine Arnold, Credit Suisse. They also discuss what a restructured Pfizer look like in 2012.

Related Links:

Business & financial news headlines from msnbc.com

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45498658/

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Foreclosure fraud whistleblower found dead

By msnbc.com staff

A notary public who signed tens of thousands of false documents in a massive foreclosure scam before blowing the whistle on the scandal has been found dead in her Las Vegas home.

NBC station KSNV of Las Vegas reported that the woman, Tracy Lawrence, 43, was scheduled to be sentenced Monday morning after she pleaded guilty this month to notarizing the signature of an individual not in her presence. She failed to show up for her hearing, and police found her body at her home later in the day.

It could not immediately be determined whether Lawrence, who faced up to one year in jail and a fine of up to $2,000, died of susicide or of natural causes, KSNV reported. ?Detectives said they had ruled out homicide.

Lawrence came forward earlier this month and blew the whistle on the operation, in which title officers Gary Trafford, 49, of Irvine, Calif., and Geraldine Sheppard, 62, of Santa Ana, Calif. ? who worked for a Florida processing company used by most major banks to process repossessions ? allegedly forged signatures on tens of thousands of default notices from 2005 to 2008.


Trafford and Sheppard were charged two weeks ago with 606 counts of offering false instruments for recording, false certification on certain instruments and notarization of the signature of a person not in the presence of a notary public. You can read a .pdf version of their indictment here.

Police said at the time that the alleged scam had thrown into question the legality of most Las Vegas home foreclosures in the past few years, leaving many people living in foreclosed-upon homes that they unknowingly don't actually own.

"I would suggest you review your documents and bring them to an expert and an attorney," said John Kelleher, chief deputy attorney general for Nevada's fraud unit.

Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/29/9099162-foreclosure-fraud-whistleblower-found-dead

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