[25470] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Have your friends been arrested?
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Magnify Background Checks)
Fri Apr 4 20:05:12 2014
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Date: Fri, 4 Apr 2014 17:04:21 -0700
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Investigate Anyone's Background!
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Jan. 30, 2014: In this Thursday photo, residents attend a devotional at
the Salvation Army in Los Banos, Calif. After the spiritual service, they
each collect a bag of free food. Leaders at the Los Banos
Salvation Army fear that the states drought will cause more people to
need food this year because they wont have jobs on Central Valley
farms.APMENDOTA, Calif. Religious leaders of multiple faiths and farmers
in Nevada and Utah turned to prayer this weekend for help easing
severe drought conditions gripping the West.The plea to above comes weeks
after the federal government declared parts of 11 parched Western and Central
states natural disaster areas.Faith leaders asked for divine intervention
during a special multifaith service Saturday at a Mormon church in the
Reno suburb of Sparks. And on Sunday, the Utah Farm Bureau Federation
asked the public to join in prayer and fasting for snow and
rain for livestock and crops as part of its Harvesting Faith event."We
can't go to the Legislature to ask for help, (so) we decided
to go to the guy upstairs," Ron Gibson, a dairy farmer in
Weber County, Utah, told the Deseret News. "One thing you learn as
a farmer is most of the things that happen in your life
are totally out of your control."Rajan Zed, who organized the Nevada service,
said Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Jewish, Baha'i and other faith
leaders who participated are confident it'll bring positive results."When
God sees (all t
CAIRO A Cairo court says it has acquitted a cameraman for
the Qatar-based network Al-Jazeera, after he was held for months on charges
of committing acts of violence.Mohamed Badr, a cameraman for Al-Jazeera's
channel in Egypt, was arrested following clashes in July. The court said
in a statement Sunday that a judge acquitted him and 62 others.Badr's
acquittal comes amid a wider crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood, after
the military's ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi on July 3. Al-Jazeera
journalists have been targeted for their coverage of Brotherhood protesters.
Authorities have long depicted the network as pro-Brotherhood.On Wednesday,
Egypt said 20 journalists, including four foreigners working for Al-Jazeera,
will face trial on charges of joining or aiding a terrorist group
and endangering national security.
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">up."On Friday, the Salt Lake School
District both apologized and placed a school cafeteria manager and a district
supervisor on paid leave while officials further investigate the incident.The
Utah school is located in a middle-class neighborhood, and the district
qualifies for federal reimbursement on lunches when students select certain
offerings within nutritional guidelines."This was a mistake," spokesman
Jason Olsen said. "There shouldn't have been food taken away from these
students once they went through that line."The Utah incident provoked something
of a national firestorm and even prompted one news outlet in Texas
to check how students in their local school districts would fare under
similar circumstances."We make sure every child gets a meal no matter what,"
Kelly Grones, director of Food Services for the Round Rock Independent School
District outside Austin told KEYE TV. "When they hit a certain limit
they're offered a cheese sandwich and milk.Ross told NBC 10 the Galloway
district has taken her son's lunch numerous times since third grade, and
a principal even apologized for doing so last year.She conceded she had
allowed her sons lunch account to become delinquent, but attributed the
situation to her sons occasional failure to relay notes and messages on
the issue sent home from the school.The districts superintendent -- Dr.
Annette Giaquinto -- reportedly said her schools have a similar cheese sandwich
policy as the distri
onfronting hopelessness."You see troubled young men
who are desperate and they strike out and they don't see that
they have any hope," Bond said.Schools generally are much safer than they
were five, 10 or 15 years ago, Stephens said. Stephens noted that
perspective is important. In Chicago there were 500 homicides in 2012, about
the same number in the nation's 132,000-plus K-12 schools over two decades."I
believe schools are much safer than they used to be but clearly
they still have a good ways to go," Stephens said.The recent budget
deal in Congress provides $140 million to support safe school environments,
and is a $29 million increase, according to the office of Democratic
Sen. Tom Harkin, chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions
Committee.About 90 percent of districts have tightened security since the
shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut, estimates Randi
Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers.Many schools
now have elaborate school safety plans and more metal detectors, surveillance
cameras and fences. They've taken other steps, too, such as requiring ID
badges and dress codes. Similar to fire drills, some schools practice locking
down classrooms, among their responses to potential violence.Weingarten
said more emphasis needs to be placed on improving school cultures by
ensuring schools have resources for counselors, social workers and after-care
programs. Many of the
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