• 21Nov

    Student Group Wants More Guns on Campus 

    Wednesday, November 21, 2007 4:59:23 AM 

    By MICHELLE ROBERTS 

     

    Mike Guzman and thousands of other students say the best way to prevent campus bloodshed is more guns. 

    Guzman, an economics major at Texas State University-San Marcos, is among 8,000 students nationwide who have joined the nonpartisan Students for Concealed Carry on Campus, arguing that students and faculty already licensed to carry concealed weapons should be allowed to pack heat along with their textbooks. 

    “It’s the basic right of self defense,” said Guzman, a 23-year-old former Marine. “Here on campus, we don’t have that right, that right of self defense.” 

    Every state but Illinois and Wisconsin allows residents some form of concealed handgun carrying rights, with 36 states issuing permits to most everyone who meets licensing criteria. The precise standards vary from state to state, but most require an applicant to be at least 21 and to complete formal instruction on use of force. 

    Many states forbid license-holders from carrying weapons on school campuses, while in states where the decision is left to the universities, schools almost always prohibit it. Utah is the only state that expressly allows students to carry concealed weapons on campus. 

    College campuses are different from other public places where concealed weapons are allowed. Thousands of young adults are living in close quarters, facing heavy academic and social pressure — including experimenting with drugs and alcohol — in their first years away from home. 

    W. Gerald Massengill, the chairman of the independent panel that investigated the Virginia Tech shootings, said those concerns outweigh the argument that gun-carrying students could have reduced the number of fatalities inflicted by someone like Tech gunman Seung-Hui Cho. 

    “I’m a strong supporter of the Second Amendment,” said Massengill, a former head of the Virginia state police. “But our society has changed, and there are some environments where common sense tells us that it’s just not a good idea to have guns available.” 

    His view is echoed by Peter Hamm, a spokesman for the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, who says campus safety concerns cannot be addressed by adding more guns to campuses. 

    “If there’s more we need to do, we certainly need to do that, but introducing random access to firearms is not the solution,” said Hamm. “You have more victims, not fewer victims.” 

    Students for Concealed Carry on Campus gathered momentum after the April killings at Virginia Tech, where the gunman shot 32 people dead before killing himself. 

    http://www.mail.com/Article.aspx?articlepath=APNews\Top%20Headlines\20071121\Guns_on_Campus_20071121.xml&cat=topheadlines&subcat=&pageid=1 

     

  • 16Nov

    Newswise (11/13/07) Most of the information that hinted at possible trouble prior to the 9-11 attacks was buried under massive amounts of data being collected faster than analysts could handle. A single day’s collection would fill more than 6 million 160-gigabyte iPods, and some of the data conflicted with other pieces of information. To prevent such pieces of information from being missed again, researchers at the DHS Science and Technology Directorate are developing ways of viewing such data as a 3D picture where important clues are more easily identified. Mathematicians, logicians, and linguists are collaborating to make the massive amounts of data form a meaningful shape, assigning brightness, color, texture, and size to billions of known and apparent facts. For example, a day’s worth of video, cell phone calls, photos, bank records, chat rooms, and emails may be displayed as a blue-gray cloud with links to corresponding cities. “Were not looking for ‘meaning’ per se,” says Dr. Joseph Kielman, Basic Research Lead for the Directorate’s Command, Control and Interoperability Division, “but for patterns that will let us detect the expected and discover the unexpected.” Kielman says it will still be several years before visual analytics can automatically create connections from fuzzy data such as video.
    (go to web site)

  • 06Nov
    Trevor Darnborough, whose company, Darnbro, filed for a patent on securing RFID tags to clothing, hopes other schools will be interested.

     



    Ten schoolchildren in the United Kingdom are being tracked by RFID chips in their school uniforms as part of a pilot program.If the program proves successful as a way to hasten registration, simplify data entry for the school’s behavioral reporting system, and ensure attendance, Trevor Darnborough, whose company, Darnbro, filed for a patent on securing RFID tags to clothing, hopes other schools will be interested, according to the Doncaster Free Press.

    The chipped children are enrolled at Hungerhill School in Edenthorpe, England, a secondary school for ages 11 to 16.

    David Clouter, a parent and founder of Leave Them Kids Alone, a children’s advocacy group, condemned the plan. “With pupils being fingerprinted and now this it seems we are treating children in a way that we have traditionally treated criminals,” he told the Doncaster Free Press.

    “The system is not intrusive to the pupil in the slightest,” Hungerhill teacher Graham Wakeling told the Doncaster Free Press. He also said that all the patents of the children in the trial supported the tracking effort.

    Video surveillance is already commonplace in the United Kingdom, and a growing number of schoolchildren are fingerprinted for administrative and security reasons. Since 2001, nearly 6,000 pupils have been fingerprinted in the United Kingdom, the Daily Mail reported earlier this month, with 20 new schools embracing the practice every week.

    In a blog post about the report, security expert Bruce Schneier quipped, “So now it’s easy to cut class; just ask someone to carry your shirt around the building while you’re elsewhere.”

    http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=202601660