ASDU Election Van Wore Gantt Fliers ASDU Votes Down Appeal To

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

ASDU Election Van Wore Gantt Fliers ASDU Votes Down Appeal To Star faculty Anne Firor Scott and several other University professors were honored on separate occasions THE CHRONICLE ail over the globe. See page 3. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1990 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15.000 VOL. 86. NO. 68 ASDU election van wore Gantt fliers Forum reveals flaws in By JONATHAN BLUM said "it seemed obvious" that she What was supposed to be a could coordinate the van's opera­ the new alcohol policy non-partisan van sponsored by tion while she was at the office. ASDU to bring voters to the polls Her other Election Day ac­ By PEGGY KRENDL people actually dispense the on Election Day became a mov­ tivities kept Pearcy unaware of A forum on the new alcohol alcohol. ing Democratic advertisement the posting of the flyers on the policy revealed flaws in the The policy states that when campaign flyers supporting van, she said. "I was very busy." policy's provisions for carders, "event monitors may not con­ Harvey Gantt were posted on the Pearcy was unaware of who petitions to hold parties dur­ sume alcohol at any time dur­ vehicle. was driving the van at any given ing the week, and distribution ing the day on which the event time, she said. Pearcy said she Efforts made by members of of cups. is held." However, the stu­ could not guarantee that all driv­ ASDU to inform the student body The Alcoholic Beverages Reg­ dents noted that the policy ers were somehow affiliated with about the incident may have ulations Review Committee does not make clear whether the University, even though the been dampened by University . will clarify these sections the carders or the servers can agreement with Transportation administrators. before the policy takes effect drink the day of the party. Services had that stipulation. ASDU President Connie on Jan. 7, 1991, said commit­ The committee said they had Pearcy said she suggested to Ex­ She was notified ofthe flyers' tee chair Maureen Cullins, as­ not considered that question, ternal Affairs Committee Chair presence by the secretary at the GEORGE IVEY/THE CHRONICLE sistant to the vice-president of but Dean for Student Life Richard Moore on the Friday ASDU office, who called her at student affairs. Suzanne Wasiolek noted that before the election that a van be the Democratic Party office after Connie Pearcy The forum, held yesterday, state law prevents people secured for transporting stu­ receiving phone calls from both to Pearcy to sign. She refused, was comprised of living group from drinking while they are dents and employees between the Office of Student Life and claiming that the University ad­ and fraternity presidents and serving alcohol. the polling sites and their homes. Transportation Services request­ ministration had told her they members asking questions According to the new policy, Moore, a Trinity sophomore, ing the flyers' removal. would deal with the situation, about the new policy to the parties at which alcohol is dis­ did obtain the use of a University "When I did find out [about the Moore said. committee. The students tributed can only be held be­ donated van. "[Pearcy] took it Gantt signs on the van], they Pearcy said she was "very pointed out some ambiguities tween 5 p.m. Thrusday and 5 from there," he said. came off," Pearcy said. hurt, very disappointed" that the in the policy. a.m. Sunday, but does have a The van was donated to ASDU "It was me, not ASDU," Pearcy Legislative Council had not provision which allows living by Transportation Services with said in accepting blame for the waited to talk to her before writ­ groups to petition for parties the understanding that it was to The new policy creates a incident. She called her actions ing the letter. to be held on other days of the be a "totally non-partisan system whereby groups must "irresponsible." The members of the council de­ week. The petition must be venture," said Mark Nielson, provide two monitors. One Moore said he found out about cided not to send the letter to The watches for underage presented to ASDU, the Inter­ manager of transportation ser­ the incident the next morning. Chronicle. drinkers at the source of dis­ fraternity Council, and the vices. Nielson said Transporta­ He suggested to the members of A few days later, Moore pursued tribution while the second Upperclass Housing Associa­ tion Services has loaned out vans the ASDU Legislative Council the matter with Pearcy again. watches for violations of the tion and it is then passed to for similar use in the past. that they write a letter to The "When I asked her later, she said policy throughout the rest of the Alcohol Beverages Regual- Pearcy, a Trinity senior, was Chronicle informing the student it had been taken care of," he the party. There must also be tions Review Committee for responsible for the van's opera­ body about the incident. "I felt said. a carder at the door who approval. tion throughout Election Day, students should know about it," Pearcy said she offered to write checks IDs and uses a rubber Because the policy states which she spent working at the Moore said. letters to The Chronicle and /or stamp to identify students Democratic Party office in Dur­ that petitions must be pres- The Legislative Council the Durham Morning Herald ex- who are 21 or older. Separate ham for the Gantt campaign. She drafted a letter which was given See PEARCY on page 5 • See ALCOHOL on page 6 • ASDU votes down appeal Cheney says to Congress to avoid war U.S. should fight Iraq By DAN BRADY writing the resolution was to ex­ ASDU legislators narrowly press students' desire to give eco­ By MICHEAL GORDON defeated a resolution that would nomic sanctions on Iraq more N.Y. Times News Service have called on Congress to con­ time to take effect, said co-spon­ WASHINGTON — Defense vene and discuss a peaceful sor David Richardson, a Trinity Secretary Dick Cheney told Con­ answer to the Middle East con­ senior. gress on Monday that military flict. "It is easy to sit down in our action rather than economic Opponents ofthe resolution ar­ chairs and let this thing slide sanctions is the only sure way of gued that the bill's content did by," said Trinity junior Sean forcing Iraqi troops to leave Ku­ not reflect the opinions of the Welton, who also sponsored the wait. student body and, even if it did, bill. "But we need to express our Cheney, rebutting suggestions the representatives needed time opinions." from key Democrats and many to consult their constituents In response to critics who said former military leaders that the before voting on such an issue. the representatives did not have United States wait a year or The resolution which was time to gauge the attitudes of more to see if economic sanctions defeated, 34-28 stated, in part, their constituents, Trinity sopho­ work, told the Senate Armed Ser­ "ASDU appeals to Congress to more Barry Starrfield said repre­ vices Committee that delaying prohibit the intiation of war by sentatives should already know military action for that period the United States against Iraq the opinions of their constitu­ would further damage the world until economic sanctions are ents. economy, allow Iraq to stiffen its given time to work . and that "If your dorm isn't talking defenses and risk the erosion of no decision ... is to substitute for about this [the Mideast crisis] the international effort to compel Congressional control of our then you might as well be going President Saddam Hussein of country's use of military force to UNC-Chapel Hill," he" said. Iraq to remove his forces from abroad." "This bill is just asking for the Kuwait. The resolution was conceived Constitution to be enforced. Con­ "There is no guarantee that shortly after Friday's Peacefest gress has the power to declare sanctions will force him out of anti-war demonstration and was war, not the President." Kuwait," Cheney said, adding submitted from the floor of Trinity sophomore Richard that the United States does not ASDU Monday night. Sponsors Moore said he feared this state­ GEORGE IVEY/THE CHRONICLE have "an indefinite period of time wrote it in response to the United ment did not reflect the attitudes Decking the dormitory to wait for sanctions to produce of a majority of students. Nations authorization of force to Trinity juniors Jessica Farnham and Leigh Culpepper engage the desired result." 'This resolution will get to the expel Iraq from Kuwait if it does in the very dangerous art of decorating the tree in an attempt "Given the nature of the not withdraw by Jan. 15,1991. press ... it will be the opinion of to enlighten the exam season. Nice try. regime, given Saddam Hussein's One of the sponsors' goals in See ASDU on page 6 • See SENATE on page 12 • PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE TUESDAY/DECEMBER 4, 1990 World and National Newsfile Associated Press Rebelling Argentinian army factions surrender Racial violence in Miami: By SHIRLEY CHRISTIAN to retake the 15-story army headquarters. ing toward the city from the northern N.Y. Times News Service Miami youths set fires and threw rocks Late Monday morning, the army com­ province of Entre Rios, from which a rebel and bottles at police Monday night af­ BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Several mand announced the first of the recap­ column was reported trying to advance in ter six police officers were acquitted of hundred army dissidents rebelled early tures, saying it had retaken a battalion armored vehicles.
Recommended publications
  • A Magazine for Taylor University Alumni and Friends (Spring 2005) Taylor University
    Taylor University Pillars at Taylor University The aT ylor Magazine Ringenberg Archives & Special Collections Spring 2005 Taylor: A Magazine for Taylor University Alumni and Friends (Spring 2005) Taylor University Follow this and additional works at: https://pillars.taylor.edu/tu_magazines Part of the Higher Education Commons Recommended Citation Taylor University, "Taylor: A Magazine for Taylor University Alumni and Friends (Spring 2005)" (2005). The Taylor Magazine. 139. https://pillars.taylor.edu/tu_magazines/139 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Ringenberg Archives & Special Collections at Pillars at Taylor University. It has been accepted for inclusion in The aT ylor Magazine by an authorized administrator of Pillars at Taylor University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. SPRING 2005 Revisiting Okinawa President's Perspective Philanthropic Women aspirations contemplate Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable-if anything is excellent or praiseworthy-think about such things. Philippians 4:8 We can only know one thing about God—that He is what we are not. Our wretchedness alone is an image of this.The more we contemplate it, the more we contemplate Him. SimoneWeil The idealists dream and the dream is told, and the practical men listen and ponder and bring back the truth and apply it to human life, and progress and growth and higher human ideals come into being and so the world moves ever on. Anna Howard Shaw \ The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing.
    [Show full text]
  • Acronyms and Abbreviations
    Acronyms and Abbreviations ACATS Advisory Committee on Ad­ BMCP Bidirectional Motion-Compen- vanced Television Service sated Prediction ACR/NEMA American College of Radi­ BTC Block Truncation Coding ologylNational Electrical Manufactur­ BTl British Telecom International ers Association B-tree Balanced-tree ADPCM Adaptive Differential Pulse CCD Charge-Coupled Device Code Modulation CCIR Consultative Committee for Inter­ ADSL Asymmetric Digital Subscriber national Radio Line CCITT Consultative Committee for Inter­ AES Audio Engineering Society national Telephony & Telegraphy ALDC Adaptive Lossless Data Com­ CD Compact Disc pression CDMA Code-Division Multiple Access AM Amplitude Modulation communications ANSI American National Standards In­ CDPD Cellular Digital Packet Data stitute CD-E Compact Disc-Erasable APPN Advanced Peer-to-Peer Net­ CD-I Compact Disc-Interactive working CD-R Compact Disc-Recordable ASCII American national Standard Code CD-ROM Compact Disc-Read Only of Information Interchange (a byte­ Memory oriented character encoding scheme) CD-ROM XA Compact Disc-Read­ ASIC Application-Specific Integrated Only Memory eXtended Architecture Circuit CELP Code-Excited Linear Predictive ATM Asynchronous Transfer Mode coding ATRAC Adaptive TRansform Acoustic CIF Common Intermediate Format for Coding H.261 video ATV Advanced (digital) Television CISC Complex Instruction-Set Computer BLDC Bit-mapped Lossless Data Com­ CLI Compression Laboratories Inc. pression CPU Central Processing Unit 371 372 Acronyms and Abbreviations CR Computed Radiography.
    [Show full text]
  • Razorcake Issue #31 As A
    was on my back at the bottom of an abandoned swimming pool after Some of them die. Then ants eat them. My leg felt a tingle; I pulled it out an hour of skating, hoping the pain would subside. I heard a wet from under the desk, and saw that there were about one hundred ants on snap and didn’t want to look. I hadn’t been getting rad. I was just and inside the cast. I got a flashlight to see where they were concentrat- I returning to the shallow end, something I’ve done thousands of ed and smacked my forehead on the edge of my desk when I leaned times. When I looked, my foot was pointing in the wrong direction and down. For the first time in a long while, I felt crushed. I felt like quitting. was slowly trying to correct itself. My back foot had slipped off my skate- All of this: the zine, the books, the non-profit. Kaput. Done. Get a job, board and I’d run over my ankle. This was mid September. We’d literally work for someone else. I’d given it my shot and it felt like I’d been beat- dropped off the last Razorcakes for our bi-monthly big mailout hours en by hammers. before. As a treat to myself for working so hard, I’d planned a week-long My friends and family wouldn’t let me go. Chris Devlin drove me “vacation at home,” where I didn’t have anything solid planned except to physical therapy and to get my pain medication, while learning new skating new places, reading, listening to music, and hanging out.
    [Show full text]
  • Michigan State Game Will Be Showing on Satellite Disc
    Friday, September 16, 1994 • Vol. XXVI No. 15 THE INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SERVING NOTRE DAME AND SAINT MARY'S Clinton to Haiti's leaders: 'Your time is up' By TERENCE HUNT Associated Press Aristide WASHINGTON In a terse ultimatum from the Oval Office, President Clinton awaits told Haiti's military leaders Thursday night, "Your time is • • up. Leave now or we will force Invasion you from power." Against a chorus of opposi­ By PIERRE-YVES GLASS tion, Clinton used a prime time Associated Press address to build his case for an American invasion of Haiti to A virulent anti-American expel a military regime that - "'~ during his days as a leftist stole power and stands accused 1' Blue Ridge Class: ·. parish priest, exiled Haitian of 3,000 political murders. Amphibious Co.mmand Ship President Jean-Bertrand Aristide now must rely on the "We must act," Clinton said •g* I I*!!' II United States to get him back from the Oval Office. USS Mt. Whitney (LCC 20) home. But he said that the United States' mission in Haiti would For most of his three years be "limited and specific" to in exile, he strenuously object­ "remove the dictators from ed to the idea of being restored power and restore Haiti's legit­ to power by an American inva­ imate democratically elected sion force. government." He said U. S. No doubt he will return with forces would help train a civil­ mixed feelings about being ian police force, but he would borne home by Washington's not get involved in rebuilding troops. Haiti.
    [Show full text]
  • Clinton Wins by Landslide Bush Years Clinton Handed Presidency
    VOL. XXV. NO. 47 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1992 THE INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SERVING NOTRE DAME AND SAINT MARY'S Clinton wins by landslide Bush years Clinton handed presidency drew curtain MM by wide electoral margin on Cold War Bill Clinton was elected the ■ Clinton campaign / page 4 nation’s 42nd president on ■ Election section / page 9 Tuesday in a Democratic ■ Campus turnout / page 9 WASHINGTON (AP) — The landslide that swept George most enduring accomplishment Bush from office and ended 12 for our country to face the of George Bush’s presidency years of divided government in challenges of the end of the may have been his role in Washington. The Arkansas Cold War and the beginning of helping end the Cold War, the governor vowed to confront the next century,” Clinton said. ideological battle that shaped problems “too long ignored,” “To restore growth to our U.S. foreign policy for 45 years from the economy to AIDS and country and opportunity to our and kept the world at the brink the environment. people, to empower our own of nuclear war. Bush wished Clinton well and people so they can take more But voters on Tuesday re­ promised a smooth transition of responsibility for their own jected Bush’s plea for a second power. “It’s over,” he whispered lives.” term to try to try to help both to his wife Barbara. The 46-year-old governor will America and the world fully ad­ Voters were renewing become the nation’s third- just to the “new world order.” Democratic control of Congress youngest president when he Of the Bush presidency’s fail­ and said pocketbook concerns takes office Jan.
    [Show full text]
  • Duke University Dissertation Template
    Conservatism and Culture: The Transformation of the U.S. Army After Vietnam by Joseph D. Swinney Department of History Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Dirk Bönker, Supervisor ___________________________ Nancy MacLean ___________________________ Anna Krylova ___________________________ Adriane Lentz-Smith Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History in the Graduate School of Duke University 2019 i v ABSTRACT Conservatism and Culture: The Transformation of the U.S. Army After Vietnam by Joseph D. Swinney Department of History Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Dirk Bönker, Supervisor ___________________________ Nancy MacLean ___________________________ Anna Krylova ___________________________ Adriane Lentz-Smith An abstract of a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History in the Graduate School of Duke University 2019 i v Copyright by Joseph D. Swinney 2019 Abstract This dissertation explores the revitalization of the U.S. army during the two decades following the Vietnam War. It questions how the army went from a nearly broken institution in the early 1970s to, arguably, one of the nation’s most respected institutions after the 1991 Persian Gulf War. Through an examination of collections of articles published in the extensive military press of the period, collections of personal papers from both senior and lower ranking army officers, and historical files from the Combined Arms Center at Fort Leavenworth, this dissertation shows that the army’s revitalization was fundamentally a transformation in the institution’s culture and conceptions of professionalism. After the Vietnam War, the army followed the nation in its conservative political turn.
    [Show full text]
  • Bush Doubts Air War Alone Will Drive Iraqis from Kuwait Duke Card Helps Nab Recent Graduate Who Was Computer Thief Duke Universi
    Chairs endowed The University is getting three new endowed communications professorships, thanks to the THE CHRONICLE efforts of Joel Fleishman and others. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6,1991 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROUNA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 86, NO. 91 Bush doubts air war alone will drive Iraqis from Kuwait By ANDREW ROSENTHAL Staff, does not necessarily mean there would be no negotiations N.Y. Times News Service that a ground offensive is immi­ and Jjiio concessions" on the Gulf War Roundup Tuesday, Feb. 5 WASHINGTON — President nent. United Nations' demand that Bush said Tuesday that he was But the tenor of Bush's Iraq leave Kuwait. Powell and Cheney to visit Gulf skeptical that air power alone remarks Tuesday, made at a But Bush spelled out in more President Bush is dispatching Defense More Iraqi would drive Iraq from Kuwait hastily called White House news detail than ever before the terms Secretary Dick Cheney and Gen. Colin planes and ordered his top two military conference, seemed to mark a under which he would call a halt Powell to the Persian Gulf to report on to Iran allied progress advisers to visit the Persian Gulf significant step toward that to the fighting against Iraq. For U.S.S.R. -> Ten more Iraqi planes later this week to assess whether decision and appeared to be part that to happen, he said, there took refuge in Iran, a ground offensive against Presi­ of a deliberate effort to prepare must be "a credible, visible, to­ TURKEY bringing the total to 110 Tikrit V... 1— dent Saddam Hussein's army the country for it.
    [Show full text]
  • Irish Racing Team's New Car Is Real, Real Fine
    8S150 YEARSM t i MOL X - H O B SE R V E R SAINT MARY’S Friday, September 9, 1994 • Vol. XXVI No.10 H NOTRt DAME -IN 9 TI IE INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SERVING NOTRE DAME AND SAINT MARY'S Irish racing team’s new car is real, real fine By JASON WILLIAMS Associate News Editor “She’s real fine, my 385." In their original song, the Beach Boys sing “she’s real fine my 409,” glamorizing loud, four-barreled, gas-guzzling hot rod cars that whisked people across the wide open American roads. But for the most part, that era has passed, and Notre Dame engineering students are helping to usher in a new way of automotive travel by racing a sleek, almost dead silent, Indy- style battery powered car with a maximum voltage of 385. Notre Dame, along with 11 other universities, purchased rolling chassis and fiberglass shells as specified by the Solar and Electric Racing Association (S.E.R.A.) in Phoenix. A chal­ lenge to the schools was then put out to see who could design the best type of propulsion sys­ tem. “T h e re ’s two objectives in ­ volved,” said Col. John Miles, Notre Dame’s assistant dean of Engineering. “One is to give undergrads hands on research, and the second is to enhance technology of electric vehicles.” Notre Dame Racing, which consisted of 26 undergraduates last year, chose a lead acid bat­ tery produced by Delco/Remy for their car. The undergrads, led by their advisor Professor William Barry, then designed what they believed was the Photo courtesy of Kevin Burke The Delco/Remy, one of the Notre Dame Engineering department's recent creations, zips around the track.
    [Show full text]
  • Special Education Teacher
    PANAMA CITY SPORTS | B1 COLLEGE FOOTBALL PLAYOFF Clemson-Alabama, Oklahoma-Georgia set for playoff semis Monday, December 4, 2017 www.newsherald.com @The_News_Herald facebook.com/panamacitynewsherald 75¢ A DAY IN THE LIFE OF A NATION & WORLD | A11 CAKES AND Special education teacher SEGREGATION Lawyers are turning to a Supreme Court ruling against a segregationist barbecue restaurant owner in support of a gay couple who were refused a wedding cake by a baker with religious objections Charter school divide Minorities are studying in racial isolation, which runs counter to the schools’ goal of off ering a better alternative By Ivan Moreno, Larry Fenn and Michael Melia The Associated Press MILWAUKEE — Char- ter schools are among the nation’s most segregated, an Associated Press analysis Media Specialist Cathy Felty helps Jacob Creamer with a coding game on Thursday at Margaret K. Lewis School. finds — an outcome at odds, critics say, with their goal of offering a better alternative By Eryn Dion where students are working to failing traditional public 747-5069 | @PCNHErynDion on walking to the tune of schools. [email protected] "Dancing Queen" by ABBA; National enrollment data and just the general noise shows that charters are vastly PANAMA CITY — For of students cheering for a over-represented among anyone used to quiet hall- correct answer, commu- schools where minorities ways and closed classroom nicating their happiness or study in the most extreme doors, walking into Marga- displeasure. Communica- racial isolation. As of school ret K. Lewis School, nestled tion, the teachers will tell year 2014-2015, more than in the heart of Millville, can you, is their number one 1,000 of the nation’s 6,747 be a little jarring.
    [Show full text]
  • Cable Service to Dorms May Be Illegal Navy ROTC at Triangle Universities
    Cavaliers conquered Greg Koubek and the gang are making their way through the ACC with devilish glee. See THE CHRONICLE page 15 for details of last night's victory. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8,1991 © DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 86, NO. 93 Cable service to dorms may be illegal Navy ROTC at triangle By ROBIN ROSENFELD may be immediately added, al­ contract. Due to a very competi­ The University has been though extra wiring will be re­ tive market the fee probably receiving its cable signal for free quired to get cable in dorm wouldn't increase by more than universities will merge from the Medical Center lines for rooms. one dollar, said ASDU President about 15 years, said Jim Members of ASDU and Cable Tonya Robinson, who coor­ By JENNIFER GREESON programs across the board." Dronsfield of Tel-Com. It is not 13 began working with Tel-Com dinated the survey. The University's Naval "The whole DOD is being clear, however, whether the Uni­ in October to bring expanded A few students in the survey Reserve Officer Training downsized. A few years ago versity was ever on the Medical cable options into dorm rooms for expressed concern they might Corps program will consoli­ everyone was hoping to see a Center contract with Cablevision a fee. The plan was part of a have to pay for the cable hookup date with programs at the 600-ship Navy," Lundquist of Durham. larger effort to connect dorm in their rooms despite the fact University of North Carolina said.
    [Show full text]
  • Death of Priest Ruled a Suicide
    Sunny, Cool Clear and ACCENT: Peace movement reps visit ND cool today, high 65 to 70. Clear and very cool tonight with the low near 45. Sunny and pleas­ ant Thursday with the high in VIEWPOINT: An intellectual potpourri the lower 70s. VOL. XXII, NO. 7 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1987 the independent newspaper serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s Death of priest ruled a suicide By CHRIS BEDNARSKI found Rasmussen’s body in the News Editor basement, said Kilgore. Rasmussen, a member of the The death of a priest who Notre Dame faculty since 1979, taught theology at Notre Dame left a note in a sealed envelope was ruled a suicide late Mon­addressed to a friend, McMeel day night by Deputy County said. The note asked that Ras­ Coroner James McMeel. m ussen’s body be crem ated “ in Father Niels Rasmussen, 53, the event anything happened to was found dead in the base­him,” McMeel said. ment of his home at 602 West Police, however, are not Parkovash St. Monday around treating this as a suicide note, 4 p.m., said Lieut. Rick Kil­ he added. gore, public information offi­ University President Father cer for the South Bend Police. Edward Malloy will celebrate An associate professor of the­ a memorial Mass for Rasmus­ ology, Rasmussen died of a sen Friday at 10 a.m. in Sacred single, self-inflicted gunshot Heart Church. wound to the chest, McMeel A prayer service will be held said. for Rasmussen at 4:15 today in McMeel estimated the time the Library Auditorium of death as sometime Saturday Lounge.
    [Show full text]
  • UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations
    UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Towards Improving Cybersecurity and Augmenting Human Training Performance Using Brain Imaging Techniques Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1kg856mj Author Rahman, Md Lutfor Publication Date 2020 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE Towards Improving Cybersecurity and Augmenting Human Training Performance Using Brain Imaging Techniques A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Computer Science by Md Lutfor Rahman December 2020 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Chengyu Song, Chairperson Dr. Megan Peters Dr. Vagelis Papalexakis Dr. Srikanth Krishnamurthy Dr. Zhiyun Qian Copyright by Md Lutfor Rahman 2020 The Dissertation of Md Lutfor Rahman is approved: Committee Chairperson University of California, Riverside Acknowledgments Alhamdulillah for everything. It would be impossible for a child of parents without a formal education to attain the highest degree (Ph.D.) without the mercy of the Almighty. I am grateful to my advisor Dr. Chengyu Song - a brilliant researcher and humble being who allowed me to grow as an independent researcher, but was always by my side for any help. My Ph.D. journey was smooth and stress-free from beginning to end. I am also grateful to Dr. Megan Peters, Dr. Vagelis Papalexakis, Dr. Srikanth Krishnamurthy, Dr. Zhiyun Qian for their valuable suggestions in my research and career. It will surely help me to be a better scientist. I would like to thank my internship mentors at Army Research Lab, Dr. Antony Passaro and Dr. Benjamin T.
    [Show full text]