Shared posts

07 Feb 03:13

holy fuck you guys

Courtney shared this story from Super Opinionated.

thegeminisage:

so, because of the ~evul~ plans of the of the rival band, jem gets stuck at the statue of liberty after the last boat’s left when she has a concert to get to

& the new thing this ep is everyone trying to find out her real name, because there’s a reward out for it, so this guy agrees to ferry her across if he can “have her secret”

so they get across and jem’s like, “you wanna see my other face? you wanna see it?” and he’s like “RIGHT NOW”

and she uses her holographic earrings—

imageimageimageimage

—to PULL OFF HER OWN GODDAMN FACE SCOOBY DOO STYLE, AND REVEAL HIS FACE UNDERNEATH IT. she then proceeds to growl menacingly, in his OWN VOICE, “so, whaddaya gonna do with all that loot?”

his reaction is to start shrieking, “SHE’S ME, SHE’S ME! SHE LOOKS LIKE ME!” in pure unadulterated existential horror and flail so badly he falls backwards into the river

this being an 80s cartoon for small children, she does, of course, throw him a life preserver ring—

image

—while leaving him with an image that will haunt his nightmares for the rest of his small, bitter life.

she then transforms BACK into jem and walks away without batting an eyelash. stone fucking cold.

image
07 Feb 03:11

theshriekingsisterhood:Cast disabled actors for disabled characters 2k15

Courtney shared this story from Super Opinionated.

theshriekingsisterhood:

Cast disabled actors for disabled characters 2k15

07 Feb 03:11

brownpropaganda:sebastianneedleman: Indian suffragettes with...

Courtney shared this story from Super Opinionated.



brownpropaganda:

sebastianneedleman:

Indian suffragettes, with Sophia Duleep Singh 2nd from left.

women often “forgotten” by these white feminsts

07 Feb 03:03

Lucas Cranach, Fitting Reward for the Most Satanic Pope and his...



Lucas Cranach, Fitting Reward for the Most Satanic Pope and his Cardinals, 1545

07 Feb 03:03

Photo



06 Feb 17:46

In Charlie Hebdo’s name, chauvinistic Urdu journalists in Mumbai are going after a female editor

by Jyoti Punwani, Scroll.in
India-Editor-Charlie-Hebdo

What is the hounding of Shireen Dalvi, editor of the now-shut Mumbai edition of the Lucknow-based Urdu newspaper Awadhnama, all about? Making an example of her so that “no one dares publish any image of Prophet Muhammed again,” as Zubair Azmi, the first person to file a police complaint against her, claims? Or driving out the only woman who has broken the glass ceiling of her profession at astonishing speed?

The 46-year-old editor has been on the run since Jan. 17, after a host of complaints were filed against her in several parts of Maharashtra for reproducing the cover of the French magazine Charlie Hebdo on the front page of Awadhnama. The management of the paper shut down the edition soon after.

Ironically, those at the forefront of the campaign against Dalvi are not the usual maulanas but fellow journalists and intellectuals. Zubair Azmi heads Urdu Markaz, an organisation that promotes the cause of Urdu literature. Izhar Ahmed, president of the Urdu Patrakar Sangh, who helped get a Mumbra resident’s complaint registered, considers himself a “Muslim first, a journalist second.”

Under Islamic law, Dalvi committed “a crime that can never be forgiven and the punishment for which is death,” he claimed. “We are not asking for that. We are only asking that she be given the strictest punishment under Indian law.”

Pitfalls of community journalism

If Ahmed’s words embody the pitfalls of community journalism (which is what Urdu journalism has become after Independence), so does Shireen Dalvi’s case. Had she not been a Muslim, Imtiaz Ahmed, managing editor of Urdu Times, would not be pronouncing that this could be the end of the road for her as an Urdu journalist.

  And in five years since then, the jean-clad, burqa-less mother of two went from being associate editor to editor, leaving many seasoned journalists by the wayside  

Talking to the principal characters ranged against her, you realise the female journalist is not exactly popular among her peers. From being a freelancer living under the shadow of her journalist-poet husband Abdullah Kamal, she reached the top quickly after his death—too quickly, perhaps. So when she published a Charlie Hebdo cover in her paper, it seemed a heaven-sent opportunity for all those waiting for her to fail.

Dalvi used to write as a student, and it was an article of hers written for Kamal’s magazine that culminated in their marriage. A few years later, she resumed writing, but, on her husband’s advice, under the pseudonym “Umai Wijdan” (mother of Umai). It took her a long time to drop that for “Shireen Kamal.” But it was only after her husband passed away in 2010 that Shireen Dalvi re-emerged.

And in five years since then, the jean-clad, burqa-less mother of two went from being associate editor at Sahafat under the late Sajid Rashid to editor at Awadhnama, leaving many seasoned journalists by the wayside. She also worked as an associate editor with Hindustan. Her association with the iconoclastic journalist Sajid Rashid added nothing to her popularity. Rashid died suddenly in 2012. Among those who called for a boycott of his funeral was the Forum Against Blasphemy headed by Zubair Azmi. It is as head of this forum that Azmi has filed the complaint against Dalvi.

Resistance at new publication

Soon after Rashid’s untimely death, Dalvi left Sahafat, unable to work with the new editor Saeed Hamid, a senior journalist not particularly known for his liberal views. Her appointment last year as editor of Awadhnama, succeeding veteran journalist Khalil Zahed, who had joined amid much fanfare when the UP-based paper had been launched in Mumbai, came as a shock to her peers. “I immediately asked the proprietor: ‘You couldn’t find anyone else?’” snorted Nihal Sagir, who worked as sub-editor under Dalvi.

  “No one said a word in the office,” she said. “Had they done so, I would have heeded their advice  

It was Sagir’s inflammatory quote that featured in the first reports about the controversy in the Urdu papers. “I had warned her not to use the Charlie Hebdo cover,” he was quoted as saying in the Urdu Times, “but she brushed it off saying: “We should be broadminded. At the most, a few hundred copies will be burnt.’”

Sagir now admits he wasn’t in the office when the Jan. 17 issue was being produced—he had been sacked two days earlier. He explains the quote ascribed to him as a “misunderstanding that occurred during a phone interview. I knew that someone in the office had warned her, and this had been her reaction.”

However, Urdu Times managing editor Imtiaz Ahmed maintains that there was no misunderstanding: it was Sagir who had called the paper, eager to give his quote. It tallied with what he had been claiming all day on Whats App, added Ahmed.

But Dalvi denies such a warning was ever given. “No one said a word in the office,” she said. “Had they done so, I would have heeded their advice, because to me, my DTP [desk top publishing] operators represent my paper’s readership.” As things turned out, nobody spoke to her for her version after the picture was published, either. Her phone was switched off, says Ahmed.

An honest mistake

Why did Dalvi use the Charlie Hebdo cover, knowing the sensitivity about  images of the Prophet? “I do not agree that the cartoons represent the Prophet because there’s never been an image of him,” she said. She had wanted to use a picture of the latest Charlie Hebdo edition to illustrate a story, which quoted the Pope’s remarks on the limits to freedom of speech, and also pointed out that the killings of its staffers had, instead of silencing Charlie Hebdo, sent both its circulation and its price rocketing.

  She has rubbed too many people the wrong way in her quick climb to the top of the ladder  

But, by mistake, she used an old cover of Charlie Hebdo  which showed a tearful figure, hands covering his face lamenting, “It’s hard to be loved by idiots.” The headline in French said: “Mahomet overwhelmed by fundamentalists.” She had no idea the caricature represented the Prophet, Dalvi said.

Senior journalist Sarfaraz Arzoo, editor of Hindustan and secretary of the Urdu Patrakar Sangh, said that this was a mistake any newspaper could have made. “When we want to show a newspaper’s masthead, don’t we pull out the first picture of the paper we find from the Internet, not bothering to check the news below the masthead?” he asked. “Any journalist would understand this.”

Arzoo, who has published both Abdullah Kamal and Dalvi, is emphatic that Dalvi’s hounding has nothing to do with piety. “She has rubbed too many people the wrong way in her quick climb to the top of the ladder,” he said. “These people are using the Prophet for profit. And thanks to them, an Urdu paper has been closed and its staffers rendered jobless.”

A non-issue

Arzoo’s is perhaps the only paper that has not carried anything on the controversy. He describes it as a “non-issue” for the Muslim community. Indeed, given the limited circulation and relative obscurity of the Awadhnama, the picture might well have gone unnoticed.

  Dalvi and her children remain unable to return home.  

The day after it was published, Dalvi published a front-page apology, as well as an editorial that blamed Charlie Hebdo for provoking Muslims. But it also said that Muslims should counter insults to the Prophet with wisdom, not violence, and should remember that Islam had spread through good deeds.

Her opponents are not impressed. “Let the law take its own course,” they intoned, as FIRs piled up against her from Thane to Malegaon under Section 295 A of the Indian Penal Code (“outraging religious sentiments with malicious intent”). Meanwhile, Dalvi and her children remain unable to return home.

Is this really the end of the road for Shireen Dalvi? “She can come back to run a boutique or a beauty parlour, anything but a newspaper—that’s what these people want,” said Arzoo. Will he publish her again? He replied: “She’s welcome any time.”

This post first appeared on Scroll.in

This article is a part of Quartz India. For more, follow this link.
06 Feb 17:42

Facebook is now more valuable than JP Morgan Chase

by Matt Phillips
Facebook Mark Zuckerberg dominance

When will the indignities cease?

Share
Tap image to zoom
J.P. Morgan
Pierpont would not be pleased.(AP Photo)

First came news that the the House of Morgan may literally become a bowling alley. And now this!

The namesake of John Pierpont Morgan’s 19th century banking behemoth—which financed America’s industrial might, single-handedly reorganized the railroad system, bailed out the US government twice, and created what was then the world’s largest company, U.S. Steel—has seen its value eclipsed by Facebook.

(It appears to be some sort of electrified photo album that allows malingering clerks to swap images of their drooling broods whilst shirking their office duties!)

Share
Tap image to zoom

Yet, the verdict of the market must be taken into account. As of the end of trading yesterday, Facebook’s market value rested at some $212 billion, above the roughly $209 billion shareholders think JP Morgan Chase is worth. And much as we may like to see this as some sort of temporary market dyspepsia, the values of the two companies have been fluttering near one another for months.

06 Feb 10:18

Mississippi - the Nation's Leader In Vaccination Rates

by samzenpus
HughPickens.com writes The NYT reports that Mississippi — which ranks as one of the worst states for smoking, obesity and physical inactivity — seldom is viewed as a leader on health issues. But it is one of two states that permit neither religious nor philosophical exemptions to its vaccination program. Only children with medical conditions that would be exacerbated by vaccines may enroll in Mississippi schools without completing the immunization schedule, which calls for five vaccines. With a vaccination rate of greater than 99.7%, Mississippi leads the national median by five percentage points and has the country's highest immunization rate among kindergarten students. However, in recent weeks, the nearly unbending nature of Mississippi's law requiring students to be vaccinated has been in jeopardy, with two dozen lawmakers publicly supporting an exemption for "conscientious beliefs" turning Mississippi into one more battleground between medical experts who champion vaccinations and parents who fear the government's role in medical decision-making. "We have been a victim of our success, and people don't realize how bad these diseases are," said Mississippi state epidemiologist, Dr. Thomas E. Dobbs III, before lawmakers met to consider a bill that would have expanded exceptions to the vaccine requirement. Members of the education committee for the House of Representatives, in effect, endorsed the state's current approach. By a voice vote, they advanced a heavily amended version of the bill that now calls for only technical changes to Mississippi's law, which has been largely untouched since the late 1970s. The amended version of House Bill 130 puts into law the state's existing practice of granting medical waivers to children whose physicians request them, and in doing so, removes the Mississippi Department of Health's ability to deny such requests. "If a medical professional thinks it's wise not to vaccinate, then that will be the gospel," said House Education Committee Chairman John Moore, R-Brandon.

Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.








06 Feb 09:24

Egyptian Court sentences 230 Involved In 2011 Uprising, To Life In Prison Over Violence

An Egyptian court has sentenced 230 people, including one of the leading activists behind the country's 2011 uprising, to life in prison after finding them guilty of taking part in clashes between protesters and security forces.
06 Feb 09:24

The Independent Discovery Of TCP/IP, By Ants

What does the Internet have in common with an ant colony? More than you might think.
06 Feb 09:18

First Clip Of Ian McKellen’s Retired Elderly Sherlock In Mr Holmes, Sadly Devoid of Bees - Not Ian Holm. That's a different guy.

by Victoria McNally

This clip, however, does contain the following: 1) Sherlock Holmes throwing shade at Watson’s accounts of their detective work; 2) Sherlock Holmes being indirectly outsmarted by a woman, kind of; and 3) Ian McKellen being sassy to a tiny youngster while speaking in a raspy voice about not being able to remember stuff. It’s every nerd’s dream.

The film is an adaptation of the book A Slight Trick of the Mind, which is about retired bee-farming Holmes revisiting his old cases in the post WWII 1940s with the help of aforementioned tiny youngster. As of now it has no official release date, but let’s hope its soon After all, the game is afoot!

(via ComingSoon.net)

Are you following The Mary Sue on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Pinterest, & Google +?

06 Feb 09:06

kayinnasaki: mrsmilering:

06 Feb 09:06

Photo



06 Feb 09:06

Photo



06 Feb 00:09

GlyphSearch

06 Feb 00:05

Gawker ruins Coke's internet kindness campaign by making it tweet Hitler quotes

by Jacob Kastrenakes

In spite of the courage and optimism that Coke showed during its Super Bowl ad last weekend, it appears that the internet is, in fact, too mean for it to fix. According to Adweek, Coke has now had to pull an online campaign that it launched alongside the commercial because it resulted in the company's main Twitter account spitting out images that included the text of Hitler's Mein Kampf.

As part of Coke's ad campaign, it allowed people to reply to tweets with the hashtag #MakeItHappy, which would prompt the @CocaCola account to automatically take that tweet and spit it back out as fun ASCII art. The idea was that Coke would turn negative tweets into positive images, but naturally, things got way out of hand. Mainly, that's because Gawker built a script that prompted Coke to tweet out the manifesto's text.


"It's unfortunate that Gawker is trying to turn this campaign into something that it isn't."

After about a dozen tweets containing ASCII art versions of Mein Kampf, Coke put a stop to its automated image maker. "It's unfortunate that Gawker is trying to turn this campaign into something that it isn't," Coke tells Adweek. "Building a bot that attempts to spread hate through #MakeItHappy is a perfect example of the pervasive online negativity Coca-Cola wanted to address with this campaign." While Gawker very much took advantage of Coke's campaign, Coke really should have known what it was getting into when it set up an automated bot to process hateful tweets — a filter list or a reviewer would have gone a long way toward preventing an incident like this.


Image via Gawker

Lesson is: there's a lot of negativity on the internet and plenty of people willing to mess with you. Coke knew that — clearly. It's admirable that Coke wants to change that and bring the issue more attention, but it looks like it'll have to find a new approach to Twitter. That's not really a big surprise: even Twitter doesn't know what to do about abuse.

05 Feb 18:54

mkcast

mkcast:

mkcast demonstration

A tool for creating GIF screencasts of a terminal, with key presses overlaid.

05 Feb 18:50

The Rocker, A Guitar Effects Unit That Makes a Cool Sound by Quickly Switching Between Live Playing and Delay

by Brian Heater

The Rocker is a neat little handmade guitar effects unit created by musician Jeremy Bell that makes a fascinating sound when combined with guitar playing by switching back between live sound and delay. The device is an adaptation of the ScrubBoard cassette tape scratcher Bell showed off in 2014.

submitted via Laughing Squid Tips

05 Feb 18:21

State legislator to submit legislation eliminating "philosophical" vaccine exemption

05 Feb 18:17

Sony Pictures co-chair Amy Pascal stepping down in wake of hacking scandal

by Bryan Bishop

Forgot password?

We'll email you a reset link.

If you signed up using a 3rd party account like Facebook or Twitter, please login with it instead.

Forgot username?

We'll email it to you.

If you signed up using a 3rd party account like Facebook or Twitter, please login with it instead.

Forgot password?

If you signed up using a 3rd party account like Facebook or Twitter, please login with it instead.

Try another email?

Forgot username?

If you signed up using a 3rd party account like Facebook or Twitter, please login with it instead.

Try another email?

Great!

Choose an available username to complete sign up.

In order to provide our users with a better overall experience, we ask for more information from Facebook when using it to login so that we can learn more about our audience and provide you with the best possible experience. We do not store specific user data and the sharing of it is not required to login with Facebook.

05 Feb 18:16

Okamoto Kiichi

05 Feb 18:16

911 operator to teen as dad lay dying: 'Stop whining' - Charlotte Observer


CBS Local

911 operator to teen as dad lay dying: 'Stop whining'
Charlotte Observer
WASHINGTON A 911 dispatcher twice told an emotional 13-year-old girl to "stop whining" as her father lay dying after a hit-and-run on a Maryland highway, according to a recording of the call obtained Thursday. The dispatcher has been reassigned to a ...
Md. 911 operator told teen to stop whining after fatal crashSTLtoday.com

all 133 news articles »
05 Feb 17:53

FiftyThree Makes Popular Creativity App ‘Paper’ Free Of Charge

by Kyle Russell
FiftyThree_Pencil_Drawing_context FiftyThree, maker of the Paper app and the accompanying Pencil stylus for the iPad, is shaking up its strategy by dropping the price of every feature in its app to zero. Read More
05 Feb 17:52

incidentalcomics:Word Problems

firehose

via ThePrettiestOne







incidentalcomics:

Word Problems

05 Feb 17:51

"A Times analysis of preschool immunization showed that private child-care centers like the YWCA in..."

firehose

via ThePrettiestOne

A Times analysis of preschool immunization showed that private child-care centers like the YWCA in Santa Monica had lower measles vaccination rates than public facilities. Mirroring the situation at kindergartens, the analysis found that preschools in affluent areas like the Westside, southern Orange County and the South Bay tended to have lower vaccination rates.

About 87% of toddlers and preschoolers had all required vaccines in privately run child-care facilities; public centers had a 90% rate. At federally funded Head Start programs, which serve low-income children, the rate was 96%.



- This has been mentioned before, but it bears repeating: The reemergence of whooping cough and measles is the work of wealthy white people. Low-income people and people of color have absolute reasons to distrust medical mandates for how often their bodies have been used without regard for health or safety, but the anti-vaxxer movement is all Jenny McCarthy and conspicuous consumption granola types. (via riverwaltz)
05 Feb 17:49

Bill Would Allow Oregon Officers To Enforce Domestic Violence Gun Ban » News » OPB

by gguillotte
firehose

the only way to stop a bad guy with a gun

An existing federal law bars people from having guns if they are convicted of domestic violence or subject to a restraining order, but only federal agents can enforce that law. Victim’s advocates say there aren’t enough agents in Oregon to handle the large volume of domestic violence cases. The new bill, SB 525, gives local law enforcement the authority to confiscate the guns.
05 Feb 15:37

Young adults are driving vaccine skepticism in the U.S.

by Christopher Ingraham
firehose

via Matthew Connor

Vaccine skepticism is highest among 20-somethings (photo: Washington Post).

Who are the vaccine skeptics? On the heels of the Disneyland vaccine outbreak, that's what everyone wants to know. As with just about every other major issue facing the country, the temptation is to divide it along familiar left/right political divides. It may seem natural that Republicans, who tend to be skeptical of mandates and government intrusions, would be most opposed to vaccination policies. Or that Democrats, distrustful of big businesses like pharmaceutical companies, would harbor the most skepticism.

But as it turns out, we're asking the wrong question. Public opinion polling shows that vaccination attitudes don't differ much by party affiliation. Or by income, or even education. But there is one important demographic factor: age.

vaccine_polling

Millennials -- 18 to 29-year-olds -- are about twice as likely as senior citizens (65+) to say that parents should decide whether their kids get vaccinated, rather than having it mandated by law. Republicans and independents are more likely to say this than Democrats, but here the split is not as stark.

More strikingly, 21 percent of millennials say it's likely that early childhood vaccinations are linked to autism, compared to only 3 percent of those aged 65+. There's little variation by political party on this question.

The Pew Research Center, which polled the first question, posits that "One possible reason that older groups might be more supportive of mandatory vaccinations is that many among them remember when diseases like measles were common." Having come of age in an era when measles was declared eradicated, millennials have no generational memory of time when hundreds of thousands of Americans were stricken with the disease each year. Not to mention polio, or smallpox.

Vaccines are partially a victim of their own success. They've done such a great job of wiping out deadly diseases that it's easy to become complacent. Largely liberated from having to worry about measles outbreaks, or tetanus, or polio, we're able to fret over whether vaccinations comport with an "all-natural" lifestyle. But we've forgotten that the incredible success of vaccination programs is what afforded us that luxury to begin with.

It may take more California-style outbreaks to jolt our memory.








05 Feb 04:40

Octodad shares the reality of an indie hit: $4.9M in revenue for 2.7 years of work

by Ben Kuchera
firehose

At least half of that revenue has to be labor. At _least_

The highest individual hours figure works out to about 126 40-hour weeks over about 132 total weeks. Mind that they only got about $2,702 per person from the Kickstarter, and I'm not sure if they got anything else before release.

Developer Rami Ismail talked about the need to share the reality of game development in a recent post, and there's nothing more eye-opening than a developer sharing both what it cost to make a game, and what they made from those efforts.

We recently talked about the numbers behind Monument Valley, and Young Horses recently opened its virtual books to share the numbers behind Octodad.

young horses data

young horses data

The $4.9 million in revenue is impressive, and achieving that number with by selling 459,735 units means that the average customer paid a bit over $10 for the game. That's a great stat when it seems like everyone is waiting for a sale and pricing is often seen as a race to the bottom.

It also means that no one is getting rich, especially since we don't know how much of that nearly $5 million is profit. With nine members of the core development team working for 2.7 years the development cost was likely substantial, and the cost of everything from travel to computers can quickly add up. Getting a booth at a show like PAX can be crucial to spreading the word about your game, and that space doesn't come cheap.

There are a few more interesting bits in the data.

young horses data

young horses data

The game supported eight control methods, but only 40 percent of players used a game pad. Also, YouTube videos of the game were by far the most effective way to get people to see the game. There's no way for Young Horses to add up the page views of all the stories about the game, but I'm going to go out on a limb and state that number would be much less than 200 million views. I'd also be very proud that 37 percent of players finished the story, that's a great level of engagement, although brevity likely had something to do with it.

Also, localizing the game for other languages is a great thing to do for fans in other markets, but it's not exactly a great way to boost sales: The top non-English versions of the game accounted for 10.7 percent all revenue combined. Localization brings cost, and it would be interesting to know if it paid for itself with these sales.

You can also read our feature about what goes into a game like Octodad; certain members of the team worked jobs in order to support the rest living in a communal. This isn't an easy lifestyle.

This data raises some questions, but the overall message is clear: It takes a lot of time and talent to make a game, and even big sales aren't enough to do much more than make a game profitable to help fund the next title. That's a huge accomplishment in a field this competitive, but it's time to stop pretending these games make anyone enough for their own candy rooms.

05 Feb 04:33

Associate/Full Professor/Shell Oil Endowed Chair (Shell Oil Endowed Chair in Oceanography/Wetland Studies/Tenure-Track/Tenured) | Vitae

by hodad
firehose

LSU, baby!

ASSOCIATE/FULL PROFESSOR/SHELL OIL ENDOWED CHAIR

(Shell Oil Endowed Chair in Oceanography/Wetland Studies/Tenure-Track/Tenured)

Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences

School of the Coast and Environment

Louisiana State University

 

The Department of Oceanography & Coastal Sciences at Louisiana State University (LSU) announces a search to fill an endowed oceanography/wetland studies chair position. Applications and nominations are being accepted for the position of Associate or Full Professor and this position will hold the Shell Endowed Chair in Oceanography/Wetland Studies.  The Department has strong biological, physical, chemical, geological, fisheries, and wetland biogeochemistry programs in continental shelf, estuarine, and wetland environments.


Responsibilities include:

Develop and maintain a rigorous, externally funded research program with relevance to wetland science and restoration and the sustainable management of coastal ecosystems; collaborate in multidisciplinary projects with coastal/wetland scientists; teach courses in aquatic/wetland soil biogeochemistry that may include redox reactions, elemental cycling of trace metals, biogeochemistry of C, N and/or S, and gaseous exchange; mentor graduate students; and provide service/ advice to state and federal and agencies and the University.


Required Qualifications:  Both Ranks: Ph. D. in biogeochemistry, ecology, oceanography or related fields. Associate Professor Rank: 6 years of related experience. Full Professor Rank: 10 years of related experience.


Salary is commensurate with qualifications and experience.  An offer of employment is contingent on a satisfactory pre-employment background check. Application deadline is February 27, 2015 or until a candidate is selected. Apply online and view a more detailed ad at: www.lsusystemcareers.lsu.edu. Position #000465


LSU IS COMMITTED TO DIVERSITY AND IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/EQUAL ACCESS EMPLOYER

Original Source

05 Feb 04:27

2 students wounded in shooting outside Maryland high school - Fox News

firehose

the only way to stop a bad guy with a gun


Fox News

2 students wounded in shooting outside Maryland high school
Fox News
Two students were shot outside a Maryland public high school Wednesday night while a basketball game was being played inside causing panic as parents rushed to the scene to make sure their children were OK. The Frederick High School students were ...
After Shooting Incident, FCPS Says 'We Won't Let This Incident Define Frederick ...CBS Local
2 students hurt in shooting outside Frederick, Md. schoolWTOP
2 students hurt in shooting outside Maryland high schoolChron.com
Mirror Daily
all 180 news articles »