Thousands protest education cuts at UC Berkeley protest

The protests loud but peaceful, with many carrying signs and banners condemning the education cuts and corporate greed. "Make the banks pay," read one sign. About two dozen protesters, who appear to be law students, marched on Bancroft Avenue from Boalt Hall, chanting, "no cuts, no expenses, education should be free."

Rallies reflected widespread economic worries which culminated in the capture of Wall Street, the national movement and demonstrations against the camp banks and big companies.

California should lead the nation in reforming public higher education, Leigh Raiford, Professor of African American studies, said during the rally. He denounced the high rate of foreclosures and spend too high in the prison of public education.

"The reckless Greed 1 percent due to this," he said. "A lot of student loan debt is held by the big four banks."

Some say the movement was born at UC Berkeley last year, when students and others repeatedly staged sit-ins in the building of the campus. The protests late last year resulted in many arrests, mainly in the Wheeler Hall, a building that became a rallying cry for the University demonstrators.

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Grey Cup – Calgary Herald fashion (blog)

Movember mustache, a smile, a beer Cap (also known as the dome of the foam in some circles) and colors of your team is really all you need to wear the Grey Cup this week.

Saskatchewan Roughriders fans John Gammie will be ready to watch the Grey Cup in Calgary Alberta, Bob fish on November 28, 2010.  (Leah Hennel, Calgary Herald)

Winnipeg fans David Milligan and Trish showing their team color Kramer.  Grey Cup 2009 both parties took place in Calgary despite the cold weather. Big kick is a Friday morning, November 27, 2009.  (Lorraine Hjalte/Calgary Herald)

Montreal fans looked on nervously as the Alouettes very favorite first half down 17-3 for the Saskatchewan Roughriders in the Grey Cup Championship 2009 in McMahon Stadium in Calgary on Sunday 29th November 2009. (Gavin young/Calgary Herald)

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Data Security Made Easy with Blackbird

No matter how much a company might trust its employees, there are certain places on the corporate network that are going to be off-limits to all but a select few. Likewise, there are going to be network resources, like files and applications, to which access will be similarly restricted. In the physical world, doors can be locked, drawers and file cabinets secured, and people sworn to secrecy. But in the digital world, more sophisticated and complex safeguards are required.

Blackbird Active Directory Software is a Real-time change tracking and security compliance for your Active Directories and Group Policies.
That’s why corporate IT managers need to know who has access to what resources at all times. The most important factor that renders this task complex and difficult is the highly distributed nature of Windows file permissions. There’s no central repository for file permissions native to Windows. In fact, those permissions reside with the individual data files, making something as basic as a permissions inventory all but impossible.

But that’s not the limit to the problems of using native tools to track resource permissions. Even if you manage to build file auditing and permissions capability with native tools, there is no centralized way to manage and control those capabilities. And, suppose you manage to collect some file permission information with native tools. How can you use it? How do you know if it’s really meaningful? There aren’t any enterprise-level reporting options using native tools, so it’s difficult to see what’s going on.

Fortunately, there’s a solution to this thorny problem. Actually, there’s a set of solutions, all within the Blackbird Management Suite.

The Blackbird Management Suite is a tightly integrated set of modules that helps IT managers and administrators perform real-time active directory auditing and continuous recovery with one-click rollback – ACTIVE DIRECTORY BACKUP, automated reporting, log consolidation and file system auditing—all from a single easy-to-use console.

There are two Blackbird Management Suite modules that deal with resource security and the problem of finding out who has access to a resource at any given time.

Blackbird Auditor for File System provides administrators with tighter security and control over resources across the enterprise. It provides real-time tracking, interactive analysis, and customized reporting on all changes to all designated shares, files and folders.

Blackbird Privilege Explorer establishes a central database of all system resources across the enterprise, providing administrators with a clear view of who has access to what. Not only does Privilege Explorer tell you the “who” and “what,” it can answer the critical question of “when,” displaying the history of access to any resource—across time, or for a specific date or range of dates.

Together, these two modules give you the power to see everything that happens with critical file system resources from a single console. Data security and compliance don’t need to be problematical. And, with Blackbird’s Auditor for File System and Privilege Explorer, they’ll never be problems again.

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Leaf tried to end the Rangers ‘ home win streak

New York Rangers is posting mediocre results only when they lost their home opener for the Toronto Maple Leafs nearly six weeks ago.

They are now among the hottest team in the NHL and that's especially true at Madison Square Garden.

Rangers look to extend their home victory to their longest of the eight-year-21 Monday night when they face the Maple Leafs.

Toronto is trying to avoid matching the longest slide in the set of the season after being swept and houses with Boston. Maple Leafs fell 4-1 on the road Saturday after losing 6-3 on Wednesday.

Phil Kessel tied with Claude Giroux Philadelphia's with League-leading 32 points, while Steven Stamkos goal 16 according to Tampa Bay and Ottawa Milan Michalek to lead the NHL.

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Brooker: Seedy underbelly sports

There's no question that the allegations surrounding Jerry Sandusky child sexual assault scandal at Penn State University sparked widespread surprise, including here in Canada. But, apart from the victims and their families, those who seem most diehard fans upset favorite sports college American football.

Their response is so traumatized is understandable. They invest so much emotional energy into their toaster titans-unhealthy amounts, in my estimation that treason just magnified-, if that's possible in a situation like this is despicable.

I would suggest, however, that this chapter reveals a lot about the extent to which Americans have been put on blinders when it comes to the undercurrents of evil from time college athletics. While their adulating square jawed titans, they seem to ignore the fact, for example, that violence, often sexually-themed hazing rituals remain commonplace in team settings, and to that end, the fraternity and Sorority houses across the land.

Despite efforts to cut the crap, the report shows that much of the campus of barbaric rituals survives, despite being pushed further underground and managed with a stronger warning not to tattle on the outside of the circle.

I would like to believe that in Canada, we have a much more mature attitude towards things like HIGH SCHOOL and college sports. So, we tend to think of it as something that kids do for themselves, not for us. But people who have participated in high-level sport will tell you that things can get pretty weird, pretty quickly.

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