startups aim to help seniors · the drought-stricken state. police located their remains while...

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World News Roundup ARAB TIMES, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2015 10 INTERNATIONAL Education Scorched trees and burned vehicles and the remains of homes cover the landscape on Sept 17, in Anderson springs Calif. The Valley fire that sped through Middletown and other parts of rural Lake County, less than100 miles north of San Francisco, has continued to burn since Saturday despite a massive firefighting effort. (AP) California wildfires death toll rises to five The death toll from monster wildfires raging in northern California has risen to five with the discovery of two new victims, authorities said on Thursday. Both were killed in the so-called Valley fire, one of two giant blazes that have destroyed hundreds of homes and displaced thousands in the drought-stricken state. Police located their remains while searching the burn zone with sniffer dogs on Wednesday morning. “Human remains were located in the Hidden Valley area and the Anderson Springs area,” Steven Brooks, spokesman for the sheriff of Lake County, said in a statement. The remains are presumed to be those of Bruce Beven Burns, report- ed missing on Tuesday, and Leonard Neft, who has been missing since Monday. “Identification of the decedents is being withheld until positive identifi- cation can be made,” the statement added. Three people were previously known to have died in the Valley and Butte wildfires. All were found in their homes, two in the Sierra Nevada Foothills and a third in Lake County. Some 17,000 people are still unable to return to their homes as 13,000 firefighters battle blazes across the state, according to Lynnette Round, a spokeswoman with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFire). (AFP) Joseph N. Jessop and his surviving son walk off after a news conference on Sept 17, in Colorado City, Ariz. Jessop expressed his gratitude for the outpouring of support after his wife and children were swept away in a flash flood Monday. (AP) Anthony Meek ‘Big Tony’ sentenced to life: Anthony “Big Tony” Moscatiello was sentenced Thursday to life in prison with- out parole for the mob-connected 2001 slaying of a prominent South Florida busi- nessman during a battle over control of a fleet of gambling ships. Broward County Circuit Judge Ilona Holmes imposed the sentence after a jury rejected the death sentence sought by prosecutors following more than three hours of deliberation. Holmes said she had little choice but to follow the jury’s advice. Moscatiello, 76, showed no reaction when the jury’s decision was announced. He was convicted in July of murder and murder conspiracy in the fatal shooting of Konstantinos “Gus” Boulis during a dis- pute over lucrative gambling ships. Trial evidence showed Boulis was shot by a hit man hired by Moscatiello, a reputed mem- ber of New York’s Gambino crime family once headed by “Teflon Don” John Gotti. Just before he was sentenced, however, Moscatiello made a short statement to Holmes denying any role in the killing and contending that the hit man identified by prosecutors is not the actual killer. Moscatiello turned in the courtroom to address Boulis nephew Spiro Naos. “I truly am sorry about what happened to Gus, but I assure you I had nothing to do with it,” he said. Naos said in a statement that the verdict and sentence was “fair and just.” “It has been almost 15 years since Gus was taken from us, but we can now move Ahmed Mohamed, 14, gestures as he arrives to his family’s home in Irving, Texas, on Sept 17. Ahmed was arrested Monday at his school after a teacher thought a homemade clock he built was a bomb. He remains suspended and said he will not return to classes at MacArthur High School. (AP) Mideast Sheikh tied to speeding likely left US BEVERLY HILLS, Calif, Sept 18, (AP): A Middle Eastern sheikh who allegedly said he owned a Ferrari caught on film speeding through a Beverly Hills neighborhood apparently has raced out of town, police said Thursday. Khalid bin Hamad Al Thani of Qatar has left the country and the cars are gone, authorities said at a news conference. Al Thani owns a drag-racing team and is a member of the rul- ing family of oil- and gas-rich Qatar. An aficionado of fast cars, Al Thani routinely has been pho- tographed racing cars on race- tracks, including a Formula 1 racer. on with our lives in a manner in which Gus Boulis would be proud,” Naos said. Co-defendant Anthony “Little Tony” Ferrari was previously convicted and is serving a life sentence. A third conspira- tor, James “Pudgy” Fiorillo, pleaded guilty and testified for prosecutors after serving more than six years behind bars. (AP) Friend of shooter arrested: A friend of the alleged Charleston church shooter was arrested Thursday, more than a month after authorities told him he was under federal investigation for lying to them and failing to report a crime, an offi- cial close to the probe said. Joey Meek, 21, was arrested Thursday, the official told The Associated Press, speaking only on the condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to publicly talk about the case. The official didn’t immediately say what charges Meek faces. Meek has said that Dylann Roof, who is accused of killing nine black church members during Bible study on June 17, stayed with him before the shootings. Meek told The Associated Press that Roof had drunkenly complained that “blacks were taking over the world” and “some- one needed to do something about it for the white race.” Roof faces federal hate crime charges as well as nine counts of murder in state court. Meek told the AP that Roof occasional- ly stayed with him at a mobile home in Red Bank, about 20 miles (32 kms) from Columbia, before the shootings at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church. Meek, of Lexington, told AP that Roof said he used birthday money from his par- ents to buy a .45-caliber Glock semi-auto- matic handgun, which Meek took away from him the night of his drunken rant but gave back to him when Roof had sobered up. (AP) American stops flights: American Airlines flights to and from Dallas, Chicago and Miami were briefly stopped on Thursday by a computer problem that prevented passengers from checking in. Airline officials said they fixed their computer systems after less than two hours but were still trying to determine the exact cause of the interruption. American spokesman Casey Norton said there was no indication that the air- line’s computers had been hacked. The midday failure affected flights on American and its regional affiliate, American Eagle. The Federal Aviation Administration said that American Airlines planes destined for Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, O’Hare Airport in Chicago and Miami International Airport were held on the ground at other airports. Norton said six American Eagle flights in Chicago were canceled and about 300 American and Eagle flights were delayed by an average of slightly more than one hour. Tracking service FlightAware.com reported nearly 600 delays on American and more than 200 on Eagle operator Envoy Air by late afternoon, but Norton said many were unrelated to the computer issue. (AP) Katz can’t suppress photo: A fed- eral appeals court said a minority owner of the Miami Heat basketball team cannot stop a woman from running a scathingly critical blog featuring an unflattering photo of him with his tongue protruding askew from his mouth. Raanan Katz, who is also a Florida real estate developer, had sought to stop Irina Chevaldina, a disgruntled former tenant in one of his shopping centers, from using the “ugly” and “embarrassing” photo, in which he held the copyright. But the 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals in Miami on Thursday agreed with a lower court judge that Chevaldina made “fair use” of the photo to illustrate and communicate her beliefs about Katz, without trying to profit. (RTRS) Other Lives ‘Age in place’ Startups aim to help seniors NEW YORK, Sept 18, (RTRS): Shari Cayle, 75, called “Miracle Mama” by her family ever since she beat back advanced colon cancer seven years ago, is still undergoing treatment and living alone. “I don’t want my grandchildren to remember me as the sick one, I want to be the fun one,” said Cayle, who is testing a device that passively moni- tors her activity. “My family knows what I’m doing and I don’t think they should have to change their life around to make sure I’m OK.” Onkol, a product inspired by Cayle that monitors her front door, reminds her to when to take her medication and can alert her family if she falls has allowed her to remain independ- ent at home. Devised by her son Marc, it will hit the US market next year. As more American seniors plan to remain at home rather than enter a nursing facility, new startups and some well-known technology brands are connecting them to family and healthcare providers. The noninvasive devices sit in the background as users go about their normal routine. Through Bluetooth technology they are able to gather information and send it to family or doctors when, for example, a sensor reads that a pill box was opened or a wireless medical device such as a glu- cose monitor is used. According to PricewaterhouseCoopers’ Health Research Institute, at-home options like these will disrupt roughly $64 billion of traditional US provider rev- enue in the next 20 years. Monitoring devices for the elderly started with products like privately- held Life Alert, which leapt into pub- lic awareness nearly 30 years ago with TV ads showing the elderly “Mrs Fletcher” reaching for her Life Alert pendant and telling an operator, “I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!” Further Now companies like Nortek Security & Control and small startups are taking that much further. The challenge though is that older consumers may not be ready to use the technology and their medical, security and wellness needs may dif- fer significantly. There are also safety and privacy risks. “There’s a lot of potential, but a big gap between what seniors want and what the market can provide,” said Harry Wang, director of health and mobile product research at Parks Associates. Milwaukee-based Onkol devel- oped a rectangular hub, roughly the size of a tissue box, that passively monitors things like what their blood glucose reading is and when they open their refrigerator. There is also a wristband that can be pressed for help in an emergency. “The advantage of it is that the per- son, the patient, doesn’t have to worry about hooking it up and doing stuff with the computer, their kids do that,” said Cayle, whose son co-founded Onkol. Sensely is another device used by providers like Kaiser Permanente, based in California, and the National Health Service in the United Kingdom. Since 2013, its virtual nurse Molly has connected patients with doctors from a mobile device. She asks how they are feeling and lets them know when it is time to take a health reading. Another startup, San Francisco- based Lively began selling its product to consumers in 2012. Similarly, it collects information from sensors and connects to a smart watch that tracks customers’ footsteps, routine and can even call emergency services. Next year it will connect with medical devices, send data to physicians and enable video consultations that can replace some doctor’s appointments. Venture firms including Fenox Venture Capital, Maveron, Capital Midwest Fund and LaunchPad Digital Health have contributed mil- lions of dollars to these startups. 5 arraigned ‘Overhaul set of principles’ IRVINE, California, Sept 18, (AP): Under pressure from Jewish organi- zations, members of the University of California’s governing board Thursday called for an overhaul of a proposed set of system-wide princi- ples against intolerance, saying it should explicitly address anti- Semitism. About two dozen people gave input to the board of regents at their meeting at UC Irvine about the proposed “Statement of Principles Against Intolerance,” a broad declara- tion that free speech advo- cates contended would amount to censorship. Jewish organ- izations concerned about a series of incidents on campuses - including swastikas and Hitler graffiti - asked the UC system in March to take a stronger stand and adopt the US State Department’s definition of anti- Semitism, which includes demoniz- ing Israel or denying its right to exist. What UC officials drafted was a statement that did not include an explicit mention of anti-Semitism or Israel. The proposed principles aim to protect any individual or group, by calling for its 10 campuses to be “free from acts and expressions of intoler- ance.” It would prohibit “depicting or articulating a view of ethnic or racial groups as less ambitious, less hard- working or talented, or more threat- ening than other groups,” among other things. Omission Groups critical of Israel’s treat- ment of Palestinians applauded the omission of the US State Department’s definition in the state- ment, saying they feared it could be used to silence them. But Jewish groups said they felt the university was ignoring a problem that needed to be addressed. On Thursday, Regent Norman Pattiz urged the body to take a real stand against the anti-Semitic incidents described by students and said that was the intent behind making such a declaration. UC is the first statewide university to consider adopting such a set of prin- ciples against intolerance. “To not recognize why this subject is even being brought up is to do a disservice to those who brought it up in the first place,” he said. His comments were echoed by other regents and welcomed by Jewish students and groups. They said they hope a new statement will address a rash of anti-Semitic inci- dents. UC President Janet Napolitano in a May radio interview had expressed support for adopting the State Department’s definition. The first five of 37 suspects in the death of a New York City freshman fraternity pledge during an initiation ritual appeared Thursday in a Pennsylvania courtroom to face charges. Fraternity members at Baruch College physically abused Chun “Michael” Deng during a December 2013 initiation ritual in the Pocono Mountains, about 100 miles (160 kms) west of New York, then tried to cover it up, police said. Police say fraternity members blindfolded the 19-year-old Deng, forced him to wear a heavy backpack and then repeatedly tackled him during a haz- ing ritual known as glass ceiling. Deng fell unconscious and was carried inside the house while frater- nity members changed his clothes and did an Internet search of his symptoms, waiting an hour before taking him to the hospital, according to court documents. He died a day later. Five men, include the former national president of the Pi Delta Psi fraternity, were arraigned on three felony counts related to what police say was an effort to conceal the crime, as well as one misde- meanor charge of hazing. A magis- trate released them on $50,000 unsecured bail and set a preliminary hearing date of Oct 16. A former University of Mississippi student who admitted helping place a noose on a statue of a civil rights activist is going to prison. A federal judge sentenced Graeme Phillip Harris on Thursday to six months in prison beginning Jan. 4, and 12 months’ supervised release. Harris’ lawyer argued he did- n’t deserve jail time. Harris pleaded guilty in June to a misdemeanor charge of using a threat of force to intimidate African- American students and employees. Prosecutors say he and two other for- mer students placed a noose on the statue of James Meredith, a black man who integrated the university known as Ole Miss amid rioting in 1962. A second man, Austin Reed Edenfield, had been scheduled to plead guilty Wednesday. Napolitano America Roof

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Page 1: Startups aim to help seniors · the drought-stricken state. Police located their remains while searching the burn zone with sniffer dogs on Wednesday morning. “Human remains were

World News Roundup

ARAB TIMES, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2015

10INTERNATIONAL

Education

Scorched trees and burned vehicles and the remains of homes cover the landscape on Sept 17, in Anderson springs Calif. The Valley fire that sped through Middletown and other parts of rural LakeCounty, less than100 miles north of San Francisco, has continued to burn since Saturday despite a massive firefighting effort. (AP)

California wildfires death toll rises to fiveThe death toll from monster wildfiresraging in northern California hasrisen to five with the discovery of twonew victims, authorities said onThursday.

Both were killed in the so-calledValley fire, one of two giant blazesthat have destroyed hundreds of

homes and displaced thousands inthe drought-stricken state.

Police located their remains whilesearching the burn zone with snifferdogs on Wednesday morning.

“Human remains were located inthe Hidden Valley area and theAnderson Springs area,” Steven

Brooks, spokesman for the sheriff ofLake County, said in a statement.

The remains are presumed to bethose of Bruce Beven Burns, report-ed missing on Tuesday, and LeonardNeft, who has been missing sinceMonday.

“Identification of the decedents is

being withheld until positive identifi-cation can be made,” the statementadded.

Three people were previouslyknown to have died in the Valley andButte wildfires. All were found in theirhomes, two in the Sierra NevadaFoothills and a third in Lake County.

Some 17,000 people are stillunable to return to their homes as13,000 firefighters battle blazesacross the state, according toLynnette Round, a spokeswomanwith the California Department ofForestry and Fire Protection(CalFire). (AFP)

Joseph N. Jessop and his survivingson walk off after a news conferenceon Sept 17, in Colorado City, Ariz.Jessop expressed his gratitude forthe outpouring of support after hiswife and children were swept away in

a flash flood Monday. (AP)

Anthony Meek

‘Big Tony’ sentenced to life:Anthony “Big Tony” Moscatiello wassentenced Thursday to life in prison with-out parole for the mob-connected 2001slaying of a prominent South Florida busi-nessman during a battle over control of afleet of gambling ships.

Broward County Circuit Judge IlonaHolmes imposed the sentence after a juryrejected the death sentence sought byprosecutors following more than threehours of deliberation. Holmes said shehad little choice but to follow the jury’sadvice.

Moscatiello, 76, showed no reactionwhen the jury’s decision was announced.He was convicted in July of murder andmurder conspiracy in the fatal shooting ofKonstantinos “Gus” Boulis during a dis-pute over lucrative gambling ships. Trialevidence showed Boulis was shot by a hitman hired by Moscatiello, a reputed mem-ber of New York’s Gambino crime familyonce headed by “Teflon Don” John Gotti.

Just before he was sentenced, however,Moscatiello made a short statement toHolmes denying any role in the killingand contending that the hit man identifiedby prosecutors is not the actual killer.Moscatiello turned in the courtroom toaddress Boulis nephew Spiro Naos.

“I truly am sorry about what happenedto Gus, but I assure you I had nothing todo with it,” he said.

Naos said in a statement that the verdictand sentence was “fair and just.”

“It has been almost 15 years since Guswas taken from us, but we can now move

Ahmed Mohamed, 14, gestures as he arrives to his family’s home in Irving,Texas, on Sept 17. Ahmed was arrested Monday at his school after a teacherthought a homemade clock he built was a bomb. He remains suspended and

said he will not return to classes at MacArthur High School. (AP)

Mideast Sheikh tied to speeding likely left USBEVERLY HILLS, Calif, Sept18, (AP): A Middle Easternsheikh who allegedly said heowned a Ferrari caught on filmspeeding through a Beverly Hillsneighborhood apparently hasraced out of town, police saidThursday.

Khalid bin Hamad Al Thani ofQatar has left the country and thecars are gone, authorities said at anews conference.

Al Thani owns a drag-racingteam and is a member of the rul-ing family of oil- and gas-richQatar. An aficionado of fast cars,Al Thani routinely has been pho-tographed racing cars on race-tracks, including a Formula 1racer.

on with our lives in a manner in whichGus Boulis would be proud,” Naos said.

Co-defendant Anthony “Little Tony”Ferrari was previously convicted and isserving a life sentence. A third conspira-tor, James “Pudgy” Fiorillo, pleadedguilty and testified for prosecutors after

serving more than six years behind bars.(AP)

❑ ❑ ❑

Friend of shooter arrested: Afriend of the alleged Charleston churchshooter was arrested Thursday, more than

a month after authorities told him he wasunder federal investigation for lying tothem and failing to report a crime, an offi-cial close to the probe said.

Joey Meek, 21, was arrested Thursday,the official told The Associated Press,

speaking only on the condition ofanonymity because the person was notauthorized to publicly talk about the case.The official didn’t immediately say whatcharges Meek faces.

Meek has said that Dylann Roof, whois accused of killing nine black churchmembers during Bible study on June 17,stayed with him before the shootings.Meek told The Associated Press that Roofhad drunkenly complained that “blackswere taking over the world” and “some-

one needed to dosomething about itfor the white race.”

Roof faces federalhate crime charges aswell as nine countsof murder in statecourt.

Meek told the APthat Roof occasional-ly stayed with him ata mobile home inRed Bank, about 20miles (32 kms) fromColumbia, before the

shootings at Emanuel African MethodistEpiscopal Church.

Meek, of Lexington, told AP that Roofsaid he used birthday money from his par-ents to buy a .45-caliber Glock semi-auto-matic handgun, which Meek took awayfrom him the night of his drunken rant butgave back to him when Roof had soberedup. (AP)

❑ ❑ ❑

American stops flights: AmericanAirlines flights to and from Dallas,Chicago and Miami were briefly stoppedon Thursday by a computer problem thatprevented passengers from checking in.

Airline officials said they fixed theircomputer systems after less than twohours but were still trying to determinethe exact cause of the interruption.

American spokesman Casey Nortonsaid there was no indication that the air-line’s computers had been hacked.

The midday failure affected flights onAmerican and its regional affiliate,American Eagle. The Federal AviationAdministration said that AmericanAirlines planes destined for Dallas-FortWorth International Airport, O’HareAirport in Chicago and MiamiInternational Airport were held on theground at other airports.

Norton said six American Eagle flightsin Chicago were canceled and about 300American and Eagle flights were delayedby an average of slightly more than onehour. Tracking service FlightAware.comreported nearly 600 delays on Americanand more than 200 on Eagle operatorEnvoy Air by late afternoon, but Nortonsaid many were unrelated to the computerissue. (AP)

❑ ❑ ❑

Katz can’t suppress photo: A fed-eral appeals court said a minority ownerof the Miami Heat basketball team cannotstop a woman from running a scathinglycritical blog featuring an unflatteringphoto of him with his tongue protrudingaskew from his mouth.

Raanan Katz, who is also a Florida realestate developer, had sought to stop IrinaChevaldina, a disgruntled former tenant inone of his shopping centers, from usingthe “ugly” and “embarrassing” photo, inwhich he held the copyright.

But the 11th US Circuit Court ofAppeals in Miami on Thursday agreedwith a lower court judge that Chevaldinamade “fair use” of the photo to illustrateand communicate her beliefs about Katz,without trying to profit. (RTRS)

Other Lives

‘Age in place’

Startups aim to help seniorsNEW YORK, Sept 18, (RTRS): ShariCayle, 75, called “Miracle Mama” byher family ever since she beat backadvanced colon cancer seven yearsago, is still undergoing treatment andliving alone.

“I don’t want my grandchildren toremember me as the sick one, I wantto be the fun one,” said Cayle, who istesting a device that passively moni-tors her activity. “My family knowswhat I’m doing and I don’t think theyshould have to change their lifearound to make sure I’m OK.”

Onkol, a product inspired by Caylethat monitors her front door, remindsher to when to take her medicationand can alert her family if she fallshas allowed her to remain independ-ent at home. Devised by her sonMarc, it will hit the US market nextyear.

As more American seniors plan toremain at home rather than enter anursing facility, new startups andsome well-known technology brandsare connecting them to family andhealthcare providers.

The noninvasive devices sit in thebackground as users go about theirnormal routine. Through Bluetoothtechnology they are able to gatherinformation and send it to family ordoctors when, for example, a sensorreads that a pill box was opened or awireless medical device such as a glu-

cose monitor is used.According to

PricewaterhouseCoopers’ HealthResearch Institute, at-home optionslike these will disrupt roughly $64billion of traditional US provider rev-enue in the next 20 years.

Monitoring devices for the elderlystarted with products like privately-held Life Alert, which leapt into pub-lic awareness nearly 30 years agowith TV ads showing the elderly“Mrs Fletcher” reaching for her LifeAlert pendant and telling an operator,“I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!”

FurtherNow companies like Nortek

Security & Control and small startupsare taking that much further.

The challenge though is that olderconsumers may not be ready to usethe technology and their medical,security and wellness needs may dif-fer significantly. There are also safetyand privacy risks.

“There’s a lot of potential, but a biggap between what seniors want andwhat the market can provide,” saidHarry Wang, director of health andmobile product research at ParksAssociates.

Milwaukee-based Onkol devel-oped a rectangular hub, roughly thesize of a tissue box, that passivelymonitors things like what their blood

glucose reading is and when theyopen their refrigerator. There is also awristband that can be pressed for helpin an emergency.

“The advantage of it is that the per-son, the patient, doesn’t have to worryabout hooking it up and doing stuffwith the computer, their kids do that,”said Cayle, whose son co-foundedOnkol.

Sensely is another device used byproviders like Kaiser Permanente,based in California, and the NationalHealth Service in the UnitedKingdom. Since 2013, its virtualnurse Molly has connected patientswith doctors from a mobile device.She asks how they are feeling and letsthem know when it is time to take ahealth reading.

Another startup, San Francisco-based Lively began selling its productto consumers in 2012. Similarly, itcollects information from sensors andconnects to a smart watch that trackscustomers’ footsteps, routine and caneven call emergency services. Nextyear it will connect with medicaldevices, send data to physicians andenable video consultations that canreplace some doctor’s appointments.

Venture firms including FenoxVenture Capital, Maveron, CapitalMidwest Fund and LaunchPadDigital Health have contributed mil-lions of dollars to these startups.

5 arraigned

‘Overhaul setof principles’IRVINE, California, Sept 18, (AP):Under pressure from Jewish organi-zations, members of the University ofCalifornia’s governing boardThursday called for an overhaul of aproposed set of system-wide princi-ples against intolerance, saying itshould explicitly address anti-Semitism.

About two dozen people gaveinput to the board of regents at their

meeting at UCIrvine about theproposed“Statement ofPrinciplesAgainstIntolerance,” abroad declara-tion that freespeech advo-cates contendedwould amountto censorship.

Jewish organ-izations concerned about a series ofincidents on campuses - includingswastikas and Hitler graffiti - askedthe UC system in March to take astronger stand and adopt the US StateDepartment’s definition of anti-Semitism, which includes demoniz-ing Israel or denying its right to exist.

What UC officials drafted was astatement that did not include anexplicit mention of anti-Semitism orIsrael. The proposed principles aimto protect any individual or group, bycalling for its 10 campuses to be “freefrom acts and expressions of intoler-ance.” It would prohibit “depicting orarticulating a view of ethnic or racialgroups as less ambitious, less hard-working or talented, or more threat-ening than other groups,” amongother things.

OmissionGroups critical of Israel’s treat-

ment of Palestinians applauded theomission of the US StateDepartment’s definition in the state-ment, saying they feared it could beused to silence them. But Jewishgroups said they felt the universitywas ignoring a problem that neededto be addressed. On Thursday,Regent Norman Pattiz urged thebody to take a real stand against theanti-Semitic incidents described bystudents and said that was the intentbehind making such a declaration.UC is the first statewide university toconsider adopting such a set of prin-ciples against intolerance.

“To not recognize why this subjectis even being brought up is to do adisservice to those who brought it upin the first place,” he said.

His comments were echoed byother regents and welcomed byJewish students and groups. Theysaid they hope a new statement willaddress a rash of anti-Semitic inci-dents.

UC President Janet Napolitano ina May radio interview had expressedsupport for adopting the StateDepartment’s definition.

❑ ❑ ❑

The first five of 37 suspects in thedeath of a New York City freshmanfraternity pledge during an initiationritual appeared Thursday in aPennsylvania courtroom to facecharges.

Fraternity members at BaruchCollege physically abused Chun“Michael” Deng during a December2013 initiation ritual in the PoconoMountains, about 100 miles (160kms) west of New York, then tried tocover it up, police said. Police sayfraternity members blindfolded the19-year-old Deng, forced him towear a heavy backpack and thenrepeatedly tackled him during a haz-ing ritual known as glass ceiling.

Deng fell unconscious and wascarried inside the house while frater-nity members changed his clothesand did an Internet search of hissymptoms, waiting an hour beforetaking him to the hospital, accordingto court documents. He died a daylater.

Five men, include the formernational president of the Pi DeltaPsi fraternity, were arraigned onthree felony counts related to whatpolice say was an effort to concealthe crime, as well as one misde-meanor charge of hazing. A magis-trate released them on $50,000unsecured bail and set a preliminaryhearing date of Oct 16.

❑ ❑ ❑

A former University ofMississippi student who admittedhelping place a noose on a statue of acivil rights activist is going to prison.

A federal judge sentencedGraeme Phillip Harris on Thursdayto six months in prison beginningJan. 4, and 12 months’ supervisedrelease. Harris’ lawyer argued he did-n’t deserve jail time.

Harris pleaded guilty in June to amisdemeanor charge of using a threatof force to intimidate African-American students and employees.Prosecutors say he and two other for-mer students placed a noose on thestatue of James Meredith, a blackman who integrated the universityknown as Ole Miss amid rioting in1962.

A second man, Austin ReedEdenfield, had been scheduled toplead guilty Wednesday.

Napolitano

America

Roof