Tag Archives: harvard

Does The GOP Support Herman Cain Because They See Him As A Black Man Who “Knows His Place?”

Are Republicans supportive of Herman Cain because he’s the kind of black man that makes them feel safe? The kind that helps assure them they’re not racist? Friday, while guest commentating on Martin Bashir’s television program, Democratic strategist and MSNBC analyst Karen Finney said that Republicans are supporting Herman Cain because of his race: “One of the things about Herman Cain is, I think that he makes that white Republican base of the party feel okay, feel like they are not racist because they can like this guy,” Finney said. “I think he giving that base a free pass. And I think they like him because they think he’s a black man who knows his place. I know that’s harsh, but that’s how it sure seems to me.” “Thank you for spelling that out,” Bashir responded. This isn’t the first time liberals have made this kind of charge about Cain and his supporters. During an online production of NBC’s Meet the Press this week, Democratic congressman Elijah Cummings of Maryland said white voters support Cain to show they aren’t racist. “I think when [members of the Tea Party] can vote for a Herman Cain and hear him say the things that he says they feel like, ‘Well, you know, I can, I support this guy and…so it shows that I’m not racist and I’m supportive,’” Cummings told host David Gregory. Liberal comedienne Janeane Garafalo told Current TV host Keith Olbermann earlier this month that Cain is popular with Republicans because it “hides the racist element” of the party. Do you agree? Or are liberals playing just as dirty as the conservatives with this kind of commentary? Source

Link:
Does The GOP Support Herman Cain Because They See Him As A Black Man Who “Knows His Place?”

Ya Big Dummy: Kris Humphries Might Have To Live Off Of Kimmy Cakes After This Steals His Stacks

If it ain’t one thing it’s a muhfuggin’ other with these two…SMH According to TMZ reports : Kim Kardashian’s husband claims he was bilked out of hundreds of thousands of dollars by a guy he invited to his wedding … a guy who’s been arrested for allegedly running a $1.7 million investment scam. Andrey C. Hicks was a guest at Kim and Kris Humphries televised wedding bonanza in August … and sat right behind the happy couple during the rehearsal dinner. But TMZ has learned … after the wedding, Kris learned Andrey was a target in a federal investigation in which he’s suspected of raising money for a purported billion dollar hedge fund … that didn’t really exist. Officials believe Andrey lied to several investors — including Kris — telling them, among other things, that he was a Harvard graduate … when in fact, he was kicked out of the University after 3 semesters for crappy grades. Officials say Andrey only took 1 math class at Harvard … and got a D-. Officials claim 27-year-old Hicks stole $1.7 million from various investors … and sources close to Kris tell us the NBA star accounted for hundreds of thousands of dollars himself. Hicks was arrested in Canada on Friday and charged with wire fraud. Officials believe he was trying to flee to Switzerland. If convicted, Hicks could face up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. We don’t know how well Kris knows this guy, but considering he wasn’t making big superstar NBA money, why would he invest “hundreds of thousands” in anything? According to reports, Humphries has only made about 16 million in his 7 year tenure in the league.

See the article here:
Ya Big Dummy: Kris Humphries Might Have To Live Off Of Kimmy Cakes After This Steals His Stacks

Quote Of The Day: “Old Spice Guy” Isaiah Mustafa Wants A Woman Who Can Give Him Kids With “Nice Hair”

Ladies, if you ever at any point thought Isaiah Mustafa was in any way sexy, be prepared for that to stop today. During an interview on E! News last night, promo-hoeing for his guest appearance on that new Charlie’s Angels Show, Isaiah was asked if he was dating, which, naturally, lead to questions about what kind of woman he wants. Among the qualities he listed were good hair. At which point Giuliana Rancic asked if the hair had to be real… which already makes Isaiah a damn fool for making this comment in that kind of a setting. But his answer to that question though? “Yes, it does have to be real hair. I want my kids to have nice hair so she better have good hair. Cause, I don’t know if you’ve checked my hair out lately. Aside from today it’s normally nice. Today it’s slightly nappy.” Really? SMDH Source

View original post here:
Quote Of The Day: “Old Spice Guy” Isaiah Mustafa Wants A Woman Who Can Give Him Kids With “Nice Hair”

Beauty + Brains: See Harvard Business School Student, Trya Banks in Her Most Stylish Ensembles

Like we needed another reason to idolize Tyra… The mega TV personality and fashion icon has headed back to school—not just any ol’ University either, Tyra Banks enrolled in Harvard’s prestigious Business School last year—smart move for a woman with an annual income of over $30 million… (Continue Reading At Style Blazer )

More here:
Beauty + Brains: See Harvard Business School Student, Trya Banks in Her Most Stylish Ensembles

VIDEO: This Failed Remake of Star Wars With Simon Pegg and Nick Frost is Better Than the Prequels

Armie Hammer on Social Network, Obeying David Fincher and His ‘Cheesy Christian Movie’

Of all the conversations encircling The Social Network on its way to awards-season glory, few have had the surprising resonance accompanying Armie Hammer’s performance at Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss — identical twins who go to war against their Harvard peer Mark Zuckerberg for the rights to Facebook. A marvel of both technical acting and digital wizardry, Hammer’s dual performance is all the more revelatory for the relatively unheralded 24-year-old actor who pulled it off. And to think we indirectly owe it all to Home Alone .

More here:
Armie Hammer on Social Network, Obeying David Fincher and His ‘Cheesy Christian Movie’

Your Office is In Your Pants: 6 Trends Shaping The Way We Work

In 1985, in the Harvard Business Review Philip Stone and Robert Luchetti foresaw in 1985 at the birth of the wireless phone that the era of the Mad Men style office that you went to and sat at a desk was over; they noted that Your office is where you are. They were off by about 25 years; it takes time for technological innovation to percolate through and cause real change. They also didn’t go far enough, thinking only about the promise of being able to talk on the phone; now the technology is getting so small that your office isn’t just where you are, it’s in your pants. Now Sami Grover is my favourite TreeHugger writer, (… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Read more here:
Your Office is In Your Pants: 6 Trends Shaping The Way We Work

Morning Shows Devote 48 Minutes to Lindsay Lohan, a Scant 20 Seconds to Appointment of Controversial Doctor

Over the span of two days, the network morning shows have given just 20 seconds of coverage to the recess appointment of Donald Berwick, a pro-rationing doctor who will run Medicare. In contrast, Good Morning America, Today and Early Show devoted 48 minutes of coverage to every detail of Lindsay Lohan’s sentencing. On Wednesday and Thursday’s GMA, ABC hosts discussed Lohan for 14 minutes. CBS’s Early Show managed 12 minutes to the important topic. Both programs had no mention of Berwick, who once told an audience in Great Britain, “Please, don’t put your faith in market forces.” NBC’s Today, so far, has been the only morning show to mention Berwick at all. On Wednesday, news reader Lester Holt explained: President Obama is expected to appoint his choice to oversee Medicare and Medicaid today, while Congress is in recess. This means Dr. Donald Berwick won’t have to undergo Senate confirmation hearings. Republicans had wanted to question the Harvard professor and healthcare policy expert about comments he made on rationing medical care. However, this 20 second brief hardly explains Berwick’s comments, including this statement, also in Britain: “I hope you realize and affirm how badly you need–how badly the world needs–an example at scale of a health care system that is universal, accessible, excellent and free at the point of care–a health system that, at its core is like the world we wish we had: generous, hopeful, confident, joyous and just.” However, Today also allotted the most time to the Lohan story: 24 minutes over two days. For more, see coverage at CNSNews.com . Also see a blog by the MRC’s Geoff Dickens for more on the lack of coverage .

Read the original:
Morning Shows Devote 48 Minutes to Lindsay Lohan, a Scant 20 Seconds to Appointment of Controversial Doctor

Glenn Beck University? Yes. Glenn Beck University.

Conservative Fox News television host, author, and radio host Glenn Beck has started a university. Sort of. According to an announcement on Beck's Web site, “Beck University is a unique academic experience bringing together experts in the fields of religion, American history and economics.” In July, August and September, interested parties can participate in “captivating lectures and interactive online discussions” in which “experts will explore the concepts of Faith, Hope and Charity and show you how they influence America's past, her present and most importantly her future.” At left is the actual insignia of Beck University. (Note the buffalo, feather and Latin words.) To be clear, calling it a university is more than a stretch: It is actually simply an opportunity to watch online classes taught by three men, among them the controversial David Barton. Barton is described on Beck's site as “the founder and president of WallBuilders, a national pro-family organization that presents America's forgotten history and heroes, with an emphasis on our moral, religious, and constitutional heritage.” He is an evangelical minister and GOP political activist who has pushed hard against the separation of church and state and been embraced by conservative Republican politicians. He has been criticized repeatedly for bad scholarship. According to People for the American Way, then-Republican Sen. Arlen Specter wrote in the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy in 1995 that Barton's arguments “range from the technical to the absurd” and “proceed from flawed and highly selective readings of both text and history.” The other two teachers have more traditional backgrounds: Louisiana State University professor James R. Stoner, Jr. and former Columbia Adjunct Associate Professor of Psychology and Education David L. Buckner. Available classes are “Faith,” “Hope” and “Charity” 101, 102 and 103. So how do you enroll at Beck University? By joining his “Insider Extreme” website at a cost of $9.95 per month or $74.95 for the year. A promotional page for the “Insider Extreme” subscription lays out what it offers beyond the normal “Insider” membership and features a variety of pictures of Beck mugging for the camera. added by: TimALoftis

Programmable Matter Takes Shape with Self-Folding Origami Sheets

June 28, 2010 | 1 comments Shifty Science: Programmable Matter Takes Shape with Self-Folding Origami Sheets A prototype sheet that folds itself into two different shapes may lead to objects that can assume any number of forms on command By John Matson Self-folding robotic sheet SHAPE-SHIFTER: The segmented sheet created by researchers at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology can fold itself into a boat or an airplane shape in a matter or seconds. The Harvard Microrobotics Lab Researchers at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) have invented a real-life Transformer, a device that can fold itself into two shapes on command. The system is hardly ready to do battle with the Decepticons—the tiny contraption forms only relatively crude boat and airplane shapes—but the concept could one day produce chameleonlike objects that shift between any number of practical shapes at will. Self-folding sheets are just one facet of programmable matter, the attempt to build structures that can shape-shift on demand. The idea, says study co-author Daniela Rus, a roboticist at M.I.T., is bringing materials and machines closer together to make everyday objects that can be programmed, much like people program a computer. “Instead of programming bits and bytes,” she says, “you program mechanical properties of the object.” The system, described in a paper published online this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, consists of a thin sheet of resin–fiberglass composite, just a few centimeters across, segmented into 32 triangular panels separated by flexible silicone joints. Some of the joints have heat-sensitive actuators that bend 180 degrees when warmed by an electric current, folding the sheet over at that joint. Depending on the program used, the sheet will conduct a series of folds to yield the boat or airplane shape in about 15 seconds. The folding-sheet approach is an extension of the field of computational origami, the mathematical study of how flat objects can be folded into complex, three-dimensional structures. Although the design presented in the new paper takes only two shapes, the researchers say that in principle the system could produce many more. “We were looking for ways to embed a bunch of different functionalities into one low-profile sheet,” says study co-author Robert Wood, an electrical engineer at Harvard University's Microrobotics Laboratory. “In the longer run we'd like to develop systems to bring this not to just three, four or five shapes but to a much greater scope of different achievable shapes.” Given a set of desired three-dimensional shapes, the group's algorithms determine how to fold the sheet to produce each of the final shapes and then how to accommodate those different folding sequences on a shared sheet. Another algorithm optimizes the sheet for its desired purpose, limiting the number of embedded actuators needed to produce the final shapes. On the airplane–boat prototype sheet, for instance, only half the joints have actuators. The researchers note that although the algorithms produce a workable folding pattern to make a given shape, human experts are often able to design a more efficient scheme. “It doesn't know how to get creative, and sometimes human origamists can see a few moves ahead, like a chess player,” Rus says. “You see patterns that are not obvious to a computer program that does a step-by-step process.” In the near term Rus envisions the computational origami technology forming the basis of three-dimensional display systems—for instance, maps that can reproduce the topography of a given region on demand. “You can imagine making machines that have the ability to give you three-dimensional views of the objects they render,” she says. In the more distant future programmable matter applications might move beyond mere shape mimicry to involve programmable optical, electric or acoustic properties. Video courtesy of the Harvard Microrobotics Lab added by: EthicalVegan