Birmingham contractor selected to build $5M computer institute in Hoover (BizJournals) Birmingham's Gary C. Wyatt General Contractor LLC was tapped to work on the $4.8 million National Computer Forensic Institute in Hoover....more...Television movies for the week of Oct. 28 (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) A list of movies on TV for the week....more... Murder in the library at Rebus exhibition (The Scotsman) THEIR careers have been linked for more than 20 years. The many ties that bind Ian Rankin and John Rebus together are well known and cherished by their huge army of fans....more... The Battle for Our Future: Remarks by Secretary Chertoff at Westminster College (Department of Homeland Security) Fulton, Mo. Westminster College Secretary Chertoff : Thank you very much, Dr. Forsythe, for that very kind introduction. And thank you to all of you for that very warm welcome....more... New Low-cost Options for Secure, Environmentally Sound Disposal of IT Equipment Now Available to CompTIA Members (Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance) OAKBROOK TERRACE, Ill.----The Computing Technology Industry Association , the leading trade association for the world's information technology industry, announced today the availability of a low-cost technology equipment recycling program for its members....more... Police Academy (The Post and Courier) With a flurry of yellow police tape, the mock crime scene is marked off. In the corner, a young woman slumps with bullet wounds made of circles cut out from red construction paper taped to her skin. Caroline Boinest watches the investigation demonstration intently. Unlike some teens whose parents suggested they attend, ......more... Questions And Answers - Wednesday, 17 October 2007 (Scoop.co.nz) 1. Hon BILL ENGLISH (Deputy Leader?National) to the Minister of Finance: Does he stand by his statement regarding tax cuts in Australia in 2005 that ?Australian taxpayers earning up to $58,000 a year receive a measly $6 a week??...more... Aging science labs are targeted (Boston Globe) Thousands of Bay State high school students conduct experiments in decades-old science labs, some without computers or functioning gas lines, at a time when science has leapt forward to embrace robotics, forensics, and nanotechnology....more... |