observer the
volume xliv, issue 13
friday, 11/30/12
Campus security guard pleads guilty to grand theft, awaits sentencing
Contractor stole $13,000 worth of electronic equipment
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“S
an Diego is a hub of biotechnology and wireless communication, and there was an opportunity to have an influential role in this market, given the critical mass of medical device companies in Southern California.” -Professor Mehran Mehregany, director of Case School of Engineering in San Diego arianna wage / observer Demeterious Cathey, a former contract security guard in the Wolstein Research Building, has pled guilty to one count of grand theft, in addition to one count of aggravated theft and three counts of petty theft.
Case Western ranked 24 in Lumosity’s smartest college list >>tanviPARMAR special.assignmentsREPORTER<<
Case Western Reserve University was recently ranked number 24 in Lumosity’s “Smartest Colleges in America.” Lumosity is a San Francisco based company that creates brain-training exercises. “Case Western’s ranking just proves that this college is one the best in providing top-notch education and resources to its students,” said freshman Shriya Shah in response to the news. “We are also a very diverse and integrated campus, and most people I know here are extremely focused, and are willing to challenge themselves and allow for academic and personal growth throughout their four years.” For this particular list, the company asked a candidate sample of 89,699 users who were students between the ages 17 and 25 from colleges all
>>giladDORON contributingREPORTER<<
Case Western Reserve University, which has been a permanent feature in Cleveland, has now expanded across the country. This past fall, the university officially launched a new master’s program in wireless health in San Diego, following the launch of its related graduate certificate in the fall of 2011. The program is a joint initiative of the electrical and biomedical engineering departments, with physical classrooms that accompany the capacity for online classes. Students in the program are able to access the utilities and assets of CWRU all while residing in the city that is the center of the wireless health universe. The development of this new Master’s Program has been in the works for the past several years. The Case School of Engineering has been searching for ways to
>>tylerHOFFMAN editor.inCHIEF<<
welve laptops, three cameras, and two iPods: these are the items a contract security guard stole from the Iris S. and Bert L. Wolstein Research Building during his brief employment at Case Western Reserve University. Demeterious Cathey, 21, worked at the university for less than two months and stole the items between Aug. 3 and Sept. 6, according to CWRU chief of police and director of security Arthur Hardee. Cathey was arrested on Sept. 6. “The [police] department’s detective was able to [link Cathey] to the thefts by reviewing the... camera system and checking for building access to monitor who was inside the building on the dates of the thefts,” he explained. The university owned ten of the laptop computers and the three cameras, Hardee said. The remaining computers and the two iPods were the property of faculty members. CWRU Police and Security Services estimates that Cathey stole $13,000 worth of electronic equipment prior to his arrest. Because the amount exceeded $5000, the state of Ohio was able to charge Cathey with one count of grand theft, in addition to one count of aggravated theft and three counts of petty theft.
CWRU expands into San Diego
around the United States to participate in the test study. The company made sure to conduct the study in a way that limits the analysis to the student population of the universities. Those conducting the study also made sure to remove the small number of users who were already taking part in universitybased clinical studies to further level the field. Experimenters looked at the user scores for a game in each of the five Lumosity Brain Areas, which are speed, attention, flexibility, memory, and problem solving. Lumosity only included the students who played at least one game in each area and had provided their date of birth and gender. After the scores were normalized, the company used inverse percentile rank normalization tables for each game that it had previously collected in its
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further advance its graduate programs and draw greater national recognition. After extensive research and assessment headed by Professor Mehran Mehregany, CWRU was able to secure its wireless health program in San Diego. Mehregany is the director of the Case School of Engineering in San Diego. “I studied the technology markets in Austin, Dallas, Phoenix, and ultimately decided on San Diego,” said Mehregany. “San Diego is a hub of biotechnology and wireless communication, and there was an opportunity to have an influential role in this market, given the critical mass of medical device companies in Southern California.” After identifying San Diego as the target market, Mehregany moved there in 2007 in order to
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index anqui li / observer CWRU was recently ranked one of the smartest universities in the country by Lumosity, a computer programming company that tested over 60,000 students from 411 different universities.
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