Friday, March 29, 2013

NO TV? What?!?! | Family Star Montessori ? Discover the community ...

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that children do not watch television for the first 2 years of their lives.? This is because the pixels that make up the pictures on the screen and speed at which they change (not to mention the content), can have damaging effects on children?s brain and eye development.? For more information on the research behind this recommendation, visit www.aap.org.? At a recent event, some parents presented the idea that not all television/ electronic media is bad- such as Sesame Street, programs shown on Nick Jr. etc. and many smart phone apps.? While this argument addresses the issue of the content children are seeing on television, it doesn?t address the effect on children?s brain and eye development.? Children have their whole lives to watch TV (and learn to use technology, for that matter), why not give them the first 2 years to just play?

But, what do you do when television has always been a huge part of your life?? Maybe you?ve always had it on as you are preparing for work in the mornings, or at night as you are winding down after work.? Now you have a small child in your house and you?re not supposed to watch TV.? What do you do?

Here is the briefest list of ideas that will hopefully get you thinking of more and playing with that fantastically fun young one that only wants to play with you:

  • Color
  • Work puzzles
  • Read (or just talk about the pictures in) books- lots of them!
  • Go for a walk
  • Have a dance party in your living room
  • Roll a ball back and forth in the house
  • Throw a ball back and forth out of the house
  • ?Cook? with pots, pans, spoons, spatulas, etc.
  • Explore with water outside or in the bath tub: splash, ?paint? with the water and a paint brush, practice pouring water from one cup to another
  • Have your child help you around the house (fold wash cloths, wipe off table tops, put things away, etc.)
  • Make a tunnel/ car/ train/ rocket ship/ castle out of a box

The most important thing is to follow your child?s lead and just be with them- present: in mind, body, and spirit.? While you?re at it, see just how much fun you can have with your little one.? Eventually, you will begin to not even miss that show on television because you are living in your own reality show.? And, who doesn?t love that?

Rebecca Wilson, MS, is mother to Emogene (IC7) and is an enthusiast for all things related to young children.? She earned her Bachelors Degree in Child Development and her Masters Degree in Early Childhood Education?both?from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville.? She has worked with children of all ages from birth through 3rd grade in different positions from teaching to administration to consulting.? Currently, she is a grant manager for the early childhood council in Adams County.

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Source: http://www.familystar.net/community/no-tv-what

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Common gene variants explain 42% of antidepressant response

Mar. 28, 2013 ? Antidepressants are commonly prescribed for the treatment of depression, but many individuals do not experience symptom relief from treatment. The National Institute of Mental Health's STAR*D study, the largest and longest study ever conducted to evaluate depression treatment, found that only approximately one-third of patients responded within their initial medication trial and approximately one-third of patients did not have an adequate clinical response after being treated with several different medications. Thus, identifying predictors of antidepressant response could help to guide the treatment of this disorder.

A new study published in Biological Psychiatry now shares progress in identifying genomic predictors of antidepressant response.

Many previous studies have searched for genetic markers that may predict antidepressant response, but have done so despite not knowing the contribution of genetic factors. Dr. Katherine Tansey of Institute of Psychiatry at King's College London and colleagues resolved to answer that question.

"Our study quantified, for the first time, how much is response to antidepressant medication influenced by an individual's genetic make-up," said Tansey.

To perform this work, the researchers estimated the magnitude of the influence of common genetic variants on antidepressant response using a sample of 2,799 antidepressant-treated subjects with major depressive disorder and genome-wide genotyping data.

They found that genetic variants explain 42% of individual differences, and therefore, significantly influence antidepressant response.

"While we know that there are no genetic markers with strong effect, this means that there are many genetic markers involved. While each specific genetic marker may have a small effect, they may add up to make a meaningful prediction," Tansey added.

"We have a very long way to go to identify genetic markers that can usefully guide the treatment of depression. There are two critical challenges to this process," said Dr. John Krystal, Editor of Biological Psychiatry. "First, we need to have genomic markers that strongly predict response or non-response to available treatments. Second, markers for non-response to available treatments also need to predict response to an alternative treatment. Both of these conditions need to be present for markers of non-response to guide personalized treatments of depression."

"Although the Tansey et al. study represents progress, it is clear that we face enormous challenges with regards to both objectives," he added. "For example, it does not yet appear that having a less favorable genomic profile is a sufficiently strong negative predictor of response to justify withholding antidepressant treatment. Similarly, there is lack of clarity as to how to optimally treat patients who might have less favorable genomic profile.."

Additional research is certainly required, but scientists hope that one day, results such as these can lead to personalized treatment for depression.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Elsevier, via AlphaGalileo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Katherine E. Tansey, Michel Guipponi, Xiaolan Hu, Enrico Domenici, Glyn Lewis, Alain Malafosse, Jens R. Wendland, Cathryn M. Lewis, Peter McGuffin, Rudolf Uher. Contribution of Common Genetic Variants to Antidepressant Response. Biological Psychiatry, 2013; 73 (7): 679 DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2012.10.030

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/z5l4WA6eDzU/130328091730.htm

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Lockheed Martin's technology hub brings startups closer to government needs

Lockheed Martin's technology hub brings startups closer to government needs

Wondering who would be the first to concoct a Kickstarter for governmental wishes? We suppose it's Lockheed Martin. Today, the aforementioned outfit has launched an initiative "aimed at expanding its collaboration with Silicon Valley companies to meet the diverse technology needs of the federal government." Called the Lockheed Martin Silicon Valley Alliance, the hub will reportedly "provide the federal government with greater visibility into innovative technology solutions developed locally," even going so far as to suggest that a game developer could use their resources in order to improve the realism of a military simulation system. It sounds as if Lockheed will end up being the middleman between aspiring companies and entities like the Department of Defense and NASA, essentially ensuring that whatever is built meets federal requirements. Those interested in venturing down such a rabbit hole can give the source link a look, but as always, we'd caution you to register at your own risk.

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Comments

Source: Lockheed Martin

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/uzVIE449n-M/

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Tim McCarver to step down from Fox after season

NEW YORK (AP) ? Tim McCarver will make his 55th straight season of Major League Baseball his last.

The two-time champion catcher will call the World Series this year and then retire from his analyst job at Fox.

"I wanted to step down while I know I can still do the job and proud of the job I've done," the 71-year-old McCarver said during a conference call Wednesday.

His health is good, McCarver said. So are his passion and energy for the game.

It was just time.

"It's not a tough call," he said. "It's not a sad thing for me."

McCarver had been thinking about moving on for a couple of years. This winter, Fox executives visited him at his home in Florida to discuss extending his contract, which expired after the 2013 season.

They never even started negotiations. McCarver had already made up his mind.

He has worked 28 consecutive MLB postseasons on network television dating to 1984, providing analysis for a record 23 World Series.

McCarver got his start in broadcasting in 1980 with the Philadelphia Phillies and NBC's "Game of the Week." He has also called local games for the New York Mets and Yankees and the San Francisco Giants.

McCarver later worked for ABC and CBS before joining Fox in 1996. Last year, he was honored by baseball's Hall of Fame with the Ford C. Frick Award for major contributions to baseball broadcasting.

"You've always been a great symbol of class," Commissioner Bud Selig told McCarver on the conference call.

McCarver spent 21 seasons in the majors between 1959 and 1980, mostly with the Cardinals and Phillies. He was a two-time All-Star and won the World Series in 1964 and 1967 with St. Louis.

He missed the start of the 2011 AL championship series because of a minor heart-related procedure, but the test result that necessitated that medical work turned out to be a false positive.

McCarver has seen other people in various businesses stay at their jobs until their health eventually forced them out, and their quality of life was often not very good after they retired. McCarver didn't want that for himself.

A wine aficionado with a second home in California's Napa Valley, he'd love to travel to Italy for cooking classes.

"I plan on living a very long life, believe me," McCarver said. "I hope Mother Nature cooperates."

McCarver could still appear on Fox or its new cable network, Fox Sports 1, in a different role in the future. But until he tests out retirement, he can't predict whether he'll still want to do a little broadcasting.

McCarver worked with announcer Jack Buck on CBS from 1990-91 then became broadcast partners with his son, Joe Buck, at Fox in 1996.

Joe Buck said he had learned more about broadcasting from McCarver than anyone else, "even my father."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tim-mccarver-step-down-fox-season-164533522--mlb.html

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

Dallas gunshot victim can continue physical therapy thanks to ...

Lukas Da Cruz, who police say was an innocent bystander when he was paralyzed in a drive-by shooting, is able to continue physical therapy thanks to influx of donations. (Vernon Bryant/The Dallas Morning News)

In today?s paper, I have a story about an 8-year-old girl in McKinney who has taken it upon herself to help a gunshot victim whom she?s never met. She has raised about $200 through a combination of emptying her piggy bank, enlisting her classmates to help and going door-to-door in her neighborhood asking for donations.

I first heard about Katelyn Indelicato from her teacher at McClure Elementary. She wrote to me to tell me that a story I wrote about 21-year-old Lukas Da Cruz, who police say was an innocent victim when he was paralyzed in a drive-by shooting last year, had captured the heart of one of her third-graders.

Eight-year-old Katelyn Indelicato has raised about $200 for Da Cruz, a man she's never met. She's on a mission to prove that anyone can make a difference. (Louis DeLuca/The Dallas Morning News)

Katelyn has given so generously of her time, money and prayers to a stranger in need. But she isn?t the only one who stepped up to help Da Cruz after the story ran in the paper last month.

Donations and cards poured in to Project Walk Dallas, where Da Cruz goes twice a week for physical therapy sessions. The sessions cost $200 each, which is more than Da Cruz?s family can afford long-term.

But thanks to more than $4,500 in donations in recent weeks, Da Cruz can attend therapy through May and part of June without worrying about how to pay for it.

The overwhelming support has helped restore Da Cruz?s faith in humanity, which had waved after the shooting.

?There are a lot of people out there that [have] a big heart,? Da Cruz said. ?That puts me up to know people that I don?t really know are there for me.?

His aunt, Berenice Da Cruz, is a hairdresser and said one of her clients had made a large donation to help her nephew get started at therapy. But the money was running out and the recent donations have allowed their family to stop thinking about the financials and focus on helping Da Cruz recover.

?The stress of ?Oh my god, what are we doing to do? How are we going to do it??? she said. ?We were able to just take a month and take a break.?

?We?re very grateful,? she said.

Since the donations and cards came in, Berenice Da Cruz said she has seen a difference in her nephew?s outlook. He feels an obligation to work hard in his recovery, she said.

?Before, you know, he would get in a bad mood and he would stay there ? Now, he doesn?t. He tries to fight it,? she said.??The disappointment [in] people, in life, is turning around. It made him feel like people do care or he does matter.?

Since starting physical therapy in January, Da Cruz has regained the strength he needs to cook for himself, help out with laundry and transfer himself in and out of the car.

?Thank you, from the family,? Berenice Da Cruz said. ?We?re grateful that he?s able to take care of himself. He?s regaining his independence. He?s doing really well.?

Donations to help Lukas Da Cruz and his family pay for physical therapy can be made in Da Cruz?s name to Project Walk Dallas, 15046 Beltway Drive, Dallas, TX 75001.

Source: http://thescoopblog.dallasnews.com/2013/03/dallas-gunshot-victim-can-continue-physical-therapy-thanks-to-outpouring-of-donations.html/

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

'Kick-Ass 2' Heroes Return In Red Band Trailer: Watch Now!

Hit-Girl and Kick-Ass are back with bad villains in this NSFW preview.
By Kevin P. Sullivan, with reporting by Josh Wigler

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1703552/kick-ass-2-red-band-trailer-premiere.jhtml

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This Is What It's Like to Really Live on the Edge

The ordered lines of Jerome, Idaho (population: 10,000) start to disintegrate as you approach those parts of town that teeter on the edge of the Snake river canyon. Here the homes are "unregulated and unzoned", says photographer Michael Light, who took this shot from his own light aircraft. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/qv0wquyBeC8/this-is-what-its-like-to-really-live-on-the-edge

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Amid sadness and mother's grief-filled letter, Cat Haven reopens

DUNLAP, Calif. ? A wildlife sanctuary in the Sierra foothills where an intern was killed by a lion last week reopened Sunday with her mother's blessing.?

Wendy Dabbas, president of Project Survival's Cat Haven, read a grief-filled letter from Dianna Hanson's mother at a news conference before visitors entered.

"I am pleased that Cat Haven is reopening today and share in their sorrow in the loss of Cous Cous," Donna Hanson wrote. "It is my desire that they continue their mission in support of saving my daughter's beloved creatures."

Cous Cous, a rare Barbary lion, was shot by deputies trying to reach Hanson after the attack. The lion was?raised at the park from the age of 8 weeks. Cat Haven founder Dale Anderson has spoken of his love for the regal animal.

But he passionately defended the deputies' shooting of the lion.

"So many people are saying they could have done this, they should have done that," he said, "when there was nothing else to do."

Before a moment of silence, Anderson spoke about his last conversation with Hanson ? a spirited debate about conservation methods.

"We want to continue with our work," he said. "I hope what we're doing can honor her and Cous Cous."

Last Wednesday, three of the park's staff members were off site at an elementary school teaching children about conservation by showing them a cheetah, a large cat that has a flight ? instead of fight ? response.

Head keeper Megan Pauls, 28, and Hanson, 24, were alone at the park, cleaning cages. Pauls was speaking to Hanson over a walkie-talkie when they lost communication. Pauls went to the lion closure to check on the intern.?

She found her lying motionless in the large enclosure. The gate between the den and the enclosure was open.

Pauls called for help and guided responders to the site, while keeping Cous Cous away from Hanson.

"I have to keep talking to him or he'll go to Dianna," Pauls told a dispatcher, according to Fresno County Sheriff Margaret Mims, who spoke at Sunday's news conference.

"I've listened to the dispatch of her 911 call, and Megan's efforts were valiant," Mims said.

Evidence suggests Cous Cous' first strike was at the bottom of the stairs leading up to the den where the lions are fed. Hanson's walkie-talkie was found there.?

Hanson was dragged 30 yards away. So far, there is no evidence that the gate was faulty.

"It appears like it was not closed," Mims said. "We believe it was just an accident, an error."

But there were no witnesses. "Some answers we may not ever know,"?Mims added.

A coroner later reported that Hanson died instantly of a broken neck, but Mims said that because of the distance between the enclosure's entrance and where Hanson lay, deputies did not know whether or not she was alive after the initial attack.

Sheriff's deputies shot and killed the lion, which weighed at least 400 pounds, then rushed to Hanson.

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/NIyDkRormYQ/la-me-cat-park-20130311,0,491963.story

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Friday, March 8, 2013

New Video: Solar Energy, Heating + Cooling Phoenix AZ

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Source: http://solarenergy.movieclipsfree.com/674262524b394349734530/video_solar_energy_heating_cooling_phoenix_az.htm

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Plankton adjusts to changing ocean temperatures

Mar. 8, 2013 ? Imagine trying to swim through a pool of honey. Because of their small size, this is what swimming in water is like for tiny marine plankton. So, it was often assumed they would be easy prey, especially in the dense viscosity of colder waters, but that is not necessarily so.

Texas Tech Associate Professor and Whitacre Endowed Chair in Mechanical Engineering Jian Sheng, along with biologists Brad Gemmell and Edward Buskey from the University of Texas Marine Science Institute, have discovered new information that explains how these tiny organisms overcome this disadvantage.

Their paper, titled "A compensatory escape mechanism at low Reynolds number" was published in the current issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"The purpose of the study was in trying to determine the effects of climate change at the very base of the food chain," Sheng said.

As one of the most abundant animal groups on the planet, many species, including many commercially important fish species, rely on planktonic copepod nauplii at some point during their life cycle. Understanding the ability of these animals to respond to changes in the environment could have direct implications into understanding the future health of our oceans.

By independently varying temperature and viscosity, Sheng recorded their movements with 3-D high speed holographic techniques developed by the Sheng lab at Texas Tech.

"At 3,000 frames per second, it was like tracking a racecar through a microscope," Sheng said. "We were able to determine that the plankton adapted to changes in viscosity by altering the rhythm of its pulsing appendage."

The response, built-in to its natural muscle fiber, was only triggered by changes in temperature, Sheng said. It could not compensate for changes in viscosity due to environmental pollution, such as algae blooms or oil spills.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Texas Tech University. The original article was written by Karin Slyker.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. B. J. Gemmell, J. Sheng, E. J. Buskey. Compensatory escape mechanism at low Reynolds number. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1212148110

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/yWsJWsEcb0o/130308133057.htm

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Homeless, poor in California can get free cellphones

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Impoverished Californians, including those who are homeless, soon will be able to get free cellphones and service thanks to the recent expansion of a statewide program.

Two wireless carriers are now offering free phones and monthly plans for 250 minutes and 250 text messages to all those who can prove that they make less than $14,702 a year, or are income eligible.

Before last week, the program only provided free landlines to the needy. But on Thursday, the California Public Utilities Commission approved two companies' proposals to offer free mobile service funded in part through the Federal Communications Commission's Lifeline program, the San Francisco Chronicle reports (http://bit.ly/WGQlKS).

Bevan Dufty, San Francisco's head of homeless initiatives, plans to send staff to low-income housing complexes and shelters in the coming weeks to make sure the city's least fortunate know how to apply. Dufty and advocates for people experiencing homelessness have been pressing the commission to approve the program for three years, saying that cell-phone Lifeline plans have been approved in most other states.

"We are very excited by this," Dufty said. "It will help people move forward. It will empower them, and we in San Francisco are going to be a model city for this program."

Romonica Grayson, who lives in the city's Sunnydale public housing project, said having a mobile phone will mean being

able to communicate easily with loved ones, and coordinate social events, parent services and other activities at Sunnydale.

"Everything will be different now," Grayson said as she picked up application information earlier this week. "I can finally be sure I will be able to get ahold of people to do what I need to do in a timely fashion."

Reach Out Wireless and Assurance Wireless, an arm of Sprint, will provide the phones free of charge, and will be reimbursed $9.25 by the FCC's federal Lifeline program to cover the cost of services, FCC spokesman Mark Wigfield said.

The two free plans to be offered in California have limits on service, and policies surrounding the replacement or repair of phones are different for each carrier, according to the CPUC's spokesman Andrew Kotch.

Most wireless carriers include long distance service in their plans, he said.

The FCC has been overseeing the wireless program since 2005, and has made rules changes to alleviate fraud and abuse, Wigfield said. The program does not do a background check on applicants' criminal or health histories, nor does it set guidelines restricting the type of calls that can be made, he added.

"The rules for the Lifeline program are meant to make sure that the program is protected against waste, fraud or abuse but a rich kid could call 911 unnecessarily just as easily as someone who is poor," Wigfield said. "It's just is not in FCC's jurisdiction to deal with that."

------

Information from: San Francisco Chronicle, http://www.sfgate.com

Source: http://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-news/ci_22730169/homeless-poor-california-can-get-free-cellphones?source=rss

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Hugo Chavez dead: Venezuelans mourn president, prepare for election

CARACAS -- Shattered supporters of Hugo Chavez mourned his death in a flood of emotion that allies of the socialist leader hope will help ensure the survival of his self-styled revolution when voters elect a successor.

Ending one of Latin America's most remarkable populist rules, Chavez died on Tuesday at 58 after a two-year battle with cancer that was first detected in his pelvis.

Thousands of Venezuelans took to the streets to honor the flamboyant and outspoken leader, whose body will be taken to a military academy on Wednesday to lie in state for three days.
State TV ran constant images of past speeches and appearances, under the banner "Chavez lives."

The future of Chavez's leftist policies, which won him the adoration of poor Venezuelans but infuriated opponents who denounced him as a dictator, now rests on the shoulders of Vice President Nicolas Maduro, the man he tapped to succeed him.

"In the immense pain of this historic tragedy that has affected our fatherland, we call on all the compatriots to be vigilant for peace, love, respect and tranquility," Maduro said. "We ask our people to channel this pain into peace."

Maduro, a 50-year-old former bus driver and union leader, will probably face opposition from Henrique Capriles, governor of Miranda state, in the next election in the OPEC nation with the world's largest oil reserves.

The stakes are huge for the region, given the Chavez government's crucial economic aid and cheap fuel supplies to allies across Latin America and the Caribbean.

Authorities said the vote would be called within 30 days, but it was not clear if that meant it would be held, or simply that the date would be announced.

One recent opinion poll gave Maduro a strong lead over Capriles, in part because he has received Chavez's blessing as his heir apparent, and he is likely to benefit from the surge of emotion following the president's death.

The tall, mustachioed Maduro has long been a close ally of Chavez. He immediately pledged to continue his legacy, and would be unlikely to make major policy changes soon.

Maduro will now focus on marshalling support from Chavez's diverse coalition, which includes leftist ideologues, business leaders, and radical armed groups called "colectivos."

Some have suggested he might try to ease tensions with Western investors and the U.S. government. Yet hours before Chavez's death, Maduro alleged that "imperialist" enemies had infected the president with cancer and expelled two U.S. diplomats accused of conspiring with domestic opponents.

"DON'T BE ANXIOUS"

A victory by Capriles, 40, a centrist politician who calls Brazil his model for Venezuela, would bring big changes and be welcomed by business groups, although he would probably move cautiously to lower the risk of political instability.

"This is not the time to stress what separates us," Capriles said in a condolence message, calling for unity and respect for the loss that many felt after Chavez's demise.

"There are thousands, maybe millions, of Venezuelans asking themselves what will happen, who even feel fear ... Don't be scared. Don't be anxious. Between us all, we're going to guarantee the peace this beloved country deserves."

Military commanders pledged loyalty to Maduro, who will be Venezuela's caretaker leader until the election. Defense Minister Diego Morales said a 21-gun salute would be fired at 8 a.m. (1230 GMT) on Wednesday to honor Chavez.

It was not immediately clear where Chavez would be buried. He had ordered a striking new mausoleum built in downtown Caracas for the remains of independence hero Simon Bolivar, his inspiration, and it is due to be finished soon.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/hrdailypress/news/~3/IBew3idh3IA/chi-hugo-chavez-dead-20130305,0,7742513.story

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Chris Brown's Crazy Wednesday: From Parking Lot Scuffle To Dissing Drake

MTV News rounds up the headlines Breezy has made in the last 24 hours.
By Jocelyn Vena


Chris Brown
Photo: Jason Kempin/ Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1703234/chris-brown-drake-diss.jhtml

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

EDUCATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL


Hostility to homeschoolers in the Obama admin.

Some sentences are made of words while others are made of jail time. And home-schooling families focused on the former kind of sentences are increasingly finding themselves under the threat of the latter?even in America.

For example, consider Uwe and Hannelore Romeike, the Christian couple who fled Germany in 2008 after the government levied them with heavy fines and even once had their children removed from their home and placed in foster care all because they home-school.

Germany bars parents from educating children at home even when the children flourish in that environment. Applying laws actually enacted during the Nazi period of the 1930s, Germany has long been at war against home-schooling families?even sentencing some parents to jail terms for teaching their children at home.

The Romeike were granted asylum in the United States in 2010, and they have peacefully lived in Tennessee and educated their outstanding children at home ever since. Uwe and Hannelor teach their children at home for religious reasons and by every standard their children are thriving.

But their German nightmare has begun all over again with Attorney General Eric Holder taking the position that German laws against home schooling did not violate the family?s ?fundamental rights? to educate their children at home and therefore were not sufficient grounds for asylum.

Holder ignores the fact that several million children are home-educated in the United States every day and in every state, and virtually all home-educating parents would argue that they are exercising a fundamental right as parents to oversee the education of their own children. He also ignores settled Supreme Court precedent establishing both religious and parental grounds to home-educate children.

The Obama administration?s Department of Homeland Security has also lined up against the Romeikes, as has the Board of Immigration Appeals. Of course, the virulent opposition of the public school teachers union?a core Obama administration financial and voting constituency?to the Romeike?s asylum request cannot be understated.

The teachers unions, as most people who follow these issues know, is in a bloody knife-fight to kill home education in the United States.

The stakes are extraordinarily high. The Romeikes have five school-age children the German government will likely snatch from their home if forced to return. And, of course, there are also the fines and jail sentences hanging like the Sword of Damocles over their heads.

All of this because the parents have decided that the better course for their children is home education.

The Romeikes are asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit to give them permanent refugee status. The Home School Legal Defense Association says it could take a full year for the circuit court to rule.

The significance of this case will become even more obvious as the political agenda of the Obama administration and its teachers union allies clash with the fundamental right of parents to determine how their own children will be educated.

Every American should hope that the only sentences the Romeikes and their children face are the ones in text books.

SOURCE

The Coddling of College Hate Crime Hoaxers

Michelle Malkin

American college campuses are the most fertile grounds for fake hate. They're marinated in identity politics and packed with self-indulgent, tenured radicals suspended in the 1960s. In the name of enlightenment and tolerance, these institutions of higher learning breed a corrosive culture of left-wing self-victimization. Take my alma mater, Oberlin College. Please.

This week, the famously "progressive" college in Ohio made international headlines when it shut down classes after a series of purported hate crimes. According to the Oberlin Review (a student newspaper I once wrote for), anti-black and anti-gay vandalism/"hate speech" have plagued the campus since Feb. 9.

"'Whites Only' was written above a water fountain, 'N*gger Oven' was written inside the elevator, and 'No N*ggers' was written on a bathroom door" at one dormitory, according to the publication.

Swastikas and epithets were drawn on posters around the school. Activists implied the incidents were tied to Black History Month. The final straw? A menacing presence on campus who allegedly donned a "KKK hood" and robe near the segregated black dormitory known as "Afrikan Heritage House."

Oberlin President Marvin Krislov and three college deans ostentatiously published an "open letter" announcing the administration's decision to "suspend formal classes and non-essential activities." The campus body immediately jumped to conclusions and indulged in collective grievance-mongering. The New York Times, Black Entertainment Television and The Associated Press all piled on with angst-ridden coverage of the puzzling crimes at one of the first U.S. colleges to admit blacks and women.

Oberlin alumna Lena Dunham, a cable TV celebrity who starred in a pro-Obama ad likening her vote for him to losing her virginity, took to Twitter to rally her fellow "Obies." The Associated Press dutifully reported Dunham's plea as news: "Hey, Obies, remember the beautiful, inclusive and downright revolutionary history of the place you call home. Protect each other."

But what the AP public relations team for Dunham and the Oberlin mau-mau-ers didn't report is the rest of the story. While Blame Righty propagandists bemoaned the frightening persistence of white supremacy in the tiny town of Oberlin, city police told a local reporter that eyewitnesses saw no one in KKK garb -- but instead saw a pedestrian wearing a blanket. Yes, the dreaded Assault Blanket of Phantom Bias.

Moreover, after arresting two students involved in the spate of hate messages left around campus, police say "it is unclear if they were motivated by racial hatred or -- as has been suggested -- were attempting a commentary on free speech."

Color me unsurprised. The truth is that Oberlin has been a hotbed of dubious hate crime claims, dating back to the late 1980s and 1990s, when I was a student on campus. In 1988, giant signs reading "White Supremacy Rules (Kill All N*ggers)" and "White Supremacy Rules, (F*uck (slashed out and replaced with 'Kill') All Minorities)" were hung anonymously at the Student Union building. It has long been suspected that minority students themselves were responsible.

In 1993, a memorial arch on campus dedicated to Oberlin missionaries who died in the Boxer Rebellion was defaced with anti-Asian graffiti. The venomous messages -- "Death to Ch*nks Memorial" and "Dead ch*nks, good ch*nks" -- led to a paroxysm of protests, administration self-flagellation and sanctimonious resolutions condemning bigotry. But the hate crime was concocted by an Asian-American Oberlin student engaged in the twisted pursuit of raising awareness about hate by faking it, Tawana Brawley-style.

Segregated dorms, segregated graduations and segregated academic departments foster paranoid and selective race-consciousness. While I was on campus, one Asian-American student accused a library worker of racism after the poor staffer asked the grievance-mongering student to lower the blinds where she was studying. Call the Department of Justice!

A black student accused an ice cream shop owner of racism after he told the student she was not allowed to sit at an outside table because she hadn't purchased any items from his store. Alert the U.N. Commission on Human Rights!

In 2006, I went back to Oberlin to confront the campus with the hate crime hoax phenomenon. As I told students back then, liberals see racism where it doesn't exist, fabricate it when they can't find it and ignore it within their own ranks. I documented case after case of phony racism by students and faculty, from Ole Miss to Arizona State to Claremont McKenna, and contrasted it with the vitriolic prejudice that tolerant lefties have for minorities who stray from the political plantation.

The response from "students of color"? They took offense, of course, and characterized my speech as self-hating hate. Just as their coddling faculty and college elders have taught them to do.

I repeat: Mix identity politics, multicultural studies, cowardly administrators and biased media -- and you've got a toxic recipe for opportunistic hate crime hoaxes. Welcome to high-priced, higher mis-education, made and manufactured in the U.S.A.

SOURCE

Australia: Teachers angry over lost perk

The new conservative government is moving fast.? And Queensland is unicameral:? No pesky upper house to hold things up

QUEENSLAND is taking "a giant step backwards" in the classroom and defying world best practice by banning teachers from professional development during school time, national education experts warn.

Principal and teachers warn student learning will suffer in state schools as a result of the controversial move.

But Education Minister John-Paul Langbroek says parents want to see their children have the same teacher throughout every school day and denies the move is a cost-cutting measure.

The State Government has sparked widespread concern and surprise by its decision to ban Professional Development (PD) during school time in state schools, amid a national focus on improving teacher quality in a bid to boost student results.

Grattan Institute school education program director Dr Ben Jensen said the ban was a giant step backwards.

"It goes against what the best schools in Australia are doing and what the best systems around the world are doing and directly runs against the idea that schools should operate in a way that continually improves learning and teaching, which should be our objective,'' Dr Jensen said.

He said schools needed to move towards a model in which professional learning was built in to how they operated daily, rather than running largely ineffective PD courses and workshop.

Professor Brian Caldwell, who was hired by the State Government in 2010 to provide a review of teacher education, backed Dr Jensen, saying PD was essential to boost teacher quality.

But Mr Langbroek said it was better for students if PD happened outside school time.? "Parents expect continuity with respect to teaching in the classroom," he said.

"For this reason the Government made the decision to limit professional development to the six pupil free days each year, school holidays or afternoons after school."

He said concerns had been raised about some instances in which it was difficult to do PD outside school hours and the Government was working towards "an appropriate solution'' around those.

Queensland Association of State School Principals president Hilary Backus said the six pupil free days for PD was not enough time given the introduction of new national curriculum, increasing technology and workplace demands.

"QASSP absolutely supports teacher continuity...however, If we are to improve student outcomes we have to improve teacher quality,'' Mrs Backus said.

Queensland Teachers' Union president Kevin Bates said if the ban remained students would "miss out on a whole range of opportunities - not as a consequence of teachers not being willing to - but teachers not being able to deliver the newest educational practices and theories''.

SOURCE

Source: http://edwatch.blogspot.com/2013/03/hostility-to-homeschoolers-in-obama.html

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Monday, March 4, 2013

Casey Anthony speaks at bankruptcy hearing

Casey Anthony, center, leaves the United States Courthouse in Tampa, Fla., with U.S. Marshals after a bankruptcy hearing Monday, March 4, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Anthony has not made any public appearances since she left jail after being acquitted in 2011 for the murder of her two-year-old daughter Caylee. (AP Photo/Brian Blanco)

Casey Anthony, center, leaves the United States Courthouse in Tampa, Fla., with U.S. Marshals after a bankruptcy hearing Monday, March 4, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Anthony has not made any public appearances since she left jail after being acquitted in 2011 for the murder of her two-year-old daughter Caylee. (AP Photo/Brian Blanco)

Casey Anthony is protected from the media by her attorney Cheney Mason as she arrives at the United States Courthouse for a bankruptcy hearing Monday, March 4, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Anthony has not been seen in public since being acquitted in 2011 of murdering her two-year-old daughter Caylee. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

Casey Anthony is protected from the media by her attorney Cheney Mason as she arrives at the United States Courthouse for a bankruptcy hearing Monday, March 4, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Casey has not been seen in public since being acquitted in 2011 of murdering her two-year-old daughter Caylee. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

FILE -In this July 17, 2011 file photo, Casey Anthony, center, walks out of the Orange County Jail with her attorney Jose Baez, left, during her release in Orlando, Fla. Anthony comes out of seclusion for a meeting with the creditors in her bankruptcy case in Tampa Monday March 4, 2013. (AP Photo/Red Huber, Pool, File)

Casey Anthony's vehicle is surrounded by the media as she arrives at the United States Courthouse for a bankruptcy hearing Monday, March 4, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Anthony has not been seen in public since being acquitted in 2011 of murdering her two-year-old daughter Caylee. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) ? Appearing in public for the first time since she was acquitted of murder, Casey Anthony revealed that she doesn't have a job or a car, lives with friends and relies on unsolicited gift cards and cash to get by.

"I guess you could say I'm living free off the kindness" of others, Anthony said at a bankruptcy hearing in Tampa.

Anthony, 26, was acquitted of murder in July 2011 in the death of her daughter, Caylee. She was released from jail several days later and disappeared from the spotlight. At the time, she had been vilified online and elsewhere, and her attorneys said threats had been made against her.

On Monday, dressed in a white short-sleeve top, a black skirt and black heels, she emerged from a sport utility vehicle and several dozen photographers and reporters swarmed her. When she left the courthouse, about 10 U.S. Homeland Security officers stood on the steps with guns.

During the 50-minute long hearing, she consulted with her team of attorneys frequently. When she spoke, it was in a calm, matter-of-fact voice, and she mostly answered "yes sir" or "no sir" to the trustee's questions.

Anthony said all of the "unsolicited" money, gift cards and donations were sent to her attorneys, who then pass them along to her. She added that her criminal attorney, Jose Baez, has given her about $3,400 in cash "to help with my living expenses."

She refused to disclose who pays for her cell phone, with one of her attorneys saying that it was due to "safety and security concerns."

Anthony filed for bankruptcy in January, claiming about $1,000 in assets and $792,000 in liabilities.

Only one creditor showed up at the hearing: R. Scott Shuker, who is a lawyer for Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez.

Fernandez-Gonzalez said her reputation was damaged by Anthony telling detectives that a baby sitter by the same name kidnapped Caylee. The detectives were investigating the 2008 disappearance of Caylee, who found dead several months later.

Anthony's attorney said details offered by Anthony did not match Fernandez-Gonzalez and clearly showed Anthony wasn't talking about her.

Shuker grilled Anthony repeatedly on whether she has been approached to tell her story for a movie, book or TV deal. Anthony insisted that she has not spoken to any agent or media organization.

Shuker said afterward that he questioned whether she was telling the truth.

"From the smell test, it didn't smell right," he said. "Any time you see an attorney in what's supposed to be a no asset case being that active, more to the point, you had five attorneys there, allegedly none of them being paid, that's odd."

Shuker said that his client suffers damages "to this day" because of her alleged link to the case.

Anthony's listed debts include $500,000 for attorney fees and costs for Baez, her criminal defense lawyer during the trial; $145,660 for the Orange County Sheriff's office for investigative fees and costs; $68,540 for the Internal Revenue Service for taxes, interest and penalties; and $61,505 for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for court costs.

Anthony had not been seen in public since she left an Orange County jail on July 16, 2011, 12 days after she was acquitted of murdering Caylee but convicted of lying to investigators and sentenced to four years in jail. With credit for the nearly three years she spent in jail since August 2008 and good behavior, she had to serve only several days when she was sentenced July 7.

During Monday's hearing, she said that in 2008 she transferred her interest in about a dozen photos to her criminal attorney, and that he sold those photos to ABC for $200,000. The money helped pay for her defense, she said.

Anthony added that she "was asked to participate in" photos and licensed those photos to Baez. She didn't say what those photos were of, or where they eventually ended up ? other than that she "posed" for them. She said she thinks Baez eventually sold, or planned to sell, those photos.

___

Follow Tamara Lush on Twitter at http://twitter.com/tamaralush

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-04-Casey%20Anthony-Bankruptcy/id-7c8053324b0d4e07b55da42921babb98

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Sunday, March 3, 2013

Star Tribune poll: Most Minnesotans want tax hike only on wealthy (Star Tribune)

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1st Polaroid-branded photo store opens in Fla.

Polaroid Fotobar founder and CEO Warren Struhl, stands in his Delray Beach, Fla., store on its opening day Friday, March 1, 2013. The 2,000 square-foot store hopes to reinvigorate the digital world's interest in print photography. Polaroid's new store aims to coax customers to move images off their cell phones and unto paper, canvas, metal, bamboo or other materials. (AP Photo/Matt Sedensky)

Polaroid Fotobar founder and CEO Warren Struhl, stands in his Delray Beach, Fla., store on its opening day Friday, March 1, 2013. The 2,000 square-foot store hopes to reinvigorate the digital world's interest in print photography. Polaroid's new store aims to coax customers to move images off their cell phones and unto paper, canvas, metal, bamboo or other materials. (AP Photo/Matt Sedensky)

Jamie Bloch, 12, is one of the first customers at the new Polaroid Foto Bar store in Delray Beach, Fla., Friday March 1, 2013. The 2,000 square-foot store hopes to reinvigorate the digital world's interest in print photography. Polaroid's new store aims to coax customers to move images off their cell phones and unto paper, canvas, metal, bamboo or other materials. (AP Photo/Matt Sedensky)

The Polaroid Foto Bar store in Delray Beach, Fla., Friday March 1, 2013. The 2,000 square-foot store hopes to reinvigorate the digital world's interest in print photography. Polaroid's new store aims to coax customers to move images off their cell phones and unto paper, canvas, metal, bamboo or other materials. (AP Photo/Matt Sedensky)

The Polaroid Foto Bar store in Delray, Fla. Friday March 1, 2013. The 2,000 square-foot store hopes to reinvigorate the digital world's interest in print photography. Polaroid's new store aims to coax customers to move images off their cell phones and unto paper, canvas, metal, bamboo or other materials. (AP Photo/Matt Sedensky)

(AP) ? The first in a chain of Polaroid-branded photo shops opened here Friday, with its backers hoping to reinvigorate the digital world's interest in printed images by capitalizing on an iconic name.

Polaroid Fotobar aims to tap into unprecedented interest in photography with its inaugural 2,000-square-foot store. The trick will be to coax consumers who snap pictures on cellphones and other devices to give their memories new life on paper.

"Maybe it's on a smartphone, maybe it's on Instagram, maybe it's on Facebook," said Warren Struhl, the founder and CEO of Fotobar. "But digital is not permanent. Physical is permanent."

In the glistening new store, customers can pay a visit to the bar where "fototenders" will assist in wireless uploads of photos. From there, a visitor can purchase prints made on-site, or order products sporting their images on canvas, metal, bamboo and other materials.

The cheapest item is a $1 print replicating a traditional Polaroid, though the purchase requires a minimum of six. The priciest product is a 7-foot-by-4-foot, 150-pound slab of acrylic with a customer's image on it, running $2,500. All of the prints made on-site take the form of the original Polaroid, in varying sizes, with its familiar white border. It is thicker, at 1.2 millimeters, and sturdier, but is instantly recognizable.

Struhl says he has heard time and again that photography's transition to digital has brought "a pain point" for people, who feel a sense of guilt that their images may reside on a hard drive but not in a frame.

"It makes them sad," he contends. "Most people are afraid they're going to lose that favorite picture on top of the fact that they wish it was up on a shelf."

Whether that is true, and whether it drives people into Struhl's stores will determine the fate of the Fotobar. But even some with deep nostalgia for the Polaroid brand wonder how the business will fare in a digital world.

Phillip Block of the International Center of Photography said he grew up with Polaroids and is "thrilled that anyone is interested in picturemaking and the physical print." But he said digital cameras have replicated the immediate gratification and emotional impact people experienced when their Polaroid camera spit out a floppy print.

Polaroid cameras were the ultimate in convenience, he said, and "anything other than that is a step backwards."

But as customers began to file in, there was no sign of discontent. Among the first to take a seat at the Fotobar was Jami Bloch, 12, who was uploading photos from her Facebook and Instagram accounts. She frequently takes photos on her iPhone but never has them printed.

"You can actually like see them," she said of the prints, "it's actually like real."

Besides offering a sleek, sparkling white atmosphere, the store also has a studio that will offer free classes, host parties and allow customers to come in for portraits with local photographers. Struhl says he's negotiating at least 10 leases for other Fotobar sites and expects new locations may open elsewhere in Florida, in New York, Boston and Las Vegas, in the next year.

Customers can also find refurbished Polaroid cameras selling for $159.95 and eight-packs of film for $29.95.

Polaroid itself, which pioneered instant photography, ultimately went bankrupt and doesn't produce its iconic cameras or film anymore. Film compatible with old Polaroid cameras is now manufactured by The Impossible Project. Polaroid is paid for the use of its name on the stores through a licensing agreement. Fotobar is owned by Struhl and other investors.

Fotobar faces competition from chain drugstores and other retail sites that allow customers to print their digital pictures, not to mention an array of websites that will deliver prints without someone ever having to leave their computer.

Struhl insists Fotobar is different, though.

"Four-by-six prints are available lots of places," he said. "We're the only place that makes Polaroids."

___

Online:

Polaroid Fotobar: http://www.polaroidfotobar.com/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-03-01-Polaroid%20Stores/id-7cf910c81e8444e6a23c5aae1222ba3d

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Video: Bonnie Franklin remembered as ?full of light and love?



>>> bonnie franklin personified the struggling single parent in "one day at a time." franklin lost her battle with cancer on friday in her california home. diana alviar has more from los angeles . this is it this is life

>> reporter: flawed and single and an romano was no june cleaver .

>> i'm not married.

>> you are divorced?

>> yes, i am.

>> great.

>> reporter: bonnie franklin 's character on "one day at a time" was a first for a prime time sitcom. she talked about it in a 2005 pbs reunion special.

>> back in the '70s when we were doing this, across the country were single parents . yet, it hadn't been reflected on camera.

>> reporter: born bonnie gale franklin , she made her tv debut at 9. franklin 's biggest impact was as mom to daughters julie played by mckenzie phillips and barbara played by valerie bert nelly.

>> steve asked me to go away with him for the weekend and i'm going.

>> great, mom. have a great time.

>> barbara? you don't understand. she's going to shack up.

>> reporter: "one day at a time" was ground breaking , in this case because franklin played a single mom with a very active dating life.

>> i guess it's been a long time since you had a man sleep over, huh?

>> no.

>> this is really the first time we saw a divorcee on television dating men and really trying to get her love life back in order after a failed marriage.

>> reporter: last september, she was diagnosed with pafrpg ree nk kree attic cancer.

>> my heart is breaking. bonnie is always one of the most important women in my life and was a second mother to me. phillips said shes with just full of light and love. and the man who cast franklin in her iconic role said "i was wrong. i thought life forces never die. bonnie was such a life force . bubbly, always up, the smile never left her face." a feisty feminist who inspired her fans.

>> i love you.

>> and you.

>> with her trade mark pictures of grace and grit.

>> we're back in a moment. this is "today" on nbc.

>>> still to come on "today,"

Source: http://www.today.com/video/today/51017083/

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Obama Signs Order for $85 Billion in Spending Cuts (Voice Of America)

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