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India’s crying need for skill development LEGO Education pack.mp4 Morchisorkh 2.mov House suspends education initiatives – again – The Politics Blog … The votes were lopsided but not unanimous to suspend initiatives 728 and 732 in the state House of Representatives Monday. The two iconic education -funding measures were first approved by voters in 2000 to provide class-size reduction … Illegal Students Entitled To K-12 Education , Dept. of Education … MIAMI — The U.S. Department of Education sent a letter to districts around the country Friday, reminding them that all students – legal or not – are entitled to a public education . The letter comes amid reports that schools may be … RealClearPolitics – The ' Education ' Mantra One of those words that many people seldom look behind is “ education .” But education can cover anything from courses on nuclear physics to courses on baton twirling. Unfortunately, an increasing proportion of American education , … “Big” education bills almost done | EdNewsColorado Two of the more noteworthy education bills of 2011 advanced today as the legislature raced toward adjournment. Education – Important for Development | znewstoday.com “ Education is a significant engine to an individual’s development. it is through education that the son of a peasant becomes a surgeon and the kid of a farmer becomes president of a great nation”, says Nelson Mandella, … tonnet says: The Education -and-Tech Daily is out! http://bit.ly/e7APcO ▸ Top stories today via @lindaaragoni

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Alicia Silverstone

Spring Heeled Jack – Alicia Silverstone Alicia Silverstone Has a Baby Boy Alicia Silverstone Welcomes Baby Boy Actress Alicia Silverstone Has A Little Baby Bear! | Radar Online By Cliff RenfrewRadar Staff Reporter Just in time for Mother’s Day – Alicia Silverstone became a mother! PHOTOS: Alicia Silverstone shows off her baby bump The 34-year-old actress and writer welcomed a baby son, Bear Blu Jarecki, … Alicia Silverstone Gives Birth To Boy Named Bear Blu Alicia Silverstone’s baby is only a few days old and he’s already a trending topic on Twitter thanks to his unusual name. She wrote on her website, “My husband [Christopher Jarecki] and I welcomed our 7 lb 15 oz baby boy Bear Blu … Alicia Silverstone Welcomes a Baby Boy! | Celebrity-gossip.net Adding yet another title to her resume, Alicia Silverstone and husband Christopher Jarecki welcomed the birth of their first-born child, a baby boy, last Thursday (May 5). The proud mom and dad gave their just-born 7 lbs., 15 oz, … Alicia Silverstone Names Her Baby “Bear” [PIC] Alicia Silverstone Names Her Baby “Bear”: “Bear Blu Jarecki” to be exact …Via Just Jared. Alicia Silverstone Welcomes Baby Boy! – Moms & Babies – UsMagazine.com The actress gave birth to her first child on Friday. habuherbu says: Alicia Silverstone named her kid Bear Blu…ugh, what'm I gonna name mine now?? either Emu Oranj or Panda Blak #awesomeabounds

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Musharraf: No deal made to let US get bin Laden

Click photo to enlargeA Pakistan army soldier secures a street close to the house of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad, Pakistan on Monday, May 9, 2011. Osama bin Laden was killed by a helicopter-borne U.S. military force on last week, in a fortress-like compound on the outskirts of Pakistani city of Abbottabad….

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David Laws broke MPs’ expenses rules

Former minister broke rules but watchdog says there is no evidence to suggest he did so out of desire to financially benefit himself or his partner David Laws, the former Liberal Democrat chief secretary to the Treasury, has been found guilty of breaching six House of Commons rules in a report by the parliament’s standards watchdog. But John Lyon, the parliamentary commissioner for standards, has concluded that there is no evidence to suggest that Laws broke the rules out of a desire to maximise profits. This finding will strengthen Laws’s argument that he claimed more than £40,000 in expenses for rent paid to his partner out of a desire to keep his sexuality private. Laws resigned from the cabinet on 29 May last year after admitting that he made a mistake after the rules of the House of Commons were changed in 2006 to bar such claims. The report by Lyon was considered on Tuesday by the cross-party standards and privileges committee. The committee is expected to publish the report on Thursday, possibly with a recommendation that Laws should apologise to MPs. It is understood that Lyon has concluded that Laws broke one over-arching rule: claiming for the £950 a month in rent he paid to his partner, Jamie Lundie. The five other breaches are understood to be related to subsidiary rules which were broken as a consequence of the major mistake over his expenses. Lyon is also understood to have concluded that he found no evidence to suggest that Laws had made the claims to benefit himself or his partner. Laws is likely to argue that the findings by Lyon endorse what he said when he resigned: that he broke the rules but that he did not do so out of a desire to maximise profits. Nick Clegg is keen to see Laws, one of the most influential Lib Dems, return to government. But the Lib Dems acknowledge that it will be difficult for Laws to return if the criticism in the report is harsh. MPs’ expenses House of Commons David Laws Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk

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Handguns allowed in Texas colleges

Republicans in state senate pass ‘self-defence’ measure despite resistance from higher education officials The holders of concealed handgun licences are set to be allowed to carry weapons into public college buildings and classrooms in Texas, after Republicans in the state senate approved the measure as part of a universities spending bill. Republican senator Jeff Wentworth had been unable to gain the votes he needed to pass the issue as its own bill after it met stiff resistance from higher education officials, particularly from within the University of Texas UT-System. The senate’s 12 Democrats had mostly worked together to block the measure but were powerless to stop it on Monday when a majority in the 31-member chamber got it added to the spending bill as an amendment. Supporters hope the vote will help push the measure past a roadblock in the house, where a similar bill has been stuck without a vote in that chamber with just a few weeks left in the legislative term. “Campus carry has more momentum than a runaway freight train,” said Scott Lewis of Students for Concealed Carry, a nationwide group backing the measure. Supporters call it a self-defence and guns rights issue. UT-System chancellor, Francisco Cigarroa, wrote to politicians and Governor Rick Perry outlining concerns that the measure will lead to more campus crime and suicides. Hearings were dominated by testimony from supporters who had been raped or assaulted on college campuses, and several people who had survived the 2007 mass shooting at Virginia Tech University when a gunman killed 32 people. Democratic senator Judith Zaffirini, who was a student at the University of Texas in 1966 when sniper Charles Whitman killed 12 people and wounded dozens of others, argued against the bill. She predicted mass chaos if police responded to a call and found several people with guns drawn. “I can’t imagine the horrors if this passes,” Zaffirini said. Wentworth, recalling the shooting at Virginia Tech, said he wanted to give students a chance to defend themselves. “There was no one there to defend themselves in a gun-free zone that was a victim-rich zone,” he said. “I’m trying to avoid that type of situation.” Texas passed its concealed handgun licence law in 1995. Licence holders must be at least 21 and pass a training course. Guns on campus bills have been rejected in at least 23 states since 2007. The bill originally covered private universities, but was changed to cover only public institutions of higher education. The senate rejected attempts to allow university boards of regents to decide gun policy on their campuses. Concealed handgun licence holders in Texas are allowed to skip metal detectors in the state capitol,. Perry made headlines for shooting a coyote on a morning jog last year. Earlier on Monday, senators voted to allow themselves to carry concealed handguns into places the rest of the public cannot, such as churches, restaurants and sporting events. Perry has said he supports the campus guns measure and is expected to sign it into law if it reaches his desk. US gun control United States guardian.co.uk

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John Boehner and Paul Ryan double down on destroying Medicare by attacking AARP

enlarge Credit: CNN USA NEXT smears AARP with anti-Gay ad Remember the above ad? As the American public turns its back on Paul Ryan’s Medicare-killing budget, part of his similarly popular Roadmap to the Poorhouse, the GOP is doubling down by attacking the AARP: Rep. Paul Ryan’s (R-Wis.) political group went on the attack Monday against AARP, calling one of the most powerful lobbies a “left-leaning pressure group.” Ryan’s Prosperity PAC sought to push back on attacks by AARP against the House Budget Committee chairman’s 2012 budget, specifically its proposed changes to Medicare. “Last week, the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP), a left-leaning pressure group with significant business interests in the insurance industry, launched a national ad campaign that intentionally misleads seniors about the Medicare debate,” wrote Pat Shortridge, a senior adviser to Ryan’s PAC, in an email to supporters. Ryan’s Medicare proposal has been a particular point of criticism by Democrats and groups on the left, which say that the Medicare plan would significantly revamp the entitlement program to the detriment of seniors. Democrats have homed in their attacks against that part of the Ryan budget, which has sparked some degree of heartburn among Republicans. AARP launched ads last week warning against “harmful cuts” to Medicare and Social Security it said Republicans favored. Fox News pushed a phony seniors’ group led by Art Linkletter called USA Next in 2005 when they tried to privatize Social Security, and they too attacked AARP — which failed miserably . Now some people on the right want you to think of gay marriage and Sunni insurgency. The New York Times this morning reported that the lobbyists who brought you the “Swift Boat Veterans for Truth” have been contracted to promote the agenda of USA Next, a conservative lobbying group. To build support, USA Next is portraying AARP – which opposes the White House’s pseudo-plan for privatizing Social Security – as some kind of liberal extremist group. They even produced a smear ad attacking gay marriage to try and rile up some old folks against AARP. Click here to view this media So now Ryan’s PAC is doing the same thing and attacking AARP. Good luck with that. Second up was John Boehner, who told Wall Streeters that he is indeed for going after Medicare: Speaker John Boehner is more blatant even than most politicians about telegraphing which constituency matters to him most: Wall Street. While his caucus leadership can’t run away from abolishing Medicare fast enough, Boehner is assuring Wall Street that it’s still on the agenda . In a speech to the Economic Club of New York in Midtown Manhattan, the Ohio Republican is set to reiterate to leading financial executives that he believes that reforming Medicare should be part of negotiations in raising the debt ceiling, saying that there needs to be “an honest conversation,” because the program is on an “unsustainable path if changes are not made,” according to sources familiar with the speech. Boehner also is expected to advocate for immediate cuts rather than deficit and debt targets preferred by some Democrats. After his talk, Boehner will take questions from two prominent Wall Street players at the intersection of Washington power: Peter G. Peterson, the private-equity giant who worked for President Richard Nixon, and Observatory Group CEO Jane Hartley, who worked for President Jimmy Carter…. Boehner’s public insistence that reforming Medicare stay a part of debt ceiling negotiations could reaffirm a concern among Wall Street types that Republicans are driving a hard bargain on the limit and will take the negotiations up to the last minute. Boehner said last week Congress must now cut trillions, not billions…. Friday evening, in a sign of unity after a disjointed week, GOP leadership, along with Ryan and Camp, released a statement saying “everything must be on the table except increasing taxes.” Freshmen, who voted en masse for the Ryan budget, largely want entitlement reform dealt with. It’ll keep Pete Peterson and his crowd happy, no matter how disastrous the plan is with actual voters. But more than anything, this is reflecting the very thin ice Boehner is skating. He’s got to try to convince the powers that be that really, his caucus isn’t a bunch of nihilists perfectly willing to blow up the economy over the debt ceiling vote. Lesse: the Speaker of the House is going to use the debt ceiling vote to “reform” Medicare, and Paul Ryan’s PAC is attacking the AARP. Let’s see how that all works out, but attacking AARP failed once and it will fail again. Millions of seniors have been members of AARP and they have tangible proof of how good an organization they are because they’ve used their services and love them. Using the debt to scare seniors is something that’s not tangible or even felt on a material level, so pragmatically speaking, which side would you choose if you’re fifty-five and older?

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Alabama has moved to deny undocumented children a chance to participate in our state’s civic religion, i.e. football, but some things are still more sacred than our state’s responsibility to shun brown people. Like, say, the legislature’s duty to save their souls before we deport them. See how that works? Remember Alabama’s State Senator Scott Beason, who wants to ” empty the clip on illegal immigration “? Watch as he struggles to argue against modifying a provision that would put church deacons in prison for giving the undocumented a ride to church. Really! Much more after the jump… Going by the Orwellian title ” Alabama Taxpayer and Citizen Protection Act ,” SB 256 is marginally worse than the bill crafted by House Majority Leader Mickey Hammon. But rather than fight as House Democrats have , Senate Dems have chosen to improve legislation, not oppose it outright. In the process, the cognitive dissonance behind omnibus immigration legislation has been laid bare. The Senate minority has fought on moral high ground and rhetoric — exactly what you are supposed to see in an “upper chamber,” or so I’m told. But I’d prefer wholesale resistance to piecemeal. My favorite part of the video above is when Scott Beason presents Roger Bedford with a hypothetical situation in which an Alabama judge is asked to dismiss charges against a terrorist caught riding shotgun in a mosque van. The internal narrative is clear: we must fear the world! Immigrants are bad, evil, unsafe, and must be cleansed from the Heart of Dixie. “Empty the clip,” indeed. Except it’s lunacy, because a terrorist will already be in federal custody by then. SB 256 is one of those bills where law enforcement agencies agree a law should exist, but ask that someone else be put in charge of enforcing it. Oddly enough, the bill’s extension of police powers to Alabama’s diminutive Department of Homeland Security (ALDHS) occasioned one of the more interesting moments in the debate. The incident presented below was listed in a press release I received from the Senate Democratic Caucus recently calling Lieutenant Governor Kay Ivey “the most partisan Lieutenant Governor in history” with a “blatant disregard for rules and fairness.” Complaining that she tells minority members what to say, refuses to acknowledge them waiting for recognition, and has their microphones turned down, the PR went on to describe Tuesday’s debate of a Constitutional Amendment to strip racist language about poll taxes and segregation: Last night she had the public audio system shut down completely for several minutes to silence the Minority’s objections. She ignored the rules that allow the Minority to have a roll call vote, and she instructed the audio feed to be silenced as Senators called on her to enforce the rule. Rachel Maddow has lately struck on the theme of Big Government Republicans in Wisconsin, Michigan, and elsewhere. They have arrived in Alabama too, and the first to say so is a Republican. When Senator Paul Sanford (R-Madison) submitted an amendment to strip the expansion of ALDHS powers, it survived Beason’s tabling motion and was passed by roll-call vote. Majority leadership scrambled to get members back from a committee meeting and reconsider the amendment. Then Lieutenant Governor Kay Ivey became combative with Sanford when he awaited recognition before a cloture vote. Remember: this is all about a bill crafted to make undocumented kids leave school and find some trouble to get into. The first GOP majority in Alabama’s state house since 1875 wants to create government jobs making sure those darn illegal alien kids don’t tear up the turf under Friday night lights instead. Maybe that’s what Scott Beason means when he calls SB 256 a “jobs bill,” eh? Call them “pigskin police.”

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Carney: Pakistan Relationship Is ‘Complicated’

White House press secretary Jay Carney said Monday that the United States’ relationship with Pakistan is both important and complicated in the aftermath of the US led raid that killed Osama bin Laden. (May 9)

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AC/DC: ‘Idol’ Fast Track Will End in Tears

Legendary rock band AC/DC share their thoughts on reality TV shows like ‘American Idol,’ and reveal how daunting it was to play at the River Plate stadium in Buenos Aires, for a show that marked their return to Argentina after a 13 year absence. (May 9)

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Gingrich to Announce Presidential Bid

Newt Gingrich, who in the 1990s led the Republican Party to its first majority in the House of Representatives in 40 years, announced Monday that he is running for president in 2012. (May 9)

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