বৃহস্পতিবার, ৩১ মে, ২০১২

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N.C. school boards lining up against virtual charter school ? The ...

Thirty-five school boards across the state have passed resolutions opposing a virtual charter school?s scheduled opening this fall.

Prompted by the N.C. School Boards Association, the resolutions pave the way for the schools boards to join litigation seeking to stop the North Carolina Virtual Academy from opening this fall.

?We?ve got all the way from Washington to Cherokee,? said Leanne Winner of the school board association. (Scroll to the bottom of the post to see a list of school boards).

Winner expects more of the state?s 115 school boards, all of which are members of the association, to pass resolutions as the boards meet.

A hearing is scheduled at 10 a.m. Monday in front of a Wake Superior Court judge to see if the school boards can join the N.C. State Board of Education in appealing an administrative judge?s decision to allow the virtual charter school to open this fall.

(The state already funds the separate North Carolina Virtual Public School, which offers online classes to students statewide to recover credits or take advanced classes, but isn?t a full-time school like the charter school.)

The proposed charter school would be overseen by a newly-formed non-profit N.C. Learns but its day-to-day management is handled by a for-profit education company,? K12, Inc., which was trading on Wall Street at $20.63 a share mid-day. The company gets most (more than 80 percent) of its revenue from running public virtual schools that have children take programmed classes from their home computers from the oversight of their parents.

The company was profiled in a New York Times investigation last December that questioned whether the company, which gets more than 80 percent of its profit from taxpayers, puts profits above quality. Audits in other states have found the company overcharged states, and many of the virtual schools have seen students test below what their peers at traditional schools.

A Stanford University study of Pennsylvania charter schools found that 100 percent of students at virtual charter schools in the state performed significantly worse than their peers.

In North Carolina, the company wants to have 2,750 students statewide in its first year, and as much as $18 million in public education funding sent diverted from the state?s 115 school districts.

An administrate law judge ruled on May 8 that the virtual charter school could open after the N.C. State Board of Education failed to act on a request for final approval the virtual school sent to the state board in February.

The statewide virtual school took an unusual strategy to get approval by being the first charter school in more than 12 years to seek approval at the local level before getting final authorization from the? N.C. State Board of Education,

The Cabarrus County School Board agreed to sponsor the charter school in exchange for four percent of the proposed charter school?s public funding (more than an estimated $700,000 in the first year). The application was then forwarded on to the state board, which had already reviewed a batch of charter school applications for the year and didn?t act on the N.C. Learns/K12, Inc. application. The state board wanted to develop a policy, and a funding formula, for virtual charter schools before approving any.

N.C. Administrative Law Judge Beecher Gray felt that the state board should have considered the application, and granted the charter school final approval as a result of the state board?s inaction.

Now, the state is appealing Gray?s ruling to a Wake Superior Court judge while the N.C. School Board Association, and the 35 individual school boards, hope to intervene in the case. The N.C. Justice Center, which N.C. Policy Watch is a project under, has filed an amicus brief in the case as well.

The following school boards have passed resolutions opposing the virtual charter school:

    1. Alamance
    2. Alleghany
    3. Anson
    4. Asheville City
    5. Brunswick
    6. Bertie
    7. Chapel Hill-Carrboro
    8. Chatham
    9. Cherokee
    10. Durham
    11. Elizabeth City-Pasquotank
    12. Franklin
    13. Gaston
    14. Granville
    15. Halifax
    16. Hertford
    17. Hickory
    18. Hoke
    19. Jackson
    20. Kannapolis City
    21. Macon
    22. Madison
    23. McDowell
    24. Montgomery
    25. Moore
    26. Mooresville
    27. Nash-Rocky Mount
    28. Perquimans
    29. Person
    30. Polk
    31. Rockingham
    32. Vance
    33. Warren
    34. Washington
    35. Wilson

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All Researchers To Be Allocated Unique IDs

ananyo writes with information on a new scheme to help uniquely identify authors in the face of ambiguous names. From the article: "In 2011, Y. Wang was the world's most prolific author of scientific publications, with 3,926 to their name ? a rate of more than 10 per day. Never heard of them? That's because they are a mixture of many different Y. Wangs, each indistinguishable in the scholarly record. The launch later this year of the Open Researcher and Contributor ID (ORCID), an identifier system that will distinguish between authors who share the same name, could soon solve the problem, allowing research papers to be associated correctly with their true author. Instead of filling out personal details on countless electronic forms associated with submitting papers or applying for grants, a researcher could also simply type in his or her ORCID number. Various fields would be completed automatically by pulling in data from other authorized sources, such as databases of papers, citations, grants and contact details. ORCID does not intend to offer such services itself; the idea is that other organizations will use the open-access ORCID database to build their own services."

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1989 Chrysler Town Country (Auction ID: 112652, End Time : Jun ...


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1989 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY....... Convertable Rare!! Yes the Hard top comes off!!!! VEHICLE ID: 193, PS, PB, AC, AUTO, 2.2L ENGINE, 6 DISC CD CHANGER.
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Mathematicians Show Why Bubbles Sink in Nitrogen-Infused Stouts

SicariusMan writes "The age old question: do Guinness and other stouts' bubbles really sink, or is it an optical illusion? Well, some mathematicians have figured it out." Full paper via arXiv; From the article: "To analyze the effect of different glass shapes, the mathematicians modeled Guinness beer containing randomly distributed bubbles in both a pint glass and an anti-pint glass (i.e., an upside-down pint). An elongated swirling vortex forms in both glasses, but in the anti-pint glass the vortex rotates in the opposite direction, causing an upward flow of fluid and bubbles near the wall of the glass."

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বুধবার, ৩০ মে, ২০১২

A Profitable Online Marketing Business Requires The Correct Setup ...

It Is Possible To Profit From Doing Web Marketing With The Correct System

Earning money at home is something many people are becoming serious about. An excellent way to achieve that is with an internet marketing system that has a great reputation and makes money. However, before rushing off to start your business, there are several downsides you must be aware of. There is a bad side and a good side to operating a business online, and you need to spend some time in researching this. Keep yourself well-informed first and you are going to prevent misery at a later stage. Goji Berry Advance

The internet can be truly helpful in setting up your business, but it is only a mechanism after all, and care has to taken in its correct usage. In some way the internet frequently results in outlandish viewpoints. A few see it as a divine solution that can only bring about amazing results. A different group of folks distrust the internet entirely, believing it to be inhabited with fraud and deception. The actuality is to be found at a certain point between them. With the right marketing system and the willingness to invest your time, you can have sensible expectations on what type of business you can develop. Though it is true that your customer base spans the world, the same can be said of the competitors. You must find the proper place for your business, instead of competing against the biggest rivals. Hoodia Balance

An amazing aspect of a business online is that your buyers will never find you having closed shop for the day. You could be pulling in sales throughout the day, every day, after you have built your niche web site and installed everything that goes with it. Because the web is world-wide and across all time-zones it is always very busy. Your business can as a result be busy all the time, also, and make more sales. You?ll be able to create a subscriber list by equipping your site with an opt-in box, for a really low cost. Once you get their contact information, you can send them valuable information, along with adverts for products that you?re trying to market.

The major drawback of internet marketing is the lack of face-to-face contact with buyers. Sometimes people only purchase the product because they trusted what the salesperson said to them. People generally want to hear a personal recommendation. You can?t provide anything face to face if your business is on the web. The best you could do is treat folks nicely through your email messages. That appear to be enough for a lot of people, but there are still many individuals who won?t buy on the web. It would be helpful to research who your site?s visitors are and how many of them actually end up buying something.

In case you have an offline business, it?s wise to increase your business by using an internet marketing system. A few businesses will prosper because of having a web site, while some will not. If your internet marketing system is put in place properly, however, your business is likely to benefit from it.

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Potential new HIV vaccine/therapy target

ScienceDaily (May 30, 2012) ? After being infected with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) in a laboratory study, rhesus macaques that had more of a certain type of immune cell in their gut than others had much lower levels of the virus in their blood, and for six months after infection were better able to control the virus.

SIV is a retrovirus that infects primates. Strains of SIV that crossed over to humans resulted in the evolution of HIV. In rhesus macaques, SIV causes simian AIDS (though in many primates it is harmless) and studying the virus in these animals offers crucial insights into how HIV acts in humans, the researchers said.

The discovery by researchers at UCSF may shed light on the mystery of why some people infected with HIV are better able to control the virus, live longer and have fewer associated health problems than others who have been infected as long, they said. It also provides a potential new target for developing therapies or vaccines.

The cells that have the protective effect, called Th17 (T helper 17) cells, are a subset of the type of disease-fighting immune cell targeted and killed by HIV and found in the gut of both primates and humans.

A prior study from the same UCSF team found that SIV infection causes a normally protective immune response to infection to go awry, leading to reduction in the protective activity in the gut of these Th17 cells and weakening of mucosal defenses against bacteria. Interestingly, in that study, Th17 cells were not affected by SIV in another primate, African green monkeys, in which SIV infection is harmless and does not cause disease.

"Animals with more of these Th17 cells were better able to control SIV and this was due in part to macaques developing a more effective immune response by producing more SIV-specific CD4-positive T-cells to fight the infection. Our next step is to see if we can augment the Th17 effect, perhaps by looking at interleukin 17 (IL-17), the cytokine released by these cells, and testing to see if it has an effect," said the study's primary investigator, Dennis Hartigan-O'Connor, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine at the UCSF Division of Experimental Medicine.

"Further, if a treatment can be developed to increase Th17 cells in the gut, it may allow for a more effective immune response after exposure to an HIV vaccine or the virus itself," he added.

The findings are being published in the May 30, 2012 issue of Science Translational Medicine.

In the new study, the investigators first determined the levels of Th17 cells in the gut of sixteen rhesus macaques and then infected them with SIV. They found that the animals with more Th17 cells to begin with were better able to control the virus. They then gave animals drugs that deplete Th17 cells and found that reducing the number of Th17 cells made controlling SIV more difficult for those animals.

"We found great variation in the levels of Th17 cells, with as much as a five-fold difference in numbers between animals. e are not sure why this is the case. It could be genetically determined or perhaps due to a previous exposure to a type of bacteria that stimulates production of Th17 cells," said Hartigan-O'Connor.

This study is part of a series of investigations undertaken by researchers at the UCSF Division of Experimental Medicine into how SIV, and by extension HIV, interacts with the immune system in the gut. The previous study was focused on chronic infection and persistent inflammation in the gut.

"The earlier study addressed the cause and consequence of inflammation after infection. We found that inflammation induces an enzyme that knocks out Th17 cells, which normally help to keep the gut intact, and that disease progression was faster. Reciprocally, we have now found that animals do better if they have many Th17 cells at the outset of infection. We are gradually increasing our understanding of this important aspect of the immune system and we are working to translate this understanding into an approach that benefits patients," said study senior author, Joseph M. McCune, MD, PhD, chief of the UCSF Division of Experimental Medicine.

Study co-investigators include Bittoo Kanwar from UCSF Division of Experimental Medicine and Kristina Abel and Koen K. A. Van Rompay from the University of California, Davis.

Funding for this research was provided by the National Institutes of Health, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the California National Primate Research Center, the National Center for Research Resources and the Harvey V. Berneking Living Trust.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - San Francisco. The original article was written by Jeff Sheehy.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. D. J. Hartigan-O'Connor, K. Abel, K. K. A. Van Rompay, B. Kanwar, J. M. McCune. SIV Replication in the Infected Rhesus Macaque Is Limited by the Size of the Preexisting TH17 Cell Compartment. Science Translational Medicine, 2012; 4 (136): 136ra69 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3003941

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.

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মঙ্গলবার, ২৯ মে, ২০১২

Re: Selfrunning Free Energy devices up to 5 KW from Tariel Kapanadze

Current coming from a ground wire in the manner of the TK video's is impossible
Is it? Found this buried on p.59 and p.758: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJ36EtABLAk

Charging by induction, narrator:

?The ground allows electrons to enter from the earth. [...] It [charging by induction] occurs when a charged object is used to charge a neutral one without discharging itself. [...] The rod can be used to charge any number of electroscopes.?

So, essentially the energy stored in all the charged electroscopes comes from earth!

Let's see: Replace the charged rod with a helical coil (important is not magnetic, but electrostatic field), which charge and discharge itself (instead to move it back and forward) a few thousand times a second (with the aid of a spark gap). Replace the electroscope with an oscillating circuit of coils connected to lamps and ground (properly synchronized to the induction field). What happens? Could it happen that we get, say, 200.000 fully charged ?electroscopes? (in shape of a coil) each second? That would be a lot of electrons to play around with, especially when they are already located in a transformer coil.

Thinking this over, it would be rather surprising if this approach is NOT going to work.

By the way: David Icke about Tesla, free energy and other strange things: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CEXd6uchNCE

Regards

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Poor performance of Ghana's hospitality industry attributed to repeal ...

You Are Here: Home ? Tourism ? Poor performance of Ghana?s hospitality industry attributed to repeal of legislative instrument

Page last updated at Tuesday, May 29, 2012 12:12 PM //

Akua Dansua - Minister of Tourism

The Poor performance of the hotels and restaurants service sectors for the 2011 fiscal year could to some extent be attributed to the repeal of LI 1817, Ms Akua Dansua, Tourism Minister has said.

She said prior to the repeal of the LI 1817, the said LI, empowered the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) to grant incentives in the form of tax exemptions to operators in the hotel and hospitality industry.

According to her, such operators enjoyed tax exemptions on imported materials such as refrigerators, air conditioners, carpets, kitchen equipment, one vehicle (pick-up and delivery van) and linen among others, required for their establishment and smooth operations.

The Minister was responding to a question on the floor of Parliament on what had accounted for the poor performance of hotels and the restaurants service sector for the 2011 fiscal year as compared to the previous year.

Ms Dansua explained that the LI was to boost investment in the sector through construction, upgrading and refurbishment among others.

?Unfortunately, some beneficiaries abused the facility and used it to import luxury cars, furniture and other goods which they sold on the open market and avoided tax payment on them,? she said.

?Rt. Hon. Speaker, the abuse led to the repeal of LI 1817 in the 2011 fiscal year. Regrettably this slowed the pace of investment and affected the performance of the hotel and restaurant service sector,? she added.

The Minister said though newly registered hotels and restaurants projects recorded by the GIPC increased marginally from 24 in 2010 to 25 in 2011, the estimated value declined from $6 million to $5 million respectively.

Other reasons, she said, that could be attributed to the poor performance of the industry in 2011, was the keen competition and new business interest generated in other sectors of the economy particularly in the oil and gas and real estate sectors.

?The good news however is that the summary of revenue collected from the hotel and restaurant sector by the Ghana Revenue Authority for the 2011 fiscal year rose to GH?18,599,133 compared to the 2010 figure of GH?14,051,092. 18 representing more than 32 percent increase,? she added.

Ms Dansua said the expectation however is that this year would see better results in the hospitality sector because the review of incentives granted under the repealed LI 1817 has been completed and incorporated into the Internal Revenue Act.

She said government was also committed to reducing the sector?s corporate tax rate from 22 to 20 per cent.

By Eunice Menka

Comments

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The features of home phones and phone providers: an overview

Life without phones has become an improbability. Phones have become a part and parcel of our lives. Though there are online chats and video conferencing available nowadays, it just does not equate to talking to a friend or family over the phone. Technology advancement has not left behind phones and the features available with phones have grown rapidly over the years. They were devices used just for military purposes initially. It has then become a home necessity over the years. There are so many call features available that even supports multiple conferencing. That is, more than two people can talk to each other at the same time. Missing out important calls when you are no longer at home is not a hindrance anymore, with voice mails and call forwarding features available with phones.

Phones with so many features should be supported by a good provider like the Charter Telephone.

It could be said that Features in phones and the connection to it are interconnected. Without a good connection, it is hard to take advantage of the features of the phone. Similarly, without a good, phone, a good connection cannot be put to the best of its use. With the advanced network technology, the sound quality of the connection would be crystal clear.

If you are looking for a home connection which is cost-effective with good quality and a connection without any hassle, then look for a provider available locally. Now, there are many providers who have their offices in cities spread across the country. An advantage with these providers is that they offer all the three home connections: Television, Internet and Phone in the form of a bundle. They provide all the three connections and the service would also be done by the same provider for all the three connections. You would not find any difference when you get all the three connections from the same provider except for the cost savings part.

The quality of the calls would be good as the internet and the phone connection is offered by the same provider. There would also be benefits like free long distance calling across US and unlimited local calling. These come as standard offers when you opt for a bundle. So the charge for the calls that you make, be it long distance or local is cut down by a great deal. You can see your bill reducing substantially when you opt for a deal or the phone connection as a part of the bundle. The quality of the connection would be equal for all the three connections as you would be getting it from the same provider. So it is a triple bonanza for you as you need not worry about each connection and there would not be any quality difference from one connection to the other.

There are also wireless home phone services available with the providers in the market. Reception would be a problem when switching over to a wireless home phone connection. But you can elevate this problem by making sure that you get reception for your house while you subscribe for the connection.

So technology has not only influenced the phones and its features but also the connections that can be subscribed for the phone. Now making phone calls using the online medium has started to pick up. I recently read an article which states that 24% of Americans have made calls using internet. So making calls through phones has become cheaper with calling through internet especially the overseas calls. Though these work cheaper than the traditional home phone service, nothing compares to the traditional method of making calls.

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Juice,Cakes And Food Recipes: Blackened Chicken Pasta Recipes

Juice,Cakes And Food Recipes: Blackened Chicken Pasta Recipes

Blackened Chicken Pasta Recipes

Ingredients

  • 1 pound penne pasta
  • 2 tablespoons butter, divided
  • 4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts, trimmed of fat and cut crosswise into 1/4-inch slices
  • 2 tablespoons Cajun-style blackened seasoning
  • 4 cloves garlic, chopped
  • 1 large red onion, cut into wedges
  • 1 green bell pepper, seeded and sliced into strips
  • 1 red bell pepper, seeded and sliced into strips
  • 1 yellow bell pepper, seeded and sliced into strips
  • 1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
  • 1/4 teaspoon curry powder
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 2 (24 ounce) jars Classico? Tomato and Basil Sauce

Directions

  1. Bring a large pot of lightly salted water to a boil. Add pasta and cook until tender but still firm, about 8 minutes. Drain.
  2. Meanwhile, melt 1 tablespoon of butter in a wok or large skillet over medium-high heat. Add chicken pieces; cook and stir until browned. Season with blackened seasoning, and remove the chicken from the wok and set aside.
  3. Melt the remaining butter in the wok over medium-high heat. Add the garlic and onion; cook and stir until fragrant and beginning to brown. Add the green, red and yellow pepper strips, and season with red pepper flakes, curry powder, salt and pepper. Cook and stir until the peppers are hot. Return the chicken to the wok and pour in the pasta sauce. Heat through and serve over pasta.

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Karen's PR & Social Media Blog ? Presenting at #ICA12 in Phoenix ...

The ICA conference was held in Phoenix ? and this was the first time I have attended the conference. ?I was very impressed with the organization with the social media and mobile communication platforms for the conference. ?They had a great app that was very useful ? you were able to create your own schedule, follow social media conversations among the attendees, and even had maps of the Sheraton facility so you knew where you needed to go for your presentation. ?Very cool!. :)

Plus, each division had their own hashtag, so the PR Division was #ica_pr and for the main conference #ica12. ?This really was great to be able to follow what teach division was discussing during their sessions and receptions.

I had two presentations at ICA ? one was looking at some of the emerging specializations within crisis communications we need to be aware of with mobile technology like augmented reality, gamification,and crowd sourcing. ?This pre conference was very cool ? I was the only person from PR and it was fascinating to hear insights about mobile communication from sociology, anthropology, and developers / practitioners in the area.

The other presentation was based off of my dissertation work at the University of Tennessee (aka ?Bruce Lee? as my friends know my dissertation as ? yes, I did name it! :) ). ?This was presented in the PR Division. ?Both papers got good reception and it was exciting to hear everyone?s comments about the role of new emerging technologies being used in crisis communications.

I had a great time talking with not only fellow professors and colleagues, but also meeting some talented and rising stars among the graduate students. ?I had a chance to talk with a few graduate students from Oklahoma who are interested in new media within fundraising/damage repair (John) and the ELM implemented in Twitter (Adam). ?Geah (PhD student at University of South Carolina) presented her great research looking at how non-profits are using social media platforms with their work and how they are engaging their audiences virtually.

It was wonderful to catch up with friends and colleagues from across the US and world at the conference. ?For my first time at the conference, I really enjoyed my time and took away a lot in the process. ?The conference will be in London for 2013, so I am sure I will make sure to submit a research piece for the conference again. :)

Hope you all are having a great day!

Best Wishes,

Karen

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Epson focuses on marketing to boost revenue - The Nation

Home ? business ? Epson focuses on marketing to boost revenue

Epson

Asina Pornwasin

The Nation
May 29, 2012 1:00 am

"In the past five months, the economy has been on the rebound with the investment of the government and private sectors. Together with our plan to continue introducing new products to the market as well as maintaining our quality of services at our 110 outlets, we believe that this year we will continue to grow at 15 per cent," country manager Eiji Kato said yesterday.

Epson will focus on its strengths including products and distribution channels as well as marketing activities throughout this year, he said.

Even though last year Epson faced both the earthquake and tsunami in Japan and the flood in Thailand, the company still expanded its sales by 13 per cent. The two key growth drivers were inkjet printers, up 25 per cent, and terminal module printers, which print receipts, up 40 per cent.

General manager Yunyong Muneemongkoltorn said Epson's strategy this year is to focus on growing such products as ink tanks and projectors while entering new markets - label printers and disc producers.

The company will also continue to strengthen its distribution channel by adding value to its 176 existing authorised partners throughout the country and increasing their number to 180-195 this year.

"We have achieved 25-per-cent sales growth in all inkjet printers. Out best sellers are the continuous-ink-supply-system printers or Epson L series and widely known Epson original-ink-tank systems, which have been introduced in the small-and-medium-enterprise, small-office and home-office markets," he said.

The marketing budget is unchanged from last year but the focus will be on organising marketing activities at the 110 Epson Authorised Service Centres throughout the country rather than on advertising.

"This year we plan to add five more Epson Authorised Service Centres," he said.

The printer business dominates Epson's sales with 80 per cent, while 20 per cent comes from projectors.

The overcall inkjet-printer market is expected to grow more slowly than before, but sales of Epson's inkjets are expected to increase by more than 20 per cent.

For projectors, overall growth this year is expected to be about 20 per cent, while Epson aims for 30 per cent.

Latest stories in this category


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Military spouses celebrated at Fort Meade appreciation luncheon

FORT GEORGE G. MEADE, Md. (May 17, 2012) -- Military spouses contribute greatly to the stability of their families and are the backbone of the armed forces.

That was the sentiment Audrey Rothstein, wife of Garrison Commander Col. Edward C. Rothstein, shared with 85 military spouses during the installation's annual Military Spouse Appreciation Luncheon on May 10 at Club Meade.

"Whether you realize it or not, you volunteered to join the Army, or the military, too, when you said 'I do' to your service member. And for that, you are immediately set apart from all other spouses of the world," she said. "You stand above the others not only for your strength, determination and resiliency but also for your tremendous sacrifice -- and for some -- the ultimate sacrifice."

Audrey Rothstein and Frank Klein, husband of Navy Rear Adm. Margaret Klein, chief of staff, U.S. Cyber Command, were the guest speakers for the 90-minute event, which was sponsored by Army Community Service.

"I think it was fantastic," Natalie Overby, wife of Ensign James Overby of the Naval Information Operations Command, said of the program. "I don't think I've ever heard anyone talk about how life is for military spouses."

Celena Flowers, Family Advocacy Program manager at ACS, emceed the luncheon. Garrison Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Sid Taylor gave the invocation.

The event also was attended by Garrison Command Sgt. Maj. Charles E. Smith and his wife, Audrey; and Debbie Alexander, wife of Gen. Keith B. Alexander, commander of U.S. Cyber Command, chief of the Central Security Service and director of the National Security Agency.

In his remarks, Klein called military spouses "American heroes."

"Real heroes see the right thing and they do the right thing, no matter the cost," he said. "What you have sacrificed for your uniformed partner to do what he or she does is the right thing, and I have learned that it doesn't come without a cost."

Klein retired as a Navy commander in 2000. In August, he and his wife will have been married 30 years. They are the parents of two adult children.

Military spouses embody the statement "not self, but country," Klein said, noting that the commitment of military spouses is reflected in two national organizations.

Klein spoke about the National Military Family Association founded in 1969 by a group of military wives during the Vietnam War. The women wanted to make sure their widowed friends would be properly taken care of after the death of their uniformed spouse.

Two years later, the military's Survivor Benefit Plan became law.

"Congress didn't do it without a push from people who cared," Klein said. "And the people who cared were military spouses."

Klein also spoke about Bonnie Carroll, a major in the Air Force Reserve, who established the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors in 1994 after her husband, Brig. Gen. Tom Carroll, died in a plane crash. TAPS helps grieving families by providing ongoing, peer-based emotional support.

Carroll was a military wife who "channeled her grief into something positive -- not for self, but for country," Klein said.

Military spouses, he said, put aside their personal ambitions to serve the greater good.

"You take care of the family, you take care of the uniformed service member, you take care of each other, you take care of Team Meade," Klein said. "And you take care of our country's defense."

In his welcoming remarks, the garrison commander thanked Fort Meade's military spouses for their commitment to their service member and family.

"We want to thank you for everything you've done to make us whole," Col. Rothstein said. "The backbone of our Soldiers and our service members really is the family, and that starts with you."

The colonel called his wife an "incredible caretaker" as the mother of their two children, Sam and Emily.

"The strength she's had and her personal courage mean a lot," he said.

After the event, Darryl Bradley, husband of Navy Senior Chief Michele Brady, 10th Command/10th Fleet at the National Security Agency, said the speeches were meaningful.

"It felt good that Colonel Rothstein and his wife said thank you," he said.

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সোমবার, ২৮ মে, ২০১২

Watching dissidents is a booming business in China

BEIJING (AP) ? Every workday at 7:20 a.m., colleagues pick up Yao Lifa from his second-floor apartment and drive him to the elementary school where he taught for years.

This is no car pool. Yao is a prisoner, part of a China boom in outsourced police control.

By day, Yao is kept in a room, not allowed to work and watched by fit, young gym teachers and other school staff. At dinner time or later, he is sent back to the apartment that he shares with his wife and 3-year-old daughter. A surveillance camera monitors the building entrance, while police sit in a hut outside.

"At school, if I have to go to the bathroom, someone escorts me. Most of the time, I'm not allowed to speak with others or answer the phone," Yao said in a recent late-night Internet phone interview from his home in Qianjiang city. "When they bring me home, they sign me over to the next shift."

Like the blind activist Chen Guangcheng until his escape from house arrest last month, Yao belongs to an untold number of Chinese activists kept under tight control by authorities, even though in many cases they have broken no law. Mostly unknown outside their communities, they are a growing portion of what's called the "targeted population" ? a group that also includes criminal suspects and anyone deemed a threat. They are singled out for overwhelming surveillance and by one rights group's count amount to an estimated one in every 1,000 Chinese ? or well over a million.

Yao has never faced criminal charges. His misdeed is decades of campaigning for democratic elections.

"They won't let me teach. They're afraid of course that I'll start talking about democracy to the students," said Yao, a 54-year-old former school administrator and science lab instructor with wavy black hair and possessed of a passionate, fiery manner.

While China has long been a police state, controls on these non-offenders mark a new expansion of police resources at a time the authoritarian leadership is consumed with keeping its hold over a fast-changing society. Co-workers, neighbors, government office workers, unemployed young toughs and gang members are being used to monitor perceived troublemakers, according to rights groups and people under surveillance.

"Social activists that no one has ever heard of have 10 people watching them," said Nicholas Bequelin, a researcher with Human Rights Watch. "The task is to identify and nip in the bud any destabilizing factors for the regime."

Targeted are growing numbers of people, from typical political dissidents to labor organizers and, increasingly, ordinary Chinese who want Beijing to correct local wrongdoing. In method, this new policing represents a break from recent decades.

In Mao Zedong's radical communist heyday, colleagues, neighbors and family members snitched on suspected enemies of the revolution. Free-market reforms broke the totalitarian grip and gave people incentive to leave farms and state jobs for work in booming cities and industrial zones. Private lives and private wealth blossomed, creating less reason for snooping.

Money now fuels the extensive surveillance system. Budgeted spending for police, courts, prosecutors and other law enforcement has soared for much of the past decade, surpassing official outlays for the military for the second year in a row this year, to nearly 702 billion yuan, or $110 billion.

Allocated by Beijing to the provinces and on down, the money sometimes is called "stability preservation funds" for the overriding priority the government now puts on control. As long as trouble is quelled, Beijing doesn't seem to mind how this money is spent. It's proving a growth opportunity for cash-strapped local governments and small-time enforcers.

Along with the police, Yao counts the city education bureau as benefiting from the funds available for his surveillance. His minders are mainly drawn from the bureau, his Qianjiang Experimental Primary School and the ranks of physical education teachers throughout the city school system.

Anywhere from 14 to 50 people a day are on the local government payroll for his round-the-clock surveillance ? what he calls the "Yao Lifa special squad." They get 50 yuan, $8, for a day shift and twice that for night work. Often, he said, hotel rooms, transport, meals and cigarettes are thrown in.

The sums add up in Qianjiang, a city of struggling factories and one million people set in the center of the country. Basic pay runs about 1,000 yuan, or $160, a month for an entry-level teacher and goes to three times that amount for a veteran, Yao said.

"This isn't bad for teachers," said Yao. "An English teacher probably wouldn't take it. They can earn extra money giving private tutoring. But gym teachers can't do the tutoring. Besides, their superiors have told them to do this. They can't not do it."

In the deep south farming county of Yun'an, more than a quarter of its 6,700 officials are on the "stability" payroll, the magazine Caijing reported last year. Township "stability" offices spent money on vans, motorcycles and computers, and also allocated reward money ? 20,000 yuan or $3,100 in 2010 ? for stopping any disgruntled local from going to Beijing to complain about conditions, the report said.

For blind legal activist Chen Guangcheng, the shock troops of his persecution were his neighbors. After the daring escape from his rural village outside Linyi city that eventually took him to New York, Chen detailed the two years of brutal house arrest in a video, saying over 100 police and other officials were involved. He, his wife and mother were beaten and his young daughter searched and harassed.

Family planning officials bore him a particular grudge for exposing forced abortions and sterilization under the government's one-child policy. But it was local farmers who guarded his house and the entrances to the village and plundered the family farm for food. They received 100 yuan, or $16, a day, and though they had to kick back a tenth to the head of the surveillance squad, Chen said it is still a good deal.

"Those people, if they work other jobs, they only make 50 to 60 yuan a day. But doing this, they don't have to do anything, and they have three free meals a day and they are safe. Of course they love to do it," Chen said in the video. He said he was told 30 million yuan, $4.3 million, was spent on his captivity in 2008 and by last year that amount had doubled.

The Public Security Ministry, the national police agency, did not respond to requests for comment about the outsourcing policy. Authorities in Linyi and Qianjiang either did not answer queries or declined comment on Chen and Yao.

Cases like Chen and Yao "are the tip of the iceberg," said John Kamm, a veteran human rights lobbyist. Research by Kamm's Dui Hua Foundation found that since the mid-1980s Beijing has tasked police throughout China with controlling the "targeted population." An initial quota for police to target 2 in every 1,000 people proved unattainable, Kamm said. He said 1 in 1,000 is a more accurate estimate, or 1.3 million people.

Included are recently released convicts, parolees, suspects on bail and anyone police see as a threat ? from activist lawyers to evangelical Christians. Overtly political cases are a small, expanding subset. But once marked, the status is hard to shake.

"Joining the 'targeted population' is the last stop on the road to oblivion for political prisoners," said Kamm.

Yao's forays into politics started 25 years ago when he sought to use a new electoral law to get himself elected to Qianjiang's legislature as an independent. After more than a decade of trying, Yao succeeded in 1998. He made a name for himself as an activist trying to change the Communist Party-dominated system. He championed the rights of farmers rebelling against high taxes and fees.

The party fought back. Yao and 31 teachers and others inspired by him to run for legislatures in 2003 all lost in an election he complained was rigged. Afterward, Yao's short-term detentions began. But he also at times slipped away to meet like-minded activists around the country.

Soon after returning from a trip to Shanghai and Beijing early last year, the controls tightened. Yao said school Vice Principal Wang Qian, police and others kidnapped him and drove him 500 kilometers (300 miles) to a hotel. He got free by throwing a note out the window while his captors slept. During another hotel captivity in July, he jumped from a second story window at 3 a.m., injuring his back and an arm in a failed escape.

By September, the "Yao Lifa special squad" settled into the current pattern ? picking him up in the morning and sending him home at night.

"Usually there are eight people with me at school, and those eight people have a duty: to speak and lecture me without interruption," said Yao. "One goal is to keep me from resting. A second is to see my reaction. One person is tasked with taking notes."

Some nights, Yao said shady-looking men sleep in a car by his building's entrance, in addition to the police in a hut. He said he heard the school and education bureau were arguing over $48,000 for his surveillance.

"I have many acquaintances. Some of them work in police stations," Yao said. "They tell me 'Really we could use a Yao Lifa. If we had one, we could make more money.'"

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LG celebrates three million LTE phones sold worldwide, shockingly finds high speed data is awesome

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LG has hitched its mobile fate to the future of LTE high speed data equipped phones basically since the technology was introduced and today it announced the fruits of its labor: three million LTE phones sold to date worldwide. While some will quibble over shipped / sold to end-user counting methods, or how this compares to figures recently touted by competition like Samsung and Apple, we need only look at LG's most recent earnings report to see the positive impact its LTE-infused lineup has had. According to LG, most of the gains have been in South Korea and North America so far, although it plans to have LTE phones in 20 countries by the end of the year. After kicking off the LTE frenzy with the Revolution last year on Verizon, it's talking up the combination of LTE and HD LCD screen features in its Optimus LTE phone, already a million seller in Korea just as its successor, the Optimus LTE II arrives on shelves.

Continue reading LG celebrates three million LTE phones sold worldwide, shockingly finds high speed data is awesome

LG celebrates three million LTE phones sold worldwide, shockingly finds high speed data is awesome originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 26 May 2012 23:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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