Thursday, February 21, 2013

Mini planet found far beyond Earth's solar system

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida | Wed Feb 20, 2013 5:23pm EST

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - - Astronomers have found a mini planet beyond our solar system that is the smallest of more than 800 extra-solar planets discovered, scientists said on Wednesday.

The planet, known as Kepler-37b, is one of three circling a yellow star similar to the sun that is located in the constellation Lyra, about 210 light years away. One light year is about 6 trillion miles (10 trillion km).

"We see very large planets and they're uncommon. Earth-sized planets seen to be pretty common, so our guess is that small planets must be even more common," said Thomas Barclay, with NASA's Ames Research Center in Mountain View, California.

The smaller the planet, the more difficult it is to find.

Kepler-37b, as well as two sibling planets, were discovered with a NASA space telescope of the same name, which studies light from about 150,000 sun-like stars.

The Kepler telescope works by detecting slight dips in the amount of light coming from target stars caused by orbiting planets passing by, or transiting, relative to the observatory's line of sight. The smaller the planet, the less pronounced the dip.

Of the 833 confirmed planets found beyond the solar system, 114 were discovered by the Kepler science team, according to the project's website. Nearly 3,000 more Kepler candidate planets are being analyzed.

Planets located in "habitable zones" around their host stars, where water can exist on their surfaces, are of particular interest. Water is believed to be necessary for life.

A planet positioned about where Earth orbits the sun would take a year to fly around its parent star. At least two, and preferably three or more, orbits are needed to confirm that a transit spotted by the Kepler telescope is indeed a planet and not a star flare or some other phenomenon.

Kepler-37b flies about 10 times closer to its star than Earth circles the sun, which gives it a surface temperature of about 800 degrees Fahrenheit (427 degrees Celsius).

"This particular one is nowhere near habitable," University of Florida astronomer Eric Ford said.

Mercury is the closet planet to the sun in our solar system, so scientists compared Kepler-37b to a mini Mercury.

The little planet, which is slightly larger than Earth's moon, has two somewhat larger siblings. Kepler-37c, which is slightly smaller than Venus, circles the trio's parent star in 21 days and Kepler-37d, about twice the size of Earth, orbits in 40 days.

The whole system would fit within the orbit of Mercury, which circles the sun in 88 days.

"When we first found exo-planets, they were all much larger than anything we have in the inner solar system. We didn't know of anything that was smaller. This is the first time we've been able to probe the smallest range, smaller than anything we have in our solar system," Barclay said.

The research was published in this week's Nature.

(Editing by Jane Sutton and Stacey Joyce)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/fj0RFl9-y0s/us-space-planets-idUSBRE91J1BV20130220

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

These insects didn't really suck dinosaur blood

Dr. Diying Huang

A mating pair of strashilids, fossil insects from the Jurassic that resemble modern aquatic flies.

By Stephanie Pappas
LiveScience

A group of Jurassic insects thought to have been parasites of feathered dinosaurs were falsely accused, new research finds. Instead, the tiny creatures were aquatic flies, similar to some still living today.

The findings don't change the reality that dinosaurs really did have lice and other parasites, Nanjing Institute of Geology and Paleontology researcher Diying Huang and his colleagues write in the Thursday issue of the journal Nature. Huang and his colleagues had previously discovered dino-fleas 10 times the size of the ones that plague mammals today.

But insects known as the strashilids had been wrongly identified as bloodsuckers, Huang and his colleagues now conclude.

The itsy-bitsy insects, only a few millimeters long, have grasping back legs and what appeared, in fossilized specimens, to be a sucking beak. These remains made scientists think strashilids belonged to an extinct group of dinosaur parasites. But researchers had only discovered a handful of these Jurassic insects.

Now, Huang and his colleagues have examined 13 new specimens of strashilids from 165 million years ago, found in Inner Mongolia. Two of these specimens even preserve males and females having sex. [See Images of the Fossil Flies Having Sex]

The new look at these ancient insects reveals that only male strashilids had grasping back legs, an indication that these limbs were used to hang on to females during sex, not to cling to dinosaur feathers during feeding. What's more, both sexes had vestigial mouthparts, suggesting the short-lived adults didn't feed at all. The insects also had large, membranous wings.

An examination of the insects' genitalia matched them to a modern group of flies, the Nymphomyiidae. These flies have feathery wings and live along rapidly moving streams. Like the Jurassic insects, adults of the present-day flies keep some vestiges of their larval selves. The ancient flies, in particular, often hung on to their abdominal gills, an unusual feature among insects, the researchers report.

Researchers suspect that these flies probably shed their wings toward the end of their lives and returned to the water to mate as their last act. The fossils of flies engaged in the act, which reveal wingless males gripping wingless females, support that theory.

Actual dino-parasites from the Jurassic were larger than strashilids, measuring about 0.7 inches (17 millimeters) in length for species such as Pseudopulex jurassicus and Pseudopulex magnus. In one way, ancient fleas were less scary than modern versions, however ? a 2012 study in the journal Nature found that Jurassic bloodsuckers probably couldn't jump.?

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas?or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook?and Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/20/17033167-these-jurassic-insects-didnt-really-suck-dinosaur-blood?lite

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2.4g Wireless Optical Mouse With Usb Receiver For Apple Macbook Laptop Pc Blue

2.4g Wireless Optical Mouse With Usb Receiver For Apple Macbook Laptop Pc Blue

Checkout Contact US Shipping Payment Netbook Accessories Subscribe for RSS Feeds 2.4G Wireless Optical Mouse with USB Receiver For Apple Macbook Laptop PC Blue Click an Image to Enlarge DESCRIPTION: Item List: 1 x 2.4G Wireless Optical Mouse with USB Dongle Item Details: Intellligent connectivity, no need to code, plug and play Ergonomically designed, confortable to use With an On/Off switch Two mouse mode, slow speed and fast speed for your convenience Intelligent power saving management, low power consumption Ultra slim, compact and lightweight, easy to carry Ideal laptop and desktop companion for home and office use Specifications: RF carrier:2402-2480MHz USB version 2.0 Rated operation current: 15mA, 1.5V 2.4G wireless transmission up to 10 meters operating distance Powered by 2x AAA Alkaline battery.(battery not included) Nano USB Dongle One small button DPI can switch the mouse to slow or fast speed Compatible with all laptops, computers Color: Blue SKU:USB-MOUS-BLU UPC:886489662737 Didn't find what you were looking for? Click Me! Checkout Check-Out Now! Click the Place bid or Buy It Now button at the top of this listing to immediately proceed with our checkout and payment process. Please note that the Pay Now button is ONLY available after winning an auction or completing a Buy It Now purchase. Check-Out Later If you do not choose to Check-Out now, you will be notified by eBay via e-mail that you are the winning bidder. There is no need to contact us to arrange payment. We will automatically send you an e-mail within three hours of an auction closing. Our message will contain a link to our simple and secure checkout system, where you will be able to quickly and conveniently pay for your purchase. You may also continue purchasing additional items from our Auctions or eBay store. You have 7 days from the end of the first purchase to add additional items to your order. Make sure all of your auctions have ended prior to checking out. All of your purchases will be consolidated into one checkout! Payment We accept the following forms of payment. PayPal Payment Instruction: If you are the winning bidder, please complete your order by using the secure eBay checkout. We apologize but we only accept payments through eBay checkout. Payments are expected within 10 business days or an UPI will be issued. Sales Tax: For shipments to California addresses, we are required by State law to collect 9% Sales Tax to your item and handling. Shipping We will attempt to process and ship your package within 1 business day after payment has been received. Most orders paid on Friday will be shipped within the following Monday or Tuesday. We do offer order consolidation but the shipping is a per-item cost. (It is your responsibility to review every item.) All items will automatically be combined and calculated during checkout. Combined shipping is limited to under the seller account: "FIREGADGETS". For International orders, the buyer is responsible for all applicable tariffs, import duties, and local tax. Please confirm with your custom before purchase. Any shipping and handling cost is non-refundable. All items are shipped from United States. Shipping Method Shipping destination Shipping time Economy Shipping United States 1 - 10 Business Days Standard Shipping United States 1 - 5 Business Days USPS First Class Mail International Europe, Canada, UK, Australia, Germany Japan 3 - 4 weeks Note: We only process orders during our business hours. Most orders that are paid on a Friday will not be shipped until Monday/Tuesday. All shipping information and notifications will be updated once available on our eBay site. We strongly advise that you give your package some time for delivery. If these estimated delivery dates has been exceeded and your package has not arrived, please email us and we will assist you. Customer Service For product information, questions, order status and all other inquiries; write to our eBay email address. Our fast and friendly customer care representatives are waiting for you. Please include your name, order information and item details and problems you have so we can provide fast service.

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Numbers taking and passing AP exams move up again

As Advanced Placement exams have expanded to a more diverse group of high school students, more failures and lower average results seemed almost inevitable. But recent high school graduates seem to be bucking the trend: For the first time on record, average scores, the percentage passing and top scores are all increasing.

In its annual report Wednesday on the AP Program, the College Board said nearly one-third of 2012 public high school graduates took AP tests, and nearly one in five received a passing score of 3 or higher on the five-point-scale exams offered in 34 subjects from calculus to history to studio art. Both figures are up substantially from a decade ago, when 18 percent of graduates took an exam and fewer than 12 percent earned a score of 3 or higher.

But more notably, the College Board said that for the first time since it began collecting data by class year in 2001, the mean exam score increased from the previous year, from 2.80 to 2.83. The percentage of all exams that earned at least a 3 also rose for the first time, and the 14.2 percent earning a top score of 5 was also the highest ever.

That's significant because it could boost the College Board's argument that there remain students out there who could succeed on AP exams if given the opportunity. And as the federal government, states and school districts aggressively push AP, the results could blunt criticism that AP expansion has become an obsession among educators, diverting resources from remedial work that low-performing students really need and setting them up to fail.

"What we see here through AP is some evidence you can both increase the number of students engaged in rigorous coursework, you can increase the diversity of students who take it, and you can keep those high standards and performance," said College Board vice president of communications Peter Kauffmann.

Trevor Packer, the College Board's senior vice president for the AP program, said "one year does not a trend make." But nor do the results look like a blip. After regular annual declines, scores stabilized last year, and early results from members of the class of 2013 who have already taken AP exams suggest the upward trend will continue next year.

Packer said it wasn't clear why results were improving, but said possible factors include colleges and universities taking AP scores and coursework more seriously (though Dartmouth College recently announced it would no longer accept AP credit). Course redesigns may also have helped, particularly in reducing the number of students getting the lowest score of 1.

Another factor could be the rising cost of college, with students taking more seriously the opportunity to get college credit and reduce the time it takes to earn degrees.

More than 954,000 of last year's graduates, or 32.4 percent, took an AP exam, compared to 471,000 a decade before. But the College Board contends despite the growth, wide gaps in access remain, particularly for low-income and minority students. It estimates more than 300,000 students nationwide with "AP potential" ? defined as a 60-percent predicted likelihood of passing an AP exam based on PSAT performance ? did not take an AP exam.

Disparities by race remain substantial, even among students who appear to have a good chance at a passing score. Six in 10 Asian students with "AP potential" took math and science AP exams, compared to four in 10 white students, and three in 10 black and Hispanic ones.

Still, 26.6 percent of AP test-takers in last year's class were low-income, compared to just 11.5 percent for the class of 2003. That translates to more than 250,000 low-income students taking an AP exam, quadruple the figure from a decade ago.

The College Board, a not-for-profit membership organization that also operates the SAT exam, also said many states have made progress in narrowing AP access gaps for low-income and minority students.

It singled out Florida as the only state with a large Hispanic population to eliminate the "equity gap" in both AP participation and success with respect to Hispanic students. Hispanics account for 24.8 percent of Florida's graduating high school class, but a higher percentage of its AP test-takers and those passing the exam there.

For black students, however, there is not a single state with a substantial black population where black students have eliminated their AP "equity gap." Nationally, blacks accounted for 14.5 percent of high school graduates, but just 9.2 percent of those taking AP exams and 4.4 percent of those scoring 3 or higher.

Among other findings in the report:

?There remain large state-by-state disparities in participation and performance. Maryland had the highest percentage of graduates earning at least one score of 3 or higher (29.6 percent) and Mississippi the lowest (4.6 percent).

?The three most popular exams are English language and composition, U.S. history, and English literature and composition, each taken by more than 300,000 students last year. The rarest are Japanese and Italian language and culture, taken by fewer than 2,000.

?The annual report doesn't include results from private schools or overseas students. But among overseas AP test-takers, China for the first time surpassed Canada as the top country of origin.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/numbers-taking-passing-ap-exams-192905393.html

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College Students are Excited about Opportunities at Job Fair

HARRISONBURG -- Students at James Madison University got the chance to learn about job opportunities before the end of the academic year.

Dozens of recruiters set up booths to speak with students on campus.

Taylor Neff, a sophomore, said he expected to see fewer openings and that he was surprised companies have jobs available for students.

?I thought with business majors, they'd be full and have a lot of people coming by. But the employers are actually coming up to me and saying, 'Hey, come by, look at our job offerings, let me see your resume.' They're very interested in what we're doing,? said Neff.

The career fair also has information on internships and it runs through Wednesday.

Source: http://www.whsv.com/news/headlines/College-Students-Excited-about-Opportunities-at-Job-Fair-191918081.html

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Resistance builds against red-light traffic cameras

Currently 21 states and Washington, D.C., use automated cameras at traffic intersections to catch violations such as running through red lights and stopping over white lines. While the cameras bring in thousands of extra dollars, drivers and some government officials argue they are inaccurate and rip people off. NBC's Tom Costello reports.

By Lisa Riordan Seville and Hannah RappleyeNBC News

Drivers dread it -- that flash as they try to speed through a yellow traffic light. It?s a red light camera, and a signal that a ticket is on the way.

A rarity 15 years ago, red light cameras have become ubiquitous in many U.S. cities. Communities in 24 states and Washington, D.C., now use the cameras to try to decrease illegal -- and sometimes deadly -- traffic violations. Supporters say it?s worked.

"In the last five years we went from 54 traffic fatalities to 19,? said Cathy Lanier, police chief in Washington, D.C., which began using the cameras in 1999. ?I mean, that's dramatic!?

Red light cameras are one piece of a growing network of automated traffic enforcement. Cameras now monitor speed, bus and high-occupancy-vehicle lanes and intersections with stop signs. Proponents like Lanier say they help to deter accidents, nab violators and allow states and municipalities to keep an eye on the roads for less.


But critics of red light programs worry about the Big Brother aspect of using cameras instead of cops. Many also say cameras, which are generally run by private companies, have spread not because they make streets safer, but because they mean profit for cities and companies.

?What the issue really comes down to is these companies are ripping people off by hundreds of millions of dollars, in the name of caring about our safety and our health and our kids,? said New Jersey Assemblyman Declan O?Scanlon, who has introduced anti-red light camera legislation to the state Legislature.

Recent news stories have fueled opposition. In Chicago, an alleged pay-to-play scandal led the mayor to ban one company from bidding for future contracts. Millions were spent on pro-camera lobbying in Florida and other states. In Iowa, doubts about the constitutionality of using cameras as traffic enforcers led a state senator to introduce a bill to ban red-light cameras ? a move already taken by at least nine other states.

What does science say?
Red light violations were associated with some 700 deaths and nearly 90,000 injuries in 2009, according to a study based on data reported to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Fatalities and injuries have decreased in recent years, the study shows.

Researchers, however, are divided on how much red light cameras increase safety.

Charlie Neibergall / AP file

Traffic passes a red light camera at an intersection in Clive, Iowa.

In 2011, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, a nonprofit research group funded by the insurance industry, released a study that found red light cameras decreased fatal accidents by an estimated 24 percent in large cities that use them.

But a 2005 Federal Highway Administration study painted a more nuanced picture. Data from seven jurisdictions showed a decrease in front-into-side crashes at intersections with cameras. But it also showed an increase in rear-end crashes. The researchers said that apparently was the result of drivers hitting the brakes to avoid a ticket. Overall, however, the research showed the cameras saved money by both decreasing the most serious accidents, and generating revenue.

However, the FHA says that red light cameras shouldn?t be a knee-jerk traffic enforcement option. The agency issued a number of recommendations regarding the implementation of red light cameras, saying cameras should be considered only after engineering solutions have failed in problem intersections. Among the possible solutions, it says: Give drivers more cushion. Increasing yellow time by one second, it found, can result in a 40 percent decrease in crashes in stoplight-controlled intersections.

?It all hinges on proper yellow light time,? said John Bowman, communications director of the National Motorists Association, a drivers advocacy group. ?If yellow lights are set properly, based on established traffic engineering, red light cameras are unnecessary because you almost automatically have low numbers of violations and low numbers of accidents. If you shorten those yellow light times beyond bare minimums, that?s when you start to generate more accidents and more violations.?

Problematic cameras
A yellow light in Cary, N.C., had Howard Bond seeing red.

Last year Bond?s son was issued two different tickets for turning left on a red light at an intersection. But when Bond watched videotape of the alleged traffic offenses, he saw that in both instances his son had legally turned left on a flashing yellow light. The town had recently switched to a flashing yellow at the intersection, but Redflex, the private company running the cameras, kept treating it as a red, Bond said.

Each time, Bond, who lives in nearby Chatham County, went to the office that issued the tickets to complain. Each time, he said, his tickets were dismissed but the larger issue was ignored.

"I just basically stood there and said, ?No sir, you?re going to look at the video,?? Bond told NBC News. But law enforcement officials told him he would have to attend a hearing to contest it.

"I said 'We?re not going through all that,'? Bond said. ?He started hee-hawing around. Then he looked at the video and said, ?This is wrong.?"

After a local television news station approached town officials with Bond?s tickets, details emerged about tens of other tickets wrongfully issued in Cary by faulty red light cameras last year. A review of its red light cameras found that cameras in one intersection had generated at least 31 false violations, many of which led to $50 tickets.

Town officials told the Raleigh News and Observer that Redflex had failed to report the error to the town.?

But Jody Ryan, spokesperson for Redflex, said the company took action as soon as it discovered the wrongful tickets.

?In this situation, changes were made by the Town of Cary to the traffic light phases without Redflex Traffic Systems, Inc. knowledge,? Ryan said. ?Because we were unaware of these changes, our systems triggered a set of false positives. ?Once we were notified of the issue Redflex either dismissed or refunded all the affected citations on behalf of the Town of Cary.?

While major cities can make millions off red light cameras, in some contracts red light camera companies keep the majority of funds paid by violators. Redflex?s contract with Cary, for instance, allowed the company to keep 88 percent of the money generated by red-light camera tickets in Cary. Between April 2004 and July 2012, ticketed drivers paid $5.7 million to the company, and $646,000 to the Wake County Public School System, which received the city?s proceeds.

The controversy led town officials to abandon its red-light camera program altogether.

Cary is one of a number of communities, including large cities such as Houston, that have recently abandoned their camera programs amid opposition from residents.

Dollars and cents
About 700 municipalities in the country have cameras. One of the most prominent companies, Redflex, had about 2,000 cameras in operation around the nation in 2011, bringing in over $92 million in revenue, according to its annual report. American Traffic Solutions, another big player in the industry, reports more than 3,000 road safety systems installed in the U.S. and Canada, which include red light cameras.

Red light cameras can also pull in big revenues for cities. An investigation by NBC 4 in Washington, D.C., found the Capitol region drivers received tickets with at least $18 million dollars in fines in one year attributable to the cameras. NBC 5 in Dallas found a single camera in Arlington, Texas, generated $2.5 million over four years.

NBCDFW.com: Red light cameras make millions

Communities continue to adopt the technology. In 2011, East Cleveland residents voted to keep red light cameras. Last year, New Jersey?s Pohatcong Township voted to extend its contract with Arizona-based American Traffic Solutions.

?The bottom line is that those who oppose cameras are the minority,? said Charles Territo, spokesperson for American Traffic Solutions. He added that American Traffic Solutions doesn?t issue tickets: a police officer reviews each image before issuing a violation. According to ATS, about 50 percent of traffic ?events? each year are rejected before a violation is issued.

?The majority of voters around the country know the dangers of red light running,? Territo said. ?Nobody likes to get a ticket, but cameras are used in a number of places around the country and the world. They?re used to help police officers do their job.?

But cameras have faced increasing opposition from drivers who object to the automated systems for many reasons, including the inability to confront their accuser in court. Facing pressure from constituents, local and state politicians in Iowa, Florida, New Jersey and other states have recently introduced measures to change or end the camera programs.

Other controversies have raised questions about red light?cameras. Problems with short yellow lights, which may increase the number of tickets issued, have surfaced in cities from California to Tennessee. Judges in Baltimore have castigated the city and thrown out tickets after finding the city had shortened yellow lights below recommended limits. Last summer, the New Jersey?Transportation?Department ordered 21 red light programs suspended after finding yellow-light timing issues. Meanwhile, camera companies have sued, or threatened to sue, cities who back out of contracts. And they?ve been?investigated for possible?pay-to-play schemes with local governments.?

?They?re very aggressive in terms of lobbying for favorable legislation or favorable court cases,? said Bowman of the National Motorists Association. ?It?s big business, and there?s a lot of money at stake.?

Last October, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel barred Redflex from re-bidding on the city?s red-light camera contract after a Chicago Tribune investigation found that Redflex company executives and lobbyists had paid for hotel rooms and spent thousands on entertainment for the city official overseeing the red light program.

Chicago?s red light cameras raised big revenues for the city. Redflex has operated a red-light program in the city since 2003, generating about $300 million in fines for the city and $97 million in revenue for itself. Redflex. Residents in the city have long complained about discrepancies between yellow light times in the city and its suburbs.

?We authorized an internal investigation and, though the inquiry is not complete, have learned that some Redflex employees did not meet our own code of conduct and the standards that the people of the City of Chicago deserve,? said Ryan, Redflex spokesperson, of the Chicago case. ?We will take corrective action and make additional information public.?

Automated traffic enforcement companies spend millions persuading local and state lawmakers to expand programs, using lobbyists, municipal partners and nonprofits to advance the cause. After spending $1.5 million lobbying Florida lawmakers over four years, American Traffic Solutions became the main-red light camera supplier in the state, winning contracts in more than 65 cities.

Territo, the spokesperson for American Traffic Solutions, defended efforts to expand red light camera programs, which he emphasized are above all about safety. ?Just as opponents of red-light safety cameras fund efforts to remove cameras, we expend resources on efforts to defend them,? he said.

Recognizing growing opposition to red light enforcement technologies, companies are looking to new markets. Both Redflex and American Traffic Solutions have active speed cameras in various markets, though 12 states have banned the technology. Both companies have also started programs to enforce rules prohibiting drivers from going around stopped school buses.

Redflex recently became the nation?s largest provider of school bus arm cameras, which catch drivers who speed past the stop signs that swing out from the side of school buses. The company has launched 10 pilot programs in six states.?

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Source: http://openchannel.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/19/17010355-lights-cameras-reaction-resistance-builds-against-red-light-cameras?lite

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

The Dangers of Testing by Monty Neill - Educational Equity, Politics ...

?February 2003 | Volume 60 | Number 5
Using Data to Improve Student Achievement Pages 43-46

These reports and many others show that the focus on tests has not produced the promised results. Claims of improvement typically rest on inflated scores on state exams. Texas, the model for the new Elementary and Secondary Education Act, provides a good example. As Texas Assessment of Academic Skills scores rose dramatically, the state's NAEP reading results did not change significantly. At the same time, the racial score gap in Texas widened (Neill & Gaylor, 2001). Meanwhile, the test-driven approach in Texas led to a much higher dropout rate, particularly for Latinos and African Americans (Haney, 2000, 2001).

An Equally Poor Outlook

If high-stakes tests have not led to improvement by now, will they ever? Two important factors suggest that even if they could in theory, they won't in practice.
Socioeconomic effects. Low-income and African American and Latino students enter school substantially less prepared to do academic work than their middle-income (never mind wealthy) or white or Asian peers (Lee & Burkam, 2002). In addition, the first group attends schools that are far less prepared, in terms of teachers and physical resources, to teach them. Rothstein (2002) points out the vast disparities in housing, health care, and other supports available to children. Those who start with less get less, and as a result they either fail to catch up or fall even further behind. Without major social investments in both classroom and out-of-school supports for low-income children, it is absurd to believe that more tests will enable schools to overcome the gaps in academic learning.
Several reports over the past few years have purported to show that large numbers of schools serving low-income students have succeeded in overcoming the effects of poverty. More careful studies, however, have shown these claims to be at best wildly inflated and often completely misleading (Krashen, 2002). Simply demanding higher scores, even with rewards and sanctions attached, will not do the job.
Teaching to the test. Any exam can only sample the curriculum that students should learn. For test results to be valid measures of real learning, students must have been taught a full curriculum. If instruction narrows to focus on the limited sample covered by the test, scores become inflated and misleading. This largely explains the difference between results on state-specific tests and those on such neutral measures as the NAEP.
Many supporters of test-driven ?reform? argue that it will at least guarantee that teachers teach the basics (which the test will supposedly cover), and will thereby initiate a positive reform process. Unfortunately, test-driven schooling often fails to provide even the basics. For example, some reading teachers teach students to ?read? by looking over the answer options to questions attached to short reading passages and then searching the passage to find a clue for selecting the answer. Others drill phonics, but never get to comprehension. As a result, independent evaluators find that the students cannot explain what they have just read?meaning they actually cannot read (McNeil & Valenzuela, 2001).

A Flawed Concept

Testing proponents believe that focusing on a limited set of skills and facts will prepare students for further education?a theory based on profound misunderstandings of how humans learn. Shepard (2000) has demonstrated the mismatch between tests and learning, a point also developed in rich detail in several books from the National Academy of Sciences (Bransford, Brown, & Cocking, 2000; Pellegrino, Chudowsky, & Glaser, 2001). In short, humans learn best through active thinking. ?Learning? while not thinking is like remembering lists of phone numbers one will never call. Memorization of facts and procedures has its place, but deep learning must engage the brain and spur thinking. Teaching to the test rarely accomplishes either.
Overall, state tests do not do a good job of measuring state standards, particularly higher-level thinking. Researchers at the University of Wisconsin found that state exams poorly matched state standards and measured mostly lower-level thinking (Wisconsin Center for Educational Research, 1999).
In a high-quality education, students conduct science experiments, solve real-world math problems, write research papers, read and analyze books, make oral presentations, evaluate and synthesize information from a variety of fields, and apply their learning to new and ill-defined situations. This work provides them with both deeper substantive knowledge and higher-level thinking skills. Standardized paper-and-pencil tests are poor tools for evaluating these important kinds of learning. If instruction focuses on the test, students will not learn the skills that they need for success in college and beyond.

What's the Alternative?

If focusing instruction on large-scale, high-stakes tests will not lead to genuine improvements in our nation's schools, what should schools do in response to high-stakes testing mandates?
Educators can take some comfort from the knowledge that employing richer curriculum and instruction is likely to somewhat improve standardized test scores (Center for Collaborative Education, 2001; Institute for Education and Social Policy, 2001). In Chicago, students of teachers who used more interactive rather than exclusively didactic instructional approaches gained more than their peers on the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills (Newmann, Bryk, & Nagaoka, 2001; Smith, Lee, & Newmann, 2001).
One can also assess higher-level attributes. Teachers do it all the time. Studies of a group of small schools in New York City and similar schools in Boston described these successful schools as having high standards and rigorous assessments (Center for Collaborative Education, 2001; Institute for Education and Social Policy, 2001). The high schools often require students to present and defend their work in a number of subject areas to earn a diploma. A committee that typically includes outside experts reviews the work. As Meier (2002) says, these high standards do not entail the standardization or drill-and-kill imposed through high-stakes exams.
These high-quality schools in New York and Boston generally do not focus on teaching to the test; indeed, many are struggling to avoid being coerced into becoming test-prep programs. They demonstrate their success by far more than test scores. Deborah Meier's Central Park East Secondary School, for example, prepares low-income students not only to enroll in college but also to succeed there?a far more important goal than merely increasing their test scores (Meier, 1995). Indeed, Meier has often pointed out that although her students learned to succeed, their standardized test scores did not necessarily show substantial gains. These schools succeed not by teaching to standardized tests but by teaching for deeper, important learning.
Some have argued that such schools cannot be replicated. They presume that test-driven improvements can be. However, researchers from the Dana Center went hunting for successful Texas school districts that had improved scores and closed racial score gaps (Skrla, Scheurich, & Johnson, 2000). Using modest criteria that were overly dependent on TAAS scores?enrollment of 5,000 or more students; high poverty levels; and 50 percent of the high- poverty schools in the district categorized as Recognized or Exemplary on the basis of their state test scores?they studied data from all Texas districts. They found only 11 districts to examine closely, which they reduced in the end to 4 successful districts. In other words, after nearly a decade in which the state had focused on high-stakes testing, sympathetic researchers found only a few districts in the state to meet their narrow criteria for success.
Unlike high-stakes testing, which undermines good schools and prevents real improvement, better forms of assessment can play a powerful role in improving schools. Most important is assessment that provides meaningful, usable feedback to students and engages them in self-evaluation. A research summary of more than 250 articles and chapters by Black and Wiliam (1998) found that formative assessment can contribute more to improving outcomes (primarily as measured by test scores) than any other school-based factor, benefiting low achievers more than high achievers. In other words, formative assessment helps raise everyone's achievement while also closing the gaps?which test-driven reform has not done. This approach, however, requires treating teachers as professionals, improving professional development, and spending more money.
Rather than chasing the illusion that test-driven change will produce significantly improved learning, policymakers need to shift attention to practices and models that emphasize serious thinking and skilled teaching. If we do less, we consign far too many students to a continued second-class education. At the moment, few policymakers recognize this. It appears that to get on the path of genuine improvement, educators and parents will have to join together to beat back test-based ?reform.?

References

Amrein, A., & Berliner, D. (2002). High-stakes testing, uncertainty, and student learning. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 10(18). [Online]. Available: http://epaa.asu.edu/epaa/v10n18

Barton, P. E. (2002, January). Raising achievement and reducing gaps. Washington, DC: National Education Goals Panel.

Black, P., & Wiliam, D. (1998, October). Inside the black box: Raising standards through classroom assessment. Phi Delta Kappan, 139?148.

Bransford, J. D., Brown, A. L., & Cocking, R. (Eds.). (2000). How people learn: Brain, mind, experience, and school, expanded edition. Washington, DC: National Academies Press.

Center for Collaborative Education (CCE). (2001). How are Boston pilot schools faring? An analysis of student demographics, engagement, and performance [Online]. Available: www.ccebos.org/quant_report_final.pdf Haney, W. (2000). The myth of the Texas miracle in education. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 8(41). [Online]. Available: http://epaa.asu.edu/epaa/v8n41 Haney, W. (2001). Revisiting the myth of the Texas miracle in education: Lessons about dropout research and dropout prevention. Paper prepared for the ?Dropout Research: Accurate Counts and Positive Interventions? conference sponsored by Achieve and the Harvard Civil Rights Project, January 13, 2001, Cambridge, MA. [Online]. Available: www.civilrightsproject.harvard.edu/research/dropouts/haney.pdf

Institute for Education and Social Policy. (2001, December). Final report of the evaluation for New York Networks for School Renewal. New York: Author.

Jacob, B. (2001). Getting tough? The impact of high school graduation exams. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 23(2), 99?121.

Lee, V. E., & Burkham, D. T. (2002). Inequality at the starting gate. Washington, DC: Economic Policy Institute.

McNeil, L., & Valenzuela, A. (2001). The harmful impact of the TAAS system of testing in Texas: Beneath the accountability rhetoric. In G. Orfield & M. L. Kornhaber (Eds.), Raising standards or raising barriers? Inequality and high-stakes testing in public education (pp. 127?150). New York: Century Foundation Press.

Meier, D. (1995). The power of their ideas. Boston: Beacon Press.

Meier, D. (2002). In schools we trust. Boston: Beacon Press.

Neill, M., & Gaylor, K. (2001). Do high-stakes graduation tests improve learning outcomes? Using state-level NAEP data to evaluate the effects of mandatory graduation tests. In G. Orfield & M. L. Kornhaber (Eds.), Raising standards or raising barriers? Inequality and high-stakes testing in public education (pp. 107?126). New York: Century Foundation Press.

Newmann, F. M., Bryk, A. S., & Nagaoka, J. K. (2001, January). Authentic intellectual work and standardized tests: Conflict or coexistence? Chicago: Chicago Consortium on School Research.

Pellegrino, J. W., Chudowsky, N., & Glaser, R. (Eds.). (2001). Knowing what students know: The science and design of educational assessment. Washington, DC: National Academies Press.

Rothstein, R. (2002). Out of balance: Our understanding of how schools affect society and how society affects schools. Chicago: Spencer Foundation.

Shepard, L. (2000). The role of assessment in a learning culture. Educational Researcher, 29(7), 4?14.

Skrla, L., Scheurich, J. J., & Johnson, J. H., Jr. (2000, September). Equity-driven achievement-focused school districts. Austin, TX: Charles A. Dana Center, University of Texas.

Smith, J. B., Lee, V. E., & Newmann, F. E. (2001, January). Instruction and achievement in Chicago elementary schools. Chicago: Chicago Consortium on School Research.

Wisconsin Center for Educational Research. (1999, Fall). Are state-level standards and assessments aligned? WCER Highlights, 1?3. Madison, WI: Author.

Monty Neill is Executive Director of the National Center for Fair & Open Testing (FairTest) in Cambridge, MA; monty@fairtest.org.

Source: http://texasedequity.blogspot.com/2013/02/the-dangers-of-testing-by-monty-neill.html

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Search job opportunities in world are highest paying jobs. List of jobs opportunties in world are top jobs in world 2013, search latest jobs and apply online free to all. The main keywords to this page are job opportunities, jobs opportunities, jobs opportunities in world, job opportunities by country, jobs by countries, jobs by country, jobs in country, jobs in 2012, jobs in 2013.

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Video: Gun control could cost jobs

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Basketball: Huskies men clinch first place in Canada West Prairie Division

caption

Huskies forward Matthew Forbes fought under the basket for 15 points to help lead his team to first place.

The Huskies men?s basketball team won the battle of the best Friday night, clinching first place in the Canada West Prairie Division with an 82-66 win over the Alberta Golden Bears.

The Dogs entered the Feb. 15 game at the PAC tied with the Bears for first place in the division. The win guarantees the University of Saskatchewan squad top spot entering playoffs, meaning they will host a conference quarter-final best-of-three series next weekend even if Alberta defeats the Huskies tomorrow in the final game of the regular season.

The Huskies came out strong Friday night, opening the game with a steal by guard Ben Baker and a three-pointer from forward Matt Forbes. After falling behind by one point just two minutes into the match, the Huskies, led by point guard Stephon Lamar?s game-high 19 points, regained control and didn?t give up the lead again for the rest of the game.

The Huskies led 35-29 at the half and, thanks to a strong third quarter in which the Dogs only allowed the Golden Bears 11 points, extended their lead to 13 entering the fourth frame.

With just under two minutes remaining in the final quarter, third-year forward Patrick Burns took a long pass and went in alone toward the Alberta basket. Burns planted to jump for the slam dunk but Alberta?s Rav Dhaliwal grabbed the shoulders of Burns and kept him from jumping.

Dhaliwal was called on the foul and ejected from the match for unsportsmanlike conduct. Huskies rookie Jonathan Karwacki also got tossed for unsportsmanlike conduct for his actions in the scrum that ensued following Dhaliwal?s foul.

Burns sunk one of his two foul shots and the Huskies cruised to the victory.

Alberta?s top offensive player, six-foot-seven point guard Jordan Baker, did not play in the game due to a mild injury. With Alberta?s playoff hopes potentially riding on tomorrow night?s game against Saskatchewan, the Bears may elect to play Baker.

Depending on other Canada West games this weekend, Alberta could be eliminated from the playoff contention if they suffer another loss to the Huskies in game two tomorrow night. Tip-off is Saturday at 6 p.m in the PAC.

?
Photo: Calvin So

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Travel Insurance for the Carnival Triumph Disaster - Squaremouth ...

ST. PETERSBURG, FL February 15, 2013 ? More than 4,000 passengers and crewmembers disembarked this morning at the Port of Mobile after enduring five days aboard the Carnival Triumph without electricity and working toilets.

Carnival is doing its best to compensate travelers for losses, but many travelers are questioning whether travel insurance could compensate future cruisers who encounter similar scenarios. Squaremouth, America?s fastest growing travel insurance comparison site, advises travelers of the benefits that may apply when mechanical breakdowns ruin vacations.

Depending on Triumph passengers? individual circumstances, certain travel insurance benefits may provide coverage for losses not otherwise reimbursed by Carnival. These may include:

- Baggage and Personal Items Loss
- Emergency Medical
- Missed Connection
- Travel Delay

?Travel insurance benefits are triggered by specific events,? says Chris Harvey, CEO of Squaremouth. ?We want people to know when it?s worth buying travel insurance and when it won?t cover you.?

In order to accurately respond to travelers inquiries regarding the Carnival Triumph disaster, Squaremouth requested position statements from the travel insurance providers on its website. The following position statements were provided at the time of press:

Allianz Travel Insurance?- As far as we can tell, because the cruise line is covering everything, there are no losses to cover in this case, but coverages that may apply include:

Travel Delay
Customers may be eligible to receive reimbursement for additional out of pocket meal or lodging expenses incurred as a result of a travel delay of six or more consecutive hours as well as lost prepaid expenses. (please note: this benefit has a per person, per day maximum as well as a policy maximum).

Baggage Protection
Baggage Loss/Damage covers loss, damage or theft of luggage and personal effects. This coverage is secondary to any reimbursements that customers may receive from the cruise line.

Baggage Delay covers the reasonable additional purchase of essential items if your baggage is delayed or misdirected by a common carrier for 24 hours or more. Receipts for emergency purchases are required.

Azimuth Risk Solutions, LLC?- ?The unfortunate and well-publicized circumstances surrounding the fire associated passenger misery for those aboard the Carnival Cruiselines ship Triumph makes all of us at Azimuth sympathize and wish them well for a safe and rapid return to shore. The situation does serve to highlight the importance of travel insurance protection for those engaged in international travel. The Beacon Series travel medical plan, offered through our key distribution partner, Squaremouth.com, offers key protections for exposures in just such an event. The Beacon Series covers against unforeseeable illnesses, such as foodborne illnesses and other disease that may arise as a result of the breakdown in proper sanitation systems with benefits up to $2 million dollars. It?s not difficult to envision this situation turning even more serious, so it is worth mentioning that the Beacon Series also provides for emergency medical evacuation up to the maximum limit selected by the client if a covered condition is life threatening. Additionally, the Beacon Series provides a trip delay benefit that is usually not found in travel medical plans and would provide coverage for up to $100 a day for each insured member?s unreimbursed expenses (up to two days) for accommodations and meals when the delay is in excess of 12 hours and is a result of the common carrier, in this case, Carnival Cruiselines.?

iTravelInsured?- The Carnival Triumph incident has many factors that may affect coverage under a travel insurance policy and the correct answer depends upon the facts in each individual?s circumstance.

iTravelInsured will consider transferring an existing insurance policy to a new travel date for those affected by Carnival?s cancellation of future Triumph cruises. ?Generally if travel dates are changed to a future date without penalties, then iTravelInsured will allow a 1-time transfer of the existing Certificate to the new future travel dates as long as:
- it is not past the original departure date, and
- a claim has not occurred, and
- the new departure date is within 3 months of the original departure date, and
- the request is received within 30 days of the Insured Traveler(s) being notified by the travel supplier.

For those on board, trip cancellation and trip interruption would not apply since the cruise line has reimbursed its passengers for any pre-paid expenses in connection with the cruise. They have also refunded all pre-paid expenses for the future cruises that were cancelled. ?For those who have travel insurance and are considering cancellation of their cruise because they ?fear? that an event such as the one on the Triumph might happen on their upcoming cruise is not eligible for coverage since ?fear? is not a covered reason. ?Only those that have a ?cancel for any reason? benefit might have an eligible trip cancellation claim.

For those onboard the Carnival Triumph, the following benefits may apply, depending upon each individual?s circumstances and whether they incurred any non-reimbursable out-of-pocket loss.

- Missed Connection
- Travel Delay
- Lost/Stolen or damaged Baggage
- Emergency Medical Expense
- Emergency Medical Evacuation/Repatriation

Each insured person should keep a record of their expenses incurred and all receipts related to those expenses. They should first present their claim(s) to the common carrier (Carnival) that caused the incident and if any airline or other travel tickets are involved, they should check with the transportation provider to determine that provider?s refund policy. ?If the insured traveler is out-of-pocket after claiming with the travel supplier involved, then they should present the outstanding claim to their travel insurance company.

About Squaremouth
Squaremouth is a website that compares?travel insurance?products from every major U.S. travel insurance provider. Established in 2006, the company has grown from $1 million in sales to $10 million in 2012. Squaremouth is headquartered in St. Petersburg, FL, with offices in Fort Wayne, IN. More information on Squaremouth and its network of providers can be found at?www.squaremouth.com.

About our Zero Complaint Guarantee
The cornerstone of Squaremouth?s commitment to customers is their Zero Complaint Guarantee. If a customer feels their claim is handled unfairly, Squaremouth will mediate on their behalf. Any provider with a customer complaint that cannot be resolved with complete satisfaction will be removed from the website.

Squaremouth offers products from the following travel insurance providers:
Air Ambulance Card,?Allianz Travel Insurance,?AMEX Assurance Company,?Azimuth Risk Solutions, LLC,?CSA Travel Protection,?Global Alert Administrators,?HCC Medical Insurance Services,?HTH Worldwide,?IMG,??iTravelInsured,?John Hancock Insurance Agency, Inc.,?MedjetAssist,?MH Ross Travel Insurance Services,?RoamRight,?Seven Corners Inc,?Travel Guard,?Travel Insurance Services,?Travel Insured International,?Travelex Insurance Services,?TravelSafe,?Trawick International,?USA-ASSIST Worldwide Protection, and?VacationGuard.

AVAILABLE TOPIC EXPERTS:
Chris Harvey
charvey@squaremouth.com
Toll-free (800) 240-0369 x 6103
Direct (727) 490-5802
Chrisharvey.com
LinkedIn
Google+

Jenna Gravino
jgravino@squaremouth.com
Toll-free (800) 240-0369 x 6112
Direct (727) 502-6849
LinkedIn
Google+

Source: http://blogs.squaremouth.com/press-room/travel-insurance-for-the-carnival-triumph-disaster-squaremouth-advises-travelers-on-coverage/

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Khamenei: Iran Not Seeking Nuclear Weapons, But.... (Voice Of America)

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

02/13/2013 - Chinese New Year Celebration: Feature Film Presentation

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The 10 Cheapest Cities In The US - Business Insider

Not all things are bigger in Texas.

The state is home to three of the cheapest places to live in the U.S., according to the?sixth annual cost-of-living index?by the?Council for Community and Economic Research.

This year, Harlingen, Texas still reigns as the No. 1 most affordable city in the country, with prices for consumer goods that are nearly 19 percent lower than the national average.?

The composite index is based on six areas: housing, utilities, grocery items, transportation, health care, and miscellaneous goods and services. It's representative of most households in the top income quintile, CCER said.

We've rounded up the top 10 cheapest cities, as well as the average costs of basic necessities like housing, utilities, health care and gas.?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/the-cheapest-cities-to-live-in-the-us-2013-2

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5 Steps to Limiting Personal Liability in Business | Planning for Your ...

The LLC and corporation are popular business entities because they?limit?the owner?s personal liability for actions taken on behalf of the business ? but they don?t just magically?erase that liability. Rather, these entities require regular attention to maintain the owner?s liability protection.

Too often, business owners ? and individuals using these entities for personal asset protection ? neglect their all-important, ongoing obligation to maintain them. Some fail to pay their taxes, others forget to update their corporate minutes and charters to reflect business changes, and many allow their business assets to become commingled with their personal ones.

When this happens, the owner makes it easy for creditors and litigants making claims against the business to pierce the corporate veil and attack the personal assets the entity is specifically designed to protect.

Why pay for an LLC or corporation only to neglect it? There are more efficient ways to waste money.

Maintaining Your Limited Liability

At any given time, an owner must be able to show that the business exists as a legitimately separate entity. To do ensure your liability remains limited, take the following steps:?

1.?Complete necessary formalities.

Corporations have strict rules they must follow, and while LLCs do not face the same stringent requirements, many of the same steps are advisable.

    • Corporation:?Create and regularly update bylaws, issue shares of stock to owners (shareholders) and maintain a stock transfer ledger, hold initial and annual meetings of both directors and shareholders, undertake annual filings required by the state in which the entity was incorporated in a timely manner and pay the necessary filing fees, and pay corporate taxes.
    • LLC:?Undertake any annual filings required by the state in which the entity was incorporated in a timely manner and pay the necessary filing fees. I further recommend creating and regularly updating an operating agreement, issuing membership certificates to owners, keeping a membership transfer ledger, and holding both initial and annual meetings of the members (and managers, if your LLC is manager-managed).

2.?Document?your business actions.?

Everything you just did in step 1 is useless if you can?t prove you did it. This is why you need to document the major business decisions and meetings you hold. Appoint a secretary who?s role is to keep minutes at such meetings. Furthermore, you should always have copies of the contracts to which your company is beholden.

Document that you held the initial and annual meetings of directors and shareholders (corporations) or members/managers (LLCs) and keep the meeting minutes from each of these meetings. Keep formal business documents for at least seven years.

3.?Keep the business and personal assets separate.?

Under no circumstances should you use personal accounts for business expenses or business accounts for personal. This shouldn?t be hard but many owners forget, to their own peril when a claim is presented. Commingling funds is one of the easiest ways to undermine the liability protection provided by your entity.

The same rule applies to other assets like equipment and real property.

4. Fund your business ? not yourself.?

Money makes the world go ?round ? well, the business world at least. Regardless of whether you fund your business through by reaching into your own pockets, those of your investors, or those of a bank, you need to ensure the capital is designated to your business and not to you. Otherwise, you?re inviting a world of financial and legal hurt.

5. Make your corporate or LLC status known.?

Order business cards, letterhead, or custom pens ? anything a company would brand with their with their name and logo. Apart from simply being good marketing, such objects help reassure your business? legitimacy.

More importantly, though, conduct all the actual business in the name of the company. Ensure that you make purchases and pay invoices via a business checking account or credit card. Create invoices in the company name to send to your clients. Sign leases and appropriate documents in the name of the company.

Remember: ?If a judge cannot distinguish between what belongs to the business and what belongs to the owner ? and the owner cannot prove the rules have been followed ? the judge may determine the company effectively less like a corporation or LLC and more like a sole proprietorship or general partnership ? entities that lack the same liability limitations. At that point, the corporate veil is easily pierced and your personal assets easily awarded to any plaintiff.

Good luck and good hunting.

Randy

__________________________________________

Related articles

The?Fisher Law Office?is known for its experience in estate planning, probate administration, asset protection, and business development. Annapolis attorney?Randall D. Fisher?has practiced for over 20 years, maintains the highest peer review rating for ethics (AV Preeminent) by Martindale-Hubbell, and is a sucker for long walks on the fairways.

Find out how to reach Randy via?TheFisherLawOffice.com?or find him at?Facebook.com/FisherLawOffice, on Twitter?@thefisherlawoffice, or at?LinkedIn.com/in/FisherLawOffice.

Image:?CC licensed for commercial use. Source Tax Credits?neither approves nor endorses the content of this blog and the?Fisher Law Office.

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Google Reportedly Pays Apple $1 Billion To Be the Default iOS Search Engine

A leaked report from Morgan Stanley seems to suggest that Google will pay Apple a cool $1 billion dollars in 2014 to remain the default search engine in iOS. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/78N66rErRxk/google-reportedly-pays-apple-1-billion-to-be-the-default-ios-search-engine

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

[NY Times] - AP Source: Miami Tests Baseball Team for HGH

AP Source: Miami Tests Baseball Team for HGH

Posted: Wednesday, February 13th 5:05?PM

By: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (Wire Services) (www.nytimes.com Requires Registration )

... nk to baseball's latest drug mess, the Hurricanes wanted additional testing. Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez, a Miami trustee, was among those listed in a M ...

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Source: http://sportspyder.com/teams/new-york-yankees/articles/8467227

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