2011年9月29日星期四
How to Run Microsoft Windows Malicious Software Removal Tool
The Microsoft Rosetta Stone Windows Malicious Software Removal tool was created by Microsoft for Windows users to remove pesky software that has been installed on their computer. While the tool itself is rather easy to use, sometimes downloading it and actually getting the tool up and running is tricky. Following a few steps will enable you to easily run the tool and remove the software you need to remove. 1If you don't have it already, download the Malicious Software Removal Tool by visiting Rosetta Stone Italian the link in the "Resources" section of this article. Double-click the executable and follow the on-screen prompts to install.2Click "Start Run." Type in "mrt.exe" minus the quotes. Click "OK."3Click "Continue" when prompted to by User Account Control.4Click "Next" to move forward in running the tool.5Click "Quick Scan" and then click "Next." Alternatively, you can click "Full Scan" to run a more complete, longer scan. You can also click "Customized Scan" to customize Rosetta Stone Korean what the tool scans for, an option that's best suited for advanced users.6Wait for the scan to complete, which can take up to an hour7In the results box that pops up after the scan is complete, click "Remove" and then "Next" if the tool has found malicious software, which it will then delete. [ Rosetta Stone Software ] If it hasn't, click "Finish." Run the tool at least once a week to keep your computer from getting infected any worse--and, in some cases, prevent infection all together.
2011年9月28日星期三
How to Get a Pell Grant for a Masters Degree
Pell Grants are generally for students working toward their first bachelor's degree. If you're hoping to use the Pell Rosetta Stone software Grant after you get your four-year degree, make sure that you're qualified. Right now, there's one exception to the "must be an undergraduate" rule. You can be working on a post-baccalaureate program leading to a teaching certificate. Instructions 1Know that you must be an undergraduate, or working on an approved post-baccalaureate program, Rosetta Stone Latin America Spanish to be eligible to receive Pell Grants. Post-baccalaureate programs related to getting a teaching degree are eligible for Pell Grants. Check with the Federal Student Aid handbook on Pell Grants to see if you're eligible (see Resources).2Go to your college financial aid, admissions or bursar office to apply for financial aid. You have to apply for all financial aid to get a Pell Grant. You can apply for financial aid online. Check with the Federal Student Aid website to get started (see Resources).3Apply to get a Pell Grant for your post-baccalaureate certification. Fill the forms Rosetta Stone English out completely. Ask the financial aid official any questions you have about the financial aid application. When applicable, indicate your teaching certificate program on the application forms. Also indicate that you already have a bachelor's degree if the application forms require that information. Follow the Federal Student Aid website's application instruction if you apply online.4Follow up on your application after you apply to get a Pell Grant. Give the office a few business days to process and forward your application. Check up with them to see how your application [ Rosetta Stone Software ] is doing. Know that you could follow up on your financial aid application online if you applied online. Simply go to the web page where you applied to get a Pell Grant, then click on the "Check Status" option.
2011年9月27日星期二
How to Get a PhD in Education
A Ph.D in education opens a variety of doors for the right professional. Whether you want to be a Rosetta Stone teacher or an administrator, work for a non-profit organization or anything else related to the education field, a college degree is needed. The more advanced your degree is, the better your chances of being able to advance your career. Obtaining a doctorate in any subject is a lot of work, but with time and dedication, a Ph.D. in education is possible. Challenging Instructions 1Get an undergraduate degree in the field of your choice. If you want to get a Ph.D. in education, a bachelor's degree in education is not necessarily required. Consider a degree in liberal Rosetta Stone Spanish Latin arts, English, child psychology, organizational management or any of a variety of other fields to begin preparing for a doctoral program in education. Work hard to get good grades, as good grades at an undergraduate level increase your chances of being accepted into a reputable graduate program once you have completed your degree.2Choose and compete a graduate program. A graduate program related to education is the best choice, as it will satisfy a lot of the prerequisites for classes in the post-graduate education program. You must earn a master's Rosetta Stone American English degree in order to apply to an education Ph.D. program.3Begin looking for a post-graduate program in education that fits your needs. In this day and age, there are several options to from which to choose. Consider a traditional program where you attend classes at a local college. If your schedule doesn't permit this, consider a non-traditional evening program that will allow you to get your Ph.D. in education on your own time. Many schools even have online programs that let students attend class and complete assignments over the Internet, following a curriculum that is very close to that of a traditional college, without you ever having to set foot in a classroom. Just make sure the online school/program is accredited.4Assemble a list of schools you are interested in and request applications. [ Rosetta Stone Software ] Every school's application process is different. Some will request letters of recommendation. Others will request an interview. Still others want a writing sample when applying for admission. Make sure that you fill out everything carefully and ensure that all materials are sent out in time for the term you in which you want to enroll.5Wait to hear results. It can take up to several weeks for some schools to issue acceptance letters. Make the decision on the school you want to attend based on those who accept you. Also consider the format, including whether the classes are online, in person or a blend of the two, and make the best decision for you.6Complete the program. Attend all classes, program requirements and complete a dissertation to earn your Ph.D. in education.
2011年9月26日星期一
How to Get Free Graphic Design Software
How to Get Free Graphic Design Software Adobe SoftwareIt's easy to create professional logos, brochures, websites and movies with top-notch software. Rosetta Stone Spanish Latin But the buying decision is often hard when the software is expensive. Testing prior to purchase is a better option. Through adobe trial downloads you can download and test many of its powerful graphic design, web building and movie making products FREE for 30 to 90 days! Here's how Things You'll NeedA computerInternet access1Visit Adobe download at Rosetta Stone . There you'll be able to get product information about the company's graphic design products such as InDesign, Adobe, Dreamweaver, Photoshop, Illustrator and others, which are available free through downloading to your home computer or via mail in the form of a DVD.What's better than getting an opportunity to use state of the art software FREE in the comfort of your home. Most of which is fully functional.2Product trial pageAfter you've become familiar with the available software products, select the software you'd like to test run and press GO.This will take you to either the chosen software's trial home page or the Adobe account sign in or creation page.3If you've arrived at the chosen products trial home page the product has two methods from which you can obtain a trial:a) Rosetta Stone American English Through download orb) By ordering a trial DVD.If you've chosen to order the DVD via mail, the next screen will display an order form.Complete the form.Hit submit.Your trial DVD is on the way.4Create AccountIf you're prompted to create an Adobe account:Create a new account by hitting the "Create Account button, [ Rosetta Stone Software ] completing the web form and pressing continue.If you already have an account, sign in as normal.5DownloadAt this point you should arrive at the download page of your chosen product.Select an appropriate language and operating system from the drop down box based on your personal preference.Hit download and the downloading process begins.6After the downloading process is complete. Follow onscreen instructions to install the software onto the hard drive of your home computer.
2011年9月24日星期六
Give Back the Elgin Marbles and the Rest of the Loot
Recently, the New York Times printed an article criticizing the demand for repatriation Rosetta Stone V3
of art treasures plundered from their various countries and exhibited in major museums throughout the West. The Elgin Marbles. The Bust of Nefertiti. The Rosetta Stone. These are the shining examples of a trade in artifacts that has stocked the store-rooms of museums since the era of exploration. Now they are a marquee item in the theatre of nationalism.The gist of the article is that there is no point in returning things lost. The deeds were long done. The demand for repatriation can only be understood as nationalist theatre produced purely for political spectacle. No true American, except maybe an Indian, would hold the position that art treasures, once taken, should be given back.I wonder, though, why the New York Times believes that the Indian Rosetta Stone German perspective is one that, with little explanation, should be so easy to discard. Is it because Indians don't really have opinions worth considering seriously? Or is it because so many things have been taken from these people that to give them back even a token would be to give back too much? Or is it because we all know that Indians have no real sense of value for anything that had once been in their possession? Including the bones of their ancestors, which only achieved true significance once they were housed in a museum? This is what happened to the remains of many Indians and this is essentially the argument for not returning the Elgin Marbles: those Greeks, like those Indians, didn't know they had anything of value until we took it from them and made it something they could learn to value. A special favor was done in the theft; it gave them knowledge--an itch to scratch, a sore they never knew was there. Until then, they were clueless. Critics of repatriation take great stock Rosetta Stone Hindi in the fact that the plundered treasures in the museums of the world now truly belong to all mankind; the argument goes that they reveal our common humanity. Therefore, to return these treasures would not represent an act of restitution; it would be to steal our humanity away from us, negating our access to mighty symbols that function to constitute it within a collective unconscious. Of course, this assumes that these symbols will no longer be accessible once they return to other museums. This is also assumes that, even were they no longer accessible, they wouldn't continue to do the same symbolic work that they have always done through the advent of reproductive technology. Isn't this the way most people experience them as symbols of a collective consciousnesses: not in person but on the internet? This also overemphasizes a few pieces fetishistically displayed as crowd-pleasers that have trained our eyes away from what is really at stake. This is both a fault in the tactics of those for and against repatriation. The redress movement seeks to repatriate marquee items because they index the whole junket of warehoused artifacts that few have ever seen and which will never become known. These unnamed items [ Rosetta Stone Software ] collect dust in holding facilities...like the bones of Indian people. If the point of the stored objects is to recognize our common humanity, shouldn't the next question be: what kind of humans are we? And also, what kind of humans do we aspire to be?
of art treasures plundered from their various countries and exhibited in major museums throughout the West. The Elgin Marbles. The Bust of Nefertiti. The Rosetta Stone. These are the shining examples of a trade in artifacts that has stocked the store-rooms of museums since the era of exploration. Now they are a marquee item in the theatre of nationalism.The gist of the article is that there is no point in returning things lost. The deeds were long done. The demand for repatriation can only be understood as nationalist theatre produced purely for political spectacle. No true American, except maybe an Indian, would hold the position that art treasures, once taken, should be given back.I wonder, though, why the New York Times believes that the Indian Rosetta Stone German perspective is one that, with little explanation, should be so easy to discard. Is it because Indians don't really have opinions worth considering seriously? Or is it because so many things have been taken from these people that to give them back even a token would be to give back too much? Or is it because we all know that Indians have no real sense of value for anything that had once been in their possession? Including the bones of their ancestors, which only achieved true significance once they were housed in a museum? This is what happened to the remains of many Indians and this is essentially the argument for not returning the Elgin Marbles: those Greeks, like those Indians, didn't know they had anything of value until we took it from them and made it something they could learn to value. A special favor was done in the theft; it gave them knowledge--an itch to scratch, a sore they never knew was there. Until then, they were clueless. Critics of repatriation take great stock Rosetta Stone Hindi in the fact that the plundered treasures in the museums of the world now truly belong to all mankind; the argument goes that they reveal our common humanity. Therefore, to return these treasures would not represent an act of restitution; it would be to steal our humanity away from us, negating our access to mighty symbols that function to constitute it within a collective unconscious. Of course, this assumes that these symbols will no longer be accessible once they return to other museums. This is also assumes that, even were they no longer accessible, they wouldn't continue to do the same symbolic work that they have always done through the advent of reproductive technology. Isn't this the way most people experience them as symbols of a collective consciousnesses: not in person but on the internet? This also overemphasizes a few pieces fetishistically displayed as crowd-pleasers that have trained our eyes away from what is really at stake. This is both a fault in the tactics of those for and against repatriation. The redress movement seeks to repatriate marquee items because they index the whole junket of warehoused artifacts that few have ever seen and which will never become known. These unnamed items [ Rosetta Stone Software ] collect dust in holding facilities...like the bones of Indian people. If the point of the stored objects is to recognize our common humanity, shouldn't the next question be: what kind of humans are we? And also, what kind of humans do we aspire to be?
2011年9月23日星期五
Music Review of Ruthie Foster's Live At Antone's Album
The great thing about a Ruthie Foster song is that you never quite know where it’s going Rosetta Stone to go. It might start as a quiet ballad before morphing into an up-tempo song built on a New Orleans-style rhythm, as on Woke Up This Mornin’, from her first live album/DVD combo Live At Antone’s.Or it might kick off with the lone strains of Foster’s melismatic vocals prior to turning into Sister Rosetta Tharpe’s triumph of blues-meets-gospel, Up Above (I Hear Music In The Air), where the band members contribute lovely harmonies before building to a climax as passionate as anything Foster’s ever sung. That unpredictability is part of what defines Foster as an artist, as well as what keeps listeners involved long after a less flexible artist might have lost his or her audience. Ruthie Foster's Live At Antone's Seven albums into her career, Foster’s audience is still expanding. It’s easy to see why: on the brief, five-minute interview that accompanies the footage on the DVD part of this dual-disc package, Foster refers to her sound as gospel-blues-infused soul. She shares that the artists on her iPod include Bettye LaVette, Sheryl Crow and Sam Cooke it’s hard to imagine a more crowd-friendly balance between roots styles and pop influences. In this performance recorded at Austin’s famed blues club Antone’s, opening Rosetta Stone Italian number Stone Love, an original composition, exemplifies her standing in the blues world: the soulful, 1960s-inspired number is nothing fancy just Foster getting the chance show that she’s not a blues singer, but rather a singer, period, capable of zeroing in on the heart of a song regardless of genre.Runaway Soul I Really Love you is pop-tinged, with a hint of reggae in the way the rhythm accentuates the off-beats. (You Keep Me) Hanging On, isn’t the Supremes tune, but it does have a classic soul sound that showcases the influence of Foster’s beloved Sam Cooke. [Rosetta Stone Software ] On Up Above My Head (I Hear Music In The Air), the Sister Rosetta Tharpe song, Foster begins with an understated vocal melisma before turning it into something much more dramatic: lovely backing vocals by her band members, as well as a sparkling keyboard solo by Scottie Miller, help the song build to a soaring climax, with Foster’s passionate singing the focal point. The highlight of both the CD and the DVD is Foster’s original Runaway Soul, from her 2002 album of the same name. She asks the crowd, is it all right if we mix the blues with the gospel this evening? Since that’s her signature sound, she already knows the answer, and proceeds to offer Rosetta Stone Korean up a traditional, mid-tempo blues shuffle with high-energy keyboard solos between verses.
2011年9月22日星期四
Two Kinds of Knowledge
Why is the Republican Party now represented by red, when conservative parties in all other places Rosetta Stone software -- and even the United States, in the past -- were represented with blue? Ben Zimmer suggests (via The Language Log) "Democrats may have wanted to appropriate the positive connotations of blue (as in true-blue)" but I wonder whether it isn't deeper than that. Because I recall over the years studies saying that teams that wear red win more frequently. Perhaps Republicans have deliberately chosen red in order to generate a subconscious association of themselves as winners.That's speculation, but the association between political advertising and psychological preference is not. A recent Fast Company post describes the use of what they call "political neuromarketing" during the campaign. It's not really neuro marketing as it has nothing to do with neural connections. Rather, they "measure everything including the story line, level of the language, images, music. Using critical point analysis, [they] identify specifics that may drive voters away or attract them. The techniques are non-invasive, and include measuring muscle, skin and pupil response."The success of such techniques obviously has its implications in political theory, but is also relevant in learning theory. The general principle that "the brain reveals more than spoken answers to questions" tells us that knowledge, beliefs, and other mental states are much more fine-grained than our more traditional analyses suggest. Understanding that learning -- and persuasion -- is not simply "words in -- words Rosetta Stone Italian out" is the first step toward developing a more comprehensive theory of cognition and a more effective understanding of learning and instruction.A recent paper from a group of leading neuroscientists outlines the understanding of learning beginning to take form. The survey paper brings together the results of dozens of studies of learning and cognition. The authors write, "Neuroscientists are beginning to understand the brain mechanisms underlying learning and how shared brain systems for perception and action support social learning." In some cases, this understanding is very detailed, such as our understanding of the function of layers of neurons in the visual cortex. In other cases, our understanding is beginning to cover a broad range of psychological phenomena, such as Rosetta Stone Japanese those involved in language learning. It is tempting to use the analogy of a computer in an effort to understand human learning. That's why we see sentences like "the brain is a machine with limited resources for processing the enormous quantity of information received by the senses." But we should not even be talking about learning in such terms. As neuro-linguists will tell you "the brain does not store precise memories in specific locations.
2011年9月21日星期三
A family's journey of hope
A cross overlooks an expanse of water at Mount Zion Church in Ense&ada, Mexico, where the Rosetta Stone Christensens have regularly done mission work. Photos courtesy of Dave ChristensenThe Christensen family plans to move to South Africa to do missionary work. From left they are Judah, Dave, Vienna, Marley, Jordan, Dayne and Krysta. A local family of seven is moving to South Africa to take over missionary efforts started by a Thousand Oaks family for children affected by AIDS.Newbury Park residents Dave Christensen, his wife, Krysta, and five children are leaving the Conejo Valley to live and work as volunteers at the Lily of the Valley Children's Village in KwaZulu Nal."We prayed about it for a while and felt it was our calling to do it full time," said Dave Christensen, 34, who has volunteered for missions with his family in Mexico for the past two years through Calvary Community Church in Westlake Village.With plans to leave the country by September, they are trying to sell their home and raise money to travel to South Africa. The family also needs funds to live on — roughly $3,000 a month, half of which has already been committed through community support."We're trusting God to provide for us. We're selling our house and I'm leaving my job and going completely on faith," said Dave Christensen, Rosetta Stone Italian who will be accompanied by his five children: Vienna and Jordan, both 12; Dayne, 10; Judah, 6; and Marley, 3."The people we'll be helping have been hit hard with AIDS, poverty and hunger. A lot of them are hopeless," he said. "We want to give them some hope."Continuing workThe Christensens will be taking over missionary efforts started by Tim Heintz's family of five, who returned home in April after 15 months at Lily of the Valley Children's Center, a place where youths typically arrive in desperate condition. They're abandoned and malnourished, and more than 90 percent are HIV positive."The Heintz family built a house in Lily of the Valley; we're staying in that house, which is a huge blessing," Christensen said.Tim Heintz is happy that another family will continue serving those in need."I think they'll have a big mission to tackle; there's a lot of work there," said Heintz. "I'm excited that someone's gonna come and go for it because it's so needed to support the people in this community."The Heintz Rosetta Stone Korean family's efforts included helping natives start small businesses, farming and building an amphitheater to feed the locals' love for music and the arts.Because many of the children don't have a stable family structure, "we ended up passing out a lot of food to these kids — sandwiches, hot dogs and apples usually. We adopted a home policy that if someone asks for food or says they're hungry, we give them something — no questions asked."They also spent a lot of time simply talking with people, said Heintz, who was once approached by a man who needed money to buy a coffin for his young daughter who had died."People would come to us for hope," Heintz said, "or to cry on our shoulder."Family plans to make South Africa homeNeither family knew the other until they discovered their common goal: to improve life for the otherwise forgotten, dying children in South Africa. Because the Christensens were already seeking full-time missionary work, continuing the Heintz's efforts seemed like a perfect fit."The more missions we've done, the more we've felt like we belong in the fields, and the less comfortable we've been here in the suburbs working," Dave Christensen said.His wife, Krysta, said leaving Ventura County to [Rosetta Stone ] serve the needy in a Third World country is something she has wanted to do for many years. Her children, now home-schooled, will be enrolled in a school in the village, where they will learn the native language while building relationships with other children."I'm really excited; it's really freeing," said Krysta Christensen, 30, adding that her family does not plan to return to the United States."We'll go as long as God wants us there. I have no problem with packing everything up and moving. There are people I'll miss, but that goes with the territory."Twelve-year-old Vienna said she is "very excited" about the opportunity to move to another country, "and being able to share my faith with others.""It's going to be hard to leave my grandma," Vienna said, "but overall I'm really happy that I'm gonna learn how to interact with people from another country and learn about their culture."
2011年9月20日星期二
Our gang society believes its strength comes from initiation, the ability to kill someone
When we have a president who thinks our power is in our brave men and women who serve our country Rosetta Stone outlet through war, why are we surprised when children pick up guns and emulate soldiers with weapons to destroy people different from us? Our gang society believes its strength comes from initiation, the ability to kill someone.Our president took us to war to avenge the 3,000 deaths of 9/11. The price: more than 3,000 more deaths of our citizens.When our leadership can evolve to the fact that killing is not the healthy solution for mankind, and that the biggest gun does not define the most powerful country, we'll make headway in preventing such tragedies. Marilee Ullmann,Thousand OaksGlobal warming questionFor anybody who still believes Al Gore and thinks the greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide, is the cause of global warming, I have one question: If greenhouse gases are so effective in warming the climate, why are the highest temperatures recorded where there are the least amount of greenhouse gases?Water vapor is the most abundant greenhouse gas, but the warmest temperatures are recorded in the driest places. Water vapor varies from 0 percent to 4 percent of the atmosphere. On average, it can be considered to be 1 percent of the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide is 0.04 percent of the atmosphere. This means Rosetta Stone German water vapor is 95 percent of the greenhouse gases.Yet, the warmest temperatures are recorded where 95 percent of the greenhouse gases are absent. Why? David J. Ameling,Newbury ParkFluoride warning neededI must say that it took strength for a member of the Triunfo Sanitation District board to step up and try to include an advisory about fluoridation via a letter in the local newspaper. I thank Ron Stark of TSD for doing that.However, not all TSD customers will be reading his letter, and it doesn't take away TSD's responsibility to post a warning on its bills. The cost of doing that was an objection by Stark. Another board member sees no problem posting that advisory, and it wouldn't be costly. Cost shouldn't be the issue anyway when it comes to performing due diligence.Based on the conclusions of the National Research Council's report, we have requested that TSD place a warning on its bill to alert its customers that only unfluoridated bottled water should be used to prepare infant formula to prevent infants and babies from overdosing on fluoride.Other vulnerable population groups, such as diabetics, kidney patients, those with compromised immune systems, athletes and laborers who drink a lot of water should also Rosetta Stone Greek be alerted that they should use nonfluoridated bottled water or risk adverse health effects from unsafe levels of fluoride exposure.Due diligence calls for the advisory to be in the form of a page stapled to the front of the monthly bill so that all their customers have the opportunity to see it. The citizens are asking TSD board members again to place this issue on their next agenda. Caroline Aslanian,Oak ParkFree money?Maybe some community service for that free money that is falling from the tax-rebate helicopters should be in the offing. After all, the cost of that $160 billion rebate is being added to our $9 trillion deficit, or the Federal Reserve will print more money to pay for it.So, maybe, a little litter pickup assignment or crossing-guard service in your community should be [Rosetta Stone] required since Americans are more than happy to accept that free money falling from the sky.Do Americans ever ask how all these tax cuts are paid for? Just look at your gas and milk prices, your healthcare and water bills oh, well! There goes that free money !Community service is a nice gesture anyway!
2011年9月19日星期一
Grand opening set for teen center
Miguel Alonso celebrates his victory over Connie Barajas playing the Rosetta Stone software Connect 4 game at One Step Center, the new after-school center for teens in Fillmore. Juan Carlo / Star staff 02/03/09 in Fillmore: Mercedes Williams-Evans works inside the computer room on scholarship information at the new after-school center for teens in Fillmore with a major part of its funding from Proposition 63, the so-called millionaire's tax, which California voters passed in 2004 to raise the income tax rate on the highest-income earners. The center will have its grand opening on Saturday, Feb. 7, although its doors have already opened and it has been offering various after school activities. The center, with the bilingual name "One Step a La Vez," or "One Step at a Time," offers computers, homework help, counseling and peer support groups, yoga and more. Students who spearheaded a new teen center in Fillmore will help stage its grand opening Saturday to display its activities and give thanks for the community’s support.The One Step Center opened in September for teens 13-19 but was not fully operational until this week, when several student assistants joined the staff and the center spread out, now occupying two rooms in Trinity Episcopal Church’s parish hall. “It’s someplace where kids can go and Rosetta Stone Latin America Spanish not worry about being judged,” said Stephanie Gonzalez, 17, secretary of One Step’s all-teen board of directors.“We’re excited about the grand opening because we want more people to come, learn what we do and how we can help teens,” added the Fillmore High School senior. She prepared a presentation for Saturday describing some of the center’s activities, which include homework help; a computer lab; cooking, nutrition and yoga classes; mentoring and counseling.Work started in 2005 The center was years in the making.In 2005, a youth committee — formed to increase mental healthcare — picked a dual-language name for their board, One Step a la Vez, or One Step at a Time, said Lynn Edmonds, a retired educator who wrote a grant application that netted $73,000 toward the center’s yearly operational cost of $150,000.The grant money comes from Proposition 63, approved by state voters in 2004, which increased the income-tax rate on California’s highest-income earners. The ballot measure sent new revenue to counties to be used for “transformational mental health services for the underserved, minority, poor populations,” said Hilary Carson, 25, of Santa Paula, the center’s coordinator.The directors’ dual-language Rosetta Stone English name, One Step a la Vez, reflects dual heritage, said Edmonds, former principal at Piru, Fillmore and Moorpark schools.Carson added that the center has a motto of “making changes poco a poco” (little by little).Positive effects already seenAmid comfortable chairs, games and exercise area and food, the center is designed for teens to feel free enough to express concerns about such issues as school, substance abuse, depression, anger management, grief or eating disorders, whether for themselves or as family issues. Scholarship and career support is an integral part, too.The center’s positive effects have already begun, said Luis Munoz, 18. A Fillmore High School freshman four years ago, Munoz was among students originally organized by Edmonds to discuss needs of Fillmore and Piru teens and “how to get more mental health services for people who don’t have access to those services, or can’t get out to get them,” he said.“We thought One Step would be an answer,” he said. Now a freshman at Chico [Rosetta Stone ] State University majoring in international relations, Munoz credits his advocacy for One Step for “giving me confidence, skills in leadership, public speaking, time management (and) communication.”The grand opening events, which are free and open to the public, will be in two parts.From 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Fillmore Options counseling services at 828 W. Ventura St., second floor, will offer a formal blessing, tour, art project and canned food drive. Then, from 12:30 to 3 p.m., the One Step Center at 600 Saratoga St., in Trinity Episcopal Church’s parish hall, will offer food, prize drawings, games and other activities for kids, and dance performance by Kalpuli Huitzilin Ihuan Xochitl.The center is open 3 to 6:30 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays.The activities are in the church hall, but it is a secular activity, Carson said. Anyone who wants more information or to volunteer to start a class or workshops may call 910-6642 or go to myonestep.
2011年9月17日星期六
The county insists I build a barn that is all wood in a high-fire
Mareen Zoll, OjaiNo to the SRPThe mailer about the proposed expansion of the Ojai Rosetta Stone outlet Valley Scenic Resources Protection zone completely misrepresents the truth of how much difficulty and expense this will add to an already onerous process.I am utterly disgusted with the county of Ventura and its lack of morality or spirit of what this country stands for.I have been trying to get a permit for months for a simple barn, without an additional overlay. The county insists I build a barn that is all wood in a high-fire, high-termite zone. How ridiculous. Perhaps I should e-mail the county Board of Supervisors the painful timeline of my truly simple barn. Nowhere does the county disclose that I and others in this proposed expansion area will most likely have to hire an aerial photographer and cartologist to prove our land cannot be seen from the road. Yet another expense. — Linda Ciarimboli, Oak ViewMedicare for allI’m an insurance broker who has sold health insurance for many, many years, while, at the same time, being active in the healthcare-reform movement here in California and Rosetta Stone Spanish V3 nationally. Obviously, any healthcare reform, if enacted, would substantially negatively impact my income.However, I feel so strongly about this issue that I am willing to make this financial sacrifice. I have seen, firsthand, premiums for health insurance increase by 100 percent-plus over the past 10 to 15 years and, at the same time, benefits have been reduced. When the profits of the insurance industry can only be increased by not paying claims, then these results will continue to occur. We need single-payer healthcare — Medicare for all! Do your duty and help this happen.— Sidney Cohn, OjaiCut through the liesPresident Barack Obama spoke to a joint session of Congress regarding healthcare and insurance reform. While the debate has been robust and ongoing, there have been many myths and lies incorporated with the debate so as to “kill the bill.” Congressional Republicans and U.S. Rep. Elton Gallegly, R-Simi Valley, have all but led the fight to end healthcare and insurance reform. Rosetta Stone English Gallegly’s claim on his Web site that Obama and HR3200 are cutting Medicare benefits to seniors to pay for the healthcare reform is false. Still, it does not stop Gallegly from repeating it.The truth is that the pending House bill, HR3200, extracts $500 billion from projected Medicare spending over 10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Such extractions are not found in payments to physicians, but rather are found in trimming projected increases in Medicare payments for medical services. Added increases, such as physician payments, ultimately will bring savings down to less than half that amount.The truth is none of the predicted savings and/or cuts come from reducing current or future benefits for seniors. AARP, a senior advocacy group, has said: “None of the healthcare reform proposals being considered by Congress would cut Medicare benefits or increase your out-of-pocket costs for Medicare services.”The lies on healthcare and insurance reform need to stop, and work on [Rosetta Stone] reform needs to start.— Christopher James Grant,OjaiWasted energyI am a senior citizen in favor of healthcare reform. I benefit from several government-run programs which have been started during my lifetime — Social Security and Medicare! Why are seniors fighting extending these benefits to everybody? They accept them as a matter of course, never realizing these benefits are an entitlement, which is a word they abhor. Their cry is to keep government out, not seeing they are benefiting from government in their healthcare already.The kernel of the debate is simply that good healthcare has become the right of every citizen in a civilized society — just as we have come to see public education for children and safety-net income for seniors as rights.And, if healthcare is a right, it should not be turned over to the private sector for profit — and huge profits at that! It’s no wonder lobbyists are being paid millions by private healthcare companies to protect their lucrative ventures!It is sad to see the amount of energy expended by these vehement, ill-informed naysayers, who are falling under the spell of fear and prejudice fomented by those whose motives are mainly profit-driven and not for the good of all.
2011年9月16日星期五
Amazing Grace and the superhighway
Icouldn’t move my eyes away from the television and the formidable figure on the screen. Rosetta Stone V3 A little old lady, wearing a U.S. Navy uniform, waving a short piece of wire and forcefully speaking of “nanoseconds” commanded my view. Grace Hopper was largely unknown to the public and completely unknown to me in 1983. However, she was about to leave the obscurity of the computing world and teach us all a lesson.Grace Murray Hopper was born Dec. 9, 1906, in New York City. Her mathematical intellect was evident as a young child and her curiosity regarding the working of mechanical items led her mother to ban her from taking apart any more of the household clocks.Her interests were boundless. She made the furniture, curtains and rugs for the dollhouse she kept all her life. She learned to knit, do needlework and took piano lessons. She mastered several languages, played basketball, took a ride in a barnstorming plane and earned a doctorate in mathematics and physics — a rarity for a woman at the time.In the early years of World War II, Grace, a teacher at Vassar College, volunteered to join the U.S. Navy and despite failing to meet the minimum weight requirement was allowed to join the WAVES (Women Accepted for Emergency Service) and received assignment to the Bureau of Ordinance Computation Project. This assignment would change her career from a college teacher to a computer pioneer.It was a wartime rush and the “computer engine” Grace faced had many errors. Her task was to program the Mark Rosetta Stone German I into a workable machine for the Navy. During this time, a relay in the computer failed and upon inspection, Grace and others found a dead moth in the relay. Plucking it out and placing it in the logbook, Grace remarked that they had “debugged” the computer. She was later credited with popularizing the term.After the war, Grace stayed in the Navy saying, “it was more fun to program Navy computers than to teach college,” and continued her work that foreshadowed the enormous developments in digital computing.The idea that led to her perhaps best-known accomplishment, the development of the AO compiler, came from her days playing basketball as a youth. The forward pass, which moved the ball ahead from one player to another became her inspiration for the compiler and her later achievement, co-developing COBOL (COmmon Business-Oriented Language).Grace continued her naval career, retiring and “unretiring” twice before involuntarily retiring in 1985 as the oldest officer in the U.S. Navy and the only woman admiral in its history. However, Adm. Grace Hopper did not retire from continuing to teach us lessons.With her nickname of “Amazing Grace,” she continued her work in the private sector and [Rosetta Stone] continued to stress the value of education. She emphasized the importance of understanding the nanosecond — defined as the distance electricity could travel in one-billionth of a second, which she illustrated with an approximate 11.8-inch piece of wire. She continued to be a woman of almost visible energy with an irreverent, lively speaking style and a motto of “go head and do it, it’s easier to apologize later than get permission.”She was a futurist in the world of computers. Her work encompassed the basis of digital science and she made the space for women to participate in the sciences on an equal basis. During her long and valuable service, Grace received many awards, including the Defense Distinguished Service Medal and the Legion of Merit.Later, in 1997, the Navy commissioned the USS Hopper, a guided missile destroyer, to serve proudly with her name — only the second time a warship had been Rosetta Stone Hindi named for a woman from the Navy’s own ranks.As Grace accepted each award, she would say gracious thanks for the honor but always added, “I have already received the highest award, which is the honor and privilege of serving proudly in the United States Navy.” Throughout her life, with respect to her many accomplishments, she was most proud of her service to her country. She died Jan. 1, 1992, and was buried with full naval honors in Arlington National Cemetery on Jan. 7.A proud Naval officer, a brilliant scientist, a bold, gutsy woman. An amazing, Grace.
2011年9月15日星期四
'Funny Story' should be more so
Focus FeaturesKeir Gilchrist, left, plays Craig, a well-to-do student who signs himself into Rosetta Stone V3 a psych ward and meets Bobby (Zach Galifianakis, center) and Noelle (Emma Roberts, right) in It s Kind of a Funny Story. “It’s Kind of a Funny Story” really isn’t so funny. Cute, bordering on cutesy, yes. Light and shallow and inconsequential in a lot of ways. But funny? Rarely.Based on a Ned Vizzini novel about a 16-year-old who checks himself into an adult mental ward and discovers something about himself and the troubled souls around him, it stumbles pleasantly and predictably down that fine line between “sweetly sensitive” and “trite.”Keir Gilchrist stars as Craig, an upper-class kid in a magnet school who is sweating grades, an application to a prestigious summer school for future Wall Street barons, his best friend’s girlfriend and a family that doesn’t seem to get him. He’s worried his dreams of jumping off the Brooklyn Bridge will become more than dreams, so he nags a doctor into admitting him to Three North, a psych ward in a New York hospital.'IT'S KIND OF A FUNNY STORY' out of Starring Keir Gilchrist, Zach Galifianakis, Emma Roberts, Viola Davis, Lauren Graham and Jim Gaffigan.A Focus Features film directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck. Produced by Kevin Misher. Written by Boden and Fleck. Based on the novel "It's Kind of a Funny Story," by Ned Vizzini. 98 minutes. PG-13 for mature thematic issues, sexual content, drug material and language. That’s where he meets the eccentric and wounded Bobby (Zach Galifianakis), his tour guide to the world of schizophrenia, dementia, depression and self-injury. Yes, there’s a cute “cutter” there, Noelle (Emma Roberts), who might bring out Craig’s emo side. If only he can stop “stress Rosetta Stone French V3 vomiting” and panicking over what his friends and family will think, and over the minimum stay he’s signed onto.The ward is peppered with “types,” which is unfortunate, since even the leading characters aren’t drawn with any real depth. There’s a Hasidic Jew confined after a bad acid trip, the elderly schizophrenic who bellows “It’ll come to you” to one and all, and Bobby and Noelle — both of whom must have tragic backgrounds, but which the movie, like its self-absorbed lead character, doesn’t care to learn.Gilchrist comes off as a younger, duller Justin Long. The haircut doesn’t help, dude.Nor do the film’s jarring and off-key fantasy sequences, such as imagining everybody in music therapy pitching in on an overly appropriate Bowie/Queen song.And co-directors Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck rely on a confused voice-over narration in which our hero occasionally blurts out the obvious. (“I know this is only the beginning.”)Their breakout film “Half Nelson” looks like more of a fluke with every new outing.Here’s what “It’s Kind of a Funny Story” gets right: It doesn’t trivialize teen angst, but it does contextualize it. Showing a kid who is overwhelmed and demonstrating to him that his problems, while real, don’t Rosetta Stone Software compare to people with more serious illnesses and struggles, suggests that empathy is part of his cure. There cannot be a more positive message in a movie about mental illness, even one as trivial as this one often is.— Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
2011年9月13日星期二
Rip it up ... and start again
Speech therapy transformed King George VI’s life. It was thanks to an Australian speech Rosetta Stone Spanish V3 therapist that he was able to overcome his stammer. The story of their relationship has now been made into a film, The King's Speech, which has been nominated for a handful of Golden Globes and is due to be released in the UK in January. King George, played by Colin Firth, was thrust into the limelight following his brother's shock abdication. The film charts how his speech therapist, played by Geoffrey Rush, helped him conquer his debilitating stutter to address the nation on the eve of war. The transformative power of speech therapy and the depth of the bond between patient and therapist is one to which Scottish singer Edwyn Collins can attest. Here, Collins and his speech and language therapist speak together for the first time. Collins almost died in 2005 when he suffered two massive brain haemorrhages within a week. He woke in a hospital bed to the terrifying discovery that he had been robbed of the power of speech, a condition known as aphasia. He was lucky to be alive; the morbidity of his condition is incredibly high and his recovery was blighted when he caught MRSA following an operation to his skull. Six months in hospital, I couldn't say anything, only yes', no' and Rosetta Stone English the possibilities are endless' over and over again,says Collins, who famously fronted the band Orange Juice before going solo. Does he remember the period after the brain haemorrhages? No, not clearly. I suppose I was quite tranquil and dozing a lot in hospital. For his partner and manager Grace Maxwell, however, his situation was all too real. Five weeks after he was admitted to hospital she was concerned that he wasn't yet receiving speech therapy. In a campaign launched this month called Giving Voice, the Royal College of Speech and Language therapists highlights the life-changing benefits of speech therapy and stresses the importance of early intervention. I went out on a quest to find somebody,says Maxwell. I was panic stricken about Edwyn's aphasia. It was complete and total. I was like a headless chicken. I had been told that there would be no assistance for his speech and language in hospital even though he was in a stroke unit. Sally Ghibaldan became Collins's speech and language therapist. When I first met Edwyn, from an understanding language point of view he was very good,recalls Ghibaldan. He followed day to day conversation incredibly well. Occasionally he would answer quite out of context so there may have still been some understanding problems going on. His speech was very hesitant. As an adult neuro-specialist, Ghibaldan works with a range of patients who have suddenly acquired a neurological problem from strokes and head injuries. She admits that Collins was different from other patients. He was a pretty unusual patient in the way he expressed himself,says Ghibaldan. Because he was a lyricist essentially, he used very Rosetta Stone Software unusual, beautiful words and would say things in a roundabout way. He was never direct and to-the-point. At first, his language appeared so simplistic and he'd suddenly come out with the most amazing words.
2011年9月10日星期六
TechStars Showcases 12 Diverse Start-ups at Boston Demo Day
TechStars, the No. 1 startup accelerator, is today showcasing 12 companies Rosetta Stone that have completed its 2011 Boston program. This year’s program includes founders from Israel, Estonia and the UK, as well as Nashville, Austin and Boston, from recent college graduates to professionals with 20 years of industry experience, and companies ranging from a knowledge-base service using artificial intelligence, to an online learning platform, and a portable medical device.The TechStars companies presenting at the 2011 Boston Demo Day are: EverTrue – an intelligence platform that connects donor CRMs to the social graph, providing the first meaningful fundraising data service. Ginger.io – a behavioral analytics company using mobile devices to collect big data for personal and enterprise healthcare applications. GrabCAD – connects CAD engineers with manufacturing and product development companies, to reduce time and cost spent on designing models, finding a partner for drafting jobs or designing and building a new prototype product. GrabCAD also provides a free CAD model library. Help Scout – the only email-based customer service solution tailored for small and medium-sized businesses, combining the personal touch of email with the scalability of a help desk. Kinvey – The first Backend as a Service, making it ridiculously easy for developers to setup, use and maintain cloud backends for mobile apps. Memrise – an online learning platform that combines the best insights from the art and science of memory to provide extraordinarily effective, game-like learning experiences. Placester – making real estate advertising simple and effective, connecting online publishers and real estate professionals, on a pay-for-performance basis. Promoboxx –Rosetta Stone Hindi the first online promotion platform that allows brands to launch, promote and track online social marketing campaigns with their retailers. Senexx – a company that uses artificial intelligence (natural language processing) to connect people within corporations in need of information, with the information owner, by unlocking trapped knowledge in emails, Sharepoint and other systems. Spill – an online anonymous peer support system that connects communities of individuals who are experiencing similar life problems. Strohl Medical – an “EKG for stroke”. The Tap Lab – creators of TapCity, the first massively multiplayer city-building game set in the real world, and the first of many titles on their real-world gaming platform.So far, one company has already closed $1.1 million in funding, while all other companies are still actively seeking investment.“The broad range of industries in Boston creates a rich mentor community with a wide variety of backgrounds,” said David Cohen, Founder and CEO of TechStars. “The breadth of this talent pool allows TechStars in Boston to accept a diverse group of high-quality companies, and to encourage and support their creativity in a very meaningful way.”“I’ve been blown Rosetta Stone Italian away by the ever-growing depth and commitment of mentorship that this community has given to the TechStars teams,” said Katie Rae, Managing Director of the TechStars program in Boston. “Each year the Boston community has rallied to support TechStars, establishing it as a growing anchor within the local startup ecosystem.”TechStars, which operates nationally in 4 cities, is currently mentoring 12 companies to be showcased in August in Boulder, and will be announcing companies selected for its Seattle and New York programs taking place during the summer in the coming weeks. In 2011, TechStars received over 3,000 applications for approximately 50 positions at the five programs taking place, making the accelerator program harder to get into than Harvard or Yale with an acceptance rate of approximately 1.50%.About TechStarsTechStars ( techstars.org) is an elite mentorship-driven start-up accelerator, recently recognized as the #1 accelerator program. Founded in 2006, the TechStars philosophy focuses on deep mentorship, and surrounding a small number of companies with highly engaged members of the entrepreneurial ecosystem to coach and support them to success. The Rosetta Stone Languages TechStars community currently includes more than 300 mentors, more than 1000 investors, and 78 alumni TechStars companies. TechStars currently operates 5 programs each year: Boulder, Boston, Seattle, New York (winter) and New York (summer). TechStars is funded by more than 50 venture capital firms, and more than 25 angel investors. Information on applying to TechStars can be found at techstarsapply.
2011年9月9日星期五
Volunteers to help students, city residents file their taxes
The start of a new semester can be demanding, but when combined with tax season, it can create Rosetta Stone Languages difficulties for students and families. Beta Alpha Psi, an academic fraternity open to accounting and finance majors, is offering to do your taxes for free.Volunteer Income Tax Assistance is a program sponsored by the Internal Revenue Service and implemented by Beta Alpha Psi and the Emanuel Community Development Corporation. The program is opening a site at the Rutgers Student Center on the College Avenue campus from Feb. 6 to April 3, said Beta Alpha Psi President Ryan McDonough, a Rutgers Business School senior. Students can meet with members of the fraternity by appointment from 1 to 4 p.m. on Fridays in the student center atrium, McDonough said."VITA is something we've always done, I've always pushed to have a site on campus, so this year we're going to be doing it at the student center," McDonough said. "We have people to more than cover the community, we want as many people to know about it as possible." VITA is a national program providing free assistance to low-income, elderly, limited-English proficient and disabled individuals who require assistance in preparing their tax returns and cannot afford the services of a paid professional tax preparer, according to a press release.All 110 members of Beta Alpha Psi are required to participate and train for 10 hours to receive basic certification in order help students and families who have an income of less than $39,000 a year fill out their tax returns, McDonough said. "I make sure that everyone in Beta Alpha Psi knows that they have to train; [fraternity members] do it because they want to be accountants and they haven't had much client experience," said the fraternity's Community Service Advisor Bassem Wadie, a Livingston College senior accounting major.The IRS distributes packets and training programs, which William Johnson, the program coordinator for the Emanuel Community Development Corporation, uses to train VITA members to attain their certification. "This is our fourth year, our second with Beta Alpha Psi," he said. "We want to double our production from last year, and that would be at least 1,200 returns Rosetta Stone V3 completed and $1 million in tax refunds to the community."McDonough said he wanted to involve Beta Alpha Psi in more community projects. "We do financial accounting tutoring for Introduction to Accounting courses at the Livingston Learning Center, but that's to a select number of people," he said. "We're also helping [the Emanuel Community Development Corporation] to achieve their goals, that's another reason we wanted to do this Rutgers site."McDonough said it was a logical service since students love free stuff, plus they will get money back. School of Arts and Sciences sophomore Konstantin Tavadze echoed this sentiment. "I think it'd be awesome [to have taxes done] for free," Tavadze said.Wadie said the fraternity's members are not doing complicated returns. "A lot of people don't know how much money they can get back and they're just happy that we found money for them," he said.McDonough said the average tax return takes an estimated 30 minutes."We'll be doing about four or five tax returns an hour, hopefully," he said.Beta Alpha Psi's advisor Marjorie Yuschak, a professor at the Business School, said last year's program was a big breakthrough because everything became computerized. "Because everything was done manually [in previous years], it took longer and is really not as accurate," Yuschak said. "Now we can take advantage of the computer database which gives us the ability to process so many more returns."McDonough said the typical appointment will begin with a fraternity member first interviewing a student or client to make sure they have all of their documents. The client will then sit with one of the fraternity volunteers to go through the actual tax return, plug the numbers into a computer program and finally do a quality review, which is mandated by the IRS, before they e-file the return. "The IRS knows that we are volunteer tax preparers, Rosetta Stone English so the IRS then reviews [the tax return] and if they reject it, we just fix the problem," McDonough said. "When the IRS accepts it you know its just as good as paying for your taxes to be done."School of Arts and Sciences first-year student Michael Bruno, a business major, said he has done his own taxes before. "I don't think it's so bad, but I think it's [a good program] if you don't know how to do your tax return," he said. "It's cool to teach people, so they can do it in the future."Wadie said they often help families and students find credits they could have missed out on without the help of someone experienced with tax law. "There's something called the Earned Income [Tax] Credit; it's estimated that millions of families miss this credit and to have a service like this, it helps them to be able to catch that," he said. "A non-English speaking family would potentially miss a lot of credits that would potentially help them."McDonough said they can also print their tax returns in Spanish this year. Beta Alpha Psi has been a part of the University community for more than 10 years. The office is located in the Janice H. Levin Building on Livingston campus, and membership in the fraternity is open to finance and accounting majors, but any interested party can volunteer to help with VITA.Beta Alpha Psi will also be providing the service on Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m at the New Brunswick Public Library on Livingston Avenue. There will be five Rosetta Stone Languages VITA sites set up throughout New Brunswick, Johnson said.Students interested in making an appointment to meet with a fraternity member at the Rutgers Student Center on the College Avenue.
City jump-starts 2010 census count
In preparation for the 2010 census count starting in March, New Brunswick Mayor Jim Cahill Rosetta Stone Store announced the creation of a committee to spread awareness of the count and its importance.Cahill, speaking at City Hall, said the goal of the New Brunswick Complete Count Committee, composed of community leaders, is to achieve a full and fair count of more than 50,000 residents."Once reached, New Brunswick will become eligible for increased federal funding, more programs and services that we provide to our residents," Cahill said.United States Census Bureau Partnership Coordinator Reva Sears said the federal government has about $400 billion to allocate to communities based on the census results."It's about bringing more money back to our community," Sears said.This money could be used for improved housing, education, social service programs and other resources and services, she said."We have to make 50,000 mainly so that we can apply for more money," Complete Count Committee Co-Chair Roy Epps said. "It's as simple as that."He said while 50,000 residents is the goal, the committee is going to shoot for a count of 52,500 residents.Changes have been made to make the process simpler, Sears said. Households will no longer receive a long census form as they had in the past, but rather a 10-question questionnaire.Before 2000, every sixth household received the long form questionnaire to fill out, she said. The American Community Survey, a more detailed questionnaire that will be sent out every month not every decade and to a smaller portion of the population, is replacing the long form this year.This was changed because it took about five years to tabulate the information from the long form, Sears said. Communities would change too much and too quickly for the information to still be effective and relevant for use."This is the message that we're sending now: that it's a much simpler form, there's no long form anymore, [and there are] very simple questions," said Rosetta Stone Cheap Complete Count Committee Co-Chair Mariam Merced.It is important people understand why the census is conducted and for everyone to make sure they participate, she said."The requirements are really simple," Sears said. "You need to be human, you need to be breathing [and] you need to be living anywhere in New Brunswick."The census is safe for all who participate, including undocumented residents, Sears said. All information given to the United States Census Bureau is strictly confidential and not shared with police or other federal agencies."Title 13 of the U.S. Code protects your confidentiality," she said. "This is the message that we need to get out."The only information shared is statistical data, Sears said. The government may use this to redraw district lines for congressional representation or businesses may use it to consider relocating to an area. Census questionnaires will be mailed or delivered to homes on March 19 to be mailed back by April 1, Sears said. Households will be mailed a second form if the first is not received.There are also questionnaire assistance centers where people can fill out the form or ask for assistance, Sears said. The form is available in 10 different languages.If no form is received, census workers will visit homes up to six times, she said."This is how important it is that everybody is counted in your community," Sears said. College students are counted in the city their college is located in, she said. Colleges Rosetta Stone Italian V3 are responsible for counting their own students, and households are asked to leave college students off their questionnaire."In the committee, there are representatives from the University to make sure that the students who live here are counted here," Merced said.New Brunswick is a college town, and since students use the resources of the city, they need to participate in the census, she said.Incarcerated and military persons are also counted separately, Sears said.The bureau is also working hard to count those living on the streets or in shelters, she said."We are working with those organizations that work with that population to make sure they have a part in this to be counted," Sears said. Merced said the committee has been working since last summer to prepare for and spread information Rosetta Stone Languages about the count.In the 2000 census, the government counted 48,573 residents in New Brunswick, Cahill said."The 2000 census was the first in 40 years to show a significant change in our city's population," he said. "New Brunswick was found to be the fastest-growing urban center in the state of New Jersey."The city has improved many homes since then, he said. The committee is working to count as many residents as possible to show the city's progress as one of the fastest growing cities in the state.
2011年9月8日星期四
Huge canvases stand on large easels
A thick mound of oil paint, built up over the years, stands like a stalagmite. Underneath lies the artists Rosetta Stone V3 original palette; on top are dozens of empty oil paint tubes. A collector once tried to buy this impressive relic, but Morrison waved him away. Displayed in a gallery of modern art, it would be an interesting installation piece. Instead it stands as testimony to the frenzy of painting that is Morrisons life: a love affair with colour and landscape and a type of creation that, for him, is an act of devotion to another, higher creator.For me, its all about one day doing that great piece of art, the best that I have ever done. Thats what makes me do this, and it is very elusive, he says.Reluctantly, Morrison has had to temper his compulsion to paint. In 2007, I was stressed out. I was doing too much. I was churning out about 1500 works a year, from tiny ones to really big ones. He has halved that output now. I was physically stressed out. The painting takes over. I wasnt well: my blood pressure was sky high. You just cannot stop, he recalls, shaking his head. I have always been like that: when I was teaching, and had my six weeks off in the summer, I should have been out with the boys, playing football. But I wasnt. I was in my corner of the house, painting. I have always been obsessive about it. [The artist] Joan Eardley said painting is like breathing, and thats how I have always felt about it. It is in your psyche. Is painting an escape, a way of temporarily avoiding real life? No, he says quickly. Then he concedes: Maybe it is an escape. But Im not really one to escape from anything. Escapism means you are trying to escape from something. Im not. Or maybe I am. The studio contains a large pile of documents, the list of entries to the Jolomo Award. A shortlist of potential winners Rosetta Stone German will be announced at the end of this month. Morrison established the award, not, as some believe, as a kind of anti-Turner Prize . Morrison actually appreciates some conceptual art, having taught it while teaching art at Lochgilphead High School, and marked it when he was an art assessor for the Scottish Examination Board for 20 years. His middle son, Peter (now 35), exhibited his own paintings at the GSA alongside much conceptual work.No, says Morrison, the award is not anti-anything. Rather it is for landscape painting, a way of encouraging the continuance of a tradition he cherishes. I felt that in the art colleges, painting in general was dying and landscape painting was nowhere to be seen, he says. The Glasgow Boys, the Colourists, Joan Eardley that lineage produced brilliant work. For that to stop, to die out, would be sacrilege to me. He traces his love of the countryside to his childhood: there were frequent holidays to his familys hut in Carbeth, and stories from his fathers family croft in north Harris. Morrison now has a house and studio on Mull. Im a painter, and I love the land, he says. We have been here in Tayvallich for 40 years and I don’t get tired of the views. Even on a day like this, I love the rain, I love a storm, I love the snow. Those things resonate with me. In the New Years honours list, Morrison received an OBE for his devotion to art and to the vocation of caring (he and Maureen are patrons of the Princess Royal Trust for Carers). He says he was gobsmacked by the award and the publicity that came with it. One interviewer asked whether it would change his life.Of course not. For me, health and family are the most important things, Rosetta Stone Software he says. After that comes God. Perhaps God should come first, but if you havent got health then you have had it. God is up there, though. Happiness should come from that, if happiness is the main thing in life. He asks if I have seen Shadowlands, the movie starring Anthony Hopkins about the tragic later life of the overtly Christian writer CS Lewis. I always like that film, he says. There is that bit where CS Lewis says he doesn’t know whether God means us to be happy. Its an interesting thought. Morrison points his finger at his beloved Argyll, its beauty drenched in rain beyond the glass wall of the studio.Happiness is kind of elusive, he says. Youre probably thinking, Imagine living in a place like this, where it rains all the time. But that goes, the sun comes out, the blue sky comes and it is stunning. Happiness and pain go together.
2011年9月6日星期二
Cryptopowah Announces Learn Chinese 2003 - Learn Chinese With Modern Technology
Learn Chinese 2003 provides a Chinese-English Rosetta Stone Languages dictionary containing 16,000 characters (about all characters of modern Chinese) that you can select in personalized lists. A special set of 400 characters has been pre-selected by professional Chinese teachers as the most important ones. They represent the most used characters in modern Chinese (Talks, TV, newspapers, etc.). The beginner will aim at learning them first, because they represent 70% of commonly used characters.User-personalized lists will feed the quizzes system - the software s core - so that the student can practice and Rosetta Stone Cheap test his/her knowledge. Being able to recognize characters from their pronunciation, selecting the right character among randomly selected sinograms (Chinese characters) are examples among the 6 exercises available. Statistics will help students monitor their daily progress.Thanks to a unique modules system, users Rosetta Stone Spain Spanish V3 are able to build custom character libraries allowing to follow exactly their Chinese lessons on their textbook or Chinese course. Cryptopowah is seeing this feature as an opportunity to let users share their knowledge and learning methods using the Learn Chinese 2003 platform.Learn Chinese 2003 runs under Windows NT4 / 2000 / XP. A trial Rosetta Stone version is available for free on lchinese where it may be purchased securely for $31.99 US or 25.00 EUR.
The title is just my old army number
The title is just my old army number. In the depths of my December depression, feeling at one Rosetta Stone V3 point that the struggle was no longer worth the pain, I remembered the advice of Theodore Roosevelt's, the 26th U.S. President, which a friend of mine is fond of quoting. Start where you are, Roosevelt would say, With what you have. Now. And thus it was that, at around half past three of a dark and dreary morning, I felt a relief like walking from death into life. I decided to take this advice. The effect was instantaneous: of happiness sweeping through me, displacing gloom. At last, I realised, it was time for me to be honest. So, just a week before Christmas I gave the owner of a little neighbourhood shop all my remaining copies of 473959'. Since I had got into the occasional habit of buying my newspaper there, the lady owner had become acquainted. I found her startlingly intelligent to be managing a small convenience store; but perhaps that is not an accident either. I asked her to give these copies away free. She read it first; then agreed. 473959 is not a fancy book. It was produced in hurry: this shows. It does, however, describe the experience of God first hand: then the struggle to communicate something of it; then the further surprise of discovering that I had chosen to teach the very subject, mathematics, that does this best. But of course another reason can be found for the moral structure of mathematics: the fact that it is prepared to treat everyone equally. How else it may be asked could it have evolved so successfully otherwise? Rosetta Stone German The answer, of course, is that it could easily have remained the secret of elite societies like the Pythagorean Brotherhood (which, incidentally, included women). Even the Renaissance mathematicians jealously guarded their secrets from each other. But this is really a chicken and egg problem. More instructive is the story of the elephant and the wise men. All were blindfolded then led to a quietly standing pachyderm and invited to describe it. One at once declared, This is certainly a tree.' Another insisted: No, a hose-pipe!' Another: A battering ram!' Yet another: Here's another hose-pipe'! This is sadly also like the enthusiasts who cry: Ours alone is the truth!, whilst others shout, No, definitely ours!, and another, Surely, ours!- and so on, ad infinitum. Such people preach humility, but are rarely humble. Religions are superior to science because they offer everyone the right freely to feel and express intense emotion. Science is superior to religions in accepting that all knowledge is provisional: that wisdom must evolve. Science has also tended to deprecate emotion. But we now know that, whilst emotions are not required by reason, it is the emotion of joy which tells reason that it may finally have made the most fruitful connection. Without this very particular emotion, reason can only produce every other kind of connection, mostly trivial.* This joy of discovery is something that even very young children can experience. Once experienced, it will transform their lives. Nothing is more addictive. Neither religions nor science are complete in themselves. Both must obey the same evolutionary rule. Simply expressed, it is that any species which best learns to use all its talents is more likely to survive; whilst the species which does not learn to use all its talents is less likely to survive. We can teach this in our schools. And if I am still invited to the Arab Thought Forum this year, this is what Rosetta Stone Software I shall try to explain there. Please wish me success! Colin Hannaford,Oxford, January 2010. (edited Snodgrass)* This fundamental connection was first pointed out by the neurologist Antonio Damasio in his book Descartes' Error' (Putnam, 1994).
2011年9月5日星期一
The Global Search for Education: New Zealand is Ready!
C. M. Rubin -- If you have a high stakes/low trust model of accountability, then you’re Rosetta Stone Store in trouble before you begin....Prime Minister John Key and young New Zealanders celebrate 100 Days to Go to Rugby World Cup 2011. (Photo courtesy of RWCNZ 2011)New Zealands Stadium of Four Million is ready to host the 2011 Rugby World Cup on September 9.In its world cup bid for the championship, this unique multicultural nation (with the most highly ranked rugby team in the world) promised to provide optimum world class rugby facilities where players would be inspired to perform at their very best. New Zealand also promised to create an environment where players and fans would be safe and welcomed.So how does a country which values its sports so highly support and nurture its younger fans and players in their equally important educational paths? ?It should be noted that New Zealand ranks much higher than the US in the global standardized PISA test (7th in both Science and Reading and 13th in Math).What is New Zealands vision for its teachers, its students, its curriculum, and for learning?I recently got the opportunity to discuss these important questions with Dr. Rosemary Hipkins, the distinguished Chief Researcher of New Zealands Council for Educational Research.What kind of educational system will permit a country to have the people skills needed to compete globally?A system with a high trust/low stakes model of accountability. If you have a high stakes/low trust model of accountability, then Rosetta Stone V3 you’re in trouble before you begin because teachers won’t feel safe enough to be innovative. If you don’t believe that your teachers are professionals and can try things out in different ways, then you are never going to change anything. So I put a system with a high trust and low stakes model of accountability at the top of the list.A system where curriculum and assessment policy are conveyed via flexible frameworks that leave space for local interpretation based on student learning needs. If you have the right model, it will leave space for teachers to interpret and use it based on their learners.The New Zealand Curriculum is a framework that applies some very high level principles that all schools are supposed to use. It specifies why each principle is important but it leaves it to schools to assemble the pieces as they believe they will work for their students. So there are a lot of different models. Each model should be implemented in conjunction with the whole school community so that everybody (parents/teachers/students) understands what the school is trying to achieve. Our secondary school system also has a flexible framework that I think is very unusual around the world. I don’t think many people have been German Rosetta Stone brave enough to do what we’ve done in New Zealand.For an educational system to achieve, it has to involve the whole community. Parents need to understand why schooling is different from the time they were schooled.And again, we need to believe that teachers are professionals and create the conditions that make it possible for teachers to work like professionals.For example, something we’ve been experimenting with in New Zealand is building professional learning networks for teachers, both inside schools and across schools. While this is Rosetta Stone not yet national (roughly about a third of our teachers in secondary schools are in the program), it’s going very well.
2011年9月2日星期五
It’s Cool to Learn
The other day our lovely suburban neighborhood was Rosetta Stone Spanish V3 saturated with police presence. No wailing sirens or skidding stops, but cars rolling up and down all the streets which form the perimeter around the public high school building.It was a special event, setting off fear in the hearts of officialdom that it might be exploited for vandalism and other public disturbances. Apparently long experience had informed their behavior. You never know what fuse might be ignited at such a time. In the end nothing happened and the flammable moment fizzled. What was the occasion? It was the last day of school. The police may be forgiven their presumption. Most of them grew up like me, at a time when attending school was a despised activity. We went because we had to and the notion it might be enjoyed was remote from our consciousness. School was a place of pressures, of niggling obligations, of confinement in cramped spaces, of neutered individuality, of people making themselves big by making you small, of boring information delivered by boring people. Teachers sat at the head of the class looking every bit as miserable as we felt. When the last day game we ran riotously through the schoolyard yelling: No more pencils, no more books, no more teachers dirty looks! And we meant every word of it. One friend of mine since childhood, now the principal of a large school, told me in all earnestness that from first through twelfth grade he looked at his watch every five minutes on average. Rosetta Stone Italian V3 All this brings us to a fascinating observation, one which I am convinced is true. It has become a shibboleth in conservative circles to grumble about decline in education. They tell us that in Togo they know more math and in Malta more science, in Brunei we are eclipsed in language while in Ghana they outdo us in history. Here too, we hear, once stood rickety schoolhouses cobbled from planks but brimful of learning. Once folks knew the sonnets of the Bard, now we are lucky if they know Mary Had a Little Lamb, and then only if the lamb is housed in humane conditions. To which I say bunk. Todays kids know as much as we did, and they have the advantage of doing so happily.When I attended in the 1960s the same sort of Jewish parochial school my kids do today Jewish studies from 8 to 11:30, lunch, secular studies from 12:30 to 4 the teachers were permitted to spank. Even those who spared the rod were caustic in verbally flailing the weak. We lived on the defensive, moaning when the vitriol struck us, cringing when it targeted our friends. Those educators presumably meant well, but this was their sense of how wisdom is imparted: in an adversarial context, by subjugating the will of the recipient. Rosetta Stone Software Today all that is gone, at least in this country, merely an unpleasant memory. Teachers speak pleasantly, give children positive reinforcement, do a lot of politically correct mumbo-jumbo about how everyone is a winner, and allow rules to assume a frightening degree of elasticity. They send mixed messages by instituting competitions and then giving an award to most everyone. You have to stand on your own two feet, they say, unless you can only spare one and a half, or one, or a half, or none at all. And yet despite a total lack of spine and an overabundance of heart, these children know every bit as much as we did, and they do it while loving school.
We then provide all interested future Soldiers a web destination (Goarmy) where they can find answers to questions
In addition, the US Army Recruiting team has more than 60,000 Facebook fans, more Rosetta Stone V3 than 41,000 Twitter followers, more than 92,000 MySpace fans, and nearly 800 YouTube subscribers. Recognizing that potential recruits (18 to 24 year olds) are more engaged with social media than traditional media, social media is really evolving the way we communicate with recruiting audiences, and Army Strong Stories creates an opportunity to strengthen relationships, encourage participation and foster dialogue through shared military experiences. 7) What are you currently involved with in terms of high school and college recruitment and how are you doing it?High school and college recruitment is traditionally done by occasional campus visits by Army recruiters, but more now we find ourselves reaching out to our audience via social media channels and telling the Army story peer-to-peer. We then provide all interested future Soldiers a web destination (Goarmy) where they can find answers to questions. When they are ready, prospects can find and connect with a recruiter nearby via GoArmy and schedule a first visit. Where can a typical high school student get more information?If students are interested in having an in-person conversation with an Army representative, they can arrange a meeting with their local recruiter or other students participating in ROTC. Most high schools have some connection to ROTC and students can check with their guidance counselors to obtain the right contacts. With that said, Rosetta Stone Greek more than 17,000,000 young people each year go to GoArmy to find their answers and 30,000 a week are turning to ArmyStrongStories to validate the life of an unfiltered Army Soldier.9) Some schools do not have ROTC- do you have a web site where these web surfers can get more information?Perhaps the best place to start is ArmyStrongStories to see real-life, honest testimonials about what life in the Army is like from Soldiers and their supporters and get answers directly from people living the Army life on a daily basis. After deciding that the Army is definitely the choice for them, students should then visit GoArmy, where students can find everything from education and career information, details about post-graduate service, Army benefits, videos about Soldier life, and even chat with an Army representative. For specific information on ROTC programs, students should also visit the ROTC page on GoArmy. There's even a page for high school students on GoArmy that answers specific questions they might have. If a student is interested in a particular college or university's Army ROTC program, they should do a preliminary Internet search for the university name and Army ROTC to connect with Rosetta Stone Software university specific program details. 10) Is there any difference between high school and college ROTC?Yes, there is a huge difference between the two programs. High school has what is officially titled Junior ROTC and is not at all focused, nor allowed by law, to be a pre-commissioning track to officership. Instead, the high school Junior ROTC program is designed to teach the fundamentals of good citizenship, with some physical fitness components to improve students' overall health. On the other hand, college ROTC is specifically designed to prepare all classroom participants to become Army officers in the Active Army, Army Reserve or Army National Guard. This of course follows graduation with a bachelor's degree, and is pending completion of all required ROTC class work, field leadership and skills, physical fitness, and physical health.
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