Friday, July 19, 2013

Bad policies in education reform law | Your Daily Update Blog

From all the pounding of chests and declarations of victory from both sides of the aisle, one would think the 2013 education reform bill passed by the Iowa Legislature and signed into law by the governor was the panacea for Iowa?s education system. The truth is a large portion of the legislation will come back to haunt the Legislature.

The education reform bill was a broad, meandering piece of legislation that included items such as student assessments, teacher compensation guidelines and allowable growth. The bill also included special interest demands, such as decreasing parental accountability by making assessments for home school children optional, limiting the state?s oversight of non-public schools, permitting home school parents to teach driver?s education, and allowing home school parents to teach up to four unrelated students with little oversight by the state.

In separate legislation, increased financial support was provided to non-public schools through direct funding and tax credits. Together, the legislation moves our state further down the road toward privatization and inequity in education, fueled by the misleading notion of ?parental choice.?

As an example, any parent can choose to home school their child. The oversight of the student?s education includes a partnership between the family and the public education system. The partnership supports a parent in teaching the child at home but also ensures the parent successfully fulfills his or her obligation through assessments.

The education reform weakens that partnership. Now, the state has limited oversight and parents have no real accountability. One hopes all home school parents have the capability to fulfill the promise of a good education. However, logic should tell you not all parents can meet that obligation, and now the children in those families will undoubtedly fall through gaping cracks.

Religious conservatives tout parent choice, home schooling, online options, vouchers and charter schools. For-profit businesses have cropped up across the country to fill a niche and make a buck on the backs of children through private schools, charter schools and online learning. It?s a marriage made in heaven.

Progressives fall easily into the trap. What?s the harm? Isn?t choice a good thing? Shouldn?t parents have the final say?

Although to date, Iowa has placed limits on the business side of this equation, legislators continue to chip away at our state?s responsibility in oversight and accountability with home schooling and non-public schools. Each of these strategies alone may appear to do only minimal harm, but together they significantly weaken our educational system.

When the state creates bad public policy by relinquishing oversight and reducing accountability and continues to shift public funds from public education to private entities through allocation or credit, the entire education system is weakened. This negatively affects all students, but the greatest burden is placed on students in public schools.

Iowans believe in our schools and understand that a healthy and vibrant public education system is the greatest equalizer for all students. Legislators can claim a victory, but, in reality, education in Iowa lost this year.

Future legislative sessions should consider reversing course and put state oversight and parental accountability back into the private education part of the equation. In addition, with our country?s long tradition of separating the institutions of religion and government, the state should stop funneling public resources directly or indirectly to non-public schools, most of which are religiously based.

Source:http://www.press-citizen.com/article/20130718/OPINION02/307180026/Bad-policies-education-reform-law?nclick_check=1

Source: http://yourdailyupdateblog.com/archives/42750

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NCAA to end video game deal

Published: 7/18/2013 - Updated: 33 seconds ago

ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK ?? Hang on to NCAA Football 14, video game fans. It will be a collector?s edition.

The NCAA said it will no longer allow Electronic Arts Inc. to use its logo starting next year. The move ends a lucrative business deal with the gaming industry giant and comes as the NCAA fights a high-profile lawsuit that says the governing body owes billions of dollars to former players for allowing their likenesses to be used for free.

The NCAA said it won?t seek a new contract with EA Sports, which manufactures the popular game, beyond the current one that expires in June 2014. However, that won?t stop EA Sports from producing a college football video game depicting powerhouse schools like Alabama, Ohio State and Oregon, and the Redwood City, Calif.-based company made that clear Wednesday.

?EA Sports will continue to develop and publish college football games, but we will no longer include the NCAA names and marks,? said Andrew Wilson, executive vice president. ?Our relationship with the Collegiate Licensing Co. is strong and we are already working on a new game for next generation consoles which will launch next year and feature the college teams, conferences and all the innovation fans expect from EA Sports.?

The company reported $3.8 billion in net revenue during its last fiscal year and, aside from its NCAA Football franchise, is well known for Madden NFL, FIFA Soccer and other games.

EA Sports first began making an NCAA Football game in 1998 and it has generated more than $1.3 billion in sales in the U.S. alone, according to a spokesman for market tracking firm The NPD Group Inc. It wasn?t known how much of what EA makes from NCAA Football goes back to the NCAA and its members in licensing deals.

Todd Mitchell, senior analyst with New York-based Brean Capital LLC, said losing the NCAA brand isn?t likely to hurt EA Sports. He estimated NCAA Football accounts for only about 5 percent of EA Sports? revenue, or about $125 million.

?It?s nice to have the brand, but it?s more about the characters,? he said.

Analyst Colin Sebastian of R.W. Baird said EA Sports likely expected to lose its partnership with the NCAA.

?I?m sure they have thought about this because of this pending litigation and the worst case scenarios,? Sebastian said by telephone from San Francisco. ?I don?t expect it to have a significant impact on their business.?

NCAA Football allows participants to play as any major college football team, though unlike in its professional sports games, the names of players are not used. The similarities between the avatars in the game and actual college athletes are at the root of a fight that could alter the way the NCAA does business in the future.

The NCAA is in the midst of a long court battle that started with a lawsuit filed by former UCLA basketball star Ed O?Bannon after he was shown a video game with an avatar playing for the Bruins that played a lot like him.

The antitrust lawsuit also names EA and the Collegiate Licensing Co. that handles trademark licensing for dozens of schools, the NCAA and various conferences. The suit has expanded to include several former athletes who claim the NCAA and EA Sports used their names and likenesses without compensation and demand the NCAA find a way to give players a cut of the billions of dollars earned from live broadcasts, memorabilia sales and video games.

?We are confident in our legal position regarding the use of our trademarks in video games,? the NCAA said. ?But given the current business climate and costs of litigation, we determined participating in this game is not in the best interests of the NCAA.

?The NCAA has never licensed the use of current student-athlete names, images or likenesses to EA. The NCAA has no involvement in licenses between EA and former student-athletes,? it said in a statement.

Still, the NCAA said its members can seek arrangements with video game manufacturers if they wish.

?Member colleges and universities license their own trademarks and other intellectual property for the video game,? the NCAA said. ?They will have to independently decide whether to continue those business arrangements in the future.?

Michael Hausfeld, the lead attorney on the O?Bannon case, said the NCAA cutting ties with EA could provide greater freedom for EA to make deals with conferences, schools and even players.

?No longer would EA have to pretend the avatars are not the likenesses of the real players,? he said.

Source: http://www.toledoblade.com/sports/2013/07/18/NCAA-to-stop-putting-name-logo-on-EA-video-game-1.html

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

Union League Cafe in New Haven shares its Crispy Chicken With Basmati Rice and Mushroom Veloute (video)

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Peter Hvizdak ? Register photo: Chef Vuillermet browns the chicken breast to make it crispy.

Peter Hvizdak ? Register photo: Crispy Chicken With Basmati Rice and Mushroom Veloute from Union League Cafe in New Haven.

Peter Hvizdak ? Register photo: Jean-Pierre Vuillermet, Union League Cafe chef-owner, and his Crispy Chicken With Basmati Rice and Mushroom Veloute.

Found: Tina Cascio of East Haven was at the Cooking for CASA fundraiser at Amarante?s and was impressed by all the delicious fare offered by Greater New Haven restaurants. She asked me if I could get the recipe for a chicken dish that Union League Cafe, (1032 Chapel St., New Haven, www.unionleaguecafe.com) served.

Tina, get out your pans, since Jean-Pierre Vuillermet, executive chef and owner, was happy to share this recipe.

Crispy Chicken With Basmati Rice and Mushroom Veloute

2? pounds (4 pieces) boneless chicken breast with skin on

1 bunch green asparagus, blanched in salted water

Rice

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

? cup yellow onion, diced

2 tablespoons carrot, small dice

2 tablespoons celery, small dice Continued...

1 cup basmati rice

1 pinch curry powder

1 bay leaf

? teaspoon fresh thyme leaves

1? cups chicken broth

Salt and pepper to taste

? cup coconut milk

In a medium saucepan, heat vegetable oil. Add onion, carrot and celery and saute on low heat until onion starts to soften. Add rice, curry powder, thyme and bay leaf. Saute for another minute. Stir in the chicken broth, salt and pepper, cover pot and bring to a boil. Once it boils, lower heat and simmer for 15 minutes. Turn off heat and stir in coconut milk. Let sit for 5 minutes until liquid is absorbed, stir and serve.

Sauce

? tablespoon vegetable oil Continued...

1 tablespoon onion, chopped

1 small garlic clove

6-ounce package portobello mushrooms or white mushrooms, washed

1 tablespoon sherry or Madeira

1 cup chicken broth

? cup heavy cream

Salt and pepper to taste

In a saucepan, heat the vegetable oil. Add onion and garlic. Saute on medium heat for 30 seconds. Add the mushrooms and saute until the onion and mushrooms start to brown. Reduce the heat, and deglaze with the wine. Add chicken broth, heavy cream , salt and pepper. Bring back to a boil and simmer for 5 minutes. Puree in a blender until smooth. Put back in the pan and adjust the consistency with more chicken stock or heavy cream if too thick.

Preheat the oven to 450 degrees. Put ? tablespoon of vegetable oil in an ovenproof saute pan large enough to hold the chicken breasts in 1 layer without being overcrowded. Season the chicken with salt and pepper, place in the sauce pan, and sear them skin-side down on the stove for 1 minute. Place the pan in the oven for 15 minutes. Take pan out of oven and turn the chicken on the other side. Let rest for 5 minutes in the pan.

Re-heat the asparagus tips with a little butter or olive oil. Place the rice in the center of each plate and arrange the asparagus tips around the rice. Use leftover spears in another recipe. Split each chicken breast in half and place on top of rice. Spoon the mushroom veloute on top of all. Makes 4 servings. Continued...

Desperately seeking

Valerie Shanoff of Branford wrote, ?I would love to have the recipe for the ossobuco from Dalton?s Restaurant (2429 Foxon Road, North Branford, 203-481-4711, daltonct.com). I have had it many times and it gets better each time.?

Chef du Jour request

Recently, I wrote my first Chef du Jour profile (Denise Appel of Zinc) here in Food. This column features an interview with an area chef, where you learn more about these creative people, their passions and how and why they got into the business. They also share favorite seasonal recipes. I asked, in the column if there is a chef in mind whom you would like me to interview.

Patricia Garcia of New Haven wrote, ?I think you would enjoy interviewing Edward Varipapa, owner-chef of Leon?s Restaurant in North Haven. He is fourth-generation owner-chef of the restaurant, which first opened on Washington Avenue in New Haven in 1938. They have a Sunday Supper three-course meal with many choices for $19.38 in honor of the year ... the food is fabulous, whatever day you choose to go!!! The atmosphere and the staff are all excellent as well. His new location is beautiful, and his passion for food and pleasing people is absolute. They have a Facebook page, which I think you would find interesting. I go there every day ... he posts interesting articles, as well as photos of some of his dishes.?

I will check to see if the chef at Dalton?s will share the recipe, and if Chef Varipapa would like to be featured as the Chef du Jour.

What chef would you like me to interview?

Culinary calendar

National Picnic Month: Celebrate 1-3 p.m. July 21, Elm City Market, 777 Chapel St., New Haven, with your favorite picnic foods. Have your face painted by artist Daniela Balzano and participate in her community art project ?Paint Away Hunger,? http://bit.ly/14ojIau. Assorted picnic fare for $1 each. More at www.elmcitymarket.coop, 203-624-0441.

Taste Of Hartford: July 22-Aug. 5, participating restaurants offer special multicourse, price-fixed tasting menus including signature dishes for only $20.13, www.tastehartford.com for list of participating rerastaunts. Reservations are strongly recommended. Dining prices are available only for special taste dinner menus, including a $28 menu at select restaurants. Price does not include tax, beverages and gratuity and cannot be combined with any other special offers.

Worth Tasting: 10:45 a.m. July 27, a guided three-and-a-half hour culinary walking tour through downtown New Haven, $59, 203-777-8550 or 203-415-3519, reservations required. Enjoy samplings from many of New Haven?s favorites. You won?t be hungry after this tour. I will lead this one. Check out a previous tour at www.nhregister.com

Send us your requests

What restaurant recipes or other recipes would you like to have? What food products are you having difficulty finding? What cooking questions do you have?

Contact Stephen Fries, professor and coordinator of the Hospitality Management Programs at Gateway Community College, at gw-stephen.fries@gwcc.commnet.edu or Dept. FC, Gateway Community College, 20 Church St., New Haven, 06510. Include your name, address and phone number. For more, go to www.stephenfries.com.

Source: http://nhregister.com/articles/2013/07/17/life/doc51e59b31b07c9517737813.txt

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Poor sleep in pregnancy can disrupt the immune system and cause birth-related complications

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Poor sleep quality and quantity during pregnancy can disrupt normal immune processes and lead to lower birth weights and other complications, a new study finds. Women with depression also are more likely than non-depressed women to suffer from disturbed sleep and to experience immune system disruption and adverse pregnancy outcomes.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/jCSLF-NO73A/130717164725.htm

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Bush brothers team up to make donors out of young Republicans

In a time when so many Republican groups are searching for ways to persuade young Americans to support them in the ballot booth, the sons of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush have taken up perhaps a more difficult task: Making donors out of them.

The Bush boys, 37-year-old George P. Bush and Jeb Bush Jr., 29?nephews and grandchildren of American presidents?are working to encourage right-leaning millennials and Gen Xers to start giving to Republican campaigns and causes through Maverick PAC, a group George P. co-founded in 2004. Jeb Jr. serves as a state co-chair of the organization and runs his own political action committee out of Florida, SunPAC, which promotes Hispanic Republican candidates.

Last weekend, MavPAC held its annual members-only conference for the first time in Miami, Fla., where young GOP donors gathered at the Mandarin Oriental hotel to hear keynote addresses from Republican leaders such as Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, Jeb Bush and New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez.

?We?re trying to get people who are interested in politics who have been successful in law, business or entrepreneurship to get them further engaged in the political process?and hopefully run for office one day,? Jeb Jr. told Yahoo News in an interview about the conference, which was closed to nonmembers and media.

The tallest hurdle to making the pitch for those new to politics, he said, was what he described as ?a general distrust? of politics among the young people that he and his brother are trying to reach.

Through MavPAC events, where attendance requires only a few hundreds dollars to participate, he hopes to introduce them to a nationwide network of other young Republicans seeking influence.

?There?s a disappointment and a huge distrust in the overall system. That?s the pushback I get,? Jeb Jr. said. ?I think especially young voters who came out strongly for Obama in 2008 and even in 2012 really feel let down, just based on the promises that he made, nothing really came to fruition. A lot of people have student debt, can?t get a job and just see two parties bickering. They don?t necessarily want to be engaged. They?re frustrated.?

Last year, MavPAC spread out donations from about 3,500 members and spent $149,000 on more than 60 congressional races. (The group spent about $1.5 million on outreach.) In preparation for next year?s midterm elections, MavPAC organizers are aiming to double their investment.

Last weekend, about 250 donors from 18 states ranging in age from their early 20s to 40s made the trip to Miami for the MavPAC conference, where they attended panels on immigration reform?Jeb Jr. and George P. have both been strong advocates for overhauling the nation?s system?and on GOP renewal.

Jay Zeidman, co-chairman of MavPAC, said the group is one of a few outside groups focusing exclusively on promoting young Republicans.

?I haven?t seen a lot of other organizations that are really focused on mobilizing people in their 20s and 30s?the postcollege Republican demographic?and that?s really what we?re focused on,? Zeidman told Yahoo News. ?As a party, our goal is to widen the tent.?

During the weekend conference, Bush and Rubio did not mention anything about possible presidential ambitions during their keynote addresses, Zeidman said, but he characterized their speeches, in which both emphasized their own journeys in public service, as ?inspirational.? (Jeb Jr. said last year that he hopes his father runs in 2016.)

?Jeb gave one of the best speeches I?ve ever heard,? Zeidman said of Bush?s address at the conference. ?Just short of announcing that he?s running for president.?

But regardless of whether Jeb Bush decides to run for president in three years, the Bush brothers' involvement in the PAC business makes one thing clear: When it comes to politics, one way or another, the Bush family is here to stay.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/george-p--bush-jeb-bush-jr-maverick-pac-republican-donors-224409208.html

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Small Businesses at risk as impact of stagnating growth continues to ...

In cities across the country, small to medium sized enterprises are feeling the impact of stagnating growth, as the poor performance of the national economy hits their local markets.

This is a critical issue for growth and jobs across the UK. Small to medium sized enterprises (SMEs) make up over 99 percent of businesses in UK cities and provide roughly half of all private sector jobs.

But the performance of the economy has a big impact on the health of SMEs ? on average 45 percent of firms in cities operate mainly within the local market and 60 percent within the regional market ? making local economies particularly important. This is particularly true in cities such as Blackburn and Luton, where up to 75 percent of firms operate within the local or regional market.

Centre for Cities? new report, Business Outlook 2013, shows clearly that SMEs in cities with lower levels of wages and skills, where the economy is less sectorally diverse, and where there is a greater reliance on public sector spending, have been particularly hit during the recession and are likely to be more vulnerable to contraction or closure in the years ahead.

The report also highlights that SMEs in different cities vary enormously in their ability to generate jobs and value.

London and cities in the South East tend to have the highest levels of entrepreneurship, the highest number of SMEs per 10,000 people, and the highest growth of SMEs. Yet this is not about a North-South divide, with Aberdeen and Warrington amongst the top performing cities and Luton having amongst the lowest SME growth rates nationally.

The recession has tended to reinforce existing differences, so the cities with the highest business start-ups before the recession tended to have the highest start-up rate in 2011 too. Despite the recession, Aberdeen, Cambridge, Reading and Edinburgh all increased start-ups by more than 4 percent, while Belfast and Sunderland ? which began with low levels of business start-ups ? have seen significant falls since 2008.

So what can be done? Clearly, many different issues affect the success or failure of a new business, with performance largely down to how a business is managed and run. But external factors such as your sector, customer demand, workers? skills, the right kind of business space, transport, broadband connections and access to finance, can have a significant impact on whether or not SMEs thrive.

With these factors in mind, we need a national government that recognises there is a place dimension to SME success and failure. In order to encourage and support businesses to diversify and grow, Government should look to continue to devolve more funding and powers around skills, transport, housing and business support through Local Growth Deals and other mechanisms in the years ahead.

Government also needs to simplify business support infrastructure. There are currently around 900 local and national, public and private, business support schemes in the UK, but the current offer is not well structured. The complexity of the system means that SMEs are often either unaware of the support available, or are unable to access it.

At a local level, every city and Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) should ensure they?re getting the basics right: education and training provision, transport connections and improvements to the planning system can have a strong bearing on SME resilience and performance.

Together, cities and LEPs should also ensure they understand their SME base, where its comparative advantage lies and what the barriers to growth are. Working with UKTI to help SMEs diversify their customer base beyond the local market, as well as improving public sector procurement, would also help.

Ultimately it is the people working in businesses that determine success or failure, but a more place-based approach to SME support, as well as some concerted attention to removing barriers to growth, could help SMEs weather the unsettled economic climate and support a national economic recovery over the long term.

Ben Harrison is Director of Partnerships at Centre for Cities?- find out more at?www.centreforcities.org

Source: http://labourlist.org/2013/07/small-businesses-at-risk-as-impact-of-stagnating-growth-continues-to-be-felt/

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Tide is turning in skin cancer battle

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Recent advances have put melanoma at the forefront of cancer research, raising hopes that scientists and clinicians may have cornered the deadliest of all skin cancers.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/xZHrapZxic8/130716120102.htm

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