Thursday, October 10, 2013

Judge Says Maryland Promoted 'Separate But Equal' Colleges


This week, a federal judge found that historically black colleges in Maryland were harmed when better-funded traditionally white institutions offered up the same degree programs in the state.


Tricia Bishop of The Baltimore Sun summed up the judge's ruling this way:




"The 60-page opinion ... found that certain high-demand specialty programs duplicated by traditionally white schools — a form of "separate but equal" — encouraged segregation among campuses by drawing students from the state's black schools, which historically have been underfunded. To repair the situation, the opinion suggested mediation, new niche areas for black schools and the possible transfer or merger of some programs."







Morgan State University in Baltimore is one of the state's four historically black institutions.



Marylandstater/Wikimedia Commons


Morgan State University in Baltimore is one of the state's four historically black institutions.


Marylandstater/Wikimedia Commons


(You can read the full opinion here.)


The judge stopped short of recommending any specific policy solutions, but a lawyer for the black college advocates who brought the case told Inside Higher Education that the decision would essentially move the state of Maryland to bolster its support for historically black colleges and universities, or HBCUs. Bishop reported that Maryland's HBCU presidents were cautiously optimistic that this week's ruling might mean an influx of funding from the state.


In her opinion, Judge Catherine Blake acknowledged that Maryland had made great strides toward ameliorating some of the discrepancies between the higher education options it offered for whites and blacks. But she said the state has been embroiled in a long, protracted fight with the federal government over the way it manages its HBCUs — a fight that goes back to the days of segregation. Various findings over the past 80 years have ruled that the state's black colleges were underfunded and underresourced and couldn't compete with corresponding white institutions from which blacks were barred. (Besides the fewer resources, the black schools couldn't grant advanced degrees for much of their histories.) And she wrote that on several occasions, the state has opened up a competing institution in proximity to one of its struggling, cash-strapped HBCUs. The newer state colleges, in effect, had a big head start.


But Blake disagreed with the plaintiffs' argument that the state is presently funding its black colleges differently from its predominantly white ones. "There are sincerely held beliefs on all aspects of this very difficult debate, which cannot be satisfactorily resolved by one lawsuit, and one judicial opinion," Blake wrote.


The ruling comes as HBCUs face a host of challenges, and notably, it's not the first finding in recent weeks that concluded states were pitting their HBCUs against predominantly white schools.


According to the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities, states were underfunding particular land grant HBCUs by $56 million. Land grant universities are funded in part by the federal government, and states are required to match the federal government's contribution. But while many HBCUs didn't get that matching state funding, the report found that states matched or paid more than they were required to for their predominantly white institutions.


"There's always been a history of underfunding HBCUs," the APLU's John Lee told Diverse last month.


All year, we've been writing about the tough climate faced by HBCUs. The challenges they face are compounded by the problems buffeting colleges everywhere, like skyrocketing tuition and student debt.


As my Code Switch teammate Hansi Lo Wang reported in September, the Obama administration's stricter lending guidelines for PLUS loans, which parents can take out to help pay for their children's college tuition, have hit HBCUs particularly hard. They tend to have lots of first-generation and low-income students who need financial assistance for college costs, and many historically black institutions have seen their student bodies shrink as a result. (The fallout from the new rules was so tough on HBCUs that Arne Duncan, the secretary of education, issued an apology for the way they were rolled out.)


"We talk about accessibility a lot, and in the past, that issue was one of sort of civil rights accessibility, [as in] 'I could not get into said school because I was black or yellow or whatever,' " said Johnny Taylor, who runs the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, an advocacy group for HBCUs. "Now, the issue is, 'I can't afford to attend these schools,' and [the Parent PLUS Loan] was a tool."


We sound like a broken record in our coverage of HBCUs, but it's worth saying again just how big an impact HBCUs continue to have on the shape of the black workforce.




"[O]ne in five African-American college graduates earned their degrees at HBCUS; black colleges graduated nearly all black students (90 percent) who earned bachelor's degrees in STEM fields between 2006 and 2010; black colleges produce half of all black public school teachers, half of all future lawyers and eight in 10 black judges."




We'll be keeping an eye on Maryland's efforts to boost the appeal of its HBCUs to a diverse variety of students. Stay tuned to Code Switch for a story about an HBCU that's in a very different situation — its student body is 90 percent white.



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Monday, January 28, 2013

Djokovic pounces to claim Melbourne three-peat

MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Novak Djokovic came up with his best tennis when it mattered most to reassert his grand slam dominance over Andy Murray on Sunday and become the first man to win three successive Australian Open titles in the professional era.

The Serbian world number one played 171 minutes of cat and mouse with his British rival before pouncing when the U.S. Open champion blinked and racing away to a 6-7 7-6 6-3 6-2 victory.

There was no ripping off of the shirt and no victory roar like Rod Laver Arena witnessed last year, but there was no disguising Djokovic's delight at claiming a fourth title at Melbourne Park.

His three successive titles were a first since Roy Emerson won his fifth straight in 1967, while a quartet of crowns matches Roger Federer and Andre Agassi, the latter being on hand to present him with the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup.

"What a joy, it's an incredible feeling to win this trophy again. This is definitely my favorite grand slam. I love this tournament. I love this court," said Djokovic, who lost to Murray at Flushing Meadows in September.

"Every tournament, especially the major tournaments, is very special (but) winning it three in a row, it's incredible."

The similarity of playing style meant the match, although studded with some brilliant rallies, was not the classic that fans have come to expect from grand slam finals in the golden age of men's tennis.

So little separated the two 25-year-old baseliners, however, that two hours and 51 minutes of the contest had passed before the first break of serve.

Crucially, it went to Djokovic and 49 minutes later he was celebrating his sixth grand slam title.

For Murray, hampered by a badly blistered toe, distracted at a key moment by a white feather and physically compromised by his four-hour semi-final against Federer, it was a third final defeat in four years in Australia.

The Scot took some solace from the fact that this match was a much tighter affair than his defeats by Federer in 2010 and Djokovic in 2011.

"There's going to be some obvious reasons for me feeling a little bit better," said Murray, who was hoping to become the first Briton to win the title since Fred Perry in 1934.

"The last few months have been the best tennis of my life. I made the Wimbledon final, won the Olympics, won the U.S. Open. I was close here as well. It was close.

"I know no one's ever won a slam the immediate one after winning their first one. It's not the easiest thing to do and I got extremely close."

SLIGHT EDGE

Djokovic needed nearly six hours to beat Rafa Nadal in last year's final and few were betting on a pre-midnight finish after the first two sets on Sunday took 133 minutes to get through.

The Serbian's aggression gave him a slight edge in the first set and he claimed five break points only for Murray to save them all and then scoot through the tiebreak 7-2.

Murray took the momentum into the second set, where he won the first seven points to earn his first three break points but he fluffed his chances and Djokovic saved his serve.

"After that I felt just mentally a little bit lighter and more confident on the court than I'd done in the first hour or so," said Djokovic.

A white feather which drifted down from the birds nesting in the rafters distracted Murray when he was serving during the tiebreak and he double faulted on his way to losing it 7-3.

"At this level it can come down to just a few points here or there," said Murray. "Probably my biggest chance was at the beginning of the second set, I didn't quite get it.

"When Novak had his chance at the end of the third, he got his."

Djokovic opened the key third set game with a brilliant winner that just caught the back of the line at the end of a 36-shot rally.

He closed it out to go 5-3 ahead when Murray smacked a forehand into the net tape and then won seven of the next nine games to claim the title.

"I didn't expect an easy match," said Djokovic. "You never get the grand slam trophy in an easy way. You have to earn it."

There was more success for 25-year-olds earlier in the day when Australians Jarmila Gajdosova and Matthew Ebden clinched the mixed doubles title, beating Czech pair Lucie Hradecka and Frantisek Cermak 6-3 7-5.

The day belonged to Djokovic, however.

"I'm just trying to play this game with 100 percent of devotion, love, passion, and fun also," he said. "I mean, 25 years-old and I won six grand slams and have a lot of trophies.

"It's amazing. I'm just trying to embrace this moment and enjoy it as much as I can and see where tomorrow brings me."

(Editing by Mark Meadows)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/murray-takes-first-set-australian-open-final-100522124--ten.html

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How well do you know 'Pride and Prejudice'?

With one of the most famous opening lines of all time ? 'It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife' ? and one of literature's most beloved love stories, as well as satire that is still admired today, Jane Austen's novel 'Pride and Prejudice' is still an acknowledged classic 200 years after its publication in 1813. How well do you know the story of Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy? Test your knowledge!

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/vrzgbBd2J6M/How-well-do-you-know-Pride-and-Prejudice

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

92% Silver Linings Playbook

All Critics (210) | Top Critics (50) | Fresh (185) | Rotten (16)

It's a rom-com that succeeds in revitalizing that discredited genre where so many others have failed, injecting it with the grit and emotion of realist drama rather than with amped-up whimsy or social satire or montages of people walking on the beach.

Silver Linings Playbook tells us that happily-ever-after may depend on finding people who coexist with our lunacy, not ones who can lead us out of it. In any case, it's crazy good.

A crazy beaut of a comedy that brims with generosity and manages to circumvent predictability at every turn.

An edgy romantic dramedy that suits our anxious times.

This meaningful film keeps the laughs, giddy anxiousness and warm butterflies from the trailer and sustains it all through two full hours of a love story.

If there's one reason why you should see this film, it's to admire the wonderful performances from Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence.

Cooper and Lawrence Shine in Linings.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/silver_linings_playbook/

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Video: Gun control advocates march

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/50601350/

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decreeing quoin: A Dictionary of Education (Oxford Paperback ...

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The field of education is vitally important but it involves a specialized vocabulary and terminology which may be unfamiliar to those new to the discipline. The new Dictionary of Education provides clear and concise definitions for 1,250 terms that anyone studying education or involved in teaching is likely to encounter. Coverage includes all sectors of education: pre-school, primary, secondary, further and higher education, special needs, adult and continuing education, and work-based learning. It also includes major legislation, key figures and organizations, and national curriculum and assessment terminology. The dictionary features entry-level web links, accessible and kept up to date via the Dictionary of Education companion website. Detailed appendices include a timeline summary of landmark educational legislation since 1945 and a glossary of acronyms. In addition, there is a useful, fully cross-referenced section of comparative terms used in the US, the UK, Canada, Australia, an

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Source: http://atixi.com/a-dictionary-of-education-oxford-paperback-reference/

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Source: http://decreeing-quoin.blogspot.com/2013/01/a-dictionary-of-education-oxford.html

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New Jersey Contractor Sentenced in Workers' Comp Fraud Scheme

The president of a now-defunct Mercer County, N.J., construction company was sentenced to eight years in state prison for stealing more than $450,000, according to Attorney General Jeffrey S. Chiesa.

New Jersey?s AG?s office reported that Herlindo Garcia-Merlos, 49, provided false and misleading information to his company?s workers? compensation carrier, failed to file tax returns or underreported wages for his business and himself to the New Jersey Department of Treasury.

Last year, Garcia-Merlos pleaded guilty to a criminal accusation charging him with two counts of second-degree theft by deception.

Garcia-Merlos was sentenced to eight years in state prison. In addition, he was ordered to pay $315,680 in restitution to New Jersey Manufacturers Insurance Group and $135,462 in restitution to the New Jersey Department of Treasury.

?The lengthy prison sentence imposed upon this defendant should act as a strong deterrent to anyone who fails to provide adequate and lawful workers? compensation insurance,? Attorney General Chiesa said.

Garcia-Merlos was the president of the now-defunct Orients Construction Company, Inc. (Orients), located in Trenton. In March 2009, Garcia-Merlos ceased doing business as Orients and began doing business as Melrose Construction, Inc.

In pleading guilty, Garcia-Merlos admitted that, between February 2007 and April 2010, false and misleading information was provided to NJM Insurance Group. The investigation determined that the type of services rendered by Orients as well as the amount of payroll during the specified policy periods were not true. As a result of the fraud, Garcia-Merlos obtained reduced premiums that his company was not entitled to resulting in the premium difference of $315,680.

Acting Insurance Fraud Prosecutor Ronald Chillemi noted that Garcia-Merlos also pleaded guilty to stealing more than $135,462 by failing to file tax returns for his companies, Orients and Melrose Construction. The investigation determined that Garcia-Merlos failed to file tax returns for Orients and/or Melrose in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010. The investigation also determined that Garcia-Merlos underreported wages on his individual tax returns during the aforementioned years.

?

Source: New Jersey Office of the Insurance Fraud Prosecutor

Source: http://www.claimsjournal.com/news/east/2013/01/25/221689.htm

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