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Archive for March, 2011

30 Mar

Michigan Protests

 SVSU newspaper: ‘WTF?!’ campaign raises interest for student protest in Lansing

By Justin L. Engel | The Saginaw News The Saginaw News

View full sizeGreg DeRuiter | APAbout 200 other college students from around the state at the Capitol last week.

KOCHVILLE TWP. — Saginaw Valley State University students joined a list of groups protesting potential cuts in state funding, a campus newspaper reports.

About 91 SVSU students traveled to the Capitol lawn in Lansing on Friday to oppose higher education cuts Gov. Rick Snyder has proposed, The Valley Vanguard’s Toni Boger reported in Monday’s edition.

The gathering’s advocates tagged the event with an interesting acronym: “WTF?!”

The letters, in 21st-century speak, typically stands for a profane term. The acronym for Friday’s protests stood for, “Where’s the funding?”

The creative re-wording of the acronym — the brainchild of the United States Student Association — generated additional interest, The Vanguard reports.

The Valley Vanguard: Julie Boon, Student Association (SA) president and political science and history junior, said that an aggressive marketing campaign generated student interest.

“We wanted students to know how much this was really going to affect them, and how much they’re going to have to make up for the lack of funding for next year,” she said.

The campaign included mass e-mails to students, window paintings, posters, signs hanging from ceilings and visits to individual classes.
A number of public university students — from institutions such as Michigan State University, Lake Superior State University and Wayne State University — joined the protests last week.

The Vanguard publishes weekly during the fall and winter semesters.

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Battle Creek Protests – Workers’ Bill of Rights

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30 Mar

Rachel Maddow – Government has to make up the demand

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The McGlynn: Any comments from those you voted for this fool?

Further, please note the funding by the Walton Foundation (ie Walmart).

Boycott! Boycott!!

“Gov. Snyder’s decision to sign this reckless measure cutting the lifeline for Michigan’s unemployed will reverberate for years,” said Rep. Sander Levin (D) of Michigan in a statement. “Republicans … gave Michigan the dubious distinction of becoming the only state in the union with 20 weeks of state unemployment insurance,” he said, adding that the bill will “affect hundreds and hundreds of thousands” of future unemployed workers.

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30 Mar

Report on Autism Today

Robert MacNeil Returns to PBS NEWSHOUR to Report on Autism Today

6-part series airs during Autism Awareness Month

April 18 – 26, 2011

ARLINGTON, Va., March 29, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Autism – it’s a developmental disorder that has become increasingly prevalent, affecting 1 out of 110 American children. Despite years of study, little is known about its cause and access to treatment varies.  Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of American families hungry for answers struggle to care for the unique needs of children with the disorder.  Among them, Robert MacNeil, co-founder of the PBS NEWSHOUR and grandfather of Nick, a 6-year-old boy with autism.

“I’ve been a reporter on and off for 50 years, but I’ve never brought my family into a story … until Nick,” MacNeil said, “because he moves me deeply.”

MacNeil and producer Caren Zucker tell the story of Autism Today in a 6-part broadcast series beginning Monday, April 18, 2011 and a robust online component where viewers can join the conversation.  Ms. Zucker has produced many stories on autism and is the mother of a 16-year-old son with autism.  

Monday, April 18 An introduction to Nick and autism as a whole body experience: MacNeil brings viewers along on a visit with his daughter and grandson Nick in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to see how autism affects the whole family, including his 10-year-old sister, Neely.  Nick experiences autism not just as a disorder in brain development but also as physical ailments affecting the whole body.  
     
Tuesday, April 19 Autism Prevalence: Why are the numbers of children with autism increasing?  At the UC Davis MIND Institute in Sacramento, California, MacNeil sees the wide range of different behaviors that comprise the autism spectrum. Anthropologist Richard Grinker argues that the rising  numbers of children with autism is explained because conditions previously given other names, like mental retardation, are now included in the autism spectrum.  Scientist Irva Hertz-Picciotto says the wider definition only partly explains the increased prevalence, pointing instead to a variety of environmental factors.  
     
Wednesday, April 20 Autism Causes: The rise in autism numbers has caused a surge in research to find the causes.  For the latest thinking, Robert MacNeil speaks with four leading researchers: Dr. Gerald Fischbach of the Simons Foundation, Dr. David Amaral of the MIND Institute, Dr. Martha Herbert of Harvard University and Dr. Craig Newschaffer of Drexel University.  
     
Thursday, April 21 Autism Treatment: Although children with autism see doctors periodically, they go to school everyday.  It is the school system that bears most of the burden of treating children with autism because treatment means education.  MacNeil visits two schools in New York – a public school in the Bronx teaching 700 children with autism and a charter school created in Manhattan as a model of possibilities in educating children with autism.  With only 30 students, it can use one-on-one teacher/student ratios employing intensive Applied Behavioral Analysis – the gold standard treatment for autism.  
     
Monday, April 25 Adults with Autism: Although federal law mandates educational services for children with autism, there are virtually no services when they become adults.  MacNeil profiles Zachary Hamrick in Mahwah, New Jersey, about to turn 21. As his family contemplates the uncertain future now facing hundreds of thousands of young people like him, his parents ask themselves, “What will happen when we die?”  
     
Tuesday, April 26 Autism Policy: The NEWSHOUR series ends with a discussion of the public policy issues raised in the series, including the enormous discrepancy in the quality and availability  of services  for  children and future adults in what the federal committee that determines research priorities for autism now calls a “national health emergency” with a panel of experts including:  Dr. Thomas Insel, Director of the National Institute of Mental Health, Catherine Lord, Professor of Psychology, Pediatrics and Psychiatry at the University of Michigan, Ilene Lainer, Executive Director of the New York Center for Autism – a private advocacy group, and John Shestack, a Hollywood producer and the co-founder of “Cure Autism Now” a former advocacy group.   
     

 

PBS NEWSHOUR will host an online content hub that will offer easy access to video of all the pieces in the series, as well as web-only features that are part of Autism Today, including:

  • First Look Online: In a brand new online-on-air cross promotion, check the NEWSHOUR’s website after each night’s broadcast during the week April 18: We’ll post the next chapter in the Autism Today series online by 7pm ET.
  • Autism 101 – A primer on autism, how it’s diagnosed, the spectrum of disorders, and available resources. We’ll also look at the costs of autism, through the lens of the families profiled in the series and others.
  • The Story of Donald – A new look at Caren Zucker and John Donvan’s profile of the first child diagnosed with autism as reported in The Atlantic.
  • Live Chat with Experts – Viewers can ask their questions directly to some of the experts and doctors profiled in the broadcast segments via live text chat moderated by PBS NEWSHOUR digital correspondent Hari Sreenivasan.
  • Ask Robin MacNeil Hari Sreenivasan will preview the series with Robin MacNeil in a special interview on the Rundown news blog.  MacNeil will also answer viewer questions after the series concludes.
  • Join us on Twitter, YouTube and Facebook: We want to hear how you or those you know are coping with autism. Use the Twitter hashtag #autismtoday to ask questions or join the conversation on the series.

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29 Mar

The New American Dream

 

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29 Mar

Stand up to the Republicans and demand protection for workers’ rights

Dear MoveOn member,

April 4, 2011 is shaping up to be one of the most important progressive days of action in nearly a decade.

It’s the anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., who was killed 43 years ago while traveling to Memphis to stand in solidarity with striking sanitation workers demanding their chance to attain the American Dream.

Now, in response to the new wave of Republican attacks on unions and working people, the entire labor movement has called for a massive national day of protests, vigils, and work site events on April 4. Virtually the entire progressive movement has joined in.

Can you help make next Monday an overwhelming day of solidarity for working people by attending an event in your area? Click here to find the April 4 event closest to you: 

http://local.we-r-1.org/partners/moveon

Working people in Wisconsin, Ohio, and Indiana have inspired an activist spirit that’s spreading across the country, and this is our chance to keep the momentum going. This is our chance to stand up to the Republicans and demand protection for workers’ rights and the restoration of the American Dream for all of us.

The events are part of “We Are One,” a grassroots effort led by a broad coalition of unions and progressive allies committed to realizing Dr. King’s goal of economic justice for all. The events include actions, teach-ins, work site discussions, vigils, faith events, and more.

You can simply attend an event in your area or if you have creative ideas for an event in a public place like a park, in your work site, a teach-in at a college near you, or even something at your house, you can volunteer to host your own.

We need to keep building our strength until the American Dream can finally be attained by everyone. On April 4, we will keep the momentum going. And we will not stop.

Will you join us?

http://local.we-r-1.org/partners/moveon

Thanks for all you do.

–Daniel, Justin, Julia, Robin, and the rest of the team   

Want to support our work? We’re entirely funded by our 5 million members—no corporate contributions, no big checks from CEOs. And our tiny staff ensures that small contributions go a long way. Chip in here.


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