Thursday, April 22, 2010

Committee recommends closing of East Liberty's Peabody High - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

Committee recommends closing of East Liberty's Peabody High - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review Members of the community group want school officials to scrap the plans to revamp Westinghouse and focus on creating a career and technical education academy in the east region. The Open East End Panel wants the district to coordinate plans for the east region with other proposed changes, such as an overhaul to the career and technical education program.
Not exactly.

The hope and aim of none is to "scrap the plans to revamp Westinghouse." That is far, far, far from the truth.

One of my missions is to finally get PPS to look at its 'drop out factories.' For far too long, the status and fate of Westinghouse, Oliver, Peabody and Langley have been without attention. So I think it is fair to say that we've all been pushing the institution of PPS to get in gear already about high school reform for those who need it the most.

Closing Schenley was not the high school reform we needed. There. said it. Now to move along.

Yesterday, April 21, 2010, was a big day for high school reform in the Pittsburgh Public Schools. Two plans from two different committees saw the light of day. One plan was featured in a press release from the PPS and the other was delivered in a one-hour meeting to top administrators to the PPS. The Open East End Plan was generated by 20 concerned citizens.  I was involved there.

Where the two plans differ is how to revamp Westinghouse.

The Open East End Panel seeks to have a single school at Westinghouse with a majority of the effort devoted to the CTE education for the 9 to 12th graders. The CTE high school could be place at Westinghouse. Or, that could be placed at Peabody. Either would work fine. One or the other. Most feel that Westinghouse is the better option.

So, to let the boil begin:

---> Westinghouse could be a new high school (grades 9 to 12) for kids from throughout the city (city-wide magnet) to be a modern South Vo Tech. Think of it as a new CAPA but with a career and technical education focus. This is a new school with a devotion to academics and specialized trades. Both are needed -- English, History, Math, Science plus new topics and subjects. This would be a new school where kids get plenty of internships and real world experiences. This would be a place for plumbing, carpenters, builders, computer tech, green energy studies, robotics (perhaps), cooking, heating and air conditioning, drafting / CAD, etc.

Or, with the other committee:

---> Westinghouse could be a school for boys and girls of certain east end neighborhoods for grades 6 to 12 where the genders are organized under different principals based on their plumbing.

Boil some more, then we all figure out that two things matter: The boiling (i.e., cooking / catering / culinary arts) and the plumbing (i.e., human anatomy / gender).

For years, I've been a big advocate of the formation of single gender schools. But, a single gender campus is much unlike a single gender classroom.

With the most recent plan put out by the PPS, we see more progress down this pathway. The school district has been forcing kids into classrooms in Westinghouse in some subjects based upon gender. Boys take math in room 101 and girls take the same course in room 103. Single gender classrooms have come to some PPS schools already, recently, by the handywork of certain principals and staff.

A few years ago I suggested that Peobody be turned into a boys campus and Westinghouse be turned into a girls campus. Then we'd have an All Boys Public High and an All Girls Public High. Both would be in their own building. Both would be for grades 9 to 12. Both would be city-wide magnets. Both would be built so as to compete directly with the Catholic single gender schools, Central Catholic and Oakland Catholic.

In the plan to create two all-city magnets for public school kids, All-City Boys Public and All-City Girls Public, I didn't care what schools were utilized to make this happen. Put the boys in Peabody, Westinghous, or even Reizenstein, Oliver or Langley. Put the girls in one of those too. There are five school buildings that are already built and ready for these changes.

It might make some sense to keep the All-City Public Boys and Girls High Schools in the same region, such as the east end. But, this isn't necessary. So, if Girls were at Reizenstein and the boys were at Peabody, then a teacher of Calc or Orchestra or Film or Ceramics or German could spend the first four periods at one school and then hop on a shuttle bus or take a long walk or short bike ride to the other campus for the afternoons. Or, this flip flop could be on a day by day basis if the buildings were too far apart, such as with a move from Langley to Westinghouse (for the teachers).

As an added wrinkle in my plans for putting the boys in one place and the girls in the other, could include a "flip the two schools" on a certain schedule. Every five years, for example, the boys could populate Oliver and the girls could be in Reizenstein. Then in one summer, the schools flip so that the girls and boys go to the other locations. This would insure 'equity.' We'd hate to see the boys get the great gym and the girls get the great typing parlor -- or some other sillyness.

Plus these should be "All City High Schools." The schools need to attract kids who what to go to these schools for more reasons than geography. Lots of people go to Central Catholic who don't live next to nor near Central Catholic. But if you're home is in one section of the city, you should have a chance of going to a closer school and not needing to fill every day with lots of travel. So, if the schools flip from east to west around the city, more kids would have a chance to have lower travel times. This isn't so much a factor for the kids -- but more for the economics of the city neighborhoods. Everyone's home values would increase if these new schools come to our landscape and succeed. And, if the schools are all only in one sector of the city, and exclusive to feeder patterns, then home values could be depressed elsewhere. The city neighborhoods have a slightly better chance to thrive as we position the schools in different sections of the city. Of course, better yet is to keep down costs of the schools and to put the schools in central locations where everyone can get to them without too much trouble.

South Vo Tech (South Side at 9th Street) was in a great location. Same too for Connelley (Hill District just above Civic Arena) and Schenley (Oakland). Those are three excellent locations. Now, none have schools, sadly. A fourth location that begs for a school or a sell of of its property value is the Board of Education Building in Oakland, right next to Pitt's Cathedral of Learning. A fifth, the PFT Building (Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers) on Mon riverfront property on the South Side.

As the All City Boys and Girls High Schools flip locations, I think we'd see different dynamics and more city-wide ownership among the business community and residents. This idea of a public school alternative to Central could get broad support if it is with city-wide roots. The best way to insure that it is for everyone to consider is to let folks know that it is a school program, not a building, and the programs are going to evolve and revolve.

Another big factor in this flipping of schools is the build rehab constraints. Face it, some of the physical assets are not up to par. PPS needs to keep plugging away on its capital improvements -- with a deliberate pace so to keep costs in tight check. We need a system wide fix up of many schools. We could rotate the students out of certain buildings while the work is done. This was done already with kids at Frick and Schenley, but with less than ideal results. But, let's say for the sake of discussion that a large amount of work is needed at Perry Traditional High because of its age and new capacity for becoming a Teachers Center. So, an option is to put the All City Girls High into an east end school and shift Perry Traditional students to Oliver for a year. Then the building at Oliver could be made ready to accept the All City Girls High in the third year.

Let's plan ahead. Let's plan in the open.

Another key to this idea of flipping schools is political. We have elected school board members who are with regional districts. Each of the board members comes from one of nine voting areas. If the All City Girls High School is always in one district -- then that board member is going to have more interest in that school and the other eight won't. If the All City Girls High School moves from time to time to different areas of the city, then all the members on the school board would take a greater interest in that school and its programs.

For too long, the city has been too parochial in its politics. This is the time to break out of the feeder pattern mentality.

Let's scrap -- a term used at the top of this blog post -- all feeder pattern constraints for high school kids. Feeder patterns should be removed.

Perry Traditional High School (northern side) is a city-wide magnet.

CAPA grades 6-12 (Creative and Performing Arts) is a city-wide magnet.

Pgh Obama (IB) grades 6-10 in 2010 and 6-12 in 2012 (IB) is growing into a city-wide magnet.

Sci-Tech 6-9 now and growing into grades 6-12 is a city-wide magnet.

Let's make a city-wide magnets for the All City Girls Public High, the All City Boys Public High, the Pittsburgh CTE (Career and Technical Education) High School.

With the new schools comes a need and calling to make the comprehensive high schools in the city all choice too. Make Allderdice, Brashear, Langley and Carrick all-city magnets where anyone from anywhere in the city can go to that school if they choose to do so. High Schools of choice would be a better Pittsburgh promise, a Pittsburgh pledge. That's a platform for Pittsburgh.

The transportation needs are not much of an issue as the high school kids get bus passes to ride on PAT (mass transit). If you want to go to Allderdice and you live in the west end, fine. Just take a bus or get a ride.

As all the schools become magnets, then the students won't be forced to go to a program because of an address of record. Students move anyway. Families that want to plug kids into certain schools can do so now -- with some creativity and door knocking.



Full article from today's Trib:

By Daveen Rae Kurutz, PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW, Thursday, April 22, 2010

A city schools committee yesterday released recommendations that would result in the closing of Peabody High School in East Liberty.

The committee proposes sending Peabody students in grades 6 through 12 to Westinghouse High School or Milliones. Students forced to relocate would be able to choose which school they would attend.

Milliones, which houses the Pittsburgh Public Schools' University Preparatory magnet, is a joint middle school-high school. Westinghouse would be converted into two single-gender academies for students in grades 6 through 12.

"We wanted to create a school that meets the needs of students in the East End," said Derrick Lopez, assistant superintendent for secondary schools. "We also want to offer our kids the opportunities afforded to those (at) Oakland Catholic and Central Catholic."

District officials are considering a plan to move the Barack Obama Academy of International Studies to Peabody starting in fall 2012.

The recommendations, which the board could vote on this summer, would affect students in 16 neighborhoods from the Hill District to Point Breeze. Currently, 373 students attend Milliones, 310 attend Westinghouse and 426 attend Peabody.

However, many students who would attend Peabody instead enroll in magnet programs at other schools such as CAPA and Obama, said Ebony Pugh, district spokeswoman.

Peabody's enrollment dropped from 497 students last year, and officials project enrollment will continue to decline to 194 by fall 2012 because of population loss. Officials expect Westinghouse's enrollment to dip to about 100 students in 2012.

Officials released the recommendations after a meeting with the Open East End Panel, a group formed by community leaders and school board members to examine the same issues as the district committee did.

Members of the community group want school officials to scrap the plans to revamp Westinghouse and focus on creating a career and technical education academy in the east region. The Open East End Panel wants the district to coordinate plans for the east region with other proposed changes, such as an overhaul to the career and technical education program.

"A lot of these plans bump into each other, like a boa constrictor trying to digest a whole lot at once," said Annette Werner, coordinator of the Open East End Panel. "Some parents get overwhelmed by all the changes, so we hope the district will thoughtfully consider our plan and present both widely for the public to consider."

Pugh said officials will use both committees' work to make a final recommendation to the school board.
There is much more to sort out as these various plan and other ideas clash.

My Summary:

Put the girls in one campus. Put the boys in another. Two academies within the same building is not good enough.

Put the high schoolers in a high school, without grades 6, 7 and 8. Make some great middle schools too. A few 6-12 schools is okay, but that should not dominate the landscape.

Open a new South Vo Tech as a high school for grades 9-12. Don't build a new school building from scratch. Rather, use Peabody, or Westinghouse, or even Reizenstein if necessary, as the CTE High School. At this new city-wide high school, teach the students in academics classes and their trades in the same school.

Do think again when prudent.

I don't think U-Prep is working well as a 6-12 school. So, it might make a great city-wide U-Prep middle school with a credit recovery program for older students.

Make all high schools in the city magnet schools. Drop feeder patterns for all the high schools. Allow any kid to go to any school with the exception of the gender specific schools.



Magic Wand Rant:

Don't allow for any 9th grade at Peabody in the fall of 2010. Close Peabody soon after. Begin rehab at Peabody if needed in 2011. A phase out of Peabody would be okay, as Schenley was phased out.

Don't allow for any 9th grade at Oliver in the fall of 2010. Close Oliver soon after. Begin rehab at Oliver if needed in 2011. A phase out of Oliver would be okay, as Schenley was phased out.

Build a new auditorium, gym and additional swimming pool at Reizenstein and keep that building for IB / Pgh Obama for the long term. But use the middle school gym and middle school pool for the middle school. Pgh Obama needs a high school gym, a high school pool, a high school auditorium and a high school cafeteria. There is room for building that addition on the grounds around the school. A parking deck with a ball field on the roof would also make sense too.

Put together an All City Girls Public High School for Peabody and an All City Boys Public High School for Oliver. After five years of operation at the same site, flip the boys and girls locations.

Make Westinghouse a fantastic, All City CTE High School. Do Big Visions, or year-round programs, and other community services at Westinghouse too. Both academics and trades should occur at Westinghouse High School. Make it special.

Westinghouse can be for most of the CTE majors, but no need to make it for all of them. Keep auto body at Brashear, for example. Keep Engineering at Allderdice. Boys who take robotic could still come to Peabody if necessary for those robitic classes.

If a fix up of Perry is needed, then move the seniors out of the building and take half as many freshmen for the next year so as to make some extra space in the school for rehab. Boxing days can work like the fix up at Sci Tech now underway.

If a rehab of Perry is needed, move the seniors of Perry out of the building to Langley or to the RMU building downtown.

Make U-Prep a middle school mainly -- and -- a place for high school with only special requirements, such as credit recovery and early exit.

Keep the bulk of the schools as is for grades K to 8. Jamming grades 6, 7 and 8 into Westinghouse for gender specific academies causes disruption of the younger schools.

Don't do anything without city-wide discussions and without thinking it through from start to finish.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Open Planning

http://cmapspublic3.ihmc.us/rid=1H72VPZSS-1P61MYZ-FJL/Open%20Planning.cmap

Lessons of Butler's Mens Basketball Team - follow up and sense making

The American Swim Coaches site posted an article about the Butler Men's Basketball season from Butler University President. This got the wheels turning.

I came up with the following concept map, now posted in a public folder. Check it out and feel free to make changes.

Title IX Changes - Why Boys Fail - Education Week

Title IX Changes - Why Boys Fail - Education Week: "At some point, and it appears that point has not yet arrived, someone in the administration will need to ask: why are so many campuses 60 percent female? Ah, that's a question that may be postponed indefinitely. Given that eight million more women than men voted for Obama, making decisions such as today's Title IX announcement will come a lot easier than probing that tougher question."

RIP: Juan Antonio Samaranch

From Public Art
Juan Antonio Samaranch, a shrewd dealmaker whose 21-year term as president of the International Olympic Committee was marked by both the unprecedented growth of the games and its biggest ethics scandal, died Wednesday at a hospital. He was 89.

I wonder what he and St. Peter will say as they meet at the gates of heaven?
From Public Art

Locals Online. A Teach the Teacher forum for leaders who gather folks to talk about places you live.

Invitation

Do you host a ...

•neighborhood e-mail list? ...
•highly interactive placeblog? ...
•local social network on Ning? ...
•a private Facebook group for nearest neighbors? ...
•a neighborhood parents network online? ...
•a local online community of any kind?
Then join community builders like you on this new peer-to-peer online group for local online hosts from:

http://e-democracy.org/locals

Mark Rauterkus, charter members for Locals Online

CMU Art: Top of Triangle and US Steel Building

The High Point Park Investigation & Pittsburgh Gigapanorama


Event: Open House, Location:Great Hall of the College of Fine Arts at CMU on Thursday, April 22 from 5-6:30 p.m.

Cost: Free

Please join us on April 22 (Earth Day 2010) as we unveil a new perspective of the region.

The Pittsburgh Gigapanorama is an awesome, interactive, 360-degree photographic image of southwestern Pennsylvania taken from the roof of the U. S. Steel Tower and one of the largest digital photographs ever created.

We will be acknowledging the participants and products of the recent High Point Park Design Sketch/Case Competition, during which more than 350 CMU students and faculty members imagined the creation of a publicly-accessible, sustainable facility on the U. S. Steel Tower's roof, a one-acre expanse that is the largest, highest space on top of any building on Earth.

We will also preview "The Roof of the World" an independent documentary video shot during the January competitions, as well as display the 32 architectural design sketches and 5 business case studies they produced.

This event is an open house and you may bring guests, but please RSVP to highpointparkinvestigation@gmail.com by April 20 with attendees' names.

If you are unable to attend on Thursday, the Gigapanorama, documentary, and other exhibits can be seen at the STUDIO at 1:00 and 3:00 on Friday, April 23.

http://www.highpointpark.org/

Reserve Marine continues to build Olympic dreams for Afghan people :: The Fallbrook Village News

Reserve Marine continues to build Olympic dreams for Afghan people :: The Fallbrook Village News: "Looking down into a 12 to 14 foot deep pool with a broken pipe and only about a foot of water at the bottom, an envisioned coach watches as members of the Afghanistan national army (ANA) hold swim and water polo practice, April 7, in Camp Shorabak, Afghanistan.
Chief Warrant Officer 2 Jeremy B. Piasecki of Fallbrook, the readiness and reports officer with 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade-Afghanistan, created and coached Afghanistan’s first water polo team in Pol-e-Charki, located in Northeast Afghanistan from June to September 2008, and has been the coach for the national team since October 2008."

Slick Bill Clinton talks with big brush

This guy is working his show. It is with a lot of production value that makes it a bit overboard. But, I do like the content.



The tea party movement was hijacked some time ago. Oh well.

Just vote for the Libertarian. Here are some good reasons to do so.

Gingrich Stumps For Burns - Biden For Critz

First reason: Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich is coming to western Pennsylvania to stump for the Republican running to fill the congressional seat of the late Rep. John Murtha. Gingrich will be in Latrobe Thursday to support 41-year-old Tim Burns, a businessman from Eighty-Four. It will cost $150 to attend a general reception with Gingrich and $4,800 to attend a VIP event. Burns spokesman Tad Rupp says it wasn't difficult to get Gingrich to appear because "the entire country is paying attention to the race."

Second reason: Vice president Joe Biden is scheduled to be in Pittsburgh Friday to campaign for Democrat Mark Critz in the May 18 special election. Critz was director of Murtha's district, which covers all or parts of eight counties in southwestern Pennsylvania. Murtha died Feb. 8.
What else do you need?

Vote Libertarian!

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Idiocy with the Federal stimulus money is mind blowing.

Check out this PDF and look to the list. Everyone should read at least the top 10. It's amazing what they're wasting money on. They spend $1.15M on a new guardrail for an Oklahoma lake that has no water. They spend $800K repaving of a backup runway for the Murtha airport that gets fewer than 10,000 visitors per year:

Pennsylvania Sociable City Forum Agenda

Pennsylvania Sociable City Forum Agenda: "City of Pittsburgh and Councilman Bruce Kraus are pleased to host the Responsible Hospitality Institute's Sociable City Forum, a unique one day event for state and local leaders to share strategies on how to plan, manage and police hospitality zones in downtown districts.
Plan on spending the evening and explore Wilmington's vibrant dining and entertainment venues."

Fw: [IHMC CmapTools] cmc2010: Extension Deadline - Fecha Limite

-- Apologies for duplicates --- Disculpas si recibe este mensaje duplicado ---

Dear colleagues / Estimados colegas (Español al final),

The deadline to submit papers and posters to the 4th International Conference on Concept Mapping has been extended to Friday April 30. Some of the authors were somewhat concerned about the earthquake in Chile and got a late start in preparing their submissions and so we are giving them a few more days to complete their paper or poster. Of course, all authors can take advantage of this extension. Instructions on the submission process are available at the Conference website at http://cmc.ihmc.us. Please follow the instructions in terms of formatting and maximum number of pages.

La fecha límite para la recepción de ponencias para el 4o Congreso Internacional sobre Mapas Conceptuales ha sido extendida hasta el viernes 30 de abril. Algunos de los autores estaban preocupados por el terremoto en Chile y empezaron tarde la preparación de sus artículos, así que les estamos dando unos días más para que completen su artículo o poster. Por supuesto, todos los autores pueden aprovechar esta extensión. Las instrucciones sobre el procedimiento de envío de ponencias se encuentran en el sitio web del Congreso en http://cmc.ihmc.us. Por favor siga las instrucciones en cuanto a formato y número de páginas máximo.

We look forward to seeing you in Viña del Mar in October / Esperamos verle en Viña del Mar en Octubre.

CMC 2010 
Organizing Committee / Comité Organizador
http://cmc.ihmc.us 

Monday, April 19, 2010

Fw: Friends of PUSH, We Need Your Action NOW!

Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®


From: "Molly Rush" <molly.rush@verizon.net>
Date: Mon, 19 Apr 2010 17:53:53 -0400
To: Scott Tyson<TysMar@aol.com>
Subject: FW: Friends of PUSH, We Need Your Action NOW!

Dear Friends,

WE NEED YOUR HELP!

PA RECENTLY MADE HISTORY BY INTRODUCING TRUE SINGLE-PAYER HEALTHCARE LEGISLATION!
  SB400/HB1660, improved & expanded Medicare for all:

Bipartisan co-sponsors in both Assemblies
State Democratic Comm. endorsed unanimously

Gov. Ed Rendell has committed to sign the bill


***Healthcare4AllPA conducted a study of all municipalities and school districts and the state and showed that we could save nearly $3 BILLION, prevent bankruptcy of state and many school districts and municipalities with Single-Payer.
***We could compete with other countries for manufacturing jobs, cut healthcare costs in HALF for the employer and increase take-home pay, cut health care costs for families by thousands of dollars by cutting out FOR-PROFIT insurers.
***Under Single-Payer, we would
n’t have deductibles or even co-pays; just 3% of income would cover EVERYTHING from cradle to grave.

Now, we want a full, objective Economic Impact Study. [EIS] of SB400.

So do 34 out of 50 PA Senators who have sponsored a Resolution for an EIS

THE PROBLEM : FOUR GUYS IN SUITS HAVE BOTTLE-NECKED THE ECONOMIC IMPACT STUDY OF SB400 SINGLE-PAYER HEALTHCARE  which would MOVE THIS LEGISLATION FORWARD.
CALL PA Senate Leaders TODAY!


DEMAND they release EIS SB400 Res. for a Floor Vote:

Jake Corman (717) 787-1377

Dom Pileggi    (717) 787-4712
Donald White (717) 787-8724
Joe Scarnati  (717) 787-7084


RALLY! WE NEED YOUR VOICES!


April 23: 3pm Friday, Sen. Don White, 618 Philadelphia St., Indiana, PA, 15701

April 23: 10am Friday, Sen. Jake Corman, 236 Match Factory Plaza, Bellefonte, PA 16823

April 24: 10:30 Saturday, Sen. Dom Pileggi, 100 Evergreen Drive, Suite 113, Glen Mills, PA 19342

Contact Us!
-Website: www.healthcare4allpa.org
-Call us: 412-421-4242
-Email us: volunteerpushpa@gmail.com
-Facebook us: PUSH PA (Pennsylvanians United for Single Payer Healthcare)
-Follow us on twitter! @PAforPUSH


Christina Kim details LPGA tour life in new book Swinging From My Heels - Tours & News - Golf.com

Christina Kim details LPGA tour life in new book Swinging From My Heels - Tours & News - Golf.com: "In her new book Swinging From My Heels, Christina Kim dishes on life, love and the L-word on the LPGA tour"

quote:


When I was 11, my dad turned up with a funny-looking metal stick with a bulbous end. Marching me to the backyard he threw down a strip of Astroturf and grunted, "Here, swing hard as you can." I did, and it was kind of fun. Then he told me to do it 499 more times. This was my introduction to a golf club, and the golf swing. Being a dutiful Korean daughter I never thought to question my dad, and every day after school I would spend two hours making the required 500 swings, as would my older brother Mel and older sister Gloria. After a month of this tedium Dad finally took us to a driving range so we could hit actual golf balls and watch them fly. It was like the clouds parted and the angels were singing and I finally understood there was a point to all of this.

Read more: http://www.golf.com/golf/tours_news/article/0,28136,1982913,00.html#ixzz0lZZVv7Fo

Oops Did He Say That? Tom Corbett's Comments Raises Eyebrows. The Constitution is ...

http://pennpatriot.blogspot.com/2010/04/oops-did-i-say-that-corbett-flap-raises.html

Tom Corbett's comments during his speech at this weekend's Pennsylvania Leadership Conference has left many conservatives around the state scratching their heads. Some are flat out suggesting that Corbett is a liberal.

Many conservatives who attended the conference and heard the speech were not impressed with Corbett and by far the most controversial part of his speech was when Corbett said "The Constitution is a living document". Something you might not want to say to a group of constitutional conservatives when you are running for Governor.

The view that the Constitution is a living document is the common view of liberal democrats who like to bend the original limited government intent of the Constitution in order to advance their big government/socialist agenda.

People who believe in a Living Constitution believe that the constitutional framers wrote the Constitution in broad and flexible terms to create such a dynamic, "living" document. Constitutional conservatives believe that the Constitution should only be changed through the amendment process.

According to Wikipedia a prominent endorsement of the Living Constitution concept was heard in the 2000 presidential campaign by the Democratic candidate, Al Gore. One of most vocal critics of the Living Document view of the Constitution is Supreme Court Justice Scalia.

So Tom Corbett agrees with Al Gore when it comes to Constitutional interpretation. A very scary thought considering Corbett is the Pennsylvania Republican Party's endorsed candidate for Governor. Republican voters across the state desperately need to give Sam Rohrer a serious look if we really want to take back our state government.

by Randy Potter

===========================
The Constitution is an "Amendable Document", not a "Living Document".

Americans should oppose a so called "living constitution", which is a term of art for "Amendment by Usurpation".

[QUICK ENGLISH LESSON, Definition - Usurpation - an unjust seize of power.]
Americans should support what George Washington said in his -1796 Farewell Address -

"If, in the opinion of the people, the distribution or modification of the constitutional powers be in any particular wrong, let it be corrected by an amendment in the way which the Constitution designates. But let there be no change by usurpation; for though this, in one instance, may be the instrument of good, it is the customary weapon by which free governments are destroyed. The precedent must always greatly overbalance in permanent evil any partial or transient benefit, which the use can at any time yield."

Article 5 of the constitution specifies how to amend the Constitution.
We have amended the US Constitution 27 times, usually for the better.

QUICK HISTORY LESSON, the word usurpation was used 3 times in the Declaration of Independence. - "But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism ... The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. ... We ...have conjured them ... to disavow these usurpations".

Please SUPPORT SAM ROHRER, The Constitutional Republican Candidate for Governor - http://www.samrohrer.org/

Frank Huchrowski, North Versailles PA
=================================

From: Lois
To: NationalPrecinctActivists-Pa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sun, Apr 18, 2010 12:44 pm
Subject: [NationalPrecinctActivists-Pa] Corbett says "Constitution is a living document" at Pa Leadership Conference Sat


There was an amazing climax to the Pa Leadership Conference this weekend with Saturday afternoon speeches by our gubernatorial candidates Tom Corbett and Sam Rohrer.
No one could deny the room was clearly pro-Rohrer. The crowd gave wildly enthusiastic applause to the introduction of Sam, and interrupted his inspiring speech, which centered on the princples on which he would govern, with spirited applause and chants of "Go, Sam, Go!" Many in the crowd had the now-familiar blue and white campaign signs and raised them energetically throughout the speech.

This was in stark contrast not only to the reception Corbett got, but to the entire style and substance of Corbett's speech. Corbett sounded more like a politician, less interested in principles, and honestly, it was difficult to tell what he stood for at the end of the speech. Even with respect to his lawsuit filed against the federal government on behalf of Pennsylvania to protect our 10th Amendment rights in the healthcare bill, he did not energetically communicate his interest in defending these rights.
I am not trying to tell you what Mr. Corbett believes. I am telling you the way he sounded. Of course this is subjective; you will make your own determination.
Mr. Corbett did say that our "Constitution is a living document." I was so stunned to hear these words come out of the mouth of our attorney general that I don't even remember what he said after that. There was a stunned reaction in the room as conservatives looked at each other and said to themselves, "Did he really just say that??"
Perhaps he meant something other than what is usually meant when liberals say this. Did he? Why the choice of words? Words have meaning, and words have connotations. Surely the state committee-endorsed candidate knows this.

The most important takeaway, and perhaps the most important illustration during the entire weekend, is that SAM ROHRER CAN WIN THIS ELECTION. The Tea Party is envigorated and excited by what this candidate stands for, and they are coming out to vote for him on May 18.
But the 50 dollar question is: Will they step up and get out the vote for Sam? Will they be able to bring their neighbors out and vote for Sam, as well? Because that is what it is going to take. The Tea Party activists are not enough in numbers alone.
This is why the Precinct Project is so important.
The job of committee people is to know how to effectively get out the vote in their precincts. And it is the job of the county committee to make sure all committee people are trained in how to accomplish this and then have the means to do it.
Can we do it in May 2010? We will find out on May 19.

Lois Kaneshiki
Pennsylvania Precinct Project
candidate, Republican State Committee
Blair County
http://www.BringthePartytothePeople.org

Woman dies in Turtle Creek police station

Woman dies in Turtle Creek police station: "Woman dies in Turtle Creek police station"
A suspended license wasn't the only thing she was driving with or more to the point, driving toward.

May she rest in peace.

National Republican Liberty Caucus Endorses Diamond for Pa's Lieutenant Governor

Russ Diamond has earned the endorsement of the National Board of the Republican Liberty Caucus in the race for Pennsylvania Lieutenant Governor. The RLC voted to endorse Diamond for his commitment to champion less government dependency and more individual liberty.

"The Republican Liberty Caucus is doing its best to assist the Tea Party movement by identifying those Republicans committed to downsizing government and restoring constitutional rule," said RLC Endorsements Director Dan Sheill.

"I'm honored to accept this particular endorsement," Diamond said. "All the efforts I've undertaken politically over the years - from fighting the pay raise to authoring legislation for a limited citizens' constitutional convention to seeking ways to permanently eliminate property taxes to standing up for the Tenth Amendment - revolve around protecting our rights and ensuring liberty."

Since November 2009, 26 newspapers, six of the state's leading columnists, the leaders of Pennsylvania's four major good government groups and the two most prominent political analysts in the Commonwealth have publicly endorsed the idea of holding a constitutional convention in response to arrests of legislators for using public resources for political purposes, indictments of state judges by federal prosecutors in an alleged kickback scheme that sent youths to detention centers without due process, and a seven-year string of budget fiascos in Harrisburg.

Diamond is the only statewide candidate in any race who has authored legislation for a limited citizens' constitutional convention, which is also supported by 72 percent of Pennsylvanians, according to a recent Franklin and Marshall College poll. He is the author of SB340 and HB1929, the only legitimate, workable plan currently before the General Assembly to enable such a convention. His plan would elect citizen delegates to debate reforms to the institutions of state government while protecting individual rights from unwarranted attack. The prime sponsors of the bills are Republicans who have generated bipartisan co-sponsorship as well.

Diamond's plan to eliminate property taxes once and for all in Pennsylvania is a fresh new approach that gives the legislature ample time to debate a revenue replacement plan to fund schools, counties, and municipalities, but provides a constitutional deadline for getting it done. He believes Pennsylvanians deserve to own their homes outright and should not live in fear of government taking their property simply because they've had a run of tough financial years.

Diamond's stand on defending Pennsylvanians from federal intrusion includes a plan to actively work with state agencies and local officials to analyze, identify, and fight federal mandates that run counter to the 10th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. He believes presenting citizens with the practical implications and the cost/benefit ratios of such mandates will give Pennsylvania firm ground on which to stand in taking steps to reduce the burdens inflicted on the Commonwealth's citizens by an overreaching, ever-growing federal behemoth.

Diamond is an entrepreneur in Lebanon County and was the founder and chairman of PACleanSweep, the statewide organization that sparked the repeal of the now-infamous legislative pay raise of 2005, led the charge in the first-ever non-retention of a Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice, and raised 117 legislative candidates in 2006 that fueled a 24 percent turnover in the General Assembly that year, a twelve-fold increase over normal election years.

For more information: http://www.russdiamond.org

City stretches phys ed curriculum through yoga

City stretches phys ed curriculum through yoga For some students, physical education classes offer a needed respite from the monotony of shuffling between stuffy classrooms.

Sure, PE classes are needed for some students -- those with bodies.

Every student should have should have solid physical education instruction. We need our schools to also have time in the day for more kinetic stuff -- like recess.

For others, they can be treacherous. They can feel singled out or self-conscious about their fitness and body shape in comparison to peers.
Pittsburgh Public Schools are integrating yoga into the phys ed curriculum to diversify the gym experience and give students at different levels of fitness an activity they can adapt to at their own pace and still have a workout.
English, math and science can be treacherous too for some. If you can't read, how do you recite a poem?

Yoga is a good and should be part of physical education -- but the treacherous part is just for the sensational.

"We build our [phys ed] curriculum around five components -- body composition, flexibility, muscular, strength and cardiovascular endurance -- and yoga has a direct impact on all of them," said Jerri Lippert, the school district's chief academic officer.

Yoga has very little to do with cardio endurance nor strength. Next to nothing. But, fine. Yoga is still deals with one aspect and there, with flexibility, it might be the best activity anywhere. Don't over inflate the benefits of yoga to justify it. Just do it for the benefit of flexibility. Plus, there are other benefits too from world culture to mental sharpness.

Yoga's inventor is from Shadyside. Who would have thought? :) Yoga is even great for kids who are doing well in the management of their bodies too. Of course yoga can enhance one's mental maturity. Excellent.

The killer is that funding was needed from the Grable Foundation and the Heinz Endowments among others. Why must the foundations fund the program? The schools should be doing this as mats to sit upon are not that expensive. Don't we pay taxes so the schools can pay teachers?

Yoga is phys ed. But yoga is not really about a confidence-building interlude for students. Far from it. Yoga will do more to tear down the super confident than anything. So don't sell yoga for its confience-building. Sell it for its learning value and physical value. All of physical education should be a big benefit for those who have had a hard time with some of with exercise and sports. Physical education is not about sports. All in all, every young person has had a hard time with exercise as each is still growing and just learning about self.

"Yoga allows an entry point for students who may feel like they don't want to get on a track or soccer field after third period, for example, because they don't feel like having to go through with the hustle of sweating at that point in their day," said Dr. Lippert.


Yoga is an entry point for students who don't have enough time to shower. Yoga is a sweat-free activity. Yoga fit within a one period class. Yoga is a recess from the school day and even an entry point for NOT doing harder cardio exercise. Yoga is a good option for Physical Education if the aim is minimal disruption for a strictly academic day.

The girls wanted to do yoga instead of circuit training (weight lifting and cardiovascular exercises). If yoga is all that they do and the other activites are nixed -- then the school district has failed our students. However, if yoga is far different from anything that they did in the past -- then the school district has failed too. Yoga should have its place and time in PE. But PE needs to be more than just yoga.

"They have learned it, they know it, and now they don't even need us to show them how to bend and stretch and meditate on the exercise. They just do it," said Ms. Wolski.
That statement, "They don't even need us," is a back breaker. Say what?

Liverpool ponder route to Madrid amid volcanic ash cloud travel chaos | Football | guardian.co.uk

Would hate to be a travel agent or team manager these days for a football team (soccer) in Eurpope.
Liverpool ponder route to Madrid amid volcanic ash cloud travel chaos | Football | guardian.co.uk: "Liverpool ponder route to Madrid amid volcanic ash cloud travel chaos"

Teacher Tenure and Performance Pay in Florida

Teacher Tenure and Performance Pay in Florida - Walt Gardner's Reality Check - Education Week Gov. Charlie Crist's veto on Apr. 15 of a bill that would have eliminated tenure for public school teachers in Florida and linked their pay to student performance on standardized tests was seen as a bellwether. But the issues raised are far from dead. As a result, this is a propitious time to take a closer look at three lessons that emerge from the state's experience

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Happy Patriots Day

On Monday we celebrate Patriots Day, especially in Boston.
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®

Fw: Great Pittsburgh Non-Profits Seeking Adult Summer Workers

Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®


From: RFlanag@aol.com
Date: Sun, 18 Apr 2010 19:12:57 EDT
To: <RFlanag@aol.com>
Subject: Great Pittsburgh Non-Profits Seeking Adult Summer Workers

 

PLEASE POST THE ATTACHED FLYER AND FORWARD THIS EMAIL OUT TO THOSE LOOKING FOR SUMMER EMPLOYMENT

 

EASTSIDE NEIGHBORHOOD EMPLOYMENT CENTER

5321 Penn Avenue

Pittsburgh, PA 15224

Phone:  (412) 362-8580          Fax:  (412) 441-6918

It's tough finding quality employment for the summer. At the same time, organizations are having a hard time finding quality candidates to consider for job openings.

Check out eastendworks.com, an innovative, new website that lets you browse dozens of job openings at more than 15 organizations in Pittsburgh's East End. These organizations are offering summer, long-term, and even permanent employment.

Questions? Contact Bill or Nicole at 412-362-8580. If you are an organization with your own job openings to post, let us know. It's free and easy!

 

Job seekers--- move on this opportunity now!

 

Rick Flanagan

Manager, Eastside Neighborhood Employment Center

rflanag@aol.com

 

EEW-Logo
log on now to eastendworks.com

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Steve Jobs bans all apps from iPhone (or thereabouts) • The Register

Steve Jobs bans all apps from iPhone (or thereabouts) • The Register: "Steve Jobs bans all apps from iPhone (or thereabouts)
Alert Print Post commentCode translation verboten. Whatever that means"

"Wisdom begins with calling a thing by its proper name."

"Wisdom begins with calling a thing by its proper name."
- Ancient Chinese Proverb

Friday, April 16, 2010

Invisible Empire: Ignore it at Your Children's Peril
by Regan Straley

Yesterday, April 15, Tax Day here in the U.S.A., saw the release of "Invisible Empire: A New World Order Defined," the latest film by young cinematographer Jason Bermas, who was responsible for "Fabled Enemies" and what is perhaps the most virally successful documentary in YouTube history, "Loose Change." That film explored the myriad, and to this day, unanswered questions surrounding the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. "Invisible Empire" delves even deeper, sifting through mountains of official and mainstream media sources to support the possibility that the U.S. and the nations of the European Union are really being run by a shadow government consisting of an exclusive core network of financial, corporate, military, and intelligence elite.

What's more, the film contends that the elite-owned corporate media--represented by major TV news and entertainment outlets, leading "independent" newspapers like The New York Times and Washington Post, and the thousands of daily hometown rags owned by a handful of corporate chains--has for decades been promoting a vapid celebrity- and sports-obsessed culture in order to distract us from this fact. In addition, the mass media has used both its journalistic and entertainment output to foster the public's incremental acceptance of a uniform, regimented, global, and permanent war-based economy. That all sounds like a mouthful, and the prospect of having to absorb such a colossal thesis makes "American Idol" seem even more puzzlingly attractive as an alternative. Nevertheless, whether you agree with him or not, Bermas actually manages to corral this sprawling hypothesis into a coherent message that should be comprehensible to anyone who regards themselves as
at least as smart as a fifth-grader.

[Before I go any further, I just stepped outside to partake in one of my vices, and saw nine doe run across my backyard, cross the road, line up in single file, and, one by one, leap over a fence and into the woods. Cool, and real. Unlike the faces and noises on my TV.]

"Invisible Empire" is available for purchase on a high-quality DVD containing 30 minutes of additional material, but can be viewed for now in six lower-quality YouTube segments. The first two parts amount to a primer on the history of the New World Order, the world events that can be attributed to it, and the financial, corporate, and government elite who have been pushing for it since before World War I.

While these introductory segments do confirm the existence of the New World Order in the actual words of those who fund and philosophize for it as an alternative to national sovereignty, they remain rather light on empirical data and seem to be mainly devoted to attracting and holding the interest of the average uninitiated viewer. Creaky old shadow government watchers like me, who cut their teeth on the Iran-Contra affair, will find them somewhat redundant and boring. Those who are determined not to believe any of it before even watching the documentary will use the skin-deep projections of the first two parts as an excuse to abort the viewing experience and discredit the entire film among family, friends, and coworkers.

That would be a shame. Because it's in Part 3 that Bermas suddenly, even jarringly, opens up the turbos, presenting his audience with media clip after media clip of NWO proponents exposing their own ignoble intentions, and official document after official document confirming that the adoption of their dubious goals is well underway in America and throughout the entire geopolitical arena. And whatever else you think of Bermas's ideas, you cannot accuse him of an ideological or political motivation. This film is equally damning of both our Democratic and Republican leadership, and draws no distinction between what the media likes to call "liberals" and "conservatives." Apart from their divisive and manipulative rhetoric, there are no substantial differences in the policies they ultimately pursue.

As a whole, "Invisible Empire" does a fairly effective job of supporting its central premise: what most of us think we know about how the world operates is a pathetic and suicidal fantasy, and that those institutions that publicly present themselves as "our government" are not at all what we've been led to believe. So, love it, hate it. Let it motivate you to further research, or dismiss it as wacky conspiracy theorism. If you choose, let it drive you faster and further into the protective arms of "American Idol." But ignore it at your own, your children's, and their children's risk.


Friday, April 16, 2010

Cycle races in the region

This year I want to get my head around the realm of cycle races in the area. Are there any readers of this blog who can give me a tutorial? I need some hand holding.

This is what we are talking about.

 2010 BAR Season Is Upon Us As you are aware from my various emails that the PCA is more than the PA road and track BAR but they are an important part of this association and what we do for our membership. The 2010 PA BAR season is here with two races with rich history and challenging courses. Saturday features the SoYoCo Circuit Race (http://www.bikereg.com/events/register.asp?eventid=10274) followed by the 23rd, yes 23rd, running of the Lower Providence Spring Classic Criterium (http://www.bikereg.com/events/register.asp?eventid=10354). Two great events to kick off the PA BAR series which has became the focus for many a riders season. I'll be there is khaki and blue as the chief referee so stop by the start/finish to say hello. Road Race Calendar Changes The official PA road racing calendar is on the PCA web site (http://www.pacycling.org/calendar/). There have been some changes to races originally scheduled for the next several weeks so please take a moment to look at April and May's events. Thanks Battenkill and Paris Roubaix Monday is a busy day for me at work but I always take a few moments to look at the past weekends race results for PA, NJ, etc. and in Europe. I was keenly interested in seeing where the PA riders finished in Battenkill on Saturday. My good friend Chris Johnson placed 18th in the P-1 race. Andy Munas (Dynaflo), who I race with at the track, took a well placed 9th in the M2 race. Robin Carpenter (Young Medalists/Team Dual Temp) and Zack Noonan (Young Medalists/Team Dual Temp) were in the top 5 for JB 17-18 and strong man Scott Haverstick (ERA Cycling) took the win in the 60+ race. After scanning those results I happened to take a look at what happened in the 122.4 KM Paris – Roubaix Junior race that took place on April 11th. More amazing than US rider Lawson Craddock 3rd place was the rider in 20th place, PA's own Juan Carmona (Breinigsville) who rides domestically for Young Medalists/Team Dual Temp. Wow! Hats off to Juan and May Britt whose work withthe juniors in PA has prepared them to be not only successful in local, regional and national races but as you can see internationally as well. 2010 PCA Junior Race Series The first race in the 2010 PCA Junior Race Series is the Lower Providence Spring Classic Criterium and a reminder to all juniors that double BAR points will be awarded and riders cannot ride up in age groups. Good luck and thanks to Gwen, May Britt, Nathan, and Shippensburg University Cycling for making the series happen. 2010 PA Track BAR This week I will formalize the rules and regulations for the 2010 PA Track BAR series which opens on Tuesday May 25th. The BAR has been expanded in 2010 to include masters who race on Saturday and I will finalize any changes with respect to the series and pass them on to Ben Miller (VPCC) and PCA Track Coordinator Rick Miller (QCW Cycling) for review. Road Racing in April Saturday – April 17th SoYoCo Circuit Race (Thru-It-All Racing, Gretna Bikes, Lupine Lighting Systems)***** PA BAR Race ***** - M1-2-3, M3-4, M4-5, Women Open, and 45+http://www.bikereg.com/events/register.asp?eventid=10274 Sunday – April 18th Lower Providence Spring Classic Criterium (TalkSoft Cycling Team p/b Pabst Blue Ribbon)***** PA BAR Race ***** - P-1-2-3, M3-4, M4, M5, W1-2-3, W4, Juniors (all age groups), 45+, 55+, and Special Event Racehttp://www.bikereg.com/events/register.asp?eventid=10354 Mingo Creek Spring Road Race Series (Trek of Pittsburgh) - M1-2-3, M4-5, Women and 45+http://trekofpgh.com/articles/2010-mingo-creek-spring-road-race-series-pg198.htm PICC 2010 Spring Training Series-Fairview (Presque Isle Cycling Club)http://www.picycling.org/events.html Saturday – April 24th Farmersville Road Race (PRO-AM Cycling) – M4, U19 (M4), 45+, 55+, M5, U19 (M5), W3-4, U19 (W3-4), M2-3, U19 (M2-3), and 35+http://www.bikereg.com/events/register.asp?eventid=10054 PICC 2010 Spring Training Series-Northeast (Presque Isle Cycling Club)http://www.picycling.org/events.html Sunday – April 25th Mingo Creek Spring Road Race Series (Trek of Pittsburgh) - M1-2-3, M4-5, Women and 45+http://trekofpgh.com/articles/2010-mingo-creek-spring-road-race-series-pg198.htm Final Thoughts Lower Providence has traditionally served as the opener for the PA criterium series and I for one look forward to catching up with many in the PCA family as the race draws the top riders in the region (PA, NJ, DE). I've raced LPC in the past with a top 20 result in the 35+ race being my best result eons ago. Now I view the race from an official's perspective and have a great crew supporting me this Sunday. Best of luck for those racing this weekend and see you on Sunday! Thanks for supporting cycling in PA and ride safe! David H. MitchellHershey Cancer Institute – GPOA - CannondalePresident - Pennsylvania Cycling Association (www.pacycling.org)215-284-2339pcapres07@verizon.net

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Western PA Black Political Assembly will host a political Candidates forum featuring candidates

Time: April 24, 2010 from 1pm to 4pm

Location: Schenley High School @ Reizenstein

Organized By: Western Pennsylvania Black Politicl Assembly

Western PA Black Political Assembly will host a political Candidates forum featuring candidates for the following office:

Governor - Lt Governor US Senate and the 19 Dist. Representative.

Doors open at 12 noon. Become an informed voter, come out and learn what these candidates are all about.

Ask question to see where they stand on issues that effect the Black community.

Co-hosting this forum :
B-PEP the Black Political Empowerment Project
The Alleghenians LTD
Zeta Phi Beta Sorsrity
A Phillip Randolph Institute
The Institute of the Black World

Swimming Downhill

Swimming Downhill

Finis has a new blog. Nice.

But while there I saw the link to Brian Goodell's page.

This was when I got into swimming!

Brian Goodell: Gold Medal Winner from Rachel Pradhan on Vimeo.


Later, in 1980, I coached with a team in Boston, at Harvard, where Bobby Hackett swam, BGSC. I saw these guys swim a few times at NCAA Championships too.

Meanwhile, in Pittsburgh we fight the fight that says swimming is going downhill, as in a dying sport. Hardly. In the city schools, swimming isn't what it should be. But, in the other schools in the city, beyond PPS, and just outside the city, swimming is doing very well. Oakland Cathoic has a state championship swim team. It is in the city too!

If swimmers in the city swam downhill, then the sport of swimming would be going strong.

Link to Brian's site.

Tea Party and Olive Branch

From:Subject: [MoveOnPgh] ~ Peace Activists Extend an Olive Branch to the Tea Party to Talk about War

Instead of fighting against each other, people of all political parties should work together, fighting the corporations, for what is most important to us all:

Stop endless wars and militarism
Stop the bankers and Wall Street from robbing the people
Stop corporate control of our government
Stop election fraud
Stop the Federal Reserve from charging taxpayers interest on money they create out of nothing

Peace Activists Extend an Olive Branch to the Tea Party to Talk about War | Take Action | AlterNet

Tea Partiers who are furious at government spending and soaring deficits should take a hard look at what is the biggest sinkhole of our tax dollars: Pentagon spending.

On Tax Day, Tea Party members from around the country will descend on the nation's capitol to "protest big government and support lower taxes, less government and more freedom." CODEPINK, a women-led peace group advocating an end to war and militarism, will be sending some representatives to begin a dialogue. While we come from the opposite end of the political spectrum and don't support the goals and tactics of the Tea Party, there is an area where we are seeking common ground, i.e. endless wars and militarism.

As Tea Partiers express their anger at out-of-control government spending and soaring deficits, we will ask them to take a hard look at what is, by far, the biggest sinkhole of our tax dollars: Pentagon spending. With the Obama administration proposing the largest military budget ever, topping $700 billion not including war supplementals, the U.S. government is now spending almost as much on the military as the rest of the world combined.

Perhaps the Tea Party and peace folks--unlikely allies--can agree that one way to shrink big government is to rein in military spending. Here are some questions to get the conversation going:

At the Southern Republican Leadership Conference on April 10, Cong. Ron Paul -- who has a great following within the Tea Party -- chided both conservatives and liberals for their profligate spending on foreign military bases, occupations and maintaining an empire. "We're running out of money," he warned. "All empires end for financial reasons, and that is what the markets are telling us today. We can do better with peace than with war." Do you agree with Congressman Paul on this?

Every taxpayer has already spent, on average, a staggering $7,367 for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan (costofwar.com). Obama is now sending another 30,000 troops to Afghanistan, with a price tag of one million dollars per soldier per year. Opposition to these wars ranges from liberal Cong. Dennis Kucinich and conservative Tea Party leader Sheriff Richard Mack. During a Congressional vote to end the war in Afghanistan that was defeated but got bipartisan support, Rep. Dennis Kucinich said, "Nearly 1000 U.S. soldiers have died. And for what? Hundreds of billions spent. And for what? To make Afghanistan safe for crooks, drug dealers and crony capitalism?" Do you think Congress should turn off the war spigot and bring out troops home?

The Cold War has been over for 20 years, yet the U.S. government maintains 800-plus bases around the world with troops stationed in 148 countries and 11 territories. Conservative commentator Pat Buchanan asks, "How we can justify borrowing hundreds of billions yearly from Europe, Japan and the Gulf states -- to defend Europe, Japan and the Arab Gulf states? Is it not absurd to borrow hundreds of billions annually from China -- to defend Asia from China?" Should we begin to dismantle this global web of bases?

Far and away the largest recipient of US foreign aid is Israel, a wealthy country that gets $3 billion a year from Uncle Sam with no strings attached and no accountability. We also give the repressive Egyptian government over a billion dollars a year to buy their support for a Middle East peace plan that is going nowhere. Are you in favor of continuing this taxpayer largesse to Israel and Egypt?

An area where Pentagon spending has mushroomed is the payment of private security contractors. While many soldiers who risk their lives for their country struggle to support their families, private security company employees can pocket as much as $1,000 a day. High pay for contract workers in war zones burdens taxpayers and saps military morale. Moreover, military officers in the field have said contractors often operate like "cowboys," using unnecessary and excessive force that has undermined our reputation overseas. Cong. Jan Schakowsky introduced the Stop Outsourcing Security Act that would phase out private security contractors in war zones. Do you support that?

Experts on the left and the right say we could cut our military budget by 25%, including closing foreign bases, winding down the wars, and ending obsolete weapons systems, without jeopardizing our security. Do you agree? If we could make significant cuts to the military budget, how should those funds be reallocated? To pay down the debt? Increase security at home? Rebuild our infrastructure? Stimulate the economy through tax breaks?

We are not naive to think that it would be easy for the Tea Party and the peace movement to work together. Our core values are different. We have had our battles in the past. We would certainly part ways in terms of how to redirect Pentagon funds, with progressives wanting more government investment in healthcare, jobs, clean energy and education--which is exactly what the Tea Party opposes.

But building peace means reaching out to the other side and trying to find common ground even with those people whose beliefs contradict so many of our own. If the Tea Party is really against runaway government spending, then certainly we can work together to cut a slice out of the military pork that is bankrupting our nation. In extending the olive branch to talk about war, the conversation can hopefully be enlightening on other issues as well, such as banks run amok and undue corporate control of our government.

Who knows what kind of potent brew could emerge when folks on the left and the right--both alienated by a two-party system that doesn't meet our needs--sit down for tea?

Mark Crowley's LTE @ North Shore Under River Tunnel

I had a LTE in my local weekly (Plum) today (4/15/2010) about Pittsburgh's North Shore Connector. We've discussed this disaster in Libertarian Pittsburgh posts long ago, but a local field trip article encouraged me to write. I'm glad they printed it, but I didn't like their editing. Here's the LTE as-submitted with the omitted parts in [bold].

Mark

Plum Advance Leader
Connector a symbol for poor government spending
April 15, 2010

Dear Editor:

While there's merit exposing students to engineering projects ("Plum High School students go underground for a look at Connector", Karen Zapf, 4/1/2010), there's a cruel irony in that [April 1st] piece.

The Connector, an admirable engineering accomplishment, is a classic example of a misguided, wasteful use of public money.

Politicians from Tom Murphy to Rick Santorum to Ed Rendell promoted it. Costs increased from $363 million in 2003 to $552 million today. It consumed limited resources, denying better uses. ["Even Governor Rendell eventually admitted, "I guess you've got to finish it, but it's a tragic mistake."]

Other tragic mistakes -- insane wars, punishing success with taxes, rewarding failure with bailouts, and buying votes with walking-around money, federal earmarks and entitlements -- have far costlier consequences.

State and local governments are $3 trillion in debt. The national debt tops $12 trillion. Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, veterans' benefits and federal pension obligations exceed $100 trillion. The dollar's value fell 10% in the past 12 months and is going down.

The cruel irony is that when those students stood in that hole beneath the Allegheny River, it was an inescapable metaphor for the hole in which their generation was placed.

Mark Crowley, Plum

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Fwd: Steel-City Stonewall Democrats

Click on the name of an endorsed or recommended candidate to find out
more about their campaign and volunteering.

Pittsburgh, PA - For Immediate Release – SCSD 2010 Pennsylvania
Primary Endorsement Results

Steel-City Stonewall Democrats ("SCSD") held its annual Endorsement
Event on March 28th at the Hyde Park restaurant on the Northside of
Pittsburgh. In attendance were over 100 members and candidates, making
for an electric atmosphere throughout the day. "This year Steel-City
had more candidates competing for its endorsement than ever before,
which shows a growing commitment by candidates in this region of the
Commonwealth to provide equality for all Pennsylvanians," said SCSD
President Dana Elmendorf.

At the event members were able to vote for endorsements in statewide
and local races. Candidates who were Strongly Endorsed by the club
are: Arlen Specter for U.S. Senate, Mike Doyle for U.S. House of
Representatives in the 14th Congressional District, Dan Connolly for
U.S. House of Representatives in the 18th Congressional District, and
Jonathan A. Saidel for Lt. Governor. Wayne Fontana was Strongly
Endorsed for the Pennsylvania Senate's 42nd District. In Pennsylvania
House races, Strongly Endorsed Candidates are Dan Frankel in the 23rd
District, Chelsa Wagner in the 22nd, and Jake Wheatley in the 19th.

Other candidates under consideration did not achieve a clear majority
of the support from voting members, but were top vote-getters in their
respective races, so those candidates receive a designation of
Recommended from the club.

Mark Purcell is Recommended for the State House in the 20th District.

In the race for the Governor's office, vote was tied between Joe
Hoeffel and Dan Onorato, each receiving an equal number of votes.
During his speech, Joe Hoeffel cited his steadfast support for issues
such as marriage equality and his commitment to a woman's right to
choose.  Dan Onorato, the Allegheny County executive stood by his
record of advancing LGBT rights locally, including the passage of the
County Human Relations ordinance.

"Because the voting membership decides whom to endorse, the SCSD board
of Directors will let stand the tie vote, with both Hoeffel and
Onorato Recommended in the May Primary," commented Janis Williams, a
Political Committee volunteer.

"The Steel-City Stonewall Democrats would like to thank its members
and volunteers and all of the Candidates who sought our endorsement
for making this year's event a great success.  Special thanks to SCSD
members: Janis Williams for volunteering to manage the endorsement
event, Chris Eckles for volunteering to set up the sound equipment and
Thomas Waters for videoing the candidates.  As an organization we are
always thrilled when we can continue to bring more people into the
political process. To that end, we would like to remind everyone who
participated in this event to vote in the Primary on May 18, 2010."

###

Per official procedures of the organization, Candidates will receive a
"Strong Endorsement" if they receive 50%+1 of the vote of the
membership in attendance. We will also acknowledge with a "Recommended
Endorsement" those candidates who, while not making the 50%+1
threshold, were top vote getters in their respective races.  This
allows members to offer endorsements in races with multiple candidates
seeking the endorsement.

Click the link below for videos, raw numbers, & pics from the
Endorsement Gathering:

http://stonewalldemocrats.org/steel-city/node/1053

Completed questionnaires from all the above the candidates are posted
in the news archive of www.steel-city.org

To become a member of Steel-City Stonewall Democrats and National
Stonewall Democrats, click the link below:

http://stonewalldemocrats.org/steel-city/contribute

________________________________

April 19th 2010 is the LAST day to register vote in time for the May
18th, 2010 Pennsylvania Primary

Click the link below to register to vote

http://www.votespa.com/portal/server.pt/community/register_to_vote/13518

________________________________

And last but not least:

Joanne Bostjanick & Lee Marcuzzi cordially invite you to their 3rd
Annual Desserts For Democrats

April 25th, 2 - 4 PM

Come and enjoy great deserts,
rub elbows with gay friendly candidates
and have a lovely afternoon.

1343 Sharps Hill Road
Pittsburgh PA 15215

For more info click the link to the Facebook page below:

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=114962591851676&ref=mf

Fw: Greens & Libertarians Condemn Decision in PA Ballot Access Lawsuit

This is big news. When I stood for office I went to Harrisburg and to court. I had a first hand account of the bonusgate slime from my PA senator, Wayne Fontana, and the guy wearing a robe. My fight put me on very thin ice and I had to be prudent.

This needs to be fixed. Our democratic process is frail. This is a major key to our salvation of a state.

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From: media-relations@lppa.org
Date: Thu, 15 Apr 2010 16:32:34 -0500
To: <mark@rauterkus.com>
Subject: Greens & Libs Condemn Decision in Ballot Access Lawsuit

April 15, 2010

Attention: News Editor

For Immediate Release

Contact:  
I.K. Samways, Green Party of PA Chair, 412-215-9161, isamways@aol.com
Steve Baker, Green Party of PA, 717-845-8697 OR 717-755-1463, thebeaker@pa.net
Doug Leard, Libertarian Party of PA Media Relations, Media-Relations@lppa.org
Michael Robertson, Libertarian Party of PA Chair, 1-800-R-RIGHTS, chair@lppa.org

Greens & Libs Condemn Decision in Ballot Access Lawsuit
• Green Party, Libertarian Party, and Constitution Party filed federal lawsuit to challenge discriminatory provisions and enforcement of ballot access laws
• Judge, a former state court judge, concludes that other state court judges are not to blame for Pennsylvania’s ballot access woes

GREEN PARTY OF PENNSYLVANIA
http://www.gpofpa.org

LIBERTARIAN PARTY OF PENNSYLVANIA
http://www.lppa.org

The Green Party of Pennsylvania and the Libertarian Party of Pennsylvania condemned a decision by federal Judge Lawrence Stengel last week.  Stengel concluded that the lawsuit, brought by the Green, Constitution, and Libertarian Parties of Pennsylvania, targeted the wrong plaintiffs, and thus threw out the case.

Stengel ruled that the plaintiffs lack standing to challenge the Pennsylvania system of using courts to determine if petitions are valid, and assessing court costs against candidates whose petitions are deemed not to have enough signatures.  In recent years, these costs have amounted to over $80,000 for the "crime" of trying to run for public office.

The lawsuit, Constitution Party v. Cortes, was filed in May, on behalf of the alternative parties by the Center for Competitive Democracy (CCD), a non-partisan, non-profit 501(c)(3) legal advocacy group.  The suit, filed in federal District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, challenged the constitutionality of the Pennsylvania Election Code provisions that authorize courts to order candidates to pay litigation costs and fees to private parties who challenge their nomination papers.  In recent years, these fees have amounted to more $80,000 for the crime of doing no more than trying to run for public office.

Due to the courts’ role in fining candidates, which is not required by Pennsylvania law, the lawsuit specifically listed State Court Judges as the plaintiffs in the case.  And because the lawsuit targeted State Court Judges, it was filed in federal court to avoid a conflict of interest.  However, last week, federal court Judge Stengel did not agree with this line of thinking and threw out the case due to the plaintiff’s “lack of standing.” 

Judge Stengel refused to comment on the other two issues in the case. One issue was the systematic refusal of the Pennsylvania Department of Elections to tally write-ins.  A closely related issue is that many counties in Pennsylvania don’t count and report any write-ins.  The other unmentioned issue in the decision is the 15% registration threshold for a party to be fully ballot-qualified.

Libertarian Party of Pennsylvania Chair Michael Robertson noted "It is clear from this ruling that federal courts cannot be relied upon to uphold the integrity of the electoral process any more than the Commonwealth courts. It is truly a shame when our troops are sent to foreign lands to secure choices for foreign voters that our citizens do not enjoy."

Sadly, this is yet another defeat in a long-line of attempts by Pennsylvania’s alternative parties to seek justice in the electoral arena.  “Everyone knows Pennsylvania’s ballot access laws are discriminatory to alternative political parties.  The laws are made by the Democrats and Republicans in the state assembly, and then enforced by other Democrats and Republicans in the courts.  There is no incentive for anyone currently in power to change the rules to allow people out of power to more easily challenge their authority.  The situation is outrageous,” said Steve Baker, Green Party member of York County.   “The Pennsylvania Constitution states that ‘Pennsylvania Elections shall be free and equal,’ yet the partisan courts won’t acknowledge even their own framework of law.”

Marakay Rogers, the Libertarian Party candidate for Governor, remarked “Once again, the voters of Pennsylvania are being insulted by court rulings that prevent them from having a real choice of candidates as other states give their voters.  The two old parties that dominate Pennsylvania's legislature and courts are only providing us with the illusion of a free vote when all parties' candidates are not given equal opportunities to make it to the ballot."

Despite this set-back, Greens and Libertarians vowed to keep fighting.  “We will continue to fight these horrible laws in the courts and in the legislature,” said GPPA Steering Committee Member Bob Small.  “Luckily, we can also look to the Voters’ Choice Act to bring about some sanity to ballot access in Pennsylvania.”  Both parties are members of the Pennsylvania Ballot Access Coalition.

The Voters’ Choice Act, or SB 252, was introduced by Sen. Mike Folmer (R-Lebanon), last year.  The bill would equalize ballot access across all parties, not just the Democrats and Republicans.  Unfortunately, the bill has been sitting in committee for over a year, with little indication that it will be passed before the end of the year.

Stated Allegheny County Libertarian Mark Crowley, “With about 10 million age-eligible Pennsylvania voters, about 7 million registered as Democrat or Republican, only one-half typically vote.  That means 6.5 million of the 10 million consistently reject the major party choices.  No wonder such an uninspiring and unpopular minority needs court decisions like this to protect its incumbency."

Said 2006 Green Party Senate Candidate Carl Romanelli, “Until people get angry about the erosion of their most fundamental right – the right to vote for the candidate of their choice – we will continue to see candidates restricted from the ballot.  I don’t know anyone who thinks that our politicians are doing a good job at fixing our most pressing problems.  If we have any hope at fixing our economy, our schools, or our environment, we’ll need to elect new people with new ideas to Harrisburg.”

SEE ALSO
PA Ballot Access Coalition
http://www.paballotaccess.org

Greens Call Press Conference for the Start of Veon Trial to Address Pennsylvania’s Culture of Corruption, February 2010
http://www.gpofpa.org/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=285

Romanelli Asks Obama for Beer Summit, September 2009
http://www.gpofpa.org/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=251

Green Party joins Ballot Access lawsuit, June 2009
http://www.gpofpa.org/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=230

GPPA Reacts to Charges Against Luzerne Judge, February 2009
http://www.gpofpa.org/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=209

Green Party decries “Bonusgate”, July 2008
http://www.gpofpa.org/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=155
 



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Sunday at 1 pm and more at 3 pm. Be there to get in the right gear.

The tribute to Dennis Brutus and Howard Zinn is this coming Sunday, April 18 at 1 PM at the PITT Graduate School of Public Health's auditorium.  Celeste Taylor will be one of the speakers reflecting on the lives of these great teachers. 

Both Celeste and Dennis are co-founders of the Pittsburgh Anti Sweatshop Community Alliance.

Immediately following this event, the Freedom School will host a workshop, open to ALL STUDENTS and ALL COMMUNITY MEMBERS, about the struggle for Human Rights in the global apparel industry.  For more information about the Freedom School - contact Alex at 1-570-269-9589. 
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School Reform turns its attention to sports and athletics in Pittsburgh Public Schools

Now, it seems, PPS and Mr. Lopez (with the support of Mark Roosevelt) are looking with a reformer's eye at sports and athletics. Yes. This has been a request of mine for years.

Mr. Lopez is the PPS reform guy. He is the Assistant Superintendent of Secondary Schools. He works with all 6-12 and 9-12 schools.Plus, he has been named as the Title IX compliance officer for PPS.

Mr. Lopez called an all sports coaches meeting on March 22, 2010. Here is most of what he had to say.



Same movie, different web host:



Update with some notes from at the event:

Business as usual is not acceptable. That's a great quote from Mr. Lopez. I hope that can be the theme for the reform and the determination to make changes.

The role of the boosters needs to be defined. But same too for the athlete, parents, and community. The community is often a missing part of the forumula. And, what too of the role of the taxpayers?

Team talk is hot now too. Everything is done in teams. Group projects are part of school grades. Corporate teams fill the landscape. Let's use a team approach to govern and organize sports in the city too then. Teams are essential in life today, and they must be part of the management process in team sports. How original is that?

Mr. Lopez likes sports because it provides an opportunity for the students to relate in a new construct. They learn new skills in new settings with new relationships. He needs to blurt out the soulful definition of sports:

Sports are games of time, space and relationship.

Coaches are to be a model of commitment. Commitment is frail here. Mr. Lopez talked about teams and coaches calling off too many practices -- even up to one per week. Skipping practices isn't good. Attendance can be a huge thrust for the overhaul.

The biggest practice skip reason for us this past season was the snow delays and cancelled days of school -- by the district. We could not hold practice when the snow days came. No morning practice on every two hour delay. A few times I was in the car headed to AM Swim practice and the district called off the practice. Institutional hurdles hurt our teams commitment this season.

Tuesday of this week, there was no swimming at Allderdice. Those who had a pool permit had to change plans at 2:30 pm for that evening. Swim pool closings are typical. The killer is the commitment on the part of PPS when it comes to facilities.

As a school principal, Mr. Lopez would 'beat the trees' and recruit kids out to the school's track team. Interesting. Beating on the kids to participate is a valued operation -- unless this happens outside of the school itself and then it is a recruiting violation. Talk to someone at the church, playground, on the bus or elsewhere and then the coach can get sanctions and taken off the job. The recruitment elements are a puzzle.

The basketball teams at the middle school level had very few times to prepare for their games this season. Frankly, there was a lot of concern about how long all the middle school seasons are. They are very short. It is impossible to get a training effect in only a few short weeks. It is impossible to get the skills taught, practices, perfected and train the kids too.

The lack of participation and depth of teams at the high school levels is because of the short seasons with the middle school teams. The kids don't get hooked into the sport and understand what it means to train and be a team.

A few are worried about how the teams and fans are always kept apart from one another. The fans from one team can't mix with the fans of the other school. What's up with that? If we can't learn to play well with others in PPS Sports, how can we expect anything otherwise in the neighborhoods?

Sports in a Concept Map


Click image for a larger view.

The map is not 'complete' in that it isn't perfect. Some sports are missing. What needs to change? Log in and click to insert your comments.