Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Fwd: [New post] PPS: Planning a Privatization Scheme?

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Yinzercation" <comment-reply@wordpress.com>
Date: Feb 20, 2013 3:46 PM
Subject: [New post] PPS: Planning a Privatization Scheme?
To: <mark@rauterkus.com>
Cc:

YinzerThing posted: "Around here, the acronym PPS usually means "Pittsburgh Public Schools," but now it might mean "Planning a Privatization Scheme." The district has hired two consulting companies to help it craft an education plan that addresses equity issues for students a"
Respond to this post by replying above this line

New post on Yinzercation

PPS: Planning a Privatization Scheme?

by YinzerThing

Around here, the acronym PPS usually means "Pittsburgh Public Schools," but now it might mean "Planning a Privatization Scheme." The district has hired two consulting companies to help it craft an education plan that addresses equity issues for students and its looming financial crisis. But it turns out those two companies – Bellwether and FSG – support privatization of public schools. Hello? Who invited them to the party?

Actually, the PPS administration did, and then received approval from the Pittsburgh school board to pay them $2.4 million for their advice. The money is coming from local foundations as well as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which has been pouring money into teacher evaluation systems across the country, including the one here in our city. In fact, the funders made sure that the contract stipulates, "A commitment that on-going current programs, for example but not limited to … Empowering Effective Teachers, will continue to be implemented while the planning process is in progress." [PPS Board January 2013 Legislative Session]

Remember, there is nothing wrong with teacher evaluation per se. However, the current national obsession with evaluation starts with the faulty assumptions that we have a crisis of bad teaching in our schools (while ignoring the very real crises of poverty, budget cuts, equity, and more); that we must weed out "low performing" teachers; and that we can identify "bad" teachers based on the test scores of their students. [For more on the serious problems of this obsession, please see "The VAM Sham".]

But concerns with the teacher evaluation system aside, the Pittsburgh school board voted to approve the contract with FSG (with Bellwether as a subcontractor) without asking a single question about the philosophy of these two companies. Only board members Mr. Mark Brentley and Dr. Regina Holley voted "no" after inquiring if there weren't local organizations that could do this consulting work, keeping all those dollars in the regional economy (an important point). But what's worse than sending those dollars out of state, is that we will be spending $2.4 million on a plan formulated by people who actually believe we ought to be handing our public schools over to private companies.

Let's start with Bellwether Education Partners. Mary K. Wells, a co-founder and managing partner at Bellwether, told the Post-Gazette that the group does not necessarily advocate charterizing public schools. "We're for high-performing schools that serve all kids really well. I think we're quite agnostic around whether that is the traditional public school setting or the charter school setting." [Post-Gazette, 2-19-13] Yet Bellwether's small group of five partners includes Andy Smarick, who just published a new book, The Urban School District of the Future, that "argues that the traditional urban school district is irreparably broken, and that … it must be replaced." Smarick, who helped start a charter school in Annapolis, Maryland, believes that, "Vastly better results can be realized through the creation of a new type of organization that properly manages a city's portfolio of schools using the revolutionary principles of chartering." [Bellwether: Can Chartering Replace the Urban District]

Seriously? This is their starting point. That Pittsburgh's schools are beyond hope and our only way out is to hand them over to charter operators. Education historian Diane Ravitch responded to the premise of Smarick's book saying, "Suffice it to say that his arguments begin with the assumption that the schools and the system are broken, whereas I have concluded that the schools are struggling to educate children who have been harmed by poverty and societal neglect. … If poverty is the cause of low academic performance, as it appears to be on every standardized test and in every nation, then we might see better results by reducing poverty than by opening charter schools." She points out that Smarick, like most corporate-style "reformers" has spent no time as an educator. Ravitch continues:

Smarick doesn't like public education. He likes privately managed charter schools getting public money. Given his limited experience, I wonder whether he has ever spent any time in good urban public schools. I doubt it. Nothing that I have seen from his pen acknowledges that charters experience failure on the same scale as public schools. Nothing acknowledges that urban charters get no different results from public schools unless they somehow manage to minimize the number of students with disabilities and students who are English language learners and to exclude the students with behavioral and academic problems. If this is the case, then what exactly would be accomplished by dismantling urban public education and handing it over to entrepreneurs? [DianeRavitch, 10-23-12]

Back in September, Diane Ravtich also went head to head with another Bellwether partner, Andrew Rotherham, on Diane Rehm's national public radio show. Rotherman and two other conservatives blamed unions for all problems in schools and claimed that even in "right-to-work" states (which severely curtail unions), unions are too powerful. While Ravitch explained why the Chicago public teachers were striking to defend the education of their students, Rotherman was publicly rooting for the Chicago mayor to defeat the union. [DianeRavitch, 9-12-12]

These are the people who founded Bellwether. They were management consultants and investors (Ms. Wells herself worked at Bain & Company) and they have MBAs, not education credentials. Bellwether's own client list reads like a who's-who of charter schools and corporate reformers. So I'm not particularly inclined to take their word for it when they tell us that they are "agnostic" as to whether charter schools are the path of Pittsburgh's future.

Brad Bernatek, the FSG director working with the Pittsburgh public schools, also claims that his company is "fairly agnostic" on privatization. [Post-Gazette, 2-19-13] But the FSG website makes it very clear that they believe in school choice – often code for charters, vouchers, and tax credit programs in the corporate "reform" lexicon – saying that their expertise is in "Unleashing the potential of technology and ensuring that a range of high-quality school options exist to meet the needs of all students." In the fall, Bernatek authored a report on "blended learning" as the future of education, looking at how schools – especially charter schools – are combining cyber learning with traditional classrooms. [Blended Learning in Practice: Case Studies from Leading Schools]

Last week the district asked me to meet with Mr. Bernatek to share my vision for the future of Pittsburgh's public schools. I talked about the things our grassroots movement has been fighting for: art, music, library, science, history, and languages for all our students. Our teachers back in the classroom and smaller class sizes. A restoration of our tutoring programs, nurses and social workers in every school, parent engagement specialists, and community-based wrap-around services that address poverty and whole neighborhood needs. I want to see our district and our school board take a public stand and boldly insist that state legislators deliver adequate, equitable, and sustainable funding for all our students. And I want them to start talking about public education as a public good that must be cherished and promoted.

But I don't see any of our priorities reflected in the process FSG/Bellwether will be using to work with Pittsburgh public schools. They have established an advisory group that will split into six subcommittees to look at: "finance and budget analysis; student outcomes and effectiveness; organization and human capital; information technology and operations; stakeholder engagement and communication; and the types of available schools and the external landscape." [Post-Gazette, 2-19-13]

Where is a rich curriculum for our kids? Where are teachers? The only subcommittee that even mentions students is "student outcomes and effectiveness," which sounds like more emphasis on the testing, evaluation, and measurement that's turning our children in data points and is not about real learning. When I told Bernatek that we want an end to the punitive culture of high-stakes-testing, he admitted to me, in the interest of full disclosure (for which I give him credit), that when he worked for the Seattle school district as director of research, evaluation, and testing he helped to select the very test that teachers there are now refusing to administer to their students. (For more on that test and the Seattle opt-out movement that is spreading like wildfire, please see the series of posts under our Opt-Out Movement category.)

Does all this mean Bernatek and his team will recommend more testing, charterizing our public schools, or blended cyber-learning as the answer to Pittsburgh's challenges? I don't know. But I do know that the district and school board ought to have asked a lot more questions before hiring these two companies. This information is all available on the web (many thanks to Yinzercator Pam Harbin for the internet sleuthing for this story). Which leads me to suspect that the district knew full well just who they were dealing with. And that raises a lot more questions. Is PPS really Planning a Privatization Scheme?

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Program at the Mt. Lebanon Library: The History and Impact of Financial Power – 1868 to 2008

Free Program Series at the Mt. Lebanon Library

A facilitated program series planned and moderated by John Hemington, on The History and Impact of Financial Power –1868 to 2008, will be held at the Mt. Lebanon Library. It will examine, evaluate and draw conclusions from the historical, political and economic roots of both the Great Depression and the Great Financial Crisis of 2008 (GFC). We will try to determine whether the same processes, problems and ideas which led to the Great Depression are related to the events which triggered the GFC. We will also critique the contribution of mainstream economic ideas, models and policies and whether they may have contributed to the ongoing turmoil in the world’s economies today and what this bodes for the future?

The group will meet twice a month to discuss readings from the three books and the cumulative issues raised by these readings. The program will last for a year, beginning on the first Tuesday of March, the 5th, from 7:00 p.m. until 8:45 p.m. and subsequent 1st Tuesdays (except for July which will be the 9th). The 2nd monthly meeting day will be determined at the initial meeting. The program is free but will involve a commitment of time and a willingness to read the three books over the course of the year – listed below – on which the program is based. Clearly, not everyone will be able to attend every session, but a good faith effort should be made to attend as many as possible and to read the material assigned.

Even for those with a good background in history this should be a fresh and revealing experience. Our goal is to demonstrate conclusively that there is not just one history connecting events over time, but perhaps as many different histories as there are historians; and that critical study and evaluation is required to come to meaningful conclusions. Participants will be encouraged to carefully evaluate the facts behind issues before arriving at judgments about the nature of current events. There is no interest in furthering any particular political agenda, view or ideology in this program, therefore, three non-mainstream – but highly credible – authors have been selected for the core reading material. Because the material is primarily historical and minimally technical any reasonable literate individual should be able to participate fully. The discussions will be moderated to minimize argumentative speeches and debates. The idea is for conclusions to be focused on the factual substance covered in the materials – not on personal political or cultural prejudices. An extensive list of optional readings will be provided.

Carroll Quigley, whose book Tragedy and Hope is central to this project, is one of the very few historians whose studies focused on the activities and operations of the world’s “power elite” in the twentieth century and is reputed to have been the only historian ever given unfettered access to the Archives of the Council on Foreign Relations and the Rockefeller Archives. Prior to his death in 1977 Quigley taught at the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, where one of his students was Bill Clinton. Earlier in his career he taught at both Princeton and Harvard.

Reading Material

Tragedy and Hope – A History of the World in Our Time (1966), by Carroll Quigley (through page 1083)
The Gods of Money – Wall Street and the Death of the American Century (2009), by F. William Engdahl
Debunking Economics – The Naked Emperor Dethroned (Revised Edition, 2011), by Prof. Steve Keen

If Interested Contact John Hemington at: jehemington -at- verizon -dot- net or show up at the initial meeting.

“We were taught by Dr. Quigley that mankind's greatest tragedies were the consequence of man’s adherence to mistaken or outmoded ideas. The most pernicious of these false ideas are the belief in the perfection of knowledge and that the truth is ours to possess. The belief in the infallibility of human knowledge destroyed classical civilization and threatens to destroy our own. It was faith in the false god of perfect knowledge that led to the silencing of Galileo by the Inquisition, the Reign of Terror in France, the slaughter of a whole generation at the River Somme and the burning of Wilhelm Reich’s books by the U.S. government. It was this same sort of intellectual intransigence that deluded our leaders into believing that strategic bombing could crush the Vietnamese Revolution and has led our civilization closer and closer to ecological disaster.”

William Erickson (Georgetown SFS ‘75)

Thursday, February 14, 2013

One of the thousands of things you can do with LiveCode

I got a mention on another blog about the software I wrote to keep track of attendance at Swim & Waterpolo Camp with PPS Summer Dreamers. 


Update about 'Pittsburgh Public Schools Board of Directors. Hoodwinking Schenley Situration Again. Inofo on Schenley was withheld and is still OUT-of-BOUNDS


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Concerned Citizens <mail@change.org>

Subject: Update about 'Pittsburgh Public Schools Board of Directors: Investigate if important information about Heads up!
- A renovation estimate from PPS is due tomorrow.
- However, the requirements of the Board resolution for the estimate have not been met.
- Specifically, Board members were to be provided with specifications and instructions for the estimate in advance of the estimate being done, so that any issues could be resolved before a figure was released.
- Despite numerous requests by Board members, specifications have not been provided.
- It is possible, then, that the estimate may include nonessential items like air conditioning, and that were there are various options for resolving an issue a more expensive option may be chosen. For example, the 2004 capital budget for ventilation upgrades was $1.35M; a later estimate for a different approach was $2.99M; but if the unprecedented approach of taking down all corridor walls is chosen the cost could be increased by $10M or more.
- Concerns about an inflated scope of service and therefore an inflated estimate are real because, incredibly, PPS officials and agents are still refusing to confirm that asbestos in the building plaster is minimal.
- Therefore, any estimate released by PPS should be taken as just a starting point subject to reduction when nonessential items are removed and less expensive options explored.
- The final step in any reasoned decision will be to compare the estimate for renovating Schenley to the renovation that Peabody will require, and to consider also the cost of making available to high school students at U Prep and Sci Tech athletic facilities comparable to those provided to other high school students in the district (cost of athletic facilities being approximately $20M).
- Until PPS does the right thing by Schenley we will not "just give up."

This message is from Concerned Citizens who started the petition "Pittsburgh Public Schools Board of Directors: Investigate if important information about Schenley was withheld at the time of closing ," which you signed on Change.org.

View the petition  |  View and reply to this message online


Sunday, February 10, 2013

Coding Freedom

I just read this article about Gabriella Coleman's book, "Coding Freedom".

http://opensource.com/life/13/1/want-understand-open-source-live-its-developers

The book is an exploration of the culture of FOSS; I'll spare you a
bunch of words, as the author of the article linked above explains it
much better than I can.

In true open source spirit, the author has released the entire book
under a Creative Commons license, and made it available to download for
free, here:

http://gabriellacoleman.org/Coleman-Coding-Freedom.pdf

(You can also buy it in "dead trees" format from Princeton University
Press.)

--Pat.
______
wplug mailing list
http://www.wplug.org/mailman/listinfo/wplug

Fwd: [DW] Chicago - Civic User Testing Group



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Steven Clift
Date: Saturday, February 9, 2013
Subject: [DW] Chicago - Civic User Testing Group
To: newswire@groups.dowire.org


See:
http://www.smartchicagocollaborative.org/introducing-the-cut-group-get-paid-to-test-civic-apps/

Introducing the CUT Group: Get paid to test civic apps
by DANIEL X. O'NEIL on FEBRUARY 1, 2013 · in CIVIC INNOVATION IN CHICAGO
Today we're excited to launch the Civic User Testing Group, a set of
regular Chicago residents who get paid to test out civic apps.

If you live in Chicago, sign up today and get started.

Fill out a CUT Group profile and sign up to be a tester of civic apps,
and we'll send you a $5 VISA gift card
If and when you are chosen to test a civic app, you get paid a $20
VISA gift card and bus fare
Here's how we explain the program:

There is a large and growing community of "civic hackers" in Chicago —
technology developers who make websites, mobile apps, and other tools
that often have specific use in Chicago. The goal is to make software
that helps make lives better in the city.

The problem is that lots of civic apps get attention among a smallish
group of other developers and people interested in the world of open
data, but do not get wide acceptance by the people they were made for
— regular residents of the city of Chicago.

You are going to change all that!

We need people from all over the city, using all sorts of devices,
browsers and operating systems.

One of the reasons I'm excited about in this project is it is the
first launch with my colleague Chris Gansen, who is working with us as
a program manager. He last served as an engineer for Obama for
America, where he was responsible for their Dashboard tool, which
helped get hundreds of thousands of people involved in the election
process. We're privileged to have him focused on our work here in
Chicago.

I recently wrote a post, Turning Civic Hacking Into Civic Innovation,
where I laid out the immense assets that are available in this city to
support this work, and identified a gap:

What's currently missing? The people.

All of this is great. Two important components for civic innovation,
government and developers, are here in force in Chicago. But dozens of
developers looking at each other in conference rooms over pizza is
never going to lead to making lives better in Chicago without the
active involvement of real residents expressing real needs and
advocating for software that makes sense to them. The good thing is
that Chicago has assets in this area as well.

We think this is a great step in establishing sustained, meaningful
collaboration with residents around the data and technology. CUT Group
is a lightweight way to get people involved. The hope is once everyone
is involved in this world, we'll find new ways to innovate that we
can't possibly conceive at this time.

* * *

Here's some coverage of the CUT Group out in the wild:

Civic Hackers Want You: Group Offers Cash for App Testing


But Daniel X. O'Neil, co-founder of EveryBlock and executive director
of the Smart Chicago Collaborative, says the current relationship
between government agencies and coders is incomplete.

"[D]ozens of developers looking at each other in conference rooms over
pizza is never going to lead to making lives better in Chicago without
the active involvement of real residents expressing real needs and
advocating for software that makes sense to them," O'Neil wrote on his
blog last month.

That's why Smart Chicago is launching a "Civic User Testing Group," to
involve citizens from all over the city in testing, and eventually
conceptualizing, new apps and tools. Participants will become the beta
testers for developers looking for feedback on their latest work.
Testers will both submit feedback through the group's site and be a
part of "mildly scientific" focus groups through the city, O'Neil
says.

Steven Clift - http://stevenclift.com
  Executive Director - http://E-Democracy.org
  Twitter: http://twitter.com/democracy
  Tel/Text: +1.612.234.7072

-----------------------------------------
Group home for Newswire - Steven Clift's Democracies Online Newswire:
http://groups.dowire.org/groups/newswire

Replies go to members of Newswire - Steven Clift's Democracies Online Newswire with all posts on this topic here:
http://groups.dowire.org/r/topic/6pHmyFeKMgNauHupRvXhO2

For digest version or to leave Newswire - Steven Clift's Democracies Online Newswire,
email newswire@groups.dowire.org
with "digest on" or "unsubscribe" in the *subject*.

Newswire - Steven Clift's Democracies Online Newswire is hosted by Democracies Online - http://dowire.org.



--
--
Ta.
 
 
Mark Rauterkus       Mark.Rauterkus@gmail.com    
PPS Summer Dreamers' Swim and Water Polo Camp Head Coach
Pittsburgh Combined Water Polo Team

http://Rauterkus.blogspot.com
http://FixPA.wikia.com
http://CLOH.wikia.com
412 298 3432 = cell

Saturday, February 09, 2013

Fwd: Please promote-- Help a veteran get the help they need..Next Wednesday


From: <RFlanag@aol.com>

Please promote-- Help a veteran get the help they need..

Veterans Event

The Eastside Neighborhood Employment Center (ENEC) is proud to sponsor a veterans' event featuring Karen Payne, career advisor and case manager at the Veterans Leadership Program (VLP) of Western PA.

She will present on the following opportunities to support veterans' needs:

· Overview of what services VLP provides to veterans and their families.

· Housing – Seven individual housing programs ranging from 12 months stay up to 36 month.

· Three rental assistance housing programs

· Life skills training, individualized goal setting leading to self-sufficiency, referrals for supportive services.

· Eligibility: Veterans status, low income, proof of homelessness, must have some income.

· Employment program for homeless and non-homeless veterans and their families

· Vocational counseling, resume preparation, job development, workshops, and job fairs.

· Individualized assessment and one-on-one assistance in supporting veterans in their job search.

· Helping veterans remove barriers to employment.

· Some supportive services for transportation, clothing and tools.

· How the Eastside Neighborhood Employment Center will help you with employment.

· Contacts and referrals with many employers.

The event will be held at:

The Eastside Neighborhood Employment Center

5321 Penn Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15224

On Wednesday, February 13th at 11 AM

To register for the event please call (412) 362-8580

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sponsoring agencies:

Eastside Neighborhood Employment Center, Neighborhood Learning Alliance, Pittsburgh CONNECTS, and Bloomfield Garfield Corporation


Black History Month: Olympic Swimmer Visits Local School « CBS Pittsburgh

Black History Month: Olympic Swimmer Visits Local School « CBS Pittsburgh

Thanks for visiting Cullen Jones.

We had the assembly with all the middle school students. Then the varsity swimmers stayed after and had a 30-minute question and answer session.

One of the interesting facts that came to light with Cullen is how he played waterpolo for a couple of years back when he was age 15 and 16 or so. He said, "Waterpolo is more fun than swimming." But, he does swimming now.


Thursday, February 07, 2013

Fwd: I've Introduced Audit the Fed


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Rand Paul <rand.paul@chooseliberty.org>

On Monday, I introduced Audit the Fed (S. 209) in the U.S. Senate to put an end to the Fed's "print-now, ask-questions-later" policies that are bankrupting every man, woman, and child in the United States.

Of course, Ben Bernanke's puppets in Congress are doing everything they can to stop folks like you from blowing the lid off the Federal Reserve.

Don't let them get away with the plundering any longer.

Read the email below from my father about how you can fight back - and be sure to sign your Audit the Fed petition to C4L IMMEDIATELY.

In Liberty,

Rand Paul, MD
U.S. Senator (R-KY)



Dear Mark ,

Our fragile economy is speeding toward a collision with economic ruin.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has jammed his foot down on the gas pedal.

And now statist economists are even discussing hyperinflationary "minting" out of thin air - arguing the Fed should create a trillion-dollar coin to pay our rapidly expanding debt!

Without your action today, I'm afraid members of BOTH parties will continue to just look the other way while the Fed's "print-now, ask-questions-later" policies bankrupt every man, woman, and child in the United States.

That's why I'm counting on you to fill out your Audit the Fed petition to Campaign for Liberty to make YOUR voice heard IMMEDIATELY.

I'll give you the link in just a moment. But first let me explain exactly why this is so important.

I know the Fed banksters believe they've wined and dined and bought off enough politicians to keep up their iron grip on our economy.

But while the Fed may have cash and connections, you and C4L have the numbers. And politics is a numbers game.

Five years ago, few dared talk about sound money or the role of the Federal Reserve.

But now, between 70-80% of Americans believe the Fed should be audited.

And as any politician worth his salt knows, standing in the way of nearly three quarters of the American people when they're activated and mobilized on an issue is like standing in the way of an oncoming freight train.

But none of that matters if good folks like you don't take action.

You see, after Harry Reid recently praised Bernanke - and said he'd have to "talk to" the Fed Chairman before allowing a vote on Audit the Fed - there's no doubt he's in the Fed's back pocket.

And ever since the GOP's 2012 election debacle, House Republican leadership has been in disarray.

Their willingness to allow President Obama to set the agenda on taxes and spending has me worried Audit the Fed will be swept under the rug.

This would be a DISASTER.

With passage of Audit the Fed, the American people will be able to see the evidence proving the Federal Reserve System leads to:

*** Constant economic crises. The housing crisis and the resulting chaos is just one example of an economic bubble created by centrally planned interest rates and money manipulation;

*** The destruction of the middle class. As fuel, food, housing, medical care, and education costs soar, everyone who is NOT on the government dole is forced to make do with less as the value of their money slowly decreases;

*** Currency destruction. History shows us that riots, violence, and full-scale police states can result when people finally realize our money isn't worth the paper it's printed on and REFUSE to accept it.

So won't you please sign your Audit the Fed petition and make a generous contribution to Campaign for Liberty TODAY?



I hope you'll act IMMEDIATELY.

Even after 2012's "QE3" - which was dubbed "QE-infinity" for its never-ending inflationary printing spree - news is the Fed is "considering" another $870 BILLION QE4!

On top of that, powerful players in Washington are DEMANDING the President be handed the unilateral ability to raise the debt ceiling at will!

So the solution to our economic problems is infinite dollar devaluation to pay for infinite spending?

Any sane person can see the answer is "NO!"

Now, countries around the globe - after spending years enabling the statists' lavish boondoggles by buying U.S. debt - are saying "enough is enough" and are preparing to cut the last thread preserving the dollar.

But the banksters and Washington, D.C.'s politically connected corporate cronies couldn't care less.

They're happy so long as their coffers are flush with Fed cash, taxpayer bailouts, and special government "perks" designed to destroy capitalism's name and usher in even more government control over our lives.

But if Campaign for Liberty can turn up the heat on Congress once again, every politician - including Harry Reid - will have a choice to make:

Vote to pass Audit the Fed... or find a new job.

Ultimately, it's their call.

All I know is, I can think of several politicians off the top of my head that I wouldn't mind joining me in retirement!

That's why it's so critical you sign your Audit the Fed petition to Campaign for Liberty TODAY!



Thanks to the support of good folks like you, Campaign for Liberty has a "reputation" in Washington, D.C.

Last year, thanks to their efforts, Audit the Fed passed the House by an overwhelming three-fourths majority.

In fact, C4L has quickly become the big spending, Big Government statists' number-one enemy.

And I think that's a good thing.

Today, I'm asking you to join their efforts by signing your Audit the Fed petition to C4L and - if possible - agreeing to a generous contribution.

With your support, C4L will launch an all-out drive to give the American people a voice in calling for Audit the Fed by:

1) Contacting up to 12 million Americans via hard-hitting mail and email to alert them to the Fed's shady dealings;

2) Running web ads on heavily trafficked websites, working the blogs, and launching a state-of-the-art Facebook campaign to reach and mobilize up to four million more supporters;

3) Work the talk radio lines, write op-eds, and continue to take the fight to the statists' phony intellectual machine, which got us into this economic mess in the first place;

4) In the days before the vote, launch hard-hitting radio, newspaper, and Internet ads calling on Representatives and Senators by name to support Audit the Fed;

5) And finally, if funds permit, C4L will launch an excoriating TV ad campaign - to be unveiled in key states in massive press conferences - ensuring every targeted Senator knows his reelection could ride on his or her Audit the Fed vote.

This is an ambitious plan, I know. But it's what it will take to win.



Sadly, not everyone understands the damage the Fed routinely causes with its inflationary policies.

Some - especially those who leech off government and have wedded themselves to Big Government's big handouts - just won't "get it" until catastrophe hits them in the face.

That's why these times call for true patriots.

I know you understand doing nothing is not an option.

So won't you please agree to sign your Audit the Fed petition to C4L and make your most generous contribution today?

Whatever you can afford will make a tremendous difference - $250, $100, $50, or even $35.

Even if all you can do right now is chip in $10 or $20, every dollar counts.

You have the ability to make a difference.

I've seen it. My former colleagues in Washington, D.C. have seen it, too.

So please sign your Audit the Fed petition to C4L and agree to your most generous contribution TODAY.

For Liberty,



Dr. Ron Paul
Chairman

P.S. I'm counting on you to sign your Audit the Fed petition to C4L right away.

With your signed petition and generous support, C4L members and thousands of other Americans can finally EXPOSE the Federal Reserve's corruption and rampant cronyism.

So if you can, please make your most generous contribution of $250, $100, $50, or even $35 TODAY.

Even if all you can do right now is chip in $10 or $20, every dollar counts!




Because of Campaign For Liberty's tax-exempt status under IRC Sec. 501(C)(4) and its state and federal legislative activities, contributions are not tax deductible as charitable contributions (IRC § 170) or as business deductions (IRC § 162(e)(1)).

www.CampaignForLiberty.org



Wednesday, February 06, 2013

Fwd: No. 148: Open Source Benefits; Buy a RunRev Exec

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "RunRev Ltd" <newsletter_no_reply@runrev.com>
Date: Feb 6, 2013 2:47 PM
Subject: No. 148: Open Source Benefits; Buy a RunRev Exec
To: <mark@rauterkus.com>
Cc:

revUp Issue 148 | February 6th 2013

To read this newsletter online, go here

revUp, News and updates for the LiveCode Community
Issue 148 | February 6th 2013 Contact the Editor | How to Contribute
on revUp today
> Why Open Source
> Your Questions
> White Slave Auction
> Native Scroller

What's New

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How Open Source will Benefit You
Our CEO explains why we are going open source and what's in it for you

Open Source LiveCodeIts been a busy week since we launched our Kickstarter campaign to take the platform open source. The response has been overwhelmingly positive so far. We've had lots of questions about exactly what going open means from many of you using LiveCode for different things. In this article I wanted to share the main benefits for you, no matter what you use LiveCode for.

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Your Questions Answered

We provide answers to the commonest questions we are being asked on Open Source LiveCode.

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White Slave Auction

Do you want to give your business a boost? Purchase time with one of our executives in the top pledge levels on Kickstarter. Whether you want business advice, deep coding skills, or application design, we've got a RunRev Executive for you!

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Creating a Native Scroller for a Field

A frequent question we are asked is how to set up a native mobile scroller to allow you to scroll the contents of a field - this lesson shows you how, with hands on coding and a sample stack.

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NPR teaser. In 10 minutes in Pgh FM 90.5 - News from Creative Class Group


Subject: News from Creative Class Group about our old Pittsburgh friend, the hippest guy with cash in his pocket in the universe!


Creative Class Group


Richard Florida
on
NPR with Steven Inskeep


"Cities Must Strategize To Boost Service Workers' Pay" 
 

We wanted to share with you Richard Florida on NPR with Steve Inskeep, Wednesday, February 5th discussing   

who wins and who loses as the highly skilled, creative class clusters around certain metro areas.

  
NPR
Click to hear the full interview


Richard Florida

The Director of the Martin Prosperity Institute at the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management, Global Research Professor at New York University, and the founder of the Creative Class Group, which works closely with governments and companies worldwide, Richard Florida is perhaps the world's leading urbanist, "as close to a household name as it is possible for an urban theorist to be in America," according to The Economist. Esquire has included him on its annual list of "The Best and the Brightest," and Fast Company dubbed him an "intellectual rock star."
                                     
Florida is the author of several global best sellers, including the award-winning The Rise of the Creative Class ("one of the best business books of all time"-800-CEO-READ), and is a senior editor for The Atlantic, where he co-founded and serves as Editor-at-Large for Atlantic Cities, the world's leading media site devoted to cities and urban affairs. Florida appears regularly on CNN and other news broadcasts and is a regular contributor to the op ed pages of major newspapers and magazines. TIME magazine recognized his Twitter feed as one of the 140 most influential in the world.

Florida previously taught at Carnegie Mellon and George Mason University, and has been a visiting professor at Harvard and MIT. He earned his Bachelor's degree from Rutgers College and his Ph.D. from Columbia University.
  
Creative Class Group
Reham Alexander
Director of Global Operations and Events
810-602-1752

PPS Attendance matters, plus Senior night at pool. H2O = Hail 2 Obama!



Hi Friends,

With all the noise about attendance at PPS in the media, it is good to know of a bright spot. See below as we honor 14, devoted senior swimmers.

Plus at 6 AM swims practice this week we had 20, 17 and 12 each on M, T and W.
FYI, three boys in Summer Dreamers Swim and Waterpolo Camps in past years are on the Varsity Swim Team now. Six more worked as staffers.

One other tidbit on attendance, our biggest trouble point in Summer Dreamers Swim and Waterpolo Camp was guarding the door to prevent kids from sneaking into our sessions. We had waiting lists. We got scolded for recruiting, but really so many were having fun and learning they told their friends. PPS record showed Waterpolo at 95% attendance in 2012, and that included the need for all kids to run 1 mile over and back to the pools in The Hill.

I really wish we were offering, robust year round, "Dreamers" at PPS with Swim and Waterpolo so our kids could get invested in their teams, fitness, schools and academics. Let's all replicated and empowered what is proving to really work wonders in our community and hooked to athletics.

Go, go, go!

H2O

Coach Mark Rauterkus
412-298-3432

PS: Heard that high school students in National Honors Society have been asked, because of funding issues, to tutor middle school kids now. Rather, let's get those senior and smart students, our swim team really, to teach swimming and play waterpolo with the kids. Then greatness can happen with self esteem, relationships, mentoring, sportsmanship and rule following. Then the academics can flow for the individuals and institutions.

PSS: Friday's visit with USA Olympic Gold Medal Swimmer, Cullen Jones, with black history month, has the potentials to be special. He is at Obama at noon and UPrep at 2 pm. FYI, in April, three other USA Olympians, Waterpolo players, visit Pitt for a weekend clinic with Tiger Waterpolo (community, club program that supports our Summer Dreamers), and we will get our kids and the media to interact as well.
Footnote: Sam's fist season of swimming this year, as a senior, happens as he is registered and training for the May 2013 Pittsburgh Marathon, his first.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Mark Rauterkus" for Morning Announcements
Date: Feb 6, 2013 7:01 AM
Subject: Senior night

The last home meet for the swim team is tomorrow, Thursday, at 6 pm against Bishop Canevin. This is our senior night and we honor our greatest class of seniors ever in the city swim scene.
The team as 14 seniors including three time PIAA swimmer Erik. Plus:
Annie
Hannah
Wendy
Nicole
Rene
Jonah
Tobias
Max
Mat
Demetri
Daniel
Ben

And, Sam Lapp who will compete in his first ever swim event on Thursday.
Win the section.
Go Seniors!
Swimmers have AM swim on Thursday and should be at the meet by 5 pm.



Monday, February 04, 2013

Fwd: Invitation: Briefing Call on Gov. Corbett's Proposed Education Budget - Feb. 6, 11 a.m.


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "The Education Policy and Leadership Center" <robinson@eplc.org>
Date: Feb 4, 2013 4:26 PM
Subject: Invitation: Briefing Call on Gov. Corbett's Proposed Education Budget - Feb. 6, 11 a.m.
To: <rauterkus@rauterkus.com>
Cc:

Having trouble viewing this email? Click here

EPLC Masthead

 You are invited to join EPLC's briefing on Governor Corbett's proposed education budget for 2013-2014.
 

On Wednesday, February 6, at 11:00 a.m., The Education Policy and Leadership Center (EPLC) will host a statewide conference call for members of the PA Education Advocacy Network, the PA School Funding Campaign, the PA Arts Education Network, and others to discuss the Pennsylvania education budget proposed by Governor Corbett this week
 
To participate in this conference call, please use the following toll-free call-in information:   

The toll-free call-in number is 1-866-843-8301

The pass code (conference number) is 5920751287


Thanks.
Ron Cowell

This email was sent to rauterkus@rauterkus.com by robinson@eplc.org |  
The Education Policy and Leadership Center | 800 N. 3rd St. | Suite 408 | Harrisburg | PA | 17102