Showing posts with label group. Show all posts
Showing posts with label group. Show all posts

A women’s legal group filed complaints Wednesday with the federal education department alleging that 12 school districts nationwide — including New York, Chicago and Houston — are violating federal law by failing to offer equal opportunities to boys and girls who play high school sports.

The group, the National Women’s Law Center, sent the complaints to the education department’s Office for Civil Rights, which is charged with enforcing the federal gender-equity law known as Title IX. The center relied on data that school districts reported to the education department in 2006, the most recent year that the data was available. The data, they said, showed in many cases a participation gap of more than 10 percentage points. Proportionality is one of the three ways schools can show compliance with Title IX.

Nationwide, the center said, about 41 percent of high school athletes are girls, although they make up about half of school enrollment.

“These schools are just the tip of the iceberg,” said Marcia Greenberger, co-president of the center, which is based in Washington.

Greenberger said that the districts were selected to be representative of the nation as a whole, with a mix of geographic regions and large and smaller districts.

Justin Hamilton, a spokesman for the education department, said that the office was looking into the complaints.

In the case of New York, the center found that the gender gap in city high schools averaged 7.9 percentage points in 2006.

In Chicago, the gap was much larger, at an average of 33 percentage points. In 2004, the gap in was 7.9 percentage points.

The center noted that some data submitted by New York and Chicago appeared to be inaccurate and asked the Office for Civil Rights to take a closer look. Monique Bond, a spokeswoman for the Chicago public schools, said that officials had not had a chance to review the complaint, but that “we continue to be encouraged by our efforts to increase programming for female student-athletes.”

The New York City schools released a statement saying officials had not received the complaint, but that the New York City Public Schools Athletic League, which operates competitive high school sports, offered a variety of varsity sports for girls.

Marmion Dambrino, the athletic director for the Houston Independent School District, said she was surprised to hear that it was the target of a complaint. “If the district is found to be out of compliance, we’ll work with O.C.R. to bring the district into compliance,” she said. The average gender gap in Houston high schools was 11.9 percent in 2006, according to the center.

The decision to single out high school participation rates reflects an increasing focus from colleges to high schools, where many advocates say gender imbalances are less visible. However, some of those who advocate reform of the Title IX law say they fear that high schools will react by eliminating sports for boys, especially in a troubling economic climate.

“This isn’t a secret that there’s a gender imbalance,” said Eric Pearson, chairman of the College Sports Council, which advocates reform of the Title IX law. “The question is how schools are going to comply, and inevitably it will lead to a shrinking down of participation numbers on the men’s side.”

Greenberger said that no one wants to cut opportunities for boys, and suggested that schools look to the community for help..


View the original article here

Former Kapuso teen star Antoinette Taus (T.G.I.S., Anna Karenina) is taking a little Hollywood splash as she is part of the a capella group Kinfolk9 which is currently competing in NBC’s singing competition “The Sing Off.”

Kinfolk 9 appeared in the premiere telecast of the show’s third season last September 19. Hosted by Nick Lachey of 98 degrees, the winner of “The Sing Off” takes home $100,000 cash prize and a recording contract with Sony Music.

According to The Sing Off website, Kinfolk 9 is a nine-piece professional vocal group from Los Angeles. Incredibly diverse in music, appearance and style, Kinfolk 9 is a group of people brought together through a genuine love of singing.

Kinfolk9 is composed of Mary Akpa, David Fertello, Kari Francis, Jon Hall, Moises Navarro, Jenilee Reyes, Angelique Sheppard, Antoinette Taus and Daniel Weidlein.

Kinfolk9, by the way, is formed by Jenilee Reyes who is also a Filipina.

Watch Kinfolk9's first peformance – “Secrets” – here:

I thought they’ve got the most un-enthusiastic critique from the judges but they were not eliminated.

Related Posts with Thumbnails

View the original article here

Registry Booster

Until Windows XP, the Ctrl+Alt+Del shortcut, was used to open the Windows Task Manager. But from Windows Vista onwards it was changed to open a new Ctrl+Alt+Del screen with consisted of options such as locking or logging off, starting the Task Manager etc. In Windows 7 and Windows Vista, to open Task Manager you now have to press Ctrl+Shift+Esc.

Using the Group Policy Editor in Professional and above latter versions of Windows, you can easily modify the Ctrl+Alt+Del screen to include only the options that you want. Here’s how to do it via Group Policy.

First open the Start menu and type gpedit.msc. Press Enter. This will open the Group Policy Editor.

073111 1109 Customizeth1 Customize Ctrl+Alt+Del Screen In Windows 7 Using Group Policy

Now navigate down to User Configuration > Administrative Templates. You will find a System sub folder under Administrative Templates. Click on it and in the right pane you will be able to see Ctrl+Alt+Del Options as shown below. Double click that.

073111 1109 Customizeth2 Customize Ctrl+Alt+Del Screen In Windows 7 Using Group Policy

Now you will see the available options that you can customize in the right pane.

073111 1109 Customizeth3 Customize Ctrl+Alt+Del Screen In Windows 7 Using Group Policy

Remove Change password – If you enable this, the Ctrl+Alt+Del screen will not show the Change Password option.

Remove Lock Computer – If you enable this, you will not be able to lock the computer from the Ctrl+Alt+Del screen.

Remove Task Manager – If you enable this, it will remove the Start Task Manager option from the Ctrl+Alt+Del screen.

Remove Log Off – This option will remove the Log Off option from the Ctrl+Alt+Del screen.

073111 1109 Customizeth4 Customize Ctrl+Alt+Del Screen In Windows 7 Using Group Policy

Just double click the setting that you want to change. Select Enabled or Disabled as you wish and click OK.

You can see the changes immediately by pressing Ctrl+Alt+Del.

If your Windows 7 or Vista edition does not have Group Policy, you can use Registry to hack Ctrl+Alt+Del screen. How to add Group Policy in your edition may also interest you.

If you liked this article, please share it.

View the original article here

29 July 2011 Last updated at 08:46 GMT International Airlines Group CEO Willie Walsh: "It's good to be back in the black"

International Airlines Group (IAG), formed by the merger of BA and Iberia, has swung to a first-half profit of 39m euros (£34m), boosted by a rise in premium travellers.

That compared with a 419m-euro loss made in the same period a year earlier.

But it said fuel costs had risen 34.8% to 2.4bn euros in the six-month period and said that fuel was still a "significant issue".

The company expects its annual fuel bill to total 5.2bn euros.

BA and Iberia completed their merger in January this year.

'Significant growth'

Revenues for the half-year rose 17.9% to 7.8bn euros.

The company also reduced its net debt by almost a half to 480m euros.

IAG said it had seen "continued strength in premium markets", adding that while its long-haul business was stable, the short-haul European market remained "highly competitive".

"We expect significant growth in operating profit this year, with improvements in both our unit revenue and unit cost performance versus 2010 and are on track to reach our synergy targets," IAG said.

But it said it expected the earthquake and tsunami in Japan and the political unrest in North Africa and the Middle East to reduce its operating profit for the year by 90-100m euros.

Charles Stanley analyst Douglas McNeill said: "These are good results at the upper end of expectations but the year-ago period was depressed by the ash cloud crisis and strikes at BA."


View the original article here

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast – Hundreds of thousands of people are still too terrified to return home more than three months after the end of postelection violence in Ivory Coast, a human rights group reported Wednesday.

Amnesty International says in a new report that traditional hunters allied with President Alassane Ouattara continue to intimidate certain ethnic groups perceived to have supported former president Laurent Gbagbo. As a result, almost 700,000 people refuse to leave the refugee camps and remote villages where they went to flee the fighting.

The report said the group of hunters, known as the Dozos, carried out targeted killings and attacks in the months following Gbagbo's fall from power, together with rebels who are now integrated into the national army.

The rights group called for the demobilization and disarmament of all irregular fighters. Security throughout the country should be established by the national security forces to provide "conditions that will eventually support the safe and durable return of displaced persons and refugees," the report said.

Ouattara named a new army chief this month, but a half-dozen warlords who formed a coalition to bring him to power still each control sections of the country.

Gbagbo was arrested in April after six months of violence sparked by his refusal to accept defeat in a November presidential election. The United Nations and many rights groups have accused both sides of carrying out war crimes and crimes against humanity during the ensuing political standoff.

The International Criminal Court has been asked to investigate. The U.N. and the Ivorian government also have ongoing war crimes investigations. Gbagbo remains in detention without charge in the north of the country.

Earlier Wednesday, Ouattara said during a visit to the U.N. that he is unfamiliar with a specific case of politically motivated violence that occurred on the banks of the Cavallay River in western Ivory Coast on May 22, the day after his inauguration.

The Associated Press reported this week that Ouattara loyalists massacred as many as 47 people in that region, known as a stronghold of political opponent Laurent Gbagbo.

"Once we get the report we will be able to say what happened," Ouattara said, referring to his country's national inquiry.

Ouattara met earlier Wednesday with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, and was to meet with President Barack Obama in Washington on Friday.

___

Associated Press writer Anita Snow contributed to this report from the United Nations.


View the original article here