Private Beta b0310 (2009-06-26)
  • adamsfallen commented on

    One thing the article didn’t really ad…

  • Dominic commented on

    The article rightly points out that most Ita…

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Call to Action on IDEA Fairness Restoration Act

A Pennsylvania a mother was forced to go to due process to implement the Independent Educational Evaluation recommendations for her child with severe dyslexia and a written expression disorder. She had to borrow $1,400 to pay the evaluator to testify, and for two days of cross-examination by the school district. The parent prevailed and the child received the reading instruction he needed. Before the Supreme Court’s Murphy decision, the mother could recover her expert fees; after Murphy, she would not.

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Cockfighting Death Knell

In 2007, The HSUS filed suit against the Postal Service, arguing that the Postal Service's refusal to declare certain cockfighting magazines "nonmailable" violated the Animal Welfare Act. In March 2009, the federal court in D.C. ordered the Postal Service to reevaluate its decision allowing the cockfighting magazines to be mailed via Postal Service.

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N.J. Senate committee advances bill expanding coverage for autism therapy - NJ.com

"More and more states are recognizing the need to pass this legislation," Stuart Spielman, a policy adviser and counsel to Autism Speaks, told the committee. "Given the severity of autism spectrum disorders for many people, providing comprehensive care is the best way . . . to realize savings down the road."

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Children's hospice in danger of closing

"In a hospital, you can't be a family. You can't bring your family pet," Mary Stark said. At home, "there's no way I could afford this 24-hour care, food, laundry. . . . My family would be a mess without this place."

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Alzheimers

New tool can help predict Alzheimer's risks

The checklist of risk factors like slowness of mind or movement predicted about half the cases of dementia that developed in a group of elderly people over a six year period. An estimated 26 million people globally have Alzheimer's disease, the most common form of dementia.

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Miranda Rights for Terrorists

"A detainee who is not talking cannot provide information about future attacks. Had Khalid Sheikh Mohammad had a lawyer, Tenet wrote, 'I am confident that we would have obtained none of the information he had in his head about imminent threats against the American people.'"

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Foreign Policy: Five Disease Outbreaks That Are Worse Than Swine Flu

Our own flu outbreak should open our eyes to the much more devastating epidemics raging throughout the rest of the world.

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Study hopes to shed light on autism, 'insistence on sameness'

"Autism is too big as a whole to attack," said John Sweeney, director of UIC's Center for Cognitive Medicine and the group's brain imaging specialist. "We have to go through the brain bit by bit to find out what's working and what's not. Get the bricks sorted out, and then build the house."

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Pentagon fears technology edge may be eroding

The Pentagon fears a severe shortage of scientists and engineers at government laboratories could erode the military's technological edge in developing weapons and other projects in coming years, spawning a hiring boom at military research laboratories and an expansion of scholarships, advertising campaigns, and other ways to recruit a new generation of researchers.

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Art

Hatred, chaos and savage beatings in Tehran - CNN.com

"Seconds earlier the man had dared to stand up to the baton wielding men because they had shoved a 14-year-old girl. For his chivalry he got one of the most savage beatings I have ever seen at the hands of four Iranian riot policemen and members of the Baseej, Iran's plain clothed volunteer militia. 'To hell with Iran,' he said as he sat beaten and battered along the sidewalk. 'This is not my government. This is not my country.'"

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