Bcag Stowaway kitten survives trip from Shanghai to Los Angeles in shipping container
Barely one in five of the st
stanley cup uk udents fed free lunches at school are getting the lunches they re entitled to during the summer, the Food Research and Action Center said Thursday.According to FRAC, 3.25 million children were served in two federal meal programs last summer. That is 21 percent of the 15.5 million child
stanley usa ren who received free or reduced-price lunches during the 2001-2002 school year, FRAC said. In a time of rising unemployment, falling wages and millions more families struggling to feed their children well, reaching only one in five needy children is unacceptable, FRAC President Jim Weill said.One of the two programs serves meals through schools, while the other reimburses local governments, nonprofits and others who serve meals. Both are overse
stanley flask en by the Agriculture Department. In some cases, schools remain open to serve the lunches; in others, local authorities serve the lunches through community centers.No one from the USDA was available for comment late Wednesday, but in an April report, the department said it recognized the need to reach out to more possible summer lunch sponsors, simplify the program and increase kids acceptance of meals. FRAC blames copious and confusing paperwork, the difficulty of serving rural children and the low federal reimbursement rate for the lack of summer lunch service. In 2003, the average reimbursement rate is $2.55 per lunch, although some rural areas are entitled to slightly more, FRAC spokeswoman Crystal FitzSimons said. Enkv Kate Beaton reveals why Black Canary shouldn t go to concerts
If you predicted the decline of deadtree books or the rise of services like Netflix streaming,
stanley taza say, 25 years ago, you ;d be considered a damn good prognosticator. But what if you predicted those things back in
stanley cup 1964鈥攂efore the internet even existed Amazingly, a scientist from IBM did just that, long before any of these things were widely considered possible, much less inevitable. Say Goodbye to Video Stores, Mailmen, Pennies 8230; In 1964, artificial intelligence pioneer Dr. Arthur L. Samuel wrote an article for New Scientist titled, The Banishment of Paper-Work, that imagined what the networked computer landscape may look like by the year 1984. Samuel predicted movies on demand, government control over what information might be accessed, and the death of the deadtree library. He got a lot right. Samuel was just a bit optimistic about the timeline. From The World in 1984, Volume 1, edited by Nigel Calder: Connection to a central location will be very necessary to perform another function which will, by then, be delegated to the omnipresent computer. I refer to information retrieval. The entire contents of the large central files or at least that portion which the government elects to make available will be readily retrievable by anyone at a moment notice. One will be able to browse through the fiction section of t
vaso stanley he central library, enjoy an evening light entertainment viewing any movie that has ever been produced for a suitable fee, o