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41. #1 Fundraisers Fundraising, Inc.
this Web Site Each year, schools, school groups, ptas, ptos, youth sports The LumbardFamily Marathon Honolulu Chapter Central new york Amount 28,000+ Steve
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  • 42. AEI - News & Commentary
    In just one smallish city, Oswego, new york, the Youth Soccer Association the pastthe Sierra Club instead of the Elks; ptos rather than ptas, and US
    http://www.aei.org/news/newsID.16054/news_detail.asp
    About AEI My AEI Support AEI Contact AEI ... Research Section Search
    Series
    America at War
    Browse by: Date Subject Author Type ...
    Home
    Bowling with Tocqueville Civic Engagement and Social Capital By Everett Carll Ladd Posted: September 15, 1998 SPEECHES Bradley Lecture (Washington) Publication Date: September 15, 1998 If some public pleasure is concerned, an association is formed to give more splendor and regularity to the entertainment. Societies are formed to resist evils that are exclusively of a moral nature, as to diminish the vice of intemperance. In the United States associations are established to promote the public safety, commerce, industry, morality, and religion. . . .The Americans make associations to give entertainment's, to found seminaries, to build ins, to construct churches, to diffuse books, to send missionaries to the antipodes; in the manner they found hospital, prisons, and schools. . . .There is no end which the human will despairs of attaining through the combined power of individuals united into a society. . . . Alexis de Tocqueville

    43. Find Sales Lead Intenet Directory
    is dedicated to helping parent teacher groups (like ptos and ptas) help their theorganizations responding to the tragedies in new york, Pennsylvania and
    http://www.findsaleslead.com/sub_category.asp?sec=2412&mcat=1

    44. Pecos Enterprise, News
    AUSTIN, August 20, 1997 Three new special Senate ptas have statewide and nationalaffiliations, while ptos are National news USA Today york (Pa.) Daily Record
    http://www.pecos.net/news/arch97a/082097p.htm
    PECOS ENTERPRISE
    Daily Newspaper and Tourism Guide
    for Trans Pecos, Big Bend, Far West Texas
    Tourism Opinion Sports Scores ...
    Van Horn Advocate
    TOP STORIES
    August 20, 1997
    Hospital district tax rate
    to remain at current level
    Skip to next story
    By GREG HARMON
    Staff Writer
    PECOS, August 20, 1997 - The Board of Directors of Reeves County
    Hospital District voted overwhelmingly to stay on the course they have
    worked to lay out over the past several years.
    The board voted to accept as presented the 1998 Operating and Capital
    Budget as well as to remain with the current effective tax rate. This
    tax rate (approximately .354 per $100 of property valuation), the Board anticipated, should result in lower overall taxes this year even though 1997 saw an increase in property value for the county. The consensus to stay the course drew inspiration from the new financial report which shows a considerable drop in total expenses for the hospital. One member of the board felt that the fortified financial statement reflected a growing confidence in the hospital on the part of the community.

    45. PTA's Role For All Children
    too much, and reported that many parents and ptas are considering People looking towardPTOs and away from PTA often do not new york has the best Belgian fries.
    http://csmweb2.emcweb.com/durable/2001/06/11/p8s4.htm
    Monitor Site Map @csmonitor.com About Us/Help Advertising Christian Science Article Archive AP's The WIRE Crossword puzzle Forums (join in!) Home International News Links Library News In Brief Subscriptions US News Weekly News Quiz
    MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2001
    e-mail
    this story to a friend write a letter to the editor (oped@csps.com)
    OPINION
    LETTERS
    PTA's role for all children
    In your June 4 editorial "Rethinking Parent-Teacher Ties," you questioned the relevance of PTA to parents and children, suggested that the National PTA's request for a $1 dues increase was too much, and reported that many parents and PTAs are considering converting to PTOs (parent-teacher-organizations). National PTA has been advocating for the health, welfare, and education of all of America's children for more than 100 years. PTA lobbyists in our nation's capital work closely with elected officials to develop and support legislation to improve the lives of children. My state PTA organization is also a major force in passing effective legislation. Recent laws include a graduated drivers license for teens, stricter traffic penalties in school zones, and pesticide-use notification to schools and communities. Our full-time lobbyist is currently working very hard to help us pass anti-bullying legislation. People looking toward PTOs and away from PTA often do not understand the global need to advocatefor children beyond their communities, or realize that for a small fee ($7 to $10 in our state) each year, they can help affect positive change for children through PTA's parent-involvement and legislative programs. That's not too much to ask, when you consider that the future of our nation will soon be in their hands.

    46. Education World® : Parents Community Center : Home-to-School Connection : Paren
    schools is much more than parent conferences and ptos…. Debate in the news ShouldPTAs Be Allowed to reopened recently when a group of new york City parents
    http://www.education-world.com/parents/home_to_school/involvement.shtml

    Parents Community

    At School:

    Afterschool Care

    Choosing A School/District

    At Home:
    Home Activities

    Homeschooling

    Home-to-School Connection

    At Issue:
    Kids "At-Risk"
    Kid's Health Kids With Special Needs School Issues ... Home-to-School Connection Parent Involvement P A R E N T I N V O L V E M E N T Research shows that students whose parents are more involved in their education generally have better grades, test scores, and attendance, and more consistently completed homework. Articles Beyond the Bake Sale: Parents Can Make the Difference in Countless Ways Everybody wins when parents volunteer ! Kevin Walker, the founder of Project Appleseed, a nonprofit organization, is helping schools involve parents. The organization has created a list of 37 different ways parents can help and is on its way to recruiting 5 million parent volunteers nationwide. INCLUDED: The Project Appleseed Parental Involvement Pledge. Parent- and Community-Involvement Strategies That Work The research is clear: When parents and communities are involved in schools, education improves. From New York to California, from an individual student's notebook to community-outreach programs, here are five approaches to parental and community involvement that work! Included: Five successful programs for parent and community involvement plus links to dozens of online resources! Young Authors and Artists Collaborate on Humanitarian Project Parents at a Washington state elementary school organized a Share a Story student enrichment project that promoted the literacy and humanitarian goals of the school. The students shipped more than 1,000 books to schools in the South Pacific. Among the books were 115 the students had written themselves! What they got in return was a lot of satisfaction - and a big surprise!

    47. Discover Teaneck '83 "Then And Now" - Teaneck Public Library Online
    7 1/2 square miles located just four miles from new york City And that's not countingPTAs, ptos, PTSAs', service organizations such as Rotary, Kiwanis, Lions
    http://www.teaneck.org/virtualvillage/discoverteaneck/grassrootstown.html
    var rootpath = '../../'; nav('virtualvillage') Published for The Teaneck Housing Center by The Teaneck News May 18,1983
    A Grass Roots Town
    By Councilman Frank Hall When visitors come to Teaneck, they are generally impressed by a number of physical features. They see beautiful homes some contemporary, some Tudor, a few Pre-revolutionary colonials, and many other types. They see our broad "Main Street" called Cedar Lane, with its attractive shops and absence of overhead wires. They see our high school up on the hill, the two junior highs, and the eight elementary schools. If they take the time to drive around town, they see our 19 municipal parks, our Richard Rodda Teaneck Recreation Center, our beautiful, recently remodeled library, and our entire municipal complex on Paul Volker Green. They'll see our university, Fairleigh Dickinson, our hospital Holy Name,. and our most recent addition Glenpointe with its Loew's Hotel, office building, atrium, and hundreds of townhouses. All this and much more in an area of about 7 1/2 square miles located just four miles from New York City. But beautiful physical features are not unique to Teaneck. They can be found scattered throughout Bergen County. What really makes Teaneck unique is its people, its grass roots.

    48. Publications
    information, contact George Degnon or Jenny york at the keynote address to the BreakingNew Ground! motivated parents who participate in ptas, ptos, and school
    http://www.healthinschools.org/pubs/access/Summer95.asp

    Back to Publications - ACCESS newsletter

    Summer 95 Inside this Issue
    School-Based Health Care Assembly Breaks New Ground
    M ore than 500 people from around the country gathered June 23-25 to establish a national movement to support improved health services for children through school-based health care. The conferenceappropriately titled Breaking New Ground! brought together school-based health care providers, researchers, and advocates for three days of activities in Washington, DC. "This is clearly a historic occasion," said Joy Dryfoos, a long-time leader of school-based health care. "For the first time, the entire school-based health care movement is building a strong organization with the capacity for advocacy, networking, and sharing resources." If the crowd's size and enthusiasm were any indication, the effort promises to be a major success. Conference organizers expected a turnout of 350 people, but they significantly underestimated the desire for this meeting. More than 500 attendees from 42 states and the District of Columbia flocked to Washington for the occasion. Half of the participants were people who work on the front lines of school-based health care250 health center staff and community organizers. The other half reflected interest from all quarters, including educators; health care institutions; private funders; community organizations; and local, state, and federal governments.

    49. The Advocate - Cuts Force Parents-teachers Groups To Change Their
    ptas have come a long way from bake sales and teachers with school supplies, helpingto bring new technology into In the old days, ptos were a 'whatever worked
    http://www.stamfordadvocate.com/news/local/scn-sa-pto3feb03,0,5780901.story?coll

    50. ISUMA : Bowling Alone: The Collapse And Revival Of American Community
    new york Simon Schuster, 2000. be more integrated and pedestrianfriendly; anew, pluralistic, socially of this criticism still sticks while ptas may be
    http://www.isuma.net/v02n01/vanrooy/vanrooy_e.shtml
    ss("#336600") Robert Putnam Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community New York: Simon Schuster, 2000 Alison Van Rooy After five years of fevered debate gasp Bowling Alone is a sign that ideas born in universities still occasionally make a difference in the wide political world.
    Making Democracy Work , a careful 1993 study about economic development and community in Italy. Indeed, a similar argument was made by Edward Banfield in his 1958 study of southern Italy, The Moral Basis of a Backward Society , extended 10 years later in an American version, The Unheavenly City The Revolt of the Elites (Christopher Lasch), Journal of Democracy Economist did a short public-interest review (it helps a lot that Putnam has a friendly, jaunty writing style), which created a stir in the lead-up to the 1996 U.S. election year. The problem: mass social unease; the cause: insufficient social capital because Americans are no longer joining in.
    What Putnam argues
    The American Prospect
    • Civic behaviour, including active membership in community groups, is down
    • The joining of groups and positive social outcomes are inextricably linked
    • The generation of key joiners is dying off
    • While generational change is the largest cause, other culprits are also responsible: television, which absorbs our erstwhile associational time, gets

    51. Potsdam PTA
    English Language Learners (ELLs) in new york City's public naturally acclimate themselvesto a new set of NOTE Local ptas are incorporated under the charter
    http://www.potsdam.k12.ny.us/District/PTA/newbyte1.htm
    Newsbytes for 2001-02
    Potsdam PTA Newsbytes
    from Susan Godreau Newsbyte Editor
    Index: Updated: 7-7-2002
    Potsdam PTA Newsbyte 6/26/2002
    LEARNING DISABLED EXCEPTIONALLY GIFTED CHILDREN
    story
    WHY ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNER STUDENTS ARE DROPPING OUT OF SCHOOL
    The implementation of New York State's new graduation requirements has been an enormous challenge for the thousands of immigrant students who are English Language Learners (ELLs) in New York City's public high schools. The current outcomes for these students as a direct result of these new requirements are extremely disturbing; more ELL children are now dropping out than are graduating high school. Under the new graduation standards, ELLs are required to pass the English Language Arts (ELA) Regents an exam designed for native-born English speaking children who have been learning English language arts since elementary school. Advocates, parents and students, and teachers and school administrators raised concerns that the new policy, without major improvements in the education provided to ELLs, would result in higher dropout rates. Learn more
    In her article " Common Elements of High Performing, High Poverty Middle Schools

    52. Baltimore City Paper: Schooled (June 5 - June 11, 2002)
    ptos from Edgewood and other targeted schools immediately outfit has worked to helpNew york communities forge of the Baltimore City Council of ptas, says that
    http://www.citypaper.com/2002-06-05/feature.html
    Go to the Feature Archives. Recently in Feature: Seeing Red - A Historian Crashes Maryland's Communist Party (May. 29, 2002) Waiting for the Dough - Maryland's Horseplayers Hope Slot Machines and a New Governor Will Help Bail Out the Industry. But Can Even an Infusion of Cash Save Pimlico? (May. 15, 2002) Punching the Clock City Paper : The First Decade (May. 15, 2002) More by Afefe Tyehimba Spiritualized - Seeking an Enlightened Escape From the Blues at Bon Secours... in Sizzlin Summer Feature (May. 22, 2002) Unlock the Vote - Victory Bittersweet for Backers of Bill to Restore Ex-Felons' Voting Rights... in Mobtown Beat (Apr. 10, 2002) Words Up - Partnership Embarks On Initiative To Spark One-to-One Dialogues Across Racial Divides... in Mobtown Beat (Apr. 3, 2002) June 5 - June 11, 2002 EMAIL AFEFE TYEHIMBA Ooh! Ooh!: Hands fly during a recent math exercise in Maria Roseman's fifth-grade class at Edgewood Elementary. Photos By Jefferson Jackson Steele Schooled When Edgewood Elementary Was Targeted to Close, Parents Say They Got a Lesson in Getting Dismissed By Afefe Tyehimba IT'S COMING ON 9:30 ON A TUESDAY NIGHT , way past the bedtime of several small children who, four hours into a meeting of the Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners, yawn from perches in their parents' laps. The families are out on this late-April weeknight to show support for Edgewood Elementarythe school their kids attend, the school some of them attended, an anchor in West Baltimore's Walbrook neighborhood for 44 years. A school slated to close in a matter of weeks.

    53. The Fourth (4th
    mailings sent to local schools and ptas re the Education Committee of the EasternNew york Section, Inc should contact elementary and middle school ptos and work
    http://membership.acs.org/E/ENY/EDCOM.htm
    EDUCATION COMMITTEE Next Education Committee Meeting Late September 2001 (watch this space for date) 6:30 p.m. B 308 Roger Bacon Science Hall, Siena College NOTE: Minutes of all meetings from October 1999 are on this page. Just scroll down. Most recent meeting is first. Minutes 2nd Meeting 2001 The second (2nd.) meeting for 2001 of the Education Committee of the Eastern New York Section, Inc. of the American Chemical Society was called to order at 6:30 P.M. in room B306 (later moved to B308) of Roger Bacon Science Hall at Siena College in Loudonville, NY.
    Members present included Ms. Debbie Alber (N.Y. State Police Forensic Investigation Center), Dr. David Clarke (Albany College of Pharmacy), Dr. Kathleen Donnelly (Russell Sage College), Dr. Steven Frey (Skidmore College), Dr. David Hilker (Wadsworth Center), Mr.. John Nickles (Hudson Valley Community College), Ms. Marilou Pudiak-Town (Shenendehowa Central High Schools East and West), and Mr.. William R. Town (retired).
    The majority of the time was spent reviewing and discussing fifteen (15) mini-grant applications that were submitted. After careful review, three (3) were removed from consideration for funding. The remaining twelve (12) were evaluated for content, extent of chemistry goals, etc. The following summarizes the funding decision of the committee:
    Susan Alexander (Acadia Middle School, Shenendehowa) no funding

    54. Telecom News Archives
    $3.9375 in composite trading on the new york Stock Exchange its formative stage, accordingto a new report by the disparity reflects the fact that ptos, used to
    http://www.igigroup.com/news/archives1999/9910-11-15.html
    Search for... ADSL Advertise in 2000 ONFOYP Asia Pacific / China Calendar of Events Change Password Conferences Conference Proceedings Daily News Download IGI Graphics Download Tools DWDM Education Employment Opportunities Enterprise Networks Fiber Optics Fiber Optics Training India Telecom Links Mailing List Newsletters "On Sale Now" Optical Networks Payment Options Regional Telecom Studies Submarine Cable Telecommunications Update listing Videos/CD-Rom NEWS
    CONFERENCES
    PUBLICATIONS
    Newsletters ... Advertise in the "2000 Optical Networks / Fiber Optic Yellow Pages" see demo of online version coming in 2000 -FREE Subscription to "Today in Telecom"
    Telecom News Archives
    October 11 - 15, 1999 Headlines - October 15, 1999 TOP STORIES ADSL EARNINGS/STOCKS

    55. Making Tech Happen Chapter 9
    Another new york school district also objects to the partnership work stations tohouse the new computers. efforts by civic organizations and ptas taking up
    http://www.southern.org/pubs/MTH/MT9.html
    Chapter 9 - Resources Finding the resources to finance, maintain, and upgrade equipment, and to provide teacher training and technical support is universally one of the biggest hurdles that schools face when it comes to technology implementation. For many, the funds are simply unavailable via the conventional means of local tax-based school financing. Despite this fact, we found schools and districts in some of the most disadvantaged areas of the nation that have somehow managed to establish exemplary technology programs. How did they do it? As an additional component of this chapter, we provide some information on the use of various information resources available through the Federal government. Not only is money essential for acquiring technology but so is good information about the availability of Federal programs and information sources. Questionnaire Data: Awareness, Use and Helpfulness of Resources
    General Approaches to Resource Acquisition
    In this area, we identified a list of nine very general approaches to expanding the resource base available to schools involved in implementing technology. It included various sources of resources (e.g., private versus public), various types of resources (e.g., money versus in-kind), and different types of relationships with the resource providers.
    In the questionnaire, we asked schools to indicate whether they were using a particular technical support approach and to rate how much the approach helped on a four-point scale. These questionnaire data are summarized in Table 9.1.

    56. Chapter9
    Another new york school district also objects to the efforts by civic organizationsand ptas taking up of the school's efforts to purchase new technologies.
    http://www.netc.org/cdrom/seirtec/html/chapter9.htm
    CHAPTER NINE RESOURCES Finding the resources to finance, maintain, and upgrade equipment, and to provide teacher training and technical support is universally one of the biggest hurdles that schools face when it comes to technology implementation. For many, the funds are simply unavailable via the conventional means of local tax-based school financing. Despite this fact, we found schools and districts in some of the most disadvantaged areas of the nation that have somehow managed to establish exemplary technology programs. How did they do it? In a word, they did everything . While we collected questionnaire information on a number of typical sources of funds (see below), schools provided literally dozens of interesting examples of how to approach fundraising. Some fostered and rewarded grantsmanship among their faculty; others developed alliances with community groups; and still others were able to steer traditional educational funding vehicles into more direct support of technology. Many schools identified non-monetary in-kind resources such as volunteers, bartering relationships, and corporate contributions of hardware and software. The best schools (from a resource acquisition perspective) had fairly elaborate strategies and tactics that combined all of these elements. One of the areas we focused particular attention on was how schools make effective use of Federal or state technology grant programs. This is an area where there is much opportunity for creative and effective public policy, as well as for some dreadful mistakes.

    57. Read Across America: Last Year's Events
    Charles Robb cut a ribbon at the new Mt with the support of the Council of ptas weredistributed The york County school superintendent read The Sneetches and
    http://www.veaweteach.org/lastyear.html
    Students in Accomack celebrated the day with a "traditional" breakfast of green eggs and ham and readings by members of the board of supervisors, local Boys and Girls clubs and community leaders.
    Mt. Vernon Elementary School in Alexandria doubled its population when each student read, one on one, with a high school student from T.C. Williams or a caring adult from one of the 41 participating volunteer organizations. Festivities continued with a spaghetti supper and a student production of "Green Eggs to Hamlet Rap." (1998)
    Senator Charles Robb cut a ribbon at the new Mt. Vernon Elementary School in Alexandria and then read to classes of students at the school. A reading night was held at Maury Elementary featuring a presentation of "the Star-Bellied Sneeches," green eggs and ham, creating bookmarks and a Dr. Seuss mural, story readings and a book raffle. (1999) U.S. Senator Charles Robb cut the ribbon opening the Dr. Seuss Reading Room at Alexandria's Mount Vernon Elementary School on March 2 and then became the room's first guest reader. Parents and volunteers read with students in classes and small groups. The kindergarten breakfast menu offered green eggs and ham. Reading competitions lead to eight classes being chosen to ring the school bell and be shown on television. A March 13 celebration will provide bells, certificates and bookmarks for children who reach their reading goals. (2000)

    58. CyberSpace Search!
    http//www.nonprofit-fundraising.com; MoneyRaising.com Offers school fundraisersand fundraising ideas for ptas and ptos. Read testimonials
    http://www.cyberspace.com/cgi-bin/cs_search.cgi?Terms=school newspaper ideas

    59. Noticias De Pau Gasol
    Translate this page a Fotsis (21 ptos) y Salomon (23 ptos) que lo Los Memphis Grizzlies ganan a los NewYork Knicks a millones de dólares (2.500 millones de ptas.), en principio
    http://mundogasol.metropoliglobal.com/Noticias.htm
    6 DE FEBRERO 2003
    4 DE FEBRERO 2003
    3 DE FEBRERO 2003
    Los Memphis Grizzlies perdieron el partido ante Denver Nuggets por 93 a 78, los Grizzlies jugaron un último cuarto malo y regalaron el partido, Pau Gasol, con 13 puntos y 11 rebotes, fue de los pocos que se salvo del mal partido.
    1 DE FEBRERO 2003
    Pau Gasol igualó su récord personal de anotación en un partido en la NBA al lograr 32 puntos en el partido que los Memphis Grizzlies disputaron contra los New York Knicks. 31 DE ENERO 2003
    Gran partido de Pau Gasol que no sirvió para vencer a los New York Knicks, con 32 puntos, 9 rebotes, 3 asistencias y 4 tapones, el resultado final fue Memphis Grizzlies 102, New York Kincks 108. 30 DE ENERO 2003
    Pau Gasol restó importancia al hecho de no estar en el partido All-Star a l verse satisfecho por participar en el partido entre 'rookies' y sophomores, jugadores de primer año contra jugadores de segundo año. 28 DE ENERO 2003
    Pau Gasol no jugará finalmente el Partido de las Estrellas de la NBA, no ha sido elegido como suplente en el equipo del Oeste para el All-Stars y el se tendrá que conformarse con jugar el partido entre los rookies y los jugadores de segundo año. 27 DE ENERO 2003
    Tercera derrota consecutiva de Memphis Grizzlies antes los Houston Rockets por 100 a 95, Pau jugó contra el gigante Yao Ming, ganando claramente el español, con 26 puntos, 8 rebotes y 4 tapones.

    60. XV Encuentro De La A.J.L. (Asociación De Jóvenes Lingüistas)
    Translate this page una Cena de Socios, que tendrá un coste de 2.200 ptas. 3. La fuente será TimesNew Roman a lo largo algo sobre la reforma de Alcuino de york, expansión y
    http://www.cica.es/aliens/sls99/ajl.htm
    Hizkuntzalari Gazteen Elkartea Sevilla 2000 30 marzo-1 abril Programa Alojamiento Sugerencias tutatis@ctv.es
    • El Monte
    17 de febrero de 2000 Hizkuntzalari Gazteen Elkartea Sevilla 2000 En cuanto al XV Encuentro de la AJL
    Philologia Hispalensis
    , 8, pp. 149- 161. Editorial Kronos , Sevilla.
    Martes y jueves de 10:00 a 13:00 horas .
    C/ Palos de la Frontera, s/n
    41004 Sevilla Tlfno. 954551526
    Fax. 954551526 rabebu@mixmail.com
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    chariro@mixmail.com
    Juana Santana Marrero ( jsantana@siff.us.es Alojamiento Programa Hizkuntzalari Gazteen Elkartea Sevilla 2000 Programa General 10:00 - 11:00 Conferencia inaugural a cargo del Dr. Ariza (Paraninfo de la Universidad): 12:00 - 14:00 Comunicaciones (2 mesas). Descanso 17:00 - 19:00: Comunicaciones (2 mesas). 21:00: Cena de Socios. Viernes 31 de marzo 9:30-11:30: Comunicaciones(5 mesas). Descanso 12:00-14:00: Comunicaciones (5 mesas). Descanso 16:30-18:00 Comunicaciones (5 mesas). 18:30-19:30 Conferencia de clausura a cargo del Dr. Yanguas:" 10:30-12:00 Comunicaciones(5 Mesas).

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