truesee's Blog

Parents fight college that won't admit their daughter — she's 13

Parents fight college that won't admit their daughter — she's 13 

 

Martin E. Comas

Orlando Sentinel

May 30, 2010

 

In some ways, Anastasia Megan is a typical 13-year-old girl. She enjoys riding her horse on her family's rural Sumter County spread. She loves to scuba dive, kayak and listen to rock music, including Pink Floyd. 

But she is not a typical teenager. The home-schooled student has nearly completed her high-school education, and her parents, both retired engineers, say they have reached their limit in continuing to challenge her academically. They recently applied for their daughter to take dual-enrollment courses at nearby Lake-Sumter Community College in Leesburg.

But the college gave a firm thumbs down, saying Anastasia — who also goes by Annie — is not ready to sit side by side with older students, most of them adults. Undeterred, her parents have filed an age-discrimination complaint against the college with the U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights.

"If she meets all the qualifications but for her age, then why not let her in?" asked her mother, Louise Racine. "What's the worst that can happen, honestly? If a child does pass these tests, don't you think they should be allowed to continue their education to the next level and continue to let their minds grow?"

College President Charles Mojock would not comment specifically on Annie's situation. However, he said Lake-Sumter is an open campus, unlike a gated high school or home-school environment and that could present safety issues for especially young students.

"Anyone basically can walk onto our campus," Mojock said. "So we've got a very different environment [than a high school]. … And we have many adult students having adult conversations on adult topics and that may or may not be suitable for some young students."

Annie's parents point out their daughter has traveled the world with them and her siblings — she is one of triplets — and is comfortable in adult settings. Her father, John Megan, offered to accompany Annie to classes. When college officials again said no, her father said he would even enroll in his daughter's classes. College officials still would not bend.

"We were told that parents could not be allowed to do that because it could be disruptive," Megan said.

Safety issues

Richard Scott, vice president of business affairs, said having a parent tag along with a young student presents problems, including faculty members who could hesitate giving a bad grade or discipline to a student, fearing pressure from the parent.

Annie's parents, however, argue that their daughter is well-suited for the college environment. The teenager recently finished online college courses in Spanish, macroeconomics and U.S. government, scoring A's in the final exams in April. She also scored far above average in three necessary college-placement tests in November in reading comprehension, sentence skills and algebra required for dual-enrollment high-school students. She was given the tests when she applied to attend Lake-Sumter.

Regardless, Scott said, the college looks at a broad array of qualifications besides high test scores before accepting students, including those applying for dual-enrollment.

In recent years, Scott said, Lake-Sumter college has seen an increasing number of young applicants, including some as young as 8 or 9 years old. That led the college's board of trustees in April to enact a minimum-age requirement of 15.

Annie's parents hope to trump the new age requirement and are awaiting a decision by a federal Department of Education investigator. An attempt at mediation in March ended in a stalemate. 

Florida does not have a minimum-age requirement for students entering community colleges. However, each college's board of trustees can basically set its own rules regarding admission standards.

John Boshoven, a member of the board of directors for the National Association for College Admission Counseling in Arlington, Va., and a counselor for continuing education at Community High School in Ann Arbor, Mich., said colleges will look at young applicants with a much more critical eye, usually because of liability.

"The primary issue most often is safety. Anything that happens to this kid, the parents can sue us for being negligent," Boshoven said. "There are also social problems. She's [Annie] very young, and what kind of friends will she make at the college? This is a kid with a 21-year-old's brain."

'Tons of possibilities' 

Annie's parents say it's time their daughter enrolls in a public academic setting. They're not interested in online courses at Lake-Sumter. 

"It's an unreal environment here," her father said, referring to the home-school setting at the family's home near Center Hill about 50 miles northwest of Orlando. "She needs this. She's going to have to get into a classroom."

Annie agreed, saying it would be an adjustment for the first month if she is allowed to enroll at the college. "I would like to think I would do fine," she said.

Eventually she plans to study business management, law or engineering at Georgetown or an Ivy League school.

"There's tons of possibilities for me," she said.

Annie's parents say the University of Florida is too far and any other university would mean moving out of the area. They'll decide what to do next if they are not able to enroll their daughter at Lake-Sumter. That could mean slowing down on the academics and traveling to remote spots around the world with their children, something they often do. 

"It's a shame to see the [college] administration taking the go-slow approach to a bright student who wants to continue to learn," Megan said.

Teens in college

Other young students with superior academic skills have been able to attend college.

•Last year, Moshe Kai Cavalin, a 13-year-old student, graduated with honors from East Los Angeles Community College with an associate arts degree in liberal studies. Moshe started college when he was 8.

•Thirteen-year-old Colin Carlson is a sophomore at the University of Connecticut, where he has been taking classes since he was 9.

•Locally, a 13-year-old student attended Seminole State College in Sanford for three terms from fall 2008 through fall 2009 as a dual-enrollment student. The college did not provide the name of the student, citing privacy protection.

•Lake-Sumter itself recently trumpeted the success of a student who entered as a home-schooled student at 14. Jasmine Lykins of Groveland graduated at age 16 and was selected to give the commencement address May 7. During her first semester in spring of 2008 she took college algebra and fundamentals of speech with her father, Jerry Lykins.

Entry #2,392

BP's top kill fails to plug Gulf oil leak

BP's top kill effort fails to plug Gulf oil leak

BEN NUCKOLS

Associated Press Writer

ROBERT, La. – BP admitted defeat Saturday in its attempt to plug the Gulf of Mexico oil leak by pumping mud into a busted well, but said it's readying yet another approach to fight the spill after a series of failures.

BP PLC Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles said the company determined the "top kill" had failed after it spent three days pumping heavy drilling mud into the crippled well 5,000 feet underwater. More than 1.2 million gallons of mud was used, but most of it escaped out of the damaged riser.

In the six weeks since the spill began, the company has failed in each attempt to stop the gusher, as estimates of how much is leaking grow more dire. It's the worst spill in U.S. history — exceeding even the Exxon Valdez disaster in 1989 off the Alaska coast — dumping between 18 million and 40 million gallons into the Gulf, according to government estimates.

"This scares everybody, the fact that we can't make this well stop flowing, the fact that we haven't succeeded so far," Suttles said. "Many of the things we're trying have been done on the surface before, but have never been tried at 5,000 feet."

The company failed in the days after the spill to use robot submarines to close valves on the massive blowout preventer atop the damaged well, then two weeks later ice-like crystals clogged a 100-ton box the company tried placing over the leak. Earlier this week, engineers removed a mile-long siphon tube after it sucked up a disappointing 900,000 gallons of oil from the gusher.

Suttles said BP is already preparing for the next attempt to stop the leak that began after the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded in April, killing 11 people.

The company plans to use robot submarines to cut off the damaged riser from which the oil is leaking, and then try to cap it with a containment valve. The effort is expected to take between four and seven days.

"We're confident the job will work but obviously we can't guarantee success," Suttles said of the new plan, declining to handicap the likelihood it will work.

He said that cutting off the damaged riser isn't expected to cause the flow rate of leaking oil to increase significantly.

The permanent solution to the leak, a relief well currently being drilled, won't be ready until August, BP says.

Experts have said that a bend in the damaged riser likely was restricting the flow of oil somewhat, so slicing it off and installing a new containment valve is risky.

"If they can't get that valve on, things will get much worse," said Philip W. Johnson, an engineering professor at the University of Alabama.

Johnson said he thinks BP can succeed with the valve, but added: "It's a scary proposition."

Word that the top-kill had failed hit hard in the fishing community of Venice, La., near where oil first made landfall in large quanities almost two weeks ago.

"Everybody's starting to realize this summer's lost. And our whole lifestyle might be lost," said Michael Ballay, the 59-year-old manager of the Cypress Cove Marina.

Workers clean up oil residue along the beach ...

AP

Sat May 29, 1:54 PM ET

Online: http://www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com/go/site/2931/

Entry #2,390

Man sold more than coffee at Starbucks

Police: Man dealt cocaine at Starbucks

 Fri, 28 May 2010 17:55:22 EDT

CHICAGO, May 28, 2010

UPI

Suburban Chicago police said they arrested a man who was allegedly selling cocaine from a Starbucks parking lot.

 

Police said they searched Jorge Saucedo-Beiza, 21, of Arlington Heights, after conducting surveillance on the Northbrook parking lot and determining he was selling Starbucks customers something stronger than caffeine.

 

Saucedo-Beiza, who police said was in possession of $4,000 cash and four plastic bags containing cocaine, was charged with possession of a controlled substance and unlawful delivery of more than 100 grams of cocaine.

Entry #2,389

Robbers use tea instead of guns to rob bank

Robbers use tea instead of guns to rob Iraqi bank

The Wire Staff

May 29, 2010

Updated 1007 GMT (1807 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Robbers stole $5.5 million; 2 held
  • Tea laced with a sleeping drug to get past guards
  • Insurgents conduct robberies to fund operations

Baghdad, Iraq (CNN) -- Robbers stole $5.5 million from a southern Iraqi state bank after giving guards tea laced with a sleeping drug, the Interior Ministry said on Saturday.

No shots were fired during the incident Friday at a bank near Najaf, the Interior Ministry said. The money is the equivalent of 6.5 billion Iraqi dinars.

In recent months, there has been a spike of similar incidents and authorities believe that insurgents were behind them to fund their military operations

Earlier this week, 15 people died in southwestern Baghdad after a brazen series of jewelry store heists on Tuesday in which bandits made off with gold and money. 

In this latest incident, robbers had an associate among the bank's guard force give drugged tea to the guards, officials said.

After the guards passed out, the robbers entered the bank and made off with the money.

Two people were arrested, but police were not able to recover any of the money. The Interior Ministry said it appears the two are poor people trying to make money and are not part of a terrorist organization.

Members of the bank's guard force are being investigated, the Interior Ministry said

Entry #2,388

Pinball machines making a huge comeback

denver and the west

Pinball makes a comeback in Colorado, U.S.

Jason Blevins
The Denver Post

Posted: 05/29/2010 01:00:00 AM MDT

Updated: 05/29/2010 01:43:38 AM MDT
  Pinballer Zen, right, puts his all into the game during a monthly tournament at the Lyons Classic Pinball arcade. (Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post)   

LYONS — "Banzai!"

Steve Novak doesn't flinch as the voice screams again. Dozens of lights flicker, yet his eyes never leave the ball hanging on his flipper in the vertical backglass of the Banzai Run pinball machine.

Soon, there are several balls in play. Novak struggles to keep up. The 58-year-old nudges the machine, mut tering a sort of plea as one, two, three balls tumble down the drain.

"That's called begging," he says as he pulls the plunger on his second ball. "The good guys, they never beg."

Novak is part of a growing tribe of pinballers — known as pinheads — who are fueling a revival of the game that was ubiquitous in the pre-video-game era of the 1970s and '80s.

The game nearly plummeted into obscurity a decade ago as arcade owners were lured to zero-maintenance video games. But today — thanks, ironically, to the Internet uniting diverse islands of pinheads — the flipper fellowship is growing. Tournaments are thriving. Local leagues draw players of all ages.

 

Flippers unite

The Mile High Pinball League has doubled in size in the past five years, with about 28 players competing every Thursday in 11-week summer and winter seasons. The 20-year-old Professional Amateur Pinball Association's annual world championship draws 400 players, up from 150 in the early 1990s, and currently ranks almost 3,000 players in a database of 112,000 contests.

The International Flipper Pinball Association started in 2006 with 430 players and now ranks more than 7,500 players from 27 countries, including 3,400 U.S. players. The association grows by about 2,000 players a year, says IFPA president Joshua Sharpe.

At the once-a-month tournament night at Lyons Classic Pinball, a narrow, noisy arcade packed with 40 flashing machines, some of the ball-flippers kick up their heels or slightly twist their hips as they slap shots toward tumbling castles, Balrogs, or the dragon-flamed

Adam Lefkoff of Longmont is one of Colorado's top 10 pinball players. He has 20 pinball machines at his house and embraces the philosophical sense that "pinball is like life." (Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post)musicians of Kiss. Others stand stoic when points climb to tens of millions and even billions.

 

It's a return to the roots of old-school, three-dimensional games anchored in split-second reflexes.

"When it dawned on me that this was a real skill, that's when it got addictive," says Kevin Carroll, who seven years ago ditched his plumbing gig and, with his wife, Carole, opened Lyons Classic Pinball. "It's not just random luck."

The Carrolls began their courtship with pinball as collectors, gathering as many as 20 machines in the basement of their Lyons home. In 2003, the hobby turned business as the couple opened one of Colorado's only pinball arcades.

The hunt for the perfect shot and the ever-elusive "wizard mode" — the score-soaring, multiball scenario achieved only after completing several levels of seemingly impossible tasks — can fuel a lifetime of pinballing. It's a fine line, designing games that keep both experts and beginners on the flippers and pumping quarters.

"We are always trying to achieve that balance," says Marc Schoenberg, spokesman for Chicago's Stern Pinball, which for the past 11 years has been the world's sole manufacturer of pinball machines.

Challenging that search for balance is the fact that most of the games Stern now sells are heading for rec rooms in homeowner basements. It's a new direction for the company, which for most of its 24 years designed and sold games destined for arcades.

"The more we sell to homeowners, the more we want to attract a player who will enjoy at a more layman's level," Schoenberg says.

Pinball biz on the rise

While the company doesn't expect to see a return to the early 1990s, when Stern was one of several pinball manufacturers and was moving 20,000 machines a year, business, says Schoenberg, is "strong and rising" for the 35-worker company.

Mike Strauss' career as a pinball machine repairman has thrived with the boom in home pinball machines.

"Pinball is very expensive for operators to place on location and turn a profit because of maintenance. Pinball machines break," says Strauss, who has repaired the complicated machines for 30 years yet "can't stand to play" pinball. "I do enjoy working on them, though. And Colorado has a lot of pinball machines."

Kevin Carroll handles most repairs himself, even soldering switches in the middle of busy tournament night.

On this night, he fires shot after shot at a wobbling Frankenstein. A frenzy of balls floods the table. The voice in the machine endlessly hollers "Jackpot" and "Double super jackpot."

Carole grins watching her sweetheart in the zone. A crowd gathers as Kevin leans closer to the machine.

"You get in this mode where you are just connected to the ball and you just can't lose," Novak says. "It's pretty cool to watch."

Watching pinball wizards marks an evangelical angle of pinball. Once a fledgling player sees an expert in action — like Colorado's own Donavan Stepp, ranked 22nd in the world — the limitless potential is revealed. That was the case for Longmont's Adam Lefkoff, one of Colorado's top 10 players.

"You can play a game 10,000 times and on the 10,001st time you play, something new happens. Pinball is never boring," Lefkoff says. "You progress through the game and find new features and you know the ball will eventually drain. In that way pinball is like life. You are going to die, so what are you going to do when the ball is in play?"

Entry #2,386

Bank robber tries to escape on bicycle

Man on bike arrested after downtown bank robbery

 

JAMES HALPIN
Anchorage Daily News

May 27th, 2010 09:39 PM
 

 

A man suspected of robbing a downtown bank Thursday afternoon and who fled the scene on a bike crashed into a police car and hit the ground, with cash spilling out of his backpack, according to Anchorage police. The suspect, Christopher Todd Mayer, 45, was arrested and was taken in for questioning, police said.

A robber walked into the Wells Fargo at 630 E. Fifth Ave. about 1:15 p.m. wearing a camouflage bandanna over his face and demanded cash but didn't show a weapon, police said. The teller stuffed money into the robber's backpack and the man left the bank heading west.

While responding to the scene, officer Aaron Roberts saw a bicyclist with a camouflaged bandanna around his neck at Ninth Avenue and Karluk Street, police said. The biker refused to stop, prompting Roberts to block the bike with his cruiser, police said. 

Mayer didn't stop but instead hit the cruiser with the bike and slid over the hood, then fell to the ground, police said. In the process, he dropped his backpack. Money spilled out onto the ground, according to police. Mayer ran but was arrested a half-block away, police said.

The FBI said this was the third bank robbery in Alaska this year. 

Read more: http://www.adn.com/2010/05/27/1297402/man-on-bike-arrested-after-downtown.html#ixzz0pH6oN2J8

Entry #2,384

Woman falls wakes up speaking a foreign language

Woman says fall changed her accent

A Fairfax County woman says she suffers from Foreign Accent Syndrome because of a fall she took at a 4-H youth conference, reports Ryan Abbott of Courthouse News Service.

Abbott reports that Foreign Accent Syndrome is a rare condition occurring in stroke victims that affects speech by altering "rhythm and melody, suggesting a foreign accent," according to the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.

Robin Vanderlip seeks $1 million in damages from the National 4-H Council, in Montgomery County Circuit Court.

She claims that a "heal scuff"coupled with a "dysfunctional handrail" in a stairwell at the National 4-H Youth Conference Center caused her to fall and strike her head. She says she was rushed to a hospital for treatment, and two days later, after she was discharged, she woke up unable to speak.

Vanderlip says the blow to her head caused a stroke, which caused her Foreign Accent Syndrome, from which she still suffers, along with memory problems and fatigue. Vanderlip's complaint does not indicate what sort of accent she developed.

Vanderlip is represented by Christopher Nace with Paulson Nace of Washington, D.C.

 

Lori Aratani

Washington Post

May 24, 2010; 1:20 PM ET

Entry #2,383

Internet addicts starved their baby while playing virtual baby

Friday, 05.28.10

 

Internet addicts guilty of starving baby to death

SANGWON YOON

Associated Press Writer

SEOUL, South Korea -- A South Korean couple were convicted Friday of abandoning their newborn daughter, who starved to death while they addictively played an online game raising a virtual child.

The husband, a 41-year-old taxi driver, and his 25-year-old wife were sentenced to two years in prison, but the woman's term was suspended because she is pregnant.

The couple played at Internet cafes on average 10 hours every day and bottle-fed their baby only once a day, prosecutors said in an affidavit.

The girl, who was born prematurely and weighed 5 pounds (2.25 kilograms), was often fed rotten formula and was beaten when she cried out of hunger, the affidavit said.

They found her dead when they returned to their home in Suwon, just south of Seoul, after an all-night gaming session last September, the ruling said. They hid at a relative's home after a autopsy found the baby died of malnutrition.

"This constitutes an inhumane crime where the defendants abandoned even the most basic responsibilities as parents, and is unforgivable beyond any excuse or reason," the Suwon District Court said in the ruling.

The mother will avoid jail time if she stays out of trouble for three years. The couple, who have only been identified by their surnames, Kim, have seven days to appeal.

The case shocked South Korea and raised concern over the severity of online gaming and Internet addiction in the nation of 49 million. The government says there are 2 million "Internet addicts" in the nation considered one of the world's most technologically wired.



Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/05/28/1652955/internet-addicts-guilty-of-starving.html#ixzz0pGC867xu

Entry #2,382

Sarah Palin's Small-Town Downfall Has Begun

Sarah Palin's Small-Town Downfall Has Begun

Adrian Chen

May 27, 2010 09:01 PM

Sarah Palin has traded heavily on her Real America, small-town roots throughout her career. But this is also a great liability. The case of Sarah Palin's nosy next-door neighbor shows Palin's downfall at the hands of pissed-off provincials has begun.

Earlier this year, Palin used her clout with Alaska State Police to get 16 year-old Willow Palin off the hook after she and some high school buddies trashed a vacant home during a bender. The other kids were hung out to dry, and Alaska's Mat-Su Valley boiled at the injustice of Willow's preferential treatment. We warned that Palin should watch her back lest small-town high school drama explode in national scandal.

There's no scandal yet. But small-town drama has indeed bled into Palin's national profile. Crack Palin-debunking journalist Joe McGinniss moved right next door to Palin on Sarah Palin Lane in Wasilla, where he's planning to write his next book—on Sarah Palin. Now Glenn Beck is threatening to boycott McGinniss' publisher and Palin is putting up a huge fence and making fun of the guy on Facebook and everything.

So, another instance of the Lamestream Media trying to ruin Sarah Palin's life, right? Actually, it appears this whole situation was orchestrated by a vengeful neighbor. McGinniss' son said in an email reprinted by Politico that his dad was offered the spot by Palin's neighbor because the Palins owed her money:

"A woman was renting her house and sought out the author because the Palins had crossed her (owed her money for renovations she had done at their request and never paid her for). So she knew McGinniss was writing the book and found him and offered him the house."

The Palins apparently tried renting the place all winter to head off any Liberals. Not only did her neighbor refuse, she called up McGinniss and was like, "Hey, got this awesome house right across from Sarah Palin. Want?" There's no purer form of small-town drama than the stiffed contractor out for non-monetary revenge. Unlike those in New York or LA, where the elitists settle their labor disputes with fancy lawyers, small town builders have the means to hit back in way more satisfying ways. (Momof3wildkids points out that the email may actually be saying that Palin asked her neighbor to fix up her own house, promised to pay for it, then stiffed her in the end. Nervy!)

Palin's rise was based on a creation myth that had her springing from a fantasy Real America that loves guns and embryos and hates immigrants and socialists. But the Real America Palin really inhabits just wants her to stop acting like a diva and to cough up the 1500 bucks or whatever she owes them for building her deck. Do not cross your people Sarah Palin! Your speaking career and presidential prospects don't stand a chance against their hard-won sense of frontier justice. Installing a sworn enemy in your own backyard is just the beginning. They will destroy you.

Sarah Palin's brand new fence

Entry #2,381

How Bad Is It Really for the Unemployed?

 

Friday May 28, 2010

How Bad Is It Really for the Unemployed?

 

William A. Galston
Senior Fellow
Governance Studies

 

The New Republic

May 25, 2010 —

 

On some level, we all know that times are really tough for the millions of people the Great Recession threw out of work—and for the millions of others who are looking for their first job. Many of us have read that long-term unemployment (26 weeks or more) is at a record high. But sometimes it takes a new angle of vision to make you see just how difficult things are. My “aha” moment came over the weekend, when I read a recent survey that tracked the fate of a large sample of individuals who were unemployed as of last August. Here's a summary:

Of the 908-person sample, 67 percent remained unemployed but were still looking for work, and an additional 12 percent had given up and dropped out of the labor force. Only 21 percent had found jobs (only 13 percent full-time) and were currently employed. A stunning 28 percent of the newly reemployed had been looking for work for more than one year, and 6 percent for more than two years. Fifty-five percent accepted a pay cut in their new jobs; 13 percent took a cut larger than one-third of their previous salary.

 

Women (26 percent newly employed) did somewhat better than men (18 percent). Surprisingly, young adults (29 percent newly employed) did better than 30 to 49-year olds (21 percent). Not surprisingly, this is a terrible time to be over 50 and out of work: Only 12 percent of these older workers had managed to find jobs.

 

Blacks or Hispanics (22 percent newly employed) got jobs at a similar clip to whites (21 percent). Education and income mattered, but not as much as one might expect. Individuals with some college training were no more successful than those with a high school diploma or less, and only 28 percent of college graduates who were unemployed last August had found work in the interim. And while only 19 percent of those making less than $30,000 were newly employed, the numbers weren’t much better for those making $30-60,000 (22 percent) or $60,000 and over (26 percent).

 

In short, there has been no place to hide from the Great Recession, and the traditional formula—get a good education and be persistent—is not reliably producing the right outcomes. The American people know that something out of the ordinary is taking place: 63 percent believe that the economy is undergoing “fundamental and lasting changes,” versus only 37 percent who think it is experiencing a temporary downturn. This shift has consequences that go well beyond the economic. For many Americans, the old verities have been cast aside, with nothing to take their place. As far as they can see, they’ve done everything right, but their expectations have been upended and their life-plans disrupted. In these circumstances, people are bound to think that the country is on the wrong path, and they are bound to feel a combination of confusion and anger toward a political system that they see as having let them down.

 

President Obama has pledged to rebuild the U.S. economy on a new and more solid foundation. That’s vital. But so is restoring the belief that there is some relation between effort and reward. If the old rules are obsolete, we not only need new rules—a 21st century unemployment insurance system, say, or infrastructure investment and employment, or hours-reductions and job-sharing as an alternative to outright job loss—but also a political system that is prepared to back them up. It’s hard to see how we can make the hard choices needed to build our future unless ordinary Americans come once more to believe that there’s something in it for them.

Entry #2,379