Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Tiger



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The National Racism Free Zone Institute
Albuquerque, NM  87105
bahatis@aol.com
http://www.racismfreezone.org

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Statement of Henry Louis Gates, Jr. - The Boston Globe

Statement of Henry Louis Gates, Jr. - The Boston Globe

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Fw: News from the National Committee of Grandparents for Children's Rights

New Mexico Parent & Child Resources
Bahati Myhelatu Ansari, BA, CPS
Trainer/Receptionist
3500 Indian School Rd. NE
Albuquerque, NM 87106
(505)268-4973
(505)268-5056 Fax

Confidentiality Notice: This e-mail, including all attachments, is for the
sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and
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Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act. If you are not the intended
recipient, please contact the sender and destroy all copies of this message.


----- Original Message -----
From: "Bahati Myhelatu Ansari" <bahatis@aol.com>
To: <dgibson@nmpcr.org>; <AnnEdenfield@wingsministry.org>;
<Madigan@monomakh.com>; <bansari@nmpcr.org>
Sent: Thursday, August 06, 2009 12:05 PM
Subject: Fwd: News from the National Committee of Grandparents for
Children's Rights


Bahati Myhelatu Ansari


-----Original Message-----
From: National Committee of Grandparents for Children's Rights
<bcastellano@grandparentsforchildren.org>
To: bahatis@aol.com
Sent: Thu, Aug 6, 2009 10:03 am
Subject: News from the National Committee of Grandparents for
Children's Rights

You're receiving this email because of your relationship with the
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July/August 2009 Vol. 1 No. 3

In This Issue


From the President

The Nanas and the Papas

Around the Country

Very Special Person

Meet Patti Page


From the President...

It has been beautiful in Washington this summer. It is great to look up
at Mount Rainier. On a clear day it looks like a mural painted
on the sky and
you know that God is in His haven and all is well with
the
world. Then you have days when you get a
call from grandparents to hear that their eight year grandson was found
hanging
in a tree. They fought so hard to regain custody of their grandchildren
who
should never have been removed from them in the first place. I hope
somehow,
some way someone is held accountable. There are some things I'll never
understand. But I do know that together we can change the system and
make it a
better world for everyone.

In the past month I've worked with grandparents in Florida, North and
South Carolina,
Colorado, Oregon,
Tennessee, Virginia,
West Virginia and Washington. Our National Organization has
been asked by the legal aid of North
Carolina to submit an Americus Brief for a case they
are representing. We are working with several attorneys as we volunteer
to do
more and more legal research for lawyers willing to work with relative
care
givers for reduced rates. We have grandparents studying their state
laws and
learning that they do have a voice and how to use it. Some are learning
how to
write briefs, others are starting groups to learn more about their own
rights
as well as those of their grandchildren. It is really great to receive
e mails
from them filled with so much excitement for the things they are
learning and are
sharing with others. It is even more so knowing tha
t some of them did
not even
know how to turn on a computer a couple of months ago. It is amazing
how the
love of grandchildren can inspire grandparents.

Our National Organization was just recognized as children's
rights advocates in the state of NC, WV and WA state. This means we can
actually be present in the court with the persons for whom we are
advocating.

We will have approximately thirty-five pieces of legislation
being introduced in the next legislative session starting in January
2010 in at
least fifteen states, all involving the rights of children from their
right to
know their relatives and de facto parenting to their representation by
a guardian
ad litem. We are working very hard to get all states to use lawyers as
guardian
ad litems and to hold them to a high standard of service. It is hard to
accept
that some states do not require that the people who are representing
the best
interest of children do not have to have a law degree. It is even
harder to
understand that these people are not held accountable for what they
present in
court, or that most would not know their client if they step on them.
You would
think this would be of the utmost importance knowing that children can
lose
their families forever on the presumption that their appointed
representatives
always act in the child's best interest.

If you are interested, we will star
t an on-line meeting at
least once a month to help you get legislation started in your state. I
would
like to start working on some subjects that we really need to address.
The
first one is in almost all states is referred to as the "RESPONSIBLE
PERSON"
list. Should a caseworker "dislike you" or "think" you should be
punished, they
can put your name on the list and you can be denied jobs, custody of
children
etc. To get your name off of this list you must petition the court, pay
all of
the legal fees and prove you are innocent.
This is a violation of our constitutional rights, and we need to know if
your state has this practice.

I am wishing you a
great summer.

Lola Bailey


"The Nana's and the Papas
ain't what they used to be"

The Foundation for Grandparenting, in association with Theater 150, is
sponsoring
a musical production entitled "The Nanas and The Papas...ain't what they
used to be" featuring talented grandparents sharing their personal
stories
and singing the music of their times.

The purpose of the production is to:
Raise consciousness concerning the
importance of Grandparenting, emphasizing grandparents exclusive roles
as
"living ancestor," and "family historian" in an exciting and
entertaining way.

Demonstrate the diversity of
Grandparenting, and show that modern grand
parents "ain't what they used
to be,"
thus challenging aging stereotypes.

Develop
the project in Ojai, with the Foundation's goal of nationally
disseminating a
production "how-to" and demonstration video to organizations,
agencies, schools, religious institutions and regional theaters,
etc. for use by local performers.


The show is conceived and produced by Carol Kornhaber, and
written and directed by Betsy Randle. Performances are scheduled for
early
October 2009 at Theater 150 in Ojai.

The Foundation for Grandparenting, a 501(c) (3) tax-exempt
organization, was founded by Arthur Kornhaber M.D., who serves as its
Executive Director. The Foundation will fund the production through
tax-deductible sponsorships and
personal donations.

Tax-deductible contributions can be mailed to:
The
Foundation for Grandparenting
108
Farnham Road
Ojai, CA 93023

Read more about the Foundation's projects and programs since 1980 at
www.grandparenting.org.


Around the Country...


NEW JERSEY - GRANDMA K.A.R.E.S.

Monthly
support meeting of kinship and foster caregivers headed by Louise Eagle
(in yellow suit far right) Regional Director, New Jersey Chapter.
Grandma K.A.R.E.S. works to help those kinship and foster caregivers
who have accepted the mission of caring for children they did not give
birth to and have been abandoned or orphaned by their na
tural
parents. Each month there are two or three speakers --- professionals,
service provider, etc --- along with group sharing of experiences and
lessons with each other. For more information contact Louise Eagle.
TENNESSEE
We
are happy to report that our chapter leader Brenda LeQuire has
successfully
advocated for the passage of a De Facto law which provides changes to
their
existing foster care regulation. After several years of hard work this
wonderful piece of legislation was part of House Bill 327/Senate Bill
859. In
summary, the Tennessee Code now states that a child "Who has willfully
been left in the sole
financial care and sole physical care of a related caregiver for not
less than
eighteen (18) consecutive months by the child's parent, parents or legal
custodian to the related caregiver, and the child will suffer
substantial harm
if removed from the continuous care of such relative;.... the court
shall order the child to remain in the
related caregiver's custody if such an arrangement is in the best
interest of
the child". The bill was signed into law on June 1, 2009 by Governor
Phil Bredesen.


Important legislation such as this must be enacted in every state.
Modification or
termination of a related caregiver's custody, brought by the child's
biological
parent, should be based on a finding, by a preponderance of the
evidence, that
there has been a material change in current circumstances. Chi
ldren
should not be yanked from a loving caregiver's home just because a
non-involved
parent wants custody back. We advocate that all cases concerning
children must
be decided on a "best interest" test.

Congratulations to
Brenda for her many years of work on this law, and to Representative
Sherry
Jones who introduced the bill in the House. She has been a great
supporter of
kinship caregivers and Brenda's work. We want to thank Ms. Jones for her
continued support on behalf of children.
TEXAS
In another bit of good news, Texas HB 2084 which wouldhave
severely restricted access by grandparents to children who may be in
abusive
situations has been brought to a halt.
We can thank our vice president, Tommie Beck, and our new chapter
leader, Gail Gallagher, who both worked hard to stop this bill. They
did this
by having petitions signed, writing articles and getting the word out to
citizens and legislators that the passage of this bill would be harmful
to
thousands of children in Texas. Congratulations to
Tommie and Gail.

Very Special Person...


David L. Levy, J.D. is the Chief Executive
Officer of the Children's Rights Council, in Landover,
Maryland and a member of the
Board of Advisors for NCGCR. Mr. Levy is a national expert on
children
's rights
appearing on more than 200 television and radio stations, including
nationally
syndicated programs such as the "Today Show", "Good Morning America",
"Oprah",
"Montel Williams", "Charlie Rose", "Phil Donahue", MS/NBC, NPR, CNN,
and C-SPAN
reaching millions of households.

Mr. Levy is also frequently quoted in a richly
diverse cross-section of printed media with numerous articles appearing
in such
newspapers and journals as the Washington Post, New York Times, and
several
national religious news magazines. Additional to the mass media, Mr.
Levy has
hosted 15 national conferences, testified more than 20 times before
congressional committees; authored a popular book among
divorced/never-married
parents "The Best Parent is Both Parents®", and received a "lifetime
achievement award" from
the federal child support office in 2000.


The Children's Rights Council is a global non-profit child-advocacy
organization
that works to help children obtain frequent and continuing contact with
both
parents and extended families, despite the parents' marital situation.
CRC favors joint custody, mediation, parenting education, parenting
plans, and
counseling. CRC has chapters in most states and in seven other
countries
- Australia, Canada, France,
Israel, Japan, Switzerland,
and the United Kingdom.

CRC
believes strongly in intergenerational contact for children. That is
why
CRC is delighted that the Nati
onal Committee of Grandparents for
Children's
Rights (NCGCR) chose to affiliate with CRC several years ago. Lola
Bailey,
Brigitte Castellano and the other leaders of NCGCR are doing a fine job
of
representing to legislators, policymakers and other opinion makers
around the
country the need for continued connection between children and their
grandparents. Children need to hear the stories of the family that
grandparents are in a unique position to relate, to enjoy the extra
love and
care that grandparents can so wonderfully provide, and to gain
understanding of
the continuity of life from the older members of the family. These
are bonds that should be strengthened, for the sake of the child.

Also,
CRC operates 25 Access Centers in 11 states and Washington, D.C.
where parents can peacefully transfer their children between them. Many
of these centers also provide for supervised access (visitation) where
a parent
may not leave the premises with the child, because of a problem
involving neglect
or abuse. However, the child and parent are spending precious time
together in a supervised setting for three or four hours on a Saturday
morning,
until the larger legal issue can be worked out in the courts. This is
not
the best imaginable setting for interaction between child and parent,
but it is
better than the no-contact that might occur if access centers did not
exist
during a transition perio
d for some families.

CRC provides substantial information on its website at
www.CRCkids.org. If you can not find what you need on the website, or
if
you need a contact in a particular state to help with a custody or
access
(visitation) matter, email CRC at info@crckids.org, or phone at
301-459-1220. CRC has held numerous conferences, testified
before many Congressional committees, boards and commissions, and
helped many
parents, children and families during our 24 years of existence, and we
will
try to help you, if we can. Our focus is on demilitarizing the divorce
process, to keep children out of the middle of custody disputes, and
assuring
children frequent and continuing contact with both parents and contact
with
extended family. CRC also publishes a quarterly magazine entitled
"Children," available free to our members. Membership is only
$50 a year. Thanks to all of you who are child advocates wherever you
may be.

For more information on the
conference: click here.


Meet Patti Page

Sunday, August 16, 2009


Click image for more info:

Quote of the Day!

"What
children need most are the essentials that grandparents provide in
abundance. They give unconditional lo
ve, kindness, patience, humor,
comfort, lessons in life. And, most importantly, cookies".

~Rudolph
Giuliani

Quick Links


News


GRAND Magazine


More On NCGCR


The
#1 resource for grandparents is FREE to NCGCR members and friends.
Click the
link below to read the current issue. Subscribe through this link and
it's
FREE. You pay nothing. You can save it, print it and email it to
friends.

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On Location Casting

On Location Casting

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Wednesday, August 5, 2009

You Can Tame the 'TV Monster'

You Can Tame the 'TV Monster'
Many parents worry about the amount of time their teen spends
watching TV. Teens should use the time they spend in front of the television
doing more important things, such as reading, day dreaming or just going
outside to play.
Here's how you can tame the "TV Monster" at your house:

a.. Give everyone a TV budget. Determine a daily limit.
Younger children may need to use TV tickets, which they "spend" by dropping
them in a jar on top of the set.
b.. Plan ahead. At the beginning of the week, sit down with
your teen and the TV listings. Decide which programs she wants to watch.
c.. Make television a privilege, not a right. Post a chart for
your teen, and deduct TV time for failure to complete tasks you think are
important. A child who leaves shoes in the middle of the floor may lose 10
minutes of time, but one who doesn't finish homework may lose more.
d.. Keep the TV out of your teen's room. A TV set behind your
teen's door is harder for you to monitor.
e.. Give "home alone" teens jobs to do after school. If your
teen arrives home before you do, make sure she has things to do-with results
you can monitor. If she has to finish writing a story, weed the garden or
take out the trash, the results of her work will show she couldn't have
spent the whole afternoon watching the tube.


Copyright (c) 2009 The Parent Institute, a Division of NIS, Inc.

Back to Ideas for Parents


New Mexico Parent & Child Resources
Bahati Myhelatu Ansari, BA, CPS
Trainer/Receptionist
3500 Indian School Rd. NE
Albuquerque, NM 87106
(505)268-4973
(505)268-5056 Fax

Confidentiality Notice: This e-mail, including all attachments, is for the
sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and
privileged information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or
distribution is prohibited unless specifically provided for under the New
Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act. If you are not the intended
recipient, please contact the sender and destroy all copies of this message.

Fw: bahati asked us to send you this post from Politics Daily

 
New Mexico Parent & Child Resources
Bahati Myhelatu Ansari, BA, CPS
Trainer/Receptionist
3500 Indian School Rd. NE
Albuquerque, NM  87106
(505)268-4973
(505)268-5056 Fax
 
Confidentiality Notice: This e-mail, including all attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution is prohibited unless specifically provided for under the New Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender and destroy all copies of this message.
 
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, August 05, 2009 10:22 AM
Subject: bahati asked us to send you this post from Politics Daily

From: Politics Daily
URL: http://www.politicsdaily.com/2009/08/05/the-coming-ban-on-texting-while-driving/
Sent from: bahati (bahatiansari@gmail.com)
Sent to: bansari@nmpcr.org
Comments:


The Coming Ban on 'Texting While Driving'?

08-05-2009

It seems fairly intuitive: Sending text messages while driving a car is extremely dangerous, and is a pr actice that should be outlawed. Several states have already limited the use of cellphones for those behind the wheel, requiring hands-free devices and issuing fines to those who do not comply.

As yet, however, there is no way to text without looking down at your phone's keypad or screen, which makes that practice much more dangerous than simply having a verbal conversation. Well, this logic has not been lost on Transportation Secretary Roy LaHood, who is convening a "distracted-driving summit" to explore ways to get drivers to stop multitasking so much:

"People in America got fed up with their children and loved ones being killed by drunk drivers. And people in America are very tired of the idea that people can text and drive and use cellphones and drive in some states."
Recently, it came to light that officials in the Bush a dministration had kept from public view a report that equated driving while talking on a cellphone to driving with a blood alcohol level of .08 percent. Though statistics are difficult to ascertain, the Department of Transportation blamed cellphone use for 955 fatalities and 240,000 accidents back in 2003, when text messaging was not a common practice. A study undertaken at Virginia Tech put a number to the belief that truckers who text are endangering themselves and other drivers: While texting, they are 23 times more likely to crash than when they are not.

Surveys of American drivers show that texting while driving is a common practice on our roads, but should it be made a crime? Should we add TWD to the list of forbidden acronyms like DUI and DWI? We live in an era of the constant data stream, and for some, kicking their addiction to that information feed -- even while driving -- might not be as easy as it sounds, whatever the consequences.


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Black Officers' Discrimination Suit Against Capitol Police Back On

 
 

Sent to you by bahatiansari via Google Reader:

 
 

via Politics Daily by Ria Misra on 8/3/09

Filed under: ,

Just a day after President Barack Obama shared a pint with Professor Skip Gates and police Sgt. James Crowley in the White House's flourishing rose garden Thursday, another discussion on race and the police was going on in a much less cordial venue -- a Washington courtroom. Nearly eight years ago, more than 200 black officers of the U.S. Capitol Police in Washington, D.C., sued the department, claiming discrimination. A lower court had thrown out the case after deciding that no efforts at mediation had been made, but on Friday, the Associated Press reported that the federal appeals court overturned that ruling and sent the case back to trial.

Among the charges being brought are that black officers were routinely denied promotions. It's also alleged that one officer found a noose left on his locker and that some senior white officers referred to black officers as "gangsters." "The Capitol Police management identified the leading black officers in the ranks and nastily attacked them," the attorney for the suing officers, Joseph Gebhardt, told the AP. Of the officers who brought the suit back in 2001, only a little over half are still with the Capitol Police today.

 

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Things you can do from here:

 
 

Chaos Theory - Quaffing at the White House

 
 

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via Politics Daily by Robert and Donna Trussell on 8/3/09

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Things you can do from here:

 
 

Plaxo - Bahati Ansari

Plaxo - Bahati Ansari

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Plaxo site

http://www.plaxo.com/profile/show/55837096230?pk=efbbc1fe94071de9f19ffd5087f67623490e2d7b
New Mexico Parent & Child Resources
Bahati Myhelatu Ansari, BA, CPS
Trainer/Receptionist
3500 Indian School Rd. NE
Albuquerque, NM 87106
(505)268-4973
(505)268-5056 Fax

Confidentiality Notice: This e-mail, including all attachments, is for the
sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and
privileged information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or
distribution is prohibited unless specifically provided for under the New
Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act. If you are not the intended
recipient, please contact the sender and destroy all copies of this message.

Obama 'Joker' Picture Pops Up In Los Angeles and Across the Internet -- Politics Daily

Obama 'Joker' Picture Pops Up In Los Angeles and Across the Internet -- Politics Daily

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Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Non Urban Dictates? - BreakTheChain.org

Non Urban Dictates? - BreakTheChain.org

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Antidepressant use doubles in U.S., study finds - TODAY Health

Antidepressant use doubles in U.S., study finds - TODAY Health

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President Obama Celebrates 48th Birthday - ABC News

President Obama Celebrates 48th Birthday - ABC News

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Troops' families feel weight of war - USATODAY.com

Troops' families feel weight of war - USATODAY.com

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Fw: Maya Angelou - Go & Hug your 'Michael'

 
New Mexico Parent & Child Resources
Bahati Myhelatu Ansari, BA, CPS
Trainer/Receptionist
3500 Indian School Rd. NE
Albuquerque, NM  87106
(505)268-4973
(505)268-5056 Fax
 
Confidentiality Notice: This e-mail, including all attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution is prohibited unless specifically provided for under the New Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender and destroy all copies of this message.
 
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, August 03, 2009 6:49 PM
Subject: Maya Angelou - Go & Hug your 'Michael'

I hope everyone enjoys this as much as I did.  Hug my Girls as well they too need that Love.

 

Thank You Maya Angelou



Go and Hug your "Michael" by Maya Angelou...

 

Yesterday I cried watching the Michael Jackson memorial. I cried for a little black boy who felt the world didn't understand him. I cried for a little black boy who spent his adulthood chasing his childhood. And I thought about all the young black boys out there who may too feel that the world doesn't understand them. The ones who feel that the world does not understand their baggy jeans, their swagger, their music, their anger, their struggles, their fears or the chip on their shoulder. I worry that my son, may too, one day will feel lonely in a wide, wide world.

 

I cried for the young children of all colors who may live their life feeling like a misfit, feeling like no one understands their perspective, or their soul.

What a burden to carry.

 

As a mother, I cried for Katherine Jackson because no mother should ever bury a child. Period. And I think about all the pain, tears and sleepless nights that she must have endured seeing her baby boy in inner pain, seeing him struggle with his self-esteem, and his insecurities and to know he often felt unloved even while the world loved him deeply. How does it feel to think that the unconditional love we give as mothers just isn't enough to make our children feel whole? I wonder if she still suffers thinking, "what more could I have done?" Even moms of music legends aren't immune to mommy guilt, I suppose.

 

When Rev. Al Sharpton ("who always delivers one" awesome "funeral speech") said to Michael's children, "Your daddy was not strange...It was strange what your Daddy had to deal with," I thought of all the "strange" things of the world that my children will have to deal with. Better yet, the things I hope they won't ever have to deal with anymore.

 

And as a mother raising a young black boy, I feel recommitted and yet a little confused as to how to make sure my son is sure enough within himself to take on the world. Especially a "strange" one. To love himself enough to know that even when the world doesn't understand you, tries to force you into its mold or treats you unkindly, you are still beautiful, strong and Black. How do I do that?

 

Today, I am taking back "childhood" as an inalienable right for every brown little one. In a world, that makes children into booty-shaking, mini-adults long before their time, I'm reclaiming the playful, innocent, run-around-outside, childhood as the key ingredient in raising confident adults. Second, I will not rest until my little black boy, MY Michael, knows that his broad nose is beautiful, his chocolately brown skin is beautiful, and his thick hair is beautiful.

 

And nothing or no one can ever take that away from him.

 

"Now aint we bad? And ain't we black? And ain't we fine? ---Maya Angelou

 


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Monday, August 3, 2009

Obama's Victory On Newspaper Front Pages (SLIDESHOW)

Obama's Victory On Newspaper Front Pages (SLIDESHOW)

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Fw: 120 degrees in Australia...KOALAS ASKING PEOPLE FOR WATER.

 
New Mexico Parent & Child Resources
Bahati Myhelatu Ansari, BA, CPS
Trainer/Receptionist
3500 Indian School Rd. NE
Albuquerque, NM  87106
(505)268-4973
(505)268-5056 Fax
 
Confidentiality Notice: This e-mail, including all attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution is prohibited unless specifically provided for under the New Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender and destroy all copies of this message.
 
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, August 02, 2009 1:08 PM
Subject: 120 degrees in Australia...KOALAS ASKING PEOPLE FOR WATER.

 


 

AT 120 DEGREES IN AUSTRALIA,

IT WAS SO HOT FOR A WEEK THAT KOALAS WERE ASKING PEOPLE FOR WATER.

IT'S NEVER BEEN SEEN BEFORE. 

[] 

[]

ONE WENT TO A HOUSE TO TRY TO HIDE FROM THE HEAT

AND TO GET A BIT OF SHADE AND HERES WHAT HAPPENED

WHEN THE OWNER GAVE HIM SOMETHING TO DRINK.

IT'S REALLY CUTE.

[] 

[] 

[] 

[]

 

 


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Town in China Sealed Off Due to Pneumonic Plague Outbreak

Town in China Sealed Off Due to Pneumonic Plague Outbreak

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Friday, July 31, 2009

The President will need to invest in a beer company.

 
New Mexico Parent & Child Resources
Bahati Myhelatu Ansari, BA, CPS
Trainer/Receptionist
3500 Indian School Rd. NE
Albuquerque, NM  87106
(505)268-4973
(505)268-5056 Fax
 
Confidentiality Notice: This e-mail, including all attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution is prohibited unless specifically provided for under the New Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender and destroy all copies of this message.
 
 
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Boston Cop's Jungle E-Mail | News | BET.com

Boston Cop's Jungle E-Mail | News | BET.com

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FW: Annie E. Casey Foundation Newsletter - July 2009




From: newsletter@lists.aecf.org
To: bahatiansari@msn.com
Subject: Annie E. Casey Foundation Newsletter - July 2009
Date: Tue, 28 Jul 2009 15:41:16 -0400

The Annie E. Casey Foundation Newsletter
The Annie E. Casey Foundation
Annie E-News July 2009
2009 KIDS COUNT Data Book Now Available
2009 KIDSCOUNT Data Book
Casey's 20th annual KIDS COUNT Data Book provides a national and state-by-state look at the status of children in the United States. This year's companion essay outlines a series of action steps to improve the nation's use of data in creating policies that improve outcomes for children and families.
Add KIDS COUNT Data to Your Site
KIDS COUNT Data Center Add data to your website, desktop, or blog with the new KIDS COUNT web widget. The widget provides state rankings for overall child-well being and state data on 10 key indicators included in the 2009 KIDS COUNT Data Book. Customize the widget to display data for any state. Learn more >>
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Monday, July 27, 2009

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