Thursday, October 24, 2013

Jamie Lynn Spears Shares Adorable Picture of Daughter Maddie, 5, and Fiance -- See What Her Family Looks Like Now


Way back in Dec. 2007, Jamie Lynn Spears was at the center of the media's spotlight when the former Nickelodeon star (and Britney Spears' little sister) announced that she was pregnant at the age of 16. At the time she was starring in the kid's show Zoey 101, and the pregnancy came as a big shock to many fans. 


PHOTOS: Celebrity siblings


Now, almost six years later, Spears, 21, has stepped out of the spotlight to spend lots of time with her little girl, Maddie, who is now 5. And in March 2013 she announced that she was engaged to boyfriend of three years Jamie Watson


PHOTOS: Young Hollywood moms


Jamie Lynn Spears' daughter Maddie, 5, eats ice cream with her fiancé, Jamie Watson, on Oct. 24, 2013.

Jamie Lynn Spears' daughter Maddie, 5, eats ice cream with her fiancé, Jamie Watson, on Oct. 24, 2013.
Credit: courtesy of Jamie Lynn Spears



On Oct. 24, she posted a picture of Watson, 30, eating ice cream with Maddie and captioned it, "I love these 2 more then words can say! Blessed to have such a good man, puppy, and baby girl!!#havingamoment #countingblessings."


Spears was previously engaged to Maddie's father, Casey Alridge, but they called off their engagement in 2009 and officially ended their relationship in 2010. 


PHOTOS: Quickest celebrity engagements ever


The Louisiana native currently lives in Nashville, Tenn. where she is said to be working on a country music career. Her famous older sister, Britney Spears, recently released the hit single, "Work B*tch" and her eighth album, Britney Jean, comes out on Dec. 3. 


Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/jamie-lynn-spears-shares-adorable-picture-of-daughter-maddie-5-and-fiance----see-what-her-family-looks-like-now-20132410
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Bubonic Plague Is Back...Small Animals In The American West


For most of us, plague is something that maybe we read about in history books. In the 14th Century, it wiped out half of Europe's population. But the bacteria is busy killing wildlife now in the American West. By studying small mammals scientists have learned that plague is far more pervasive a killer than anyone thought.



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MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:


This is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED from NPR News. I'm Melissa Block.


AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:


And I'm Audie Cornish.


Most Americans' experience with plague is limited to history books. In the 14th century, it famously wiped out half of Europe's population. But right now, the bacteria is quietly ravaging wildlife in parts of the American West.


NPR's Elizabeth Shogren has the story.


(SOUNDBITE OF A PRAIRIE DOG)


ELIZABETH SHOGREN, BYLINE: This is what it sounds like if you walk through a prairie dog town in South Dakota's Badlands National Park.


(SOUNDBITE OF A PRAIRIE DOG)


SHOGREN: A chorus of prairie dogs telling each other to watch out for threats. But just down the road, as Dean Biggins hikes into what use to be a large prairie dog town, all he hears is an occasional call of the meadowlark.


(SOUNDBITE OF A MEADOWLARK)


DEAN BIGGINS: Several years ago, plague moved in with a vengeance and really pretty much wiped out the prairie dog.


SHOGREN: Biggins is a biologist for the U.S. Geological Survey. He first saw plague in action in Meeteetse, Wyoming in 1985, when he watched colony after colony of prairie dogs turn into ghost towns.


BIGGINS: Really a devastating feeling to have watched it and just basically be helpless to do very much about it.


SHOGREN: When plague wipes out a prairie dog town, it dramatically changes the ecosystem. It takes away food for predators like hawks and coyotes, and the intricate system of burrows and underground tunnels created by all those prairie dogs and used by many other critters collapses.


Back then, Biggins says scientists believed plague had a predictable MO.


BIGGINS: Plague would come from this unknown source and invade quickly into a prairie dog town, explode and kill almost all the prairie dogs, and then disappear back into its reservoir form where it existed without damaging anything too much.


SHOGREN: But it was Biggins' work with another animal that gave him clues that scientists were wrong about plague. In the late 1990s, Biggins was running a captive breeding program for endangered black-footed ferrets in Colorado. All of the sudden, ferrets started getting very sick.


BIGGINS: It was horrifying. I mean, absolutely horrifying. We actually did not know it was plague then. We suspected because of the symptoms. They tried to drink water, couldn't drink. They bled from the nose, so they were hemorrhaging inside.


SHOGREN: It turns out keepers had mistakenly fed the ferrets chunks of prairie dog meat infected with plague.


BIGGINS: I think we lost something like 26 ferrets to plague. So it was a real kick in the head to me.


SHOGREN: But it gave Biggins an idea. Maybe plague was the reason why ferrets weren't thriving in the wild. He started looking at the animals in Montana. He did not find a big outbreak killing ferrets. But he did find plague. He found it in coyotes and badgers. Plague doesn't make these animals sick. But when they've been exposed, it shows up in antibodies in their blood.


BIGGINS: If these animals can find something with plague out there, the ferret does the same thing. The ferret is going to die.


SHOGREN: Maybe plague was killing ferrets so fast that there was no trace left for researchers to see. So they decided to vaccinate ferrets to test their hunch.


BIGGINS: Turned out that the vaccinated ferrets survived at a rate of about 240 percent better than non-vaccinated ferrets, so there was our answer.


SHOGREN: They were right. Plague was active. That told Biggins that plague had a different MO. It didn't go on a mad killing spree, mostly in prairie dogs, and then go dormant.


BIGGINS: Now we recognize that the disease is out there killing mainly mammals every year.


SHOGREN: Since then, Biggins has confirmed his theory in field experiments on other small mammals. Plague is killing various kinds of mice and ground squirrels in New Mexico and Mexican wood rats in Colorado.


BIGGINS: The threat is to the ecosystems of the West. I think we could be having basically a Black Death type of episode occurring rather continuously in the United States that we haven't even recognized.


SHOGREN: Some experts say there isn't enough evidence to quantify plague's death toll. There aren't enough scientists studying these small animals in the West. That's because there aren't that many people getting plague, only seven reports each year in the U.S. Few people live where outbreaks occur.


Biologist Travis Livieri contracts with the federal government to capture ferrets and give them checkups. He's watched plague ravage populations of rare black-footed ferrets. Now, when he when he goes to scientific meetings, he warns his colleagues.


TRAVIS LIVIERI: Is everything, quote, unquote, "normal" with your favorite species? If it isn't, consider that plague might be there. It might be affecting your species in ways that you couldn't even imagine.


SHOGREN: In nearby Badlands National Park, biologist Dean Biggins' team is looking for mice. They've checked tens of thousands of traps over five months. But they've caught relatively few mice.


DIANNA KREJSA: We have a closed box.


SHOGREN: Researcher Dianna Krejsa looks into the trap.


KREJSA: It's a false positive, is that what we call it. It's closed but nobody is in there.


SHOGREN: Biggins is pretty sure he knows why this gorgeous habitat is so sterile. The plague that swept through here several years ago, wiping out prairie dogs, is still busy killing.


Elizabeth Shogren, NPR News.


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10 Things to See: A week of top AP photos

IN this image taken with a fisheye lens, Boston Red Sox players take batting practice as a rainbow appears in the sky above Fenway Park Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013, in Boston. The Red Sox are scheduled to host the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1 of baseball's World Series on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)







IN this image taken with a fisheye lens, Boston Red Sox players take batting practice as a rainbow appears in the sky above Fenway Park Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013, in Boston. The Red Sox are scheduled to host the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1 of baseball's World Series on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)







Guatemalan clown Tonito poses for a portrait at an international clown convention in Mexico City, Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013. Wearing oversized shoes, wigs and rubber noses, the clowns lined up to register on the first day of the 17th International Clown Convention at a theater in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills)







An Indian boy jumps to catch a ball at Shivaji Park in Mumbai, India, Friday, Oct.18, 2013. Shivaji Park is the largest park in Mumbai and has been a training ground for several Indian cricketers, including Sachin Tendulkar. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade)







Pakistani boys, who were displaced with their families from Pakistan's tribal areas due to fighting between the Taliban and the army, pose for a photograph, on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)







George Mendez, foreground, a 55-year-old recovering alcoholic, sits in front of a drunk woman in the Skid Row area of Los Angeles on Tuesday, July 23, 2013. The area, originally agricultural until the 1870s when railroads first entered Los Angeles, has maintained a transient nature through the years from the influxes of short-term workers, migrants fleeing economic hardship during the Great Depression, military personnel during World War II and the Vietnam conflict, and low-skilled workers with limited transportation options who need to remain close to the city's core, according to the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)







Here's your look at highlights from the weekly AP photo report, a gallery featuring a mix of front-page photography, the odd image you might have missed and lasting moments our editors think you should see.

This week's collection includes a portrait of a clown in Mexico City, a rainbow over Red Sox players taking batting practice at Fenway Park in Boston, children playing ball in Mumbai and a powerful punch landed during a boxing match in Leipzig, central Germany.

___

This gallery contains photos published Oct. 17-24, 2013.

Follow AP photographers on Twitter: http://apne.ws/XZy6ny

The Archive: Previous "10 Things to See" galleries: http://apne.ws/13QUFKJ

___

See other recent AP photo galleries:

A slice of life at clown convention: http://apne.ws/166dgHk

Clowning serious business at convention: http://apne.ws/1a9KaKn

30 years after Marine barracks blast: http://apne.ws/1a9KgBG

Argentines worry about agrochemicals: http://apne.ws/17LRVAq

Indigenous fashion show in Bolivia: http://apne.ws/1adApav

Georgia Bull Run draws 3,000 daredevils: http://apne.ws/1a9KsB4

Skid Row, a battle of misery and hope: http://apne.ws/19AdCqg

Yosemite reopens after shutdown: http://apne.ws/1adARW8

___

Follow AP Images on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP_Images

Visit AP Images online: http://www.apimages.com

___

This gallery was curated by news producer Caleb Jones. Follow him on Twitter (http://twitter.com/CalebAP) and Instagram (http://instagram.com/calebnews)

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-10-24-BC-10-Things-To-See/id-f915988bf9e24504b8ab39639848d3bf
Category: tom brady   mrsa   Tony Hale   james spader   elton john  

Are Afghanistan's Schools Doing As Well As Touted?





An Afghan child writes on a blackboard as she attends classes in a school built by German troops at a refugee camp in the outskirts of Mazar-e-Sharif on April 19. The number of students enrolled in Afghan schools has skyrocketed since the fall of the Taliban at the end of 2001.



Farshad Usyan/AFP/Getty Images


An Afghan child writes on a blackboard as she attends classes in a school built by German troops at a refugee camp in the outskirts of Mazar-e-Sharif on April 19. The number of students enrolled in Afghan schools has skyrocketed since the fall of the Taliban at the end of 2001.


Farshad Usyan/AFP/Getty Images


It's one of the most touted "positive statistics" about Afghanistan: Today, there are 10 million Afghans enrolled in school, 40 percent of them female.


Under the Taliban, about a million boys and almost no girls were attending schools. Western officials routinely point to the revived education system as a sign of success and hope for the future.


The international community has spent billions on the construction of schools and programs ranging from teacher training to community-based education in remote villages to book distribution. The U.S. Agency for International Development alone has spent more than $850 million on education since the fall of the Taliban at the end of 2001.


But the numbers tell only part of the story: While 10 million students might be enrolled in all levels of education, they aren't all attending classes, and there are questions about how many of those attending are actually learning.


Cultural And Economic Obstacles


Take the Neswan school in Parwan province, north of Kabul, for example. On a recent day, students shuffle to class in a two-story building. The school holds about 400 students at a time, and there are three daily sessions — a total of about 1,200 students are supposed to attend class each day.


But principal Fawzia Hakimi says average attendance is only a little more than 50 percent.


"Some boys can't attend school because they are working," she says. "When we ask them why they are late, some say, 'I was selling water, I was selling plastic bags.'"





Afghan children attend class in a tent in Bamiyan province, west of Kabul, the Afghan capital, on June 3. A shortage of classroom buildings is just one of a host of problems the Afghan educational system faces.



Ahmad Massoud/Xinhua/Landov


Afghan children attend class in a tent in Bamiyan province, west of Kabul, the Afghan capital, on June 3. A shortage of classroom buildings is just one of a host of problems the Afghan educational system faces.


Ahmad Massoud/Xinhua/Landov


As in most of Afghanistan, many of the families in the school district live in poverty. So they make their sons work for at least part of the day. The 48-year-old principal says looking at the attendance log is depressing.


And it's not just the boys who are often late or absent.


"We have a girl in sixth grade who is engaged," says Hakimi. "She is just a little girl. And there are others who are engaged, too."


Many girls in rural areas are forced into marriage once they reach puberty — and disappear from school.


"One of my classmates stopped attending school due to security issues, and another got married when we were in grade nine," says Mojdah, a 12th-grader at the Hora Jalali Girls High School in Parwan.


By ninth grade, classes are segregated, and female teachers must teach the girls. Even though Hora Jalali is a single-sex school, it's so conservative that girls like Mojdah have to wear a double headscarf to ensure not a single strand of hair is visible.


"Family issues, social issues, and also cultural and traditional customs prevent girls attending school in our society," says Mojdah, who like many Afghans goes by only one name.


But it's not just cultural practices that keep girls out of school, says Deputy Minister of Education Asif Nang.


"In more than 166 districts of Afghanistan out of 416, we don't have a single female teacher," he says. In about 200 districts, Nang adds, there is no secondary education for girls.


So even if families want to send their daughters to school, it's not always an option. Nang says there are roughly 5 million Afghan boys and girls attending primary school nationwide. But only about a million Afghans make it to grades 11 and 12.


Shortage Of Classrooms, Books


Parwan province is above average in the country. Officials there claim 95 percent of kids have access to school. But access doesn't necessarily translate into a quality education.


Sadeqi High School in Parwan consists of an old building, two newer ones, and seven tents. Boys attend classes in the morning, girls in the afternoon.


Sadina Saqeb teaches history in one of those tents.





Afghan girls take classes at a refugee school in Afghanistan's Parwan province, on April 3. Under the Taliban, girls were forbidden from receiving an education. Now they account for 40 percent of the country's student enrollment.



Zhao Yishen/Xinhua/Landov


Afghan girls take classes at a refugee school in Afghanistan's Parwan province, on April 3. Under the Taliban, girls were forbidden from receiving an education. Now they account for 40 percent of the country's student enrollment.


Zhao Yishen/Xinhua/Landov


"Most of the students have sore throats during the summer because of the dust," she says. "And these tents can't block outside noise, so the students can't study their lessons properly."


Although some 4,000 schools have been built since the fall of the Taliban, some provinces are desperately in need of more. At the same time, there are other provinces where large numbers of schools are closed because of a lack of security or of teachers, or simply because not enough families want to send their children to school.


Classroom space isn't the only thing in short supply, says teacher Roshan Rasooli.


"We have a shortage of books," she says. "17 of 55 students are present today, and we still don't have enough books."


Officials like Bashir Ahmad Abed, headmaster of the Sadeqi school, says even if a student has a book, there's no guarantee he or she can read it: Many books are too complicated for the students.


That's in large part because most kids aren't getting any kind of early childhood education, says Mindy Visser, the national education adviser for the Aga Khan Foundation in Afghanistan.


"Maybe their parents are illiterate so they haven't been exposed to reading material or even words very often before they enter school," says Visser.


Recruiting Qualified Teachers


While many students aren't getting much help from their parents, a lot of them aren't being well served by their teachers either, says Nang, the deputy education minister. He says that half the teachers in Afghanistan don't have the minimum required training, which is the equivalent of an associate degree.



"In the rural area[s], we have a huge shortage of professional teachers," he says, adding that many of them have not even finished 12th grade.


The government even had a program trying to encourage teachers to go to more rural schools by paying higher wages, says Visser, the education adviser. But even so, she says, qualified teachers still don't want to go to rural areas because of security concerns or because of the travel time and distance.


Visser gives the Ministry of Education good marks for its efforts to modernize the school curriculum and expand access at the primary level. She says long-term challenges include increasing the number of kids who stay in school beyond the primary level, and addressing the bottleneck in higher education.


About 300,000 people graduate from high school each year; they are competing for 60,000 openings in colleges as well as vocational and teacher training programs.


Even though many schools and teachers — or students, for that matter — are getting failing grades, the principal of the Hora Jalali High school in Parwan says that's not diminishing the appetite for education. She says in one case, a 35-year old woman returned to school after a 15-year hiatus during the civil war and Taliban rule.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels/2013/10/24/240482395/are-afghanistans-schools-doing-as-well-as-touted?ft=1&f=1004
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Iraqi Dancers in US on First Hip Hop Diplomacy Tour (Voice Of America)

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The Hounds Below On World Cafe





Courtesy of the artist


The Hounds Below.


Courtesy of the artist





  • "You Light Me Up In The Dark"

  • "O. Harris"

  • "For You And I"

  • "Chelsea's Calling"



Continuing this week's feature Sense of Place: Detroit, we welcome The Hounds Below to the World Cafe. Even before the popular garage rock band The Von Bondies started to dissolve in 2009, lead singer Jason Stollsteimer was already writing the poppier songs that make up the repertoire of the Hounds. Stollsteimer committed to the new band in 2011; the group released its debut, You Light Me Up In The Dark, the following year.


In Wednesday's session, we talk with Stollsteimer about Detroit rock 'n' roll. The musician also expands upon the new bands springing up in the city, and where the Hounds like to peform live. The group's live set features four songs, including the title track from its debut.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/WorldCafe/2013/10/23/240279889/the-hounds-below-on-world-cafe?ft=1&f=1039
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GOP Senator Says His Party Can't Govern (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

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