We had a blow out of course, but we got back together.
I see her starting her circle again. "Male friend, comfortable, think they are real friends, exchange emails, then pix"
You know the drill. However, when I explained it to her tonight that she was spending more time with her online friends; and one particular that she can't seem to get enough of, I am the "bad guy".
Until, I am proven right, then I am an a....... You get it...
I did the key loggers and caught her, and got the same response a caged criminal gives "You spied on me?!?!?!" Yes, yes, I did. And I welcome YOU to do the same...
Anyhoo. Advice? Or should I let this one go...
Source: http://talkaboutmarriage.com/mens-clubhouse/34094-gaming.html
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Check out exclusive pictures from UFC 137 by Tracy Lee. You'll see Nick Diaz's taunting, Roy Nelson's belly-rubbing, Donald Cerrone's overwhelming win and more from Saturday night's fights. Which is your favorite pic? Tell us in the comments or on Facebook.
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MINNEAPOLIS ? Dozens of states intend to apply for waivers that would free their schools from a federal requirement that they set aside hundreds of millions of dollars a year for after-school tutoring, a program many researchers say has been ineffective.
The 2002 No Child Left Behind law requires school districts that repeatedly fail to meet its benchmarks to set aside federal money to pay for outside tutors. But studies released in the past five years have found mixed results, at best, from the program.
They say it has suffered from participation rates as low as 20 percent, uneven quality among tutors, a lack of coordination between tutors and teachers, poor oversight by the states and a prohibition against giving the lowest achieving students priority. Also, they say, there has been no connection between students' success and tutors' paychecks.
"We are spending millions of dollars a year, and we are not seeing any measurable results for students," said Matthew Mohs, who oversees the St. Paul Public Schools' tutoring program, which set aside about $4.5 million for tutoring this school year.
However, the program's defenders argue it gives poor children access to the same resources as their wealthier classmates and that picking a tutor gives parents an important choice in their child's education.
Patricia Burch, an education professor at the University of Southern California, studied tutoring programs in Austin, Chicago, Dallas, Milwaukee and Minneapolis and found the programs haven't worked because of design flaws.
States have the authority to approve tutoring companies and monitor their performance, but oversight varies because there's no federal money for it. And, Burch said, schools aren't permitted to steer students to the best tutors on the state's list so parents often base their decisions on the companies' marketing.
"It's not necessarily that the idea is that bad, it's just not designed well," Burch said.
John Nunnery, executive director of the Center for Educational Partnerships at Old Dominion University, analyzed multiple studies on the tutoring program's impact on the math and reading scores of about 140,000 students in 17 states. He concluded the program had "negligible" effects.
It can create more financial problems for struggling schools. Failing districts must set aside about 20 percent of their federal education money for poor students for tutoring. In districts where few students sign up, the money goes unspent even as other parts of the budget are slashed. In urban districts, where more students tend to use the program, there's often not enough money to provide enough tutoring ? Burch's research puts it at 40 hours per student, per year ? to matter.
"The bottom line is we need performance-based contracts if we are going to have outside contracts," Burch said. She said several states and districts were considering them.
Steven Pines, executive director of the Education Industry Association, the trade group for private tutoring companies, estimated $650 million in federal money was spent on tutoring last year for about 600,000 students. His group supports reforms at the state and federal levels, but he said eliminating the program altogether would be unfair to the students it serves.
"I understand states and districts are looking for some breathing room financially, but that doesn't mean they should throw poor kids who are low-income and trapped in struggling schools under the bus," said Pines, whose group is part of a lobbying effort to save the program.
Pines called the research on it "a mixed bag" and said it has been successful in places that have invested in stricter oversight, including Florida and the Chicago Public Schools.
For some, the program isn't only about test scores. DeLisa Shearod's 8-year-old grandson has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and a mild form of autism. She credited his tutor with helping him pass the second grade.
"They have the patience of Job, I'll tell you that," said Shearod, who's raising her grandson in St. Paul. "His behavior problems aren't a problem anymore; now he does his homework."
It's not clear how the program will fare in Congress' ongoing overhaul of No Child Left Behind. The Senate version of the bill scraps the program, and Rep. John Kline, R-Minn, the chairman of the House education committee, was ambivalent about it in an interview. "It works well in some places and not in others," he said.
Because Congress has been slow to overhaul No Child Left Behind ? which both parties agree should be updated ? Education Secretary Arne Duncan announced in September that states would be able to get waivers, including for tutoring if they agree to certain reforms favored by the administration.
The department's own recent research into the program's effectiveness in five large school districts found small benefits in some districts but no effect in others, said Carmel Martin, assistant secretary for Planning, Evaluation and Policy Development.
"We think it can be effective for some students in some cases, but it doesn't make sense to require every school that misses targets to do the same thing," Martin said in an email.
Thirty-seven states and the District of Columbia have notified the Department of Education they intend to apply for a waiver, with 17 states saying they would apply by the Nov. 14 deadline for the first round. A second deadline has been set for mid-February.
Minnesota plans to apply for a waiver. Minnesota schools set aside $16 million last school year for tutoring, although the state Education Department had no estimate for how much was actually spent.
Minnesota Education Commissioner Brenda Cassellius and some other school leaders say the money would be better spent by districts on programs that more closely support their curriculum, including in-school tutoring and summer school.
States that receive first-round waivers could halt the program in the 2012-2013 school year.
Jack Jennings, president of the independent nonprofit Center on Education Policy, predicted that would be a priority for them. A federal mandate that often leaves education money unspent "doesn't make sense right now while teachers are being laid off," he said.
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By BEN WALKER
updated 5:43 p.m. ET Oct. 29, 2011
Freese flipped him the souvenir, drawing a big smile and making yet another friend in his hometown.
Then again, why not? There was plenty to share in this World Series.
A Game 6 that ranked among baseball's greatest thrillers. A three-homer performance by Albert Pujols that's probably the best hitting show in postseason history. Ron Washington running in place, Tony La Russa reacting in dismay at a ball that got away. Everyone learning how to chant Nap-Oh-Lee!
Oh, and a Rally Squirrel on the scoreboard and a telephone mix-up in the bullpen.
"I told you it was going to be a great series ? and it was," Texas slugger Josh Hamilton said.
Hamilton put Texas ahead with an RBI double in the first inning Friday night in Game 7. Freese and the Cardinals, however, would not be denied. A night after twice rallying when it was one strike from elimination, St. Louis came back to win the championship with a 6-2 victory.
"Now that we've won it, it makes yesterday greater," La Russa said.
Said Hamilton: "It was actually fun to watch and fun to see. You hate it, but it happened."
An October for fans to cherish, for sure. A lot of them tuned in: The clincher drew the most viewers for a baseball game since Boston won in 2004, and boosted overall television ratings 19 percent higher than last year's World Series between Texas and San Francisco.
Even before the opener, many observers predicted this Series would be a dud because it lacked big-market teams. Minus the likes of the Yankees, Red Sox and Phillies, some said, it would attract little attention.
Inning by inning, it got more intriguing.
"I know there's been a lot of conversation about ratings," Commissioner Bud Selig said before Game 7. "Some of it, in my opinion ... was misinformed."
No mistaking that it was quite a run for baseball.
Exactly a month before the Cardinals won their 11th championship, they captured a playoff spot on the final day of the regular season. The night of Sept. 28 was riveting ? St. Louis capped a comeback from 10? games down to overtake Atlanta for the NL wild card, Tampa Bay completed its late surge to beat out Boston for the AL wild card.
The playoffs produced their moments, too. The one that brought winning and losing into a tight focus: Chris Carpenter and the Cardinals celebrating their 1-0 win over Roy Halladay in Philadelphia while star slugger Ryan Howard writhed on the ground, having torn his Achilles tendon during a game-ending groundout.
Soon after, the first Game 7 in the World Series since 2002.
"Somebody said on television, baseball has had a coming-out party since Labor Day. I don't think so. I think it's always there," Selig said. "It's produced for this country really a remarkable chain of events."
In a year punctuated by historic comebacks and epic collapses, it'd be easy to say the biggest rally of all belonged to baseball. That's what many like to say whenever the game shows up well.
Is it true, will that be so?
Selig insists the sport already is more popular than ever. Major league attendance slightly increased this season, ending three seasons of drops. The Chicago Cubs have renewed hope for next year after hiring Theo Epstein to oversee the club, a new ballpark is waiting in Florida for the team that will soon officially become the Miami Marlins.
Certainly a back-and-forth World Series boosted interest, helped by the two most magical words in sports: Game 7.
"There isn't anybody on this team, the other team, too, that when you're a young kid you don't think about winning the World Series, and it's always in Game 7," La Russa said.
Freese delivered the key hit, a two-run double that tied it in the first inning. The MVP of the NL championship series wound up adding the World Series MVP trophy.
He saved the Cardinals' season in Game 6, lining a two-strike, two-out, two-run triple in the ninth and then hitting a winning home run in the 11th.
An inning before Freese connected, Hamilton homered to put Texas ahead. Had the Rangers held on, mostly likely Mike Napoli would've been picked the Series MVP. So, so close.
Freese estimated he got about 45 minutes of sleep as Thursday night turned into Friday. A lot to think about for a player who quit baseball out of high school because it wasn't fun anymore. From done to donating his bat and jersey to the Hall of Fame.
"I'm trying to soak this all in," he said. "I've tried to soak in this whole postseason as much as I can because you never know if it's your last attempt at a title."
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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More newsHBT: There's some good news for Texas. C.J. Wilson is the team's only significant free agent, so this team will contend again.
DeMarco: They had the gutsiest of regular-season comebacks, followed by the unlikeliest of postseason runs. But the Cardinals' ?World Series championship was a fitting end to a captivating postseason.
Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45084506/ns/sports-baseball/
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CARACAS, Venezuela ? President Hugo Chavez says Venezuela refuses to pay compensation in foreign currency to a British-owned company after his government expropriated tens of thousands of acres of its ranchlands.
Chavez says the government has received a demand for payment in dollars from the owners of Agropecuaria Flora, a local subsidiary of the British company Vestey Group.
But Venezuela insists in paying for private land it has taken over in bolivars, Venezuela's currency.
It's difficult for foreign companies operating in Venezuela to repatriate profits and other income due to foreign currency controls in the South American country.
Representatives of Agropecuaria Flora did not answer telephone calls seeking comment Sunday.
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On the Terrell Owens 911 call released yesterday, the NFL star's assistant told the operator that she thought he had tried to commit suicide on October 6.
T.O.'s rep now says that's just untrue.
Diana Bianchini stated emphatically that "Terrell Owens absolutely did not attempt suicide nor did he attempt to overdose on pills on October 6, 2011."
Of reports of a drug overdose, she says, "[T.O.'s assistant] arrived at his home that evening after he had already taken a sleeping aid to fall asleep."
"He was unresponsive because of this. Unaware he had taken a sleeping aid prior to her arrival, his assistant was concerned and decided to call 911."
"When the ambulance and police arrived, Owens was responsive and not held in the hospital. The reports released with the 911 call are misleading."
So, that's that. Probably. You never know with T.O., who has been accused of trying to leave this cruel world via painkiller overdose once before.
[Photo: WENN.com]
Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/10/terrell-owens-denies-trying-to-off-himself/
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SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) ? A central Texas gun dealer ran radio ads advising "Socialist" liberals, those who voted for President Barack Obama, Arabs and Muslims that they need not apply for his concealed gun license class.
Crockett Keller, who owns Keller's Riverside Store, ran the ads on the radio station in his rural hometown of Mason, Texas, which is 120 miles west of the state capital of Austin.
"If you are a Socialist liberal and/or voted for the current campaigner in chief, please do not take this class," Keller said in the ad. "You have already proven that you cannot make a knowledgeable and prudent decision as required under the law."
"Also, if you are a non-Christian Arab, or Muslim, I will not teach you the class," Keller said in the radio ad.
Keller said he is simply exercising his freedom to teach concealed handgun license classes to whomever he wants. He said he has received "hundreds" of calls from Americans who support his stance.
"I should have had the class next week instead of this week, I could have had 500 people in it," Keller said on Friday.
He said he was not joking when he put the lines about socialists in his commercial, because he knows some socialist liberals and did not want them to enroll in the class.
"I didn't want them to show up and have to tell them no," he said.
The Texas Department of Public Safety, which oversees the concealed carry program, and licenses instructors, said in a statement that "certified instructors are required to comply with all applicable state and federal statutes, and conduct by an instructor that denied service to individuals on the basis of race, ethnicity, or religion would place that instructor's certification at risk."
The department said it had begun an investigation into the matter, and would "take appropriate administrative action based on the findings of from the investigation."
Adults in Texas are allowed to carry concealed weapons if they have completed a class such as the one Keller teaches.
Keller wrapped up his radio by saying: "With no shame, I'm Crockett Keller. Thank you, and may God bless."
(Editing by Greg McCune)
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