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Smoking, drinking teens are the unhappiest of all.... and fruit and veg is the secret to a good life


Teenagers who smoke, drink alcohol and eat junk food are significantly more likely to be unhappy than their clean- living counterparts, a study has found. About 5,000 children were questioned on their appearance, family, friends, school and life as a whole, and had their happiness levels rated. Researchers discovered that those who never drank alcohol were between four and six times more likely to have higher levels of happiness than those who did, while those who shunned cigarettes were about five times more likely to have high happiness scores than young smokers.
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Fruit extract can help you lose weight, lower cholesterol and prevent diabetes


Pakistani government has now stepped forward to take a greater control over Internet by imposing harsh censorship. In a tender published on the Website of Information and Communications Technology Ministry’s Research and Development Fund the local government has asked for proposal from interested national and international parties dealing with the “development, deployment and operation of a national-level URL filtering and blocking system.” Pakistan has reserved $10 million to work with interested company(ies) on Internet filtering technology. The online proposal reads “The system would have a central database of undesirable URL’s that would be loaded on the
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Pakistan Sends Call For Proposals To Filter Internet Access

Fruit extract loved by tea drinkers for the aromatic flavour it lends to Earl Grey tea could help you lose weight, lower cholesterol and protect against diabetes. The bergamot orange, grown in the Mediterranean, is being hailed as ‘nature’s statin’. It contains chemicals called citrus polyphenols that appear to block production of blood fats, boost metabolism and prevent cholesterol absorption in the gut. Doctors who gave the extract to heart patients and diabetics claim dramatic benefits. Some of their patients have avoided taking statins, which may have side-effects.
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25,000,000,000!


Apple has announced that there has been 25 billion downloads from the App Store to date. The countdown to 25,000,000,000 apps began on February 17th when Apple said it would give away a $10K gift card to the person who downloaded the app — or filed a claim in its non-purchase form — that broke the record . A notice on Apple’s website acknowledges the record being broken. It notes that a winner will be revealed on the homepage later Read Post

Study: Older People Sleep Better

A new study from the Center for Sleep and Circadian Neurobiology at the University of Pennsylvania has found that aging is not a factor in poor sleep. The study surveyed more than 150,000 Americans about the quality of their sleep and found that the quality actually improves over time. The fewest complaints of poor sleep came from people in their 80's. It was a popular belief that older adults wake up more frequently in the night than young adults This old notion has now been turned on its head. First of all, the researchers found that health problems and depressions were associated with poor sleep. Also, women reported more sleep disturbances and daytime tiredness than men.
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Moshi Monsters signs Sony Music record deal


Moshi Monsters, the popular British children’s gaming website run from east London’s so-called "Silicon Roundabout", has signed a record deal with Sony Music as it seeks to become a major children’s brand. Mind Candy, the company behind the game played by 60m children aged between six and 12, has signed an agreement with the record label to release a series of albums. The debut 12-track album, Moshi Monsters, Music Rox, features songs from popular characters such as Dr Strangeglove, Big Bad Bill and Sweettooth. Despite the multitude of mechanisms that pathogens .Jason Perry, head of Moshi Music and a former producer for McFly and The Pussycat Dolls, told The Sunday Telegraph: “Moshi Monsters has never released an album before so this is a big opportunity. The thinking behind it is that we don’t want the company to just be a computer brand. We want to turn it into the number one children’s brand.” Sony will handle the production, sales and distribution aspects of Moshi Monster’s forthcoming music releases. The first CD will go on sale in shops and be available on iTunes from April 2. Read Post

University of Saskatchewan to Decrease Expenses in Light of Budget Pressures

The University of Saskatchewan will need to decrease its expenses over the next four years in the face of budget pressures that include lower-than-requested provincial funding, salary and benefit costs rising faster than revenue increases, solvency and going concern pension issues, and the pressing need for capital renewal to support teaching, research and innovation. At a public town hall meeting April 3, Provost and Vice-President Academic Brett Fairbairn and Vice-President Finance and Resources Richard Florizone outlined how the 2.1 per cent increase in Read Post

AUSTRALIA Critics Counter Website Allowing University Indicator Comparisons


beetle For the first time, students from around the world can compare Australia’s 39 public universities on the basis of their courses, student satisfaction levels, the qualifications of academics, staff-student ratios, drop-out rates and graduate employment. Although criticised immediately for including information of doubtful validity, the MyUniversity website is probably unique in providing so many comparative details of each university’s operations. Officially launched on Tuesday 3 April in Canberra by Tertiary Education Minister Senator Chris Evans, MyUniversity is an interactive, searchable site that includes a wide variety of indicators. Evans said the site would “empower students to make the right call”. “Enrolling at university is a huge life decision for young Australians and their families. MyUniversity will help ensure that students have all the relevant information to make an informed decision about what’s best for them,” he said. Evans said the site was designed to ensure accountability and transparency as universities began competing for students in Australia’s new demand-driven system after the government this year lifted limits on the number of students each university could enrol. Creation of the A$1.5 million websiteRead Post

Trinity College Dublin Students Win Entrepreneurship Prize for Innovative Technology

Students from Trinity College Dublin’s School of Computer Science and Statistics have won the first-ever upStart entrepreneurship programme. The competition, organised by Citi, saw master’s students from TCD and Queen’s University Belfast universities create their own start-up business for a new technology product or service. Each business plan had to provide a real market prospect and teams competed with each other to win the opportunity for virtual funding from Citi for their business. The winning entries were Happy Swap, a consumer exchange website for goods created by students from Trinity College Dublin, and Woogie Tap, an interactive tag for downloading information instantaneously, created by students from Queen’s University Belfast. Pictured at the upStart awards at Citi’s offices in Belfast were (left to right back row), Nathan O’Reilly, Citi, Dr Peter Middleton, Queen’s University Belfast, Prof. Siobhán Read More

Fullbright Award Recipient Case Nafziger '12 Will Teach In South Korea

DePauw University senior Case M. Nafziger will spend the upcoming academic year in South Korea teaching English as a result of being awarded an English Teaching Assistant grant through the 2012-13 Fulbright U.S. Student Program competition. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of State and established in 1946, the Fulbright U.S. Student Program competition aims to increase mutual understanding among nations through educational and cultural exchange while serving as a catalyst for long-term leadership development. “As a student at DePauw, I have had the privilege of traveling to two continents, taking courses in numerous disciplines, and studying alongside students from across the globe,” Nafziger wrote in his Fulbright application. “My dual degrees in English writing and vocal performance have prepared me to look at the world through a creative lens.” The senior notes Read Post

The University Of Auckland's Students Get a Kick-Start in Engineering


Thirty-one top engineering students have been awarded Kick Start Scholarships from The University of Auckland. The scholarships, worth $2000 each, are awarded to outstanding first-year students studying at the Faculty of Engineering. Faculty of Engineering Dean Professor Michael Davies says the scholarships, awarded to students of academic excellence, are designed to help first-year engineering students get established. “The scholarships were set up to help alleviate some of the financial pressure for the students, in particular to help them pay for their textbooks, fees and accommodation costs.” There are four types of Kick Start scholarships: Affirmative Action, City of Sails Read Post



 Pensive  By Sarah Mahmood

Pensive: Listen First!

Pensive, yet again very brief but nonetheless important. Here it is: listen attentively to what others have to say. A major contributor towards effective communication, this is a habit many of us are in dire need of. We interrupt. We start disagreeing before the other person has stopped. We tend to impose our own opinions. The consequences, of course, aren't very healthy. A lot of shouts, disagreements and unfruitful debates are what we are left with. Happy trying! Read Post
We either make ourselves miserable, or we make ourselves strong. The amount of work is the same.
Carlos Castaneda

Greatest losses of 2011!

Earthquakes in New Zealand and Japan, floods in Thailand and a series of severe storms in the U.S. resulted in the highest-ever catastrophe economic losses in a year this year. Total economic losses to society, which include insured and uninsured losses, reached an estimated $350 billion, up from $226 billion in 2010. Read More...

Forgery for benefits leads a Greek policeman to jail


A former Greek policeman, in order to claim benefits from government, showed himself as the largest family of 19 children. He collected the phototgraphs of children from internet and create false birth certificates. The average Greek family has 2 or 3 children. And he was the only one with that big a family.The police sensed something fishy. This Wednesday, the man was ready to collect his benefits of 8,000 euros from an Athens Read More...

Mountaineers intend to reach the K2 summit for the first time in winters

A 16-member expedition team lead by Viktor Kozlov will attempt to climb K2 in winters. If this epic adventure is successful, it would be the first ever summit by any team on K2 in winter. The mountain has a history of killing one out of four climbers under normal weather conditions. Earlier two expeditions to climb the mountain in winters have failed while In 2010, an expedition involving three climbers from Italy and Russia successfully reached the summit of Gasherbrum II during the winter season. The team, a blend of engineers, scientists, guides and experienced mountaineers, is considered to be the toughest team in the mountaineering world and has a list of achievements.
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SS Member Gets Sentenced At 90

Heinrich Boere, 90, begins jail term for murders committed as a member of the Nazi hit squad during the World War II. Boere argues that whatever he did at that time, was because of orders from his superiors and that he saw nothing as a crime back then. Not following the orders would have meant possible confinement in a concentration camp. Born in Germany, Boere joined the German SS after the Nazis raided his hometown of Maastricht in 1940. Read More...

Paris Museum Gets Rights To Bronte Manuscript

A Paris museum has won a bid to an unpublished manuscript by Charlotte Bronte at an auction of £690,850, outbidding the Bronte Parsonage Museum located at the author's hometown. The work, which dates back to 1830, sheds important light on Bronte's literary development, representing "her first burst of creativity" and "provides a rare and intimate insight into one of history's great literary minds," according to Dr. Philip Errington director of books and manuscripts at Sotheby's.
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Friday, 9 December 2011

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SCIENTISTS SCORE ANOTHER VICTORY OVER UNCERTAINTY IN QUANTUM PHYSICS MEASUREMENTS



Most people attempt to reduce the little uncertainties of life by carrying umbrellas on cloudy days, purchasing automobile insurance or hiring inspectors to evaluate homes they might consider purchasing. For scientists, reducing uncertainty is a no less important goal, though in the weird realm of quantum physics, the term has a more specific meaning. For scientists working in quantum physics, the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle  Read More

Disasters made 2011 most expensive year ever


The world faced total losses of $380 billion, over $150 billion more than 2005, the previous record year, according to a report by the Munich-based insurance company Munich Re. But 2011 was not merely a year of financial losses, as over 27,000 lives were claimed by natural catastrophes. The figures reveal that two-thirds of the final  Read More
Yesterday's headline

THE WAY OUT! OBITS OF 2011 !!

Respectful Dedication Prof Germane Grier/ Cambridge - Julian Assange/ Wikileaks - Prof Alex Deschovitz


We are saddened to read and experience first hand , the madcap plotline, announcement of the 'clinically depressed smile therapists' of the death of American hegemony of multiple undiagnosed causes. American hegemony has been in a hopeless Read More

NEW STUDY IN GERMANY FINDS FEARS OF THE INTERNET ARE MUCH HIGHER THAN EXPECTED


The first-ever in-depth study of Internet use in Germany offers some surprising – and not so surprising -- results. For starters, Internet users in Germany have very different expectations regarding security on the web, according to the new study published by the
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World's Tallest Tower Completed


The 634-metre-tall Tokyo Sky Tree, the world's tallest self-supporting communications tower, has been completed on February 29, 2012 after a two-month delay due to last year's quake and tsunami.
 Comment 
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Poll: US belief in warming rises with thermometer


Americans' belief in global warming is on the rise, along with temperatures and surprising weather changes, according to a new university poll. The survey by the University of Michigan and Muhlenberg College says 62 percent of those asked last
 Comment 
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A NEW DA VINCI MYSTERY


When the Italian architect Claudio Sgarbi set his ruler along a drawing of an obscure Renaissance manuscript, he was suddenly struck by what he found. He quickly compared it to a copy of the
 Comment 
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People Aren't Smart Enough for Democracy to Flourish, Scientists Say


The democratic process relies on the assumption that citizens (the majority of them, at least) can recognize the best political candidate, or best policy idea, when they see it. But a growing body of research has
 Comment 
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Investigating Mother-In-Laws By Detectives In India


At the Hatfield India detective agency, Sherlock Holmes is revered with the respect normally reserved for Hindu gods. The agency’s director, Ajit Singh, wears a pin with Holmes’ picture on the collar of his blue pinstripe jacket, and works beneath the
 Comment 
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Amazing Animals Made from Recycled CDs and Other Computer Junk


Sean Avery, guy makes amazing art from old e-waste such as CDs and computer parts. A very unique work done. Sean writes on his website: "As a designer I am very capable and have an impeccable work ethic, putting 100% into any project that I undertake. I am highly proficient with industry standard software like Adobe inDesign, Photoshop and Illustrator. I am currently under contract with Anvil Mining, who have asked me to design their company biography." Read Post

What Germans Do After Retirement


If he gets a call from the company that employs him, Klaus Beckert goes to work even if it’s one of his days off. When that happens, though, it’s usually to deal with clients, says the 73-year-old, a qualified toolmaker and machinist. Otherwise he sticks to his normal work week routine, which means going in from Tuesday to Thursday – just three days. Beckert, who lives in Cologne, isn’t thinking of retiring. “It’s not about the money,” he says. “It’s about having work that – even after 40 years -- I enjoy.” Beckert used to work full time for the company, a family-owned technology firm called Henkelhausen GmbH. Now he does part time work as a consultant. Henkelhausen isn’t the only company that doesn’t want to miss out on the experience older workers bring to the job. According to a recent survey of family-owned companies and young entrepreneurs, nearly 40% of participating companies employ Read Post

Lois Hayes, Retired Teacher, Sends Handwritten Birthday Cards To Former Students

Lois Hayes, 66, may have retired from her career at an elementary school, but she hasn't forgotten her former students. Every week the Lexington, Miss., resident rolls through an index of cards with past students' names and birthdays. And every week, she sends out a handful of handwritten, personal birthday notes for the upcoming birthdays -- about 400 each year, MSNBC's The Daily Nightly reports. Hayes says the tradition began when she decided she wanted her students to know they were "special." "It brings back memories to think of them, and Read More

HORN OF AFRICA: Drought warning prompts call for early action

KIGALI, 29 February 2012 (IRIN) - Drought is likely to return to Somalia and other parts of the Horn of Africa over the next three months, say regional climate scientists meeting in the Rwandan capital, Kigali. The forecast comes just weeks after the UN declared the Somali “famine” over. “There is a high probability of drought returning to the Greater Horn of Africa…Poor rains are a definite in all of Somalia, Djibouti, northern Kenya, southern, eastern and northeastern Ethiopia,” said Laban Ogallo, director of the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) Climate Prediction and Applications Centre (ICPAC), which provides forecasts for the Horn. “We have put the message out there. It is now up to governments, civil society and the media to prepare… for the worst-case scenario even if the worst does not happen. There is no harm in being prepared,” he said. “We must realize many of these areas are already facing the cumulative impact of several droughts.” Read Post

With Interchangeable Soles, One Pair of Boots Can Survive All Conditions


Surviving the outdoors requires a fair amount of gear. For your footwear alone, you need boots for everyday hiking, for dealing with ice, for trudging along streams — to name a few. Sporting a creative solution, shoe maker Korkers has created an interchangeable sole for its boots. The OmniTrax Sole System can be changed out for a variety of conditions, reports The Gear Caster: The OmniTrax Interchangeable Sole System has further strengthened the Korkers product offering. Options include high-friction rubber for scrambling trails, rock hopping, and wading in wet conditions, compressed felt for traction underwater on slimy rocks, and either rubber or compressed felt with carbide spikes for extremely slippery conditions. Read Post



Cruise Ship adrift off Seychelles after fire


A cruise ship belonging to same company as Costa Concordia with more than 1,000 passengers and crew on board is adrift in the Indian Ocean after a fire broke out in its electrical room. Planes, ships and tug boats are heading towards the Costa Allegra, which is about 200 miles south-west of the Seychelles. The luxury liner left the port of Diego Suarez in Madagascar on Saturday and was due to arrive in Mahe in the Seychelles on Tuesday. There were no injuries from the fire, which has not spread to other parts of the vessel. But the ship is without power and adrift about 20 miles off Alphonse Island in the Indian Ocean. “The shipboard fire-extinguishing system and procedures were promptly activated and the special fire-fighting squads intervened to extinguish fire,” parent company Costa Cruises Read Post

Music Videos


Lady Gaga at Harvard, Launches Youth Foundation


Pop star Lady Gaga descended on Harvard University with some powerful friends Wednesday to launch her new foundation aimed at empowering young people. he singer was joined by Oprah Winfrey, spiritual leader Deepak Chopra, and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to kick off the Born This Way Foundation that Gaga's mother and inspiration will help steer. Gaga spoke to more than 1,100 students from several states, faculty and invited guests at Harvard, urging the young audience to "challenge meanness and cruelty." "I believe that if you have revolutionary potential, you must make the world a better place and use it," she said. She reminded them that there is no law to make people be kind to one another and added: "I wish there was because, you know, I'd be chained naked to a fence Read Post

Giorgio Armani's Cleaned Up Androgyny at Milan Fashion Week


Giorgio Armani kept things streamlined this season in one of his most lovingly understated collections, and a timely lesson in the art of romantic tailoring and sophisticated draping. Where the over-ridding message on many Milan runways was exotic glamor, on Armani's this season it was lean and clean chic. That much was clear from the opening salvos Read Post

A Clockwork Orange (1971)

A Clockwork Orange is a 1971 film adaptation of Anthony Burgess's 1962 novel of the same name. It was written, directed and produced by Stanley Kubrick. It features disturbing, violent images, facilitating its social commentary on psychiatry, youth gangs, and other social, political, and economic subjects in a dystopian, future Britain. Alex (Malcolm McDowell), the main character, is a charismatic, psychopathic delinquent whose interests include classical music (especially Beethoven), rape, and what is termed "ultra-violence". He leads a small gang of thugs (Pete, Georgie, and Dim), whom he calls his droogs (from the Russian друг, "friend", "buddy"). The film chronicles the horrific crime spree of his gang, his capture, and attempted rehabilitation Read Post
Tourism

VisitBritain Woos Japanese Outbound Tourism Market


VisitBritain is reinforcing its increased investment and commitment to the world’s seventh most valuable source market for international tourism by taking a trade delegation to Japan this week
Read Post

Identical Strangers by Paula Bernstein and Elyse Schein

From the Publisher: Elyse Schein had always known she was adopted, but it wasn't until her mid-thirties while living in Paris that she searched for her biological mother. When Elyse contacted her adoption agency, she was not prepared for the shocking, life-changing news she received: She had an identical twin sister. Elyse was then Read Post

Scott Parker appointed as England captain


Scott Parker's appointment as England captain ahead of Steven Gerrard divides opinion Stuart Pearce has named Scott Parker as England captain. Parker, the Tottenham midfielder, will lead the team out against Holland at Wembley despite the presence of Gerrard - Liverpool captain and England's most experienced player - in the squad. QPR midfielder Joey Barton was the most vocal critic of Pearce's decision, describing his reaction as "speechless." The 31-year-old was also crowned England's 2011 player of the year. Read Post

Amla, Morkel steer South Africa to series win


Napier: A 92 from Hashim Amla guided South Africa to victory, chasing 230 set by New Zealand after the Kiwis middle order failed, in the 2nd ODI as the tourists seal the series. After winning the toss, South Africa invited New Zealand to bat first. Martin Guptill (58) and McCullum (85) gave the hosts a strong start with their107-run partnership for the 2nd wicket, but after Tsotsobe dismissed the top order Morne Morkel, who took 5 wickets for just 38, took the charge and was on a hat-trick twice. At the end of their innings, New Zealand had lost eight wickets for 67 South Africa's chase was bright from the start despite Jacques Kallis departed early. Amla (92) progressed along with middle order batsmen to reach the target within 39 overs with a loss of 4 wickets. Score Card

Counter-terrorism degree launches


The University of Central Lancashire (UCLAN) says it wants to train the next generation of security professionals.
The airport security course is being designed in conjunction with the police and airline industry.
Andy Johnson, course leader and former police officer, says it will reflect the "evolving security landscape".
Universities are facing an increasingly competitive market for students and income - and this development, by the Preston-based institution, will hope to reach a growth area. Read Post

Preparing Music Students for a Competitive Market


beetle In the aftermath of a protracted economic recession in the United States, professional American orchestras are faced with a challenging combination of escalating costs, changing audience tastes and declining attendance. According to a June 2011 article on the Arts Management Network, two-thirds of the major orchestras in the United States have a budget deficit and will need intervention and innovation to turn things around. To encourage a healthy future, orchestras are rethinking their programming and restructuring their organizations. As orchestras adapt to this changing financial and cultural environment, the College of Music remains Read Post

Graduation Arts Exhibition, Seoul National University, Korea

Serious research universities like SNU sometimes tend to forget they also have experimenters of the modes of expression. In fact SNU has been shaping the aesthetic tradition in Korea over the years. The 2009 Artist of the Year awarded by the National Museum of Contemporary Arts Korea SUH Yongsun, modern minimalist painter OH Junggeun, and the awardee of Paris' Knight of Arts and Letters KIM Tschang Yeul are some examples of famous Korean artists turned out Read More

International Women's Day Celebration By De Montfort University

A lecture by Jane Robinson, author of Bluestockings: The Remarkable Story of the First Women to Fight for an Education Based on Jane’s acclaimed book Bluestockings: The Remarkable Story of the First Women to Fight for an Education, this lecture will chart the history of university education in Britain from 1869 to 1939. The book was chosen as BBC Radio 4’s ‘Book of the Week’ and attracted rave reviews, described in the Press as ‘inspiring, funny and thoughtful’ Read Post

Leicester students design shoes for Duchess of Cambridge


Six fashion students at Leicester's De Montfort University have been invited to design a shoe for the Duchess of Cambridge. The duchess will choose her favourite design during a visit to Leicester, where she is due to join the Queen at the start of her Diamond Jubilee tour of the UK. Catherine, the Queen and Duke of Edinburgh will visit De Montfort University on 8 March.
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The continuing Education of Education

Respectful and admiring dedication President and Mrs Jimmy Carter!
Two Great Humans!

The truth is that even beyond the monumental symbolism, Student Angel Mother is truly humbled by the ever growing commitment that Students the World over, so shown. With free will and wilfull streak, we are bound to build a better world! And in the meantime, take a look at some true stats :

  • The average student debt has gone up to 26,000 from 16,000 in 1999
  • Indians now own more than 569 million handsets.
  • China now has over 438 million internet users and
  • The world has over 934 million undernourished human
  • Also, The World Population has crossed 7.4 billion


The cost of education throughout the world is on a fee rise! Even higher middle class families are having severe difficulties in having a single child educated. If you consider all of the above in pattern , you'll easily figure the basic inference: "Why can't the  world learn? "

Try comparing the student populations of different countries. See what you think through!
So, How are we going to attract quality teachers without offering them higher salaries? When the biggest predictor of test scores is socio-economic status. Public schools are the microcosm of society; as poverty increases and schools are forced to provide expensive academic intervention?!!

Could the bankrupt countries of the developing world even conceive that!? The world has to face up to the truth that "The Educational System at All Levels Needs to be Fixed". Pointing fingers at educators or even the students will get us nowhere. But the hurting reality is that "Teaching" has lost it's prestige the world over and in many cases the teachers have become the perennial scapegoats and, the focus of media criticism . Therefore, the best and the brightest students will no longer be willing to go into education.

Like the great economist, Milton Freidman, Student Angel Mother too has become besotted with the notion of choice, the idea of markets.We give students choices, the best students form and services will rise to the top. But in the discrete culture of poverty , the daily life has more dimensions than one can discern; a unique lesson in the education of education. With prayers for a peaceful world, Goodnight!
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