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daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Match.com)
Tue Nov 12 09:31:15 2013
From: "Match.com" <Match.com@rnvrbslszuisin.us>
Date: Tue, 12 Nov 2013 06:31:12 -0800
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
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d the West for failure at the weekend talks in
Almaty, Kazakhstan. "The talks showed that the West is not honest in
its remarks," he told reporters.He said Western powers cannot achieve progress
"if they do not acknowledge Iran's natural rights" to enrich uranium.Velayati
is seen a leading candidate for June elections to pick a successor
to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.The comments were the first by top Iranian
officials after the talks Friday and Saturday between Iran and the five
permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany.
just have a patchwork of bills with
no consistency, said Sean Johnson, the Maryland State Teachers Associations
managing director of legislative and legal affairs.Johnson acknowledged
some issues are best decided on a local level but not in
this case, in which some workers pay for union representatives to negotiate
fair pay and benefits while others do not.Right now, 24 states have
right-to-work statues, which prohibit unions from requiring employees to
join or pay dues as a condition of employment, according to the
National Right to Work Foundation.The right to work has been on the
march for several decades, said Greg Mourad, vice president for the Right
to Work Committee. And Maryland is moving in the wrong direction in
relation to the rest of America.He also said the recent efforts by
governors in Indian and Michigan that made their states right to work
states stunned a lot of people.Mourad said the key points are employees
want freedom in the workplace and employers want to open businesses where
they can treat their employees fairly and they wont be forced to
join unions. The new Maryland legislation is an extension of 2009 legislation
passed by the Assembly -- at the request of the American Federation
of State, County and Municipal Employees that requires all state workers
except teachers to pay the fees.Right now, teachers in Baltimore City and
nine of the states 23 counties already pay the fee, as do
all other state employees
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">ave
the painful past behind.Powell endured the explosive battle over desegregation
in Boston in the 1970s. Tears come to her eyes when she
talks about how it took her decades to return to the place
where she never felt safe as an African-American seventh-grader."It was
scary because of what you were going into, getting bricks thrown at
your bus. I remember the bus windows being broken," said Powell, now
48.Nearly four decades later, Powell's native city also is still working
to move forward from the legacy of the school busing crisis. Last
year, Mayor Thomas Menino created an advisory group whose aim was to
work toward putting students back in neighborhood schools. And last month,
school officials agreed to do away with the last vestiges of the
desegregation-based school assignment system, beginning in 2014.But raw
feelings remain from that divisive time. And to explore and mend the
divisions, the nonprofit Union of Minority Neighborhoods has been holding
public story circles across Boston where participants like Powell can open
up about their own experiences.Organizers hope the airing of voices will
help people of different races and economic classes learn from the city's
busing past so they can fight together for access to quality schools
for all students. Project director Donna Bivens said the exercises are designed
to be about listening and discussing, but not judging each other's stories."I
think that we can't move forward, looki
NEW YORK Police say a man bled to death outside a
Brooklyn restaurant after he fell on a broken bottle during an argument.The
incident happened at 4 a.m. Saturday in the borough's Flatbush section.Witnesses
tell police two men were involved in a dispute inside the eatery,
and then got into an altercation outside.When officers arrived on the scene,
they found one of the men bleeding from a cut on his
arm.The victim was in his 20s. He was taken to a hospital,
but doctors couldn't save him.News photographs of the scene showed investigators
retrieving a large knife from the street, but police said they believed
it was the glass, and not the blade, that delivered the fatal
wound.The slain man's identity wasn't immediately released.
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