APRIL WIPs - Angelfire

straight to the source: The New York Times, Laurie J. Flynn, 19 May 2004 ...
Literacy Coalition (OLC): www.on.literacy.ca/whatnew/wrkplace/wrkplace.pdf ......
Nathan said As You Sow spoke to Dell in a "constructive, supportive manner, not
...... of your brain and try some brain exercises to make the most of what you've
got!

Part of the document


APRIL & May 04 WIPs
Reply and Fifth Request
Robert M. Clarke reply, subject " RE: Kim will resend the 1099s"
My address remains same as on you records since July 2003.
"She", I suppose, means Ms. Hedgpeth; if a payee asks for MMLLC 2003 proof
of income, whether ANY ONE has sent them, then IT IS OBVIOUS that payee is
asking for same documentation. I understand where Ms. Hedgpeth is coming
from and I don't blame her: you are grating on every one's last nerve
UNNECESSARILY. Ms. Hedgpeth also understands that this is YOUR problem, as
I do.
For the record, as of this writing, I have not received said mentioned 2003
proof since my multiple requests have been sent to you. Sophina Aryvz
From: "RMC" Reply-To: To:
Subject: Kim will resend the 1099s Date: Fri, 16 Apr
2004 11:32:30 -0400 Hope you are well. Rmc I spoke with her yesterday and
she did not seem to understand the request and said she had already mailed
the items to you. What is the correct mailing address? WCVE Richmond PBS, along with WHTJ Charlottesville PBS, will begin
broadcasting the
"G.E.D. Connection" series on Sunday, May 2 at 7:30am. Summer Institute Dates: Look for registration forms and information
about this year's summer institutes inside the May issue of Progress. If
you do not receive Progress, call 800-237-0178 for registration information
or look for it on the Resource Center website at www.aelweb.vcu.edu/. Send
us your home address to receive Progress.
http://www.os.dhhs.gov/policies/index.shtml#testimony is from U.S.
Department of Health & Human Services . 200 Independence Avenue, S.W. .
Washington, D.C. 20201, has long pg entitled Policy and Regulations where
these are the topics, and was Last revised: February 2, 2004. See
Glossary: http://aspe.hhs.gov/daltcp/diction.shtml HHS Information and Hotline Directory A list, by subject, of Websites and
public inquiry and publication phone numbers for popular topics:
http://www.hhs.gov/about/referlst.html Mailing Address and Telephone Number: The U.S. Dept of Health & Human
Services
200 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20201
Telephone: 202-619-0257, Toll Free: 1-877-696-6775
(mail sent to our Washington D.C area offices takes an additional 3-4 days
to process) Healthcare Standards subtopic: Healthcare Informatics and Standards
(takes you to "Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality" at
http://www.ahrq.gov/data/infoix.htm on Medical Infomatics within the many
different medical fields, espl on tracking patient medical history and
resuting medical issues; plus other medical admin issues. Rsch: http://www.ahrq.gov/research/primarix.htm Primary care practices
working with researchers to improve community-based health care. Computer Manufacturers Get Low Grades on Recycling Computer makers' environmental programs generally stink, though U.S.
companies -- particularly Dell and Hewlett-Packard -- are better than most,
says an annual report released yesterday by the Silicon Valley Toxics
Coalition, an enviro group based in San Jose, Calif. No company is
recycling more than 2 percent of its products -- products chock-full of
lead, polyvinyl chloride, mercury, and other hazardous materials -- a
statistic which coalition director Ted Smith called "pathetic." Coalition
researchers singled out Dell for particular praise. The company, which
received terrible scores on last year's report, has stopped using prison
labor to recycle products and launched a new recycling campaign. A number
of states are considering bills that would make manufacturers responsible,
to some extent at least, for electronics recycling. straight to the source: MSNBC, Associated Press, 20 May 2004
straight to the source: The New York Times, Laurie J. Flynn, 19 May 2004 * Good practice in workplace education is something we value as adult
educators. Mary Ellen Belfiore has consolidated what we know about good
practice in workplace education to date. You can download the report,
Workplace Literacy: National and International Perspectives on Research
and Practice, from the Ontario Literacy Coalition (OLC):
www.on.literacy.ca/whatnew/wrkplace/wrkplace.pdf
* American Memory is a gateway to rich primary source materials relating to
the history and culture of the United States. The site offers more than 7
million digital items from more than 100 historical collections:
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/ammemhome.html
* The California Health Literacy Initiative is excited to announce the
launch of its Online Health Literacy Resource Center. To visit the
Resource Center, please go to: www.cahealthliteracy.org.
* The Plain Language Action & Information Network is a government-wide
group of volunteers working to improve communications from the federal
government to the public. Their belief is better communication will
increase trust in government, reduce government costs, and reduce the
burden on the public: www.plainlanguage.gov. * The Health and Literacy Compendium, developed by World Education in
collaboration with the National Institute for Literacy with a generous
grant from the Metropolitan Life Foundation, is one resource guide for
the health and literacy fields. This guide includes literacy curricula,
student-generated materials, and websites commonly used by literacy
educators. The Compendium is meant to encourage teachers and health
educators to think about ways to disseminate and make known to others the
resources they find valuable and to inspire people to create new
materials, as gaps in the Compendium may represent gaps in information
currently available in the field. You can find this document at:
www.worlded.org/us/health/docs/comp/. Project REACH: Recursos para la Ensenanza y el Aprendizaje de las Culturas
Hispanas offers resources on the history and literature of the Spanish
language, Latino cultures in the U.S., arts of the Spanish speaking world,
instructional materials for teaching Spanish speakers, and the Quechua
culture indigenous to the remote regions of the Peruvian Andes:
www.nflc.org/REACH/index.htm. Theory and Practice of Online Learning edited by Terry Anderson and Fathi
Elloumi, Athabasca University, 2004, is concerned with assisting providers
of online education with useful tools to carry out the teaching and
learning transactions online. It presents the theory, administration,
tools, and methods of designing and delivering online learning. This book
can be downloaded in its entirety at:
http://cde.athabascau.ca/online_book/. * The Council of the Great City Schools has prepared this fourth edition of
Beating the Odds report to give the nation another look at how inner-city
schools are performing on the academic goals and standards set by the
states for our children. The report examines student achievement in math
and reading through spring 2003; measures achievement gaps between cities
and states, African Americans and Whites, and Hispanics and Whites;
includes new data on language proficiency, disability, and income; and
looks at academic progress: www.cgcs.org/reports/beat_the_oddsIV.html
Health Literacy: A Prescription to End Confusion is a report from the
Institute of Medicine which defines health literacy as "the degree to which
individuals have the capacity to obtain, process, and understand basic
health information and services needed to make appropriate health
decisions." This report examines the body of knowledge in this emerging
field and recommends actions to promote a health literate society. The
entire report is available:
www.aed.org/iom/pdfs/HealthLiteracyExecutiveSummary.pdf. Cow Poop Powers California Dairy A well-fed dairy cow produces 120 pounds of poop a day -- some 43,000
pounds a year. What to do with all that doo? Dairy farmer Albert Straus
of Marin County, Calif., puts it in a big covered lagoon, where it
decomposes and generates tons of methane gas, which he captures and uses to
power his farm, his creamery, and his electric car. In California, where
1,950 commercial dairies house some 2 million excreting bovines, the state
energy commission recently allocated $10 million in matching funds to
encourage farmers to build methane digesters, and a 2003 state law paved
the way for utilities to set up "net metering" for the farmers, which makes
it possible for them to reduce or erase their electric bills. Not only
will Straus save some $5,000 to $6,000 a month in energy costs, he is
preventing tons of methane (a greenhouse gas 21 times more potent than
carbon dioxide) from drifting into the atmosphere and organic pollutants
from contaminating water sources. Plus, he now has a built-in, renewable
source of jokes. straight to the source: San Francisco Chronicle, Maria Alicia Guara, 14
May 2004
Get 'Slightly' Famous (tm)
The online newsletter by Steven Van Yoder, author of
Get Slightly Famous: Become a Celebrity in Your Field and
Attract More Business with Less Effort
Visibility + Competence + Word of Mouth = REPUTATION Getting Slightly Famous in print media means reaching a larger audience,
rather
than relying entirely on human contact. After all, there is only one
physical
you. No matter how much you network, get around, or attend meetings, YOU
can
only
go so far. Appearing in the media is the equivalent of expanded networking. You reach
a
targeted audience of people who might buy from you, and you build a
relationship
with your target market that can lead to sales. Even if you have a small
local
business, media exposure helps you establish a regional or national
presence
without leaving you