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Missouri Senate approves education overhaul bill
Jefferson City, MO — Struggling school districts in Missouri could see significant changes under two pieces of education legislation passed Thursday by the Missouri Senate. One measure would allow for an expansion of charter schools in lagging districts, while the other would let the state intervene more quickly and make changes in districts that have lost their state accreditation. Both measures now go to the House. Examiner
Submitted 28 days ago

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That's The Randle Report for April 19, 2012
That's a wrap on The Randle Report for today. Feel free to use the sort buttons above or the search window to find your favorite stories from today, last week, last month or in the last year. If you are looking for more information on economic development in the South, click on the headline above to read Southern Business & Development magazine. If you want to keep up with the South's growing automotive industry, go to www.SouthernAutoCorridor.com.
Submitted 29 days ago

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Gov. Bobby Jindal signs into law measure to revamp education in Louisiana
Baton Rouge -- Louisiana teachers will face tougher standards for keeping tenure, more charter schools will sprout around the state, and some low-income students will get private school tuition vouchers from state taxpayers under a sweeping package Gov. Bobby Jindal signed into law Wednesday with considerable fanfare. Times-Picayune
Submitted 29 days ago

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Guns, or lost jobs and safety
Last week, the Washington Post published an editorial criticizing the Tennessee Legislature's passage of a law -- and Gov. Bill Haslam's refusal to veto it -- that seems designed solely to safeguard teaching in public schools of the pseudo-science theory of creationism as a legitimate counterpoint to science-based knowledge of evolution, and such issues as global warming. Next time, the Post may be writing about the Tennessee Legislature's willingness to sacrifice the state's rising job-creation prospects on the NRA altar of gun-carry rights on employer parking lots, and the parking facilities of public and private K-12 schools, colleges and universities. Word gets around. Chattanooga Times Free Press
Submitted 29 days ago

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Pat Summitt ends reign at UT after 38 years
KNOXVILLE — Pat Summitt is stepping down as the women's basketball coach at the University of Tennessee. To think she's going away, though, would be a mistake. Chattanooga Times Free-Press
Submitted 29 days ago

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Georgia Regents OK tuition installment pay plan
AMERICUS, Ga. — A day after increasing the cost of going to college by as much as 6 percent, the University System of Georgia’s Board of Regents voted Wednesday to test a way to let parents and students make payments in installments. Augusta Chronicle
Submitted 30 days ago

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Pat Summitt era ends at UT; Warlick named coach
Pat Summitt is stepping aside as Tennessee’s women’s basketball coach and taking the title of “head coach emeritus” with long-time assistant Holly Warlick being promoted to replace the sport’s winningest coach. The Tennessean
Submitted 30 days ago

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Pat Summitt Stepping Down as Tennessee Coach
Less than a year after she received a diagnosis of early onset Alzheimer’s disease, Pat Summitt has stepped down as Tennessee’s women’s basketball coach, ending her remarkable 38-year career building one of the signature programs in the sport. New York Times
Submitted 30 days ago

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West Virginia would like to pump you up
West Virginia's not an official member of the Big 12 yet, but the school published what I believe is its first legitimate "hype" video for the Big 12 this week. Even coach Dana Holgorsen took to his little-used Twitter account to promote the video. Here's a look: ESPN
Submitted 30 days ago

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New Report Questions Texas' Higher-Ed Priorities
A new study on Texas’ higher-education policy that is being released today lays out the tough choices that state lawmakers are facing and throws some cold water on one of their prize programs: the initiative to create more tier-one universities. Texas Tribune
Submitted 30 days ago

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Features & Opinion

 
OPINION
By Dennis Cuneo
 

Much has been written about the need to expand and diversify our energy base. With the recent spike in gasoline prices and the Iranian threat to disrupt global oil supplies, some are calling for the equivalent of a Manhattan Project to develop alternative energy sources. Others say that renewables are still too expensive and that we shouldn’t encourage them at the expense of fossil fuels. The highly publicized failure of Solyndra has called into question whether the federal government should continue the U.S. Department of Energy loan program, initiated under the Bush Administration, to provide funding for alternative energy projects. Supporters of the program say that without government funding, we risk ceding leadership of the alternative energy market to China.

 

 

 FEATURE  
By Glenn McCullough, Jr.
 
On February 9 the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission did something it has not done in 34 years: approve a license (two in fact) to build two advanced nuclear reactors. For a consortium of utilities constructing two advanced nuclear reactors at Plant Vogtle on the Georgia-South Carolina border, this means major strides generating 2,200 megawatts of new electricity, enough for approximately one million homes and businesses.
 
 
FEATURE  
By Dan Juneau
 
National, state, and local business groups from around the country opposed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (aka “ObamaCare”) when it was being debated in Congress last year.
Many trade association representatives (including this writer) went to Washington to express business community concerns about the legislation and to request votes against it. History records that the legislation (all 2700 pages of nearly incomprehensible jargon) was finally enacted on party line votes in both chambers and signed into law by President Obama.
 
 
by Mike Randle
 
The headline above is of a great song from the '70s. It was by The Outlaws and was recorded in 1975 (go straight to You Tube to listen to it and bring the entire staff into your C-suite and rock on). I was a student but more like the starting shortstop for the University of Tampa Spartans baseball team in 1975.
 


 

 


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