Grls Brilliant art posters celebrate Star Trek: The Animated Series!
Charter schools, already seeing a surge in students, are getting attention from another group 151; private investors.Entertainment Properties Inc., known mostly for sinking its money into movie theaters and wineries, recently bought 22 locations from charter school operator Imagine Schools for about $170 million. The real estate investment trust acts as landlord, while Imagine operates the schools and is using the investment to expand its chain of 74 locations. They really are an effective source of long-term financing that we can rely on and enables us to do what we re best at, which is running schools, and do what they re best at, which is long-term real estate ownership, said Barry Sharp, chief financial officer for Arlington, Va.-based Imagine. It s a good fit. Charter school supporters hope the move by Kansas C
stanley website ity-based Entertainment Properties is the first of many such partnerships as they deal with increased interest from parents but not more money to build or expand their facilities.In the past decade, the number of U.S
stanley mugs . charter schools has tripled to 4,618, while the number of students enrolled has almost quadrupled to more than 1.4 million, according to the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. While charter schools are publicly funded, they often don t have the same access to bonds and other fin
stanley quencher ancing available to mainstream public schools. That forces many to operate in places like storefronts or church basements, said Todd Ziebarth, vice presid Utae CIA Got Legal Cover From Torture Charges
We ;ve known since the initial
stanley kubek Apollo missions that traveling through space does strange things to the human body, but the initial results from a study of Commander Hadfield during his time aboard the ISS suggest these detrimental effects might be much worse than we had thought. The results of the study, conducted by a University of Waterloo team led by Richard Hughs
stanley botella on, are set to be announced at a scientific conference in Waterloo next Tuesday and reportedly illustrate a number of serious health issues that will confront long-term space voyagers. The most serious of which is a condition that mimics type-2 diabetes. During Hadfield five months aboard the ISS, he and four other members of his crew exhibited both elevated levels of insulin and other diabetes-related blood factors, though none of them actually showed symptoms of being diabetic. Hughson believes that the extreme sedentary nature of the astronaut life in space鈥攚ithout even gravity to force one into maintaining posture鈥攊s a primary factor in the emergence of these blood factors. They [astronauts] are the most sedentary working population that you can find, Profe
stanley canada ssor Hughson told the Globe and Mail. And that not the only danger facing long-term astronauts. As Scott Smith, manager for nutritional biochemistry at NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston, explains, In a month of spaceflight you see about the same change in bone that you see in a year in a postme