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 Government inaction is to blame for increasing racial segregation in America s schools, according to a study by The Civil Rights Project a stanley cups t Harvard University.Released on the eve of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, the nationwide analysis of enrollments from the 2000-2001 school year found a growing number of black and Latino stu stanley flasche dents attend schools where the majority of students are minorities. Similarly, white students are found increasingly likely to attend schools where most of their classmates are also white. Martin Luther King s dream is being honored in theory and dishonored in the decisions and practices that are turning our schools back to segregation,  said professor Gary Orfield, co-director of The Civil Rights Project.In the South, where civil rights legislation aimed at integrating schools had the most dramatic results in the 1960s and 1970s, the process of resegregation has been most rapid, the study showed. The South went from being the most segregated region in the country to being the most integrated,  said researcher Erica Frankenberg.  Now the reverse is happening.         In 1964, a decade after the U.S. Supreme Court ordered all schools desegregated in Brown v. Board of Education, 98 percent of blacks in the South still attended totally segregated schools.By 1988, 44 percent of black students in the South attended schools that were majority white. In 2000, however, just 31 percent of black students went to schools where whites made up more than half the e stanley cups nroll Rdza Flooding concerns ease in Northern Calif.
 Without synapses, your neurons wouldn ;t be able to communicate and your brain would be little more than a ball of meat. Exactly what synapses look like has been a my stanley thermos mug stery until now, and it turns out that even though their job is simple, they ;re complicated as hell.     You have trillions of synapses in your brain, and when you zoom in, each one is an insanely complex miracle of nature. A tiny biological switch with so much nuance it   mind-boggling. Using a number of techniques like Western blot, mass spectrometry, electron microscopy, and super-resolution fluorescence microscopy, German researchers were able to get a close look inside, and recently published their findings in Science. What you see is a party of some 300,000 different proteins all hanging out in and on a single synapse. And there are trillions of those parties raging in your brain right now. The specifics of what they all are doing is, of course, super complicated, but even someone with half a brain can appreciate how insanely complex our bodies really are. So exercis stanley cup e yo stanley vattenflaska ur synapses by pondering that. You can hop over to National Geographic to see a whole insane video tour. [National Geographic via It   OK to be Smart] http://phenomena.nationalgeographic/2014/05/29/now-this-is-a-synapse/                                                        Science