Friday, April 24, 2009

Smithtown Students Garner Essay Honors



Eileen Rowe (Science Chairperson), Ilana Selli, Samantha Mellone, Maria Trinkle (East Research Coordinator)

Smithtown East research program is pleased to announce that Samantha Mellone has placed first in Bodies…The Exhibition Essay Contest. Students from the tri-state area were challenged to write an essay where an analogy was made of a human body system to a mechanical system. Students had to succinctly describe the functions of the body system, the invention of the mechanical system, and then compare the necessity of the mechanical system with that of the body system. An added difficulty was accomplishing the task within a 600 word limit.

Bodies…The Exhibition awarded one First Place and two Honorable Mentions. In addition to Samantha, Ilana Selli also in the research program, placed Honorable Mention garnering two of the top three spots for Smithtown East. The prize is a trip for Samantha and her classmates to Bodies…The Exhibition complete with audio guides, a staff docent, as well as lunch courtesy of South Street Seaport. According to Ms. Trinkle, High School East research program coordinator, “both Samantha and Ilana produced excellent essays. The essays involved multiple steps and they each stayed diligent and truthful to the writing process. Scientific literacy is an important goal for all students, and it continues to be a focal point in our classroom.” Richard Hinojoso, education coordinator for Bodies …The Exhibition, commented that “the essays were creative in addition to being well-written, which was exactly what they were looking for.”

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Happy Earth Day


Earth Day, first held April 22, 1970, is now celebrated every year by more than a billion people in 180 nations around the world. All work together for the common goal of preserving the Earth and leaving it a better place for the future. This photo of Earth is from 2002. Using a collection of satellite-based observations, scientists and visualizers stitched together months of observations of the land surface, oceans, sea ice, and clouds into a seamless, true-color mosaic of every square kilometer (.386 square mile) of the planet. (NASA/MCT)

What are your thoughts on Earth Day and the environment? Click below to leave us a comment!

College Board wants to help immigrants find path to citizenship

By Ben Meyerson
Tribune Washington Bureau
(MCT)

WASHINGTON — A prominent group of more than 5,000 colleges and universities is supporting legislation that would offer some undocumented youths a path to citizenship through college or the military.

The College Board, best known for the SAT and advanced placement tests it administers, is stepping into the contentious issue for the first time just as President Barack Obama is signaling he may encourage lawmakers to overhaul immigration laws later in the year.

The bill the College Board is supporting, known as the Dream Act, would allow students who illegally entered the U.S. when they were 15 or younger to apply for conditional legal status if they have lived in the country for five or more years and graduated from high school or earned a GED. If they then attended college or served in the military for two or more years, they could be granted full citizenship.

Conditional legal status could make the immigrants eligible for in-state college tuition, depending on local laws, and would allow them to compete for some forms of federal financial assistance. A 2007 UCLA report estimated that 65,000 undocumented students graduate from U.S. high schools every year.

The College Board's trustees have voted unanimously to support the Dream Act, said James Montoya, a vice president of the College Board.

"These are students who have gone through our K-12 system and have achieved in a very high manner," Montoya said.

But Ira Mehlman, spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, said the Dream Act allows illegal immigrants to take scholarship opportunities away from native U.S. residents. It's unfair to reward those who violated the law to get here, he said.

"If you ask any illegal alien why they came to America, the answer, invariably is 'Well, I wanted to do better for my family,' and this gives them precisely what they broke the law to achieve," Mehlman said.

The Senate voted on the Dream Act in 2007, winning a majority but lacking the 60 votes needed to end a filibuster. The measure was then folded into more comprehensive immigration legislation, which died. It was reintroduced in the House and Senate last month.

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(c) 2009, Tribune Co.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Weak economy threatens prepaid tuition program

By Stephen C. Fehr

Stateline.org

(MCT)

WASHINGTON — The future of a popular program in 18 states that allows parents to prepay college tuition at public schools is shaky because of recent stock market losses and a wave of tuition increases. The Wall Street collapse shrank the value of many investment funds, out of which the prepaid tuition plans disburse tuition and fees. At the same time, states are raising tuition to help balance their budgets in response to declining tax revenue caused by the recession.

"Just about all these programs are going through similar turmoil," said Joseph Hurley, founder of savingforcollege.com, a Web site devoted to financing a college education. "It's the same dynamic: investments are not keeping up with tuition increases. The irony is, it makes demand for these programs even stronger for families but that popularity translates into more financial stress for these programs."

The Obama administration has made college affordability a priority, through its Middle Class Task Force. Vice President Joe Biden went to St. Louis last Friday to draw attention to the problem.

"The challenges of paying for college in America is well understood," he said. "The growth of college tuition is far outpacing that of family income. No matter what else we do to get our economy moving, it all leads back to education."

Prepaid tuition plans vary, but most are set up so parents or grandparents pay today's prices for tuition and fees instead of the higher costs in the year their child goes to a state school. Those discounted costs are paid as a lump sum or over time through monthly payments that are deposited into a state-managed investment fund. When the child is ready to attend a state college, the tuition and fees are paid from the fund.

The states that have offered prepaid tuition plans, according to www.finaid.org, a student financial aid Web site, are: Alabama, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin. None of the states has failed to pay tuition for plan participants in the current school year, but a few states are moving to bail out their programs.

Alabama's prepaid tuition fund has less than half of the money it needs to pay future tuition commitments and has suspended new enrollment as lawmakers try to save the program. West Virginia lawmakers are considering pumping $8 million into the prepaid tuition program to cover investment losses. The program is closed to new enrollees but still has 7,200 participants.

The instability of the programs comes as some states are reporting record participation by parents seeking a hedge against future tuition increases.

Pennsylvania Treasurer Rob McCord, who has ordered a review of the state's prepaid tuition plan after its assets dropped more than 23 percent, says enrollment in the program rose 26 percent last year. Oregon lawmakers and Ohio education officials, reacting to the demand, are weighing creating new prepaid tuition programs but tying them less to the ups and downs of the stock market.

Another college savings program, available in 33 states, is not linked to future tuition costs. Under these plans, which like the prepaid programs are called 529 plans after the section of the federal tax code that created them, are simple savings plans that allow parents their choice of a variety of tax-advantaged stock and bond funds. Parents draw from their account when the student goes off to school.

Those savings plans also have been hit by the Wall Street meltdown. Between Sept. 30 and Feb. 28, the average loss was 21 percent for the 529 plan portfolios in Morningstar's database, an investment research firm.

The tension over these losses reached a point in Oregon where on April 13, state Treasurer Ben Westlund and Attorney General John Kroger filed a lawsuit against Oppenheimer Funds alleging Oregon parents lost at least $36.2 million in account value because of Oppenheimer's alleged negligence for investing in a hedge fund.

Attorneys general in Illinois, Maine, Texas and New Mexico have launched separate investigations into Oppenheimer, which has denied wrongdoing and has said it disclosed details about the fund's performance to Oregon officials throughout the financial crisis.

In St. Louis, Biden said he would ask the treasury and education officials to study ways of making 529 accounts "more effective and reliable. Their analysis will examine how people save in the 529s, whether they are taking appropriate approaches to risk, and try to identify options and best practices for helping these funds be there for families when they need them."

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

In most of the states with the prepaid tuition programs, officials say, the plans have enough money to cover their tuition obligations — for now. But in some states, the market losses were so severe that officials may have to consider dipping into state general funds, freezing enrollment or raising fees. Only Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Texas, Virginia and Washington guarantee that the state will bail out the tuition program if there isn't enough money.

Florida and Alabama illustrate the challenges facing the programs. In Alabama, as in most states with the programs, the idea is that the state will manage the investments so earnings will grow faster than future tuition costs. That usually works well over time, but the severity of the 2008 Wall Street collapse hurt some state plans more than others. At the same time the funds' value is dwindling, the cost of tuition is rising.

Just two years ago, Alabama's prepaid plan had almost $900 million in assets, which would cover nearly all of its future tuition obligations to families. By Feb. 28, the assets fell to $431 million, less than half of what would be needed to pay future obligations to its 48,000 participants.

State Treasurer Kay Ivey has reassured anxious parents that the state can pay summer school tuition, but the fall semester is more uncertain. Lawmakers and Ivey are working on several ideas to prop up the plan, including limiting tuition increases and raising up to $30 million a year from other state funds.

With an open governor's race next year — incumbent Republican Bob Riley is term-limited — several announced and probable candidates are trying to capitalize on the trouble in the prepaid tuition program to win votes. Typical is U.S. Rep. Artur Davis, a Democratic candidate for governor, who said the losses in the tuition program are "an example of our state government's failing to manage our citizens' money wisely." Ivey, a Republican who also may run, accuses her critics of "petty politics."

Florida has a different problem. Its $9 billion tuition fund is relatively healthy because it is financed through bonds instead of stocks. But the state budget has a $6 billion gap that will require deep cuts to Florida's 11 colleges and universities. To improve its state college and university system, many of Florida's business, political and education leaders have been pushing increases of up to 15 percent in tuition, which is second-lowest in the country.

If that happens, monthly payments in the prepaid college tuition program could swell to $265 a month or more a child, up from $170 now. "The program will end," predicted Stanley Tate, founder of Florida's prepaid tuition program and a Miami real estate developer.

Tate has been fighting an often lonely battle against the tuition increases, waged with $500,000 for newspaper advertisements and a Web campaign. Lawmakers and others who support the tuition increases say Tate is concerned only about holding college costs down. The issue is quality, they say. "Florida has the worst student-faculty ratios in the country," says Republican Rep. Will Weatherford.

Prepaid tuition programs have been threatened before. Ohio suspended its program in 2003 as tuition was increasing. Pennsylvania imposed a temporary surcharge on its payment plan in 2003 because of a decline in the value of its investments. Texas, Colorado and West Virginia also suspended enrollment in its initial prepaid tuition programs.

But this time, there is more discussion in some states of whether the prepaid programs should be scrapped or retooled to avoid the fluctuations in the stock market. "I hope they do survive and find a model that works to keep them going because they do serve a great need," Hurley said.

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(c) 2009, Stateline.org

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Google's e-mail add-ons are fun

By Anne Krishnan

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

The fun folks at Google have been busy developing neat e-mail features within Gmail Labs, the company's experimental testing ground.

Three of the new additions can keep you from sending an e-mail you regret. The two more practical ones are the "Forgotten Attachment Detector," which scans your e-mail to determine when you probably forgot to include a file, and "Undo Send," which gives you up to a 10-second grace period to cancel a sent e-mail. A third, called "Mail Goggles," tries to prevent poorly conceived late-night e-mails by requiring the sender to solve a few math problems before the message sends.

Other features allow you to use Gmail offline, add a to-do list, show link previews within the body of e-mails and expand the flagging icons beyond the yellow star.

To see these and other options, log into your Gmail account. (You can set up one at gmail.com.) Go to "Settings" at the top right of the page, then choose the link for "Labs." You can also click on the little green test tube next to the settings link. Once you have enabled a feature, you also may be able to tweak it under the "General" settings tab.

Clif Dudley of Raleigh, N.C., was one of several readers who responded to the recent column about BIOS errors. His letter was so good, I wanted to reprint it here.

To Stump The Geeks,

The answer to the last question in today's article ... was partially correct, that Windows XP Service Pack 3 was indeed installed. But there are two indicators in the body of the question that point to a very basic solution to the underlying BIOS problem. A person admitting to using a dial-up connection implies a Mennonite type mindset to use a contraption far beyond its intended life cycle. Most of us, in our throw-away society, never enjoy what this resourceful miser has just experienced — a dead battery.

The clues to the problem are the repeated BIOS errors and 12:00 a.m. clock time upon start up. The main board battery can last beyond five years before giving up without warning or a sensible diagnostic error code such as "Battery Dead, Replace To Continue." Merely coincidence that a laborious download occurred at the same time a voltage back up gave up the last of its three volts.

So advising the questioner (who might currently be in the futile effort of updating the BIOS, which if done improperly or with the wrong load, can permanently corrupt the poor unsuspecting chip) to replace the silvery thin disk contained within a black plastic holder somewhere towards the left rear of the main board with a CR2025 battery found at most department stores as soon as possible would be the best option.

How do I know? I have no particular computer skills to note and am often software challenged. But I am one of those Mennonites who has difficulty in containing my glee and adrenaline release when I happen upon a residence with an unwanted computer on temporary display before the sanitation technician crew rolls by.

Regards,

Clifton Dudley

(Think you can stump the geeks? Send your high-tech question to stumpthegeeks@newsobserver.com. Please include your name, address and daytime phone number. Individual replies are not given.)

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(c) 2009, The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.).

Visit The News & Observer online at http://www.newsobserver.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Capture everything your computer sees and hears

By Craig Crossman

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

(MCT)

Something is playing on your computer yet you can't save it to disc so you can play it again anytime you like. It's a frustrating experience when you see something playing on your computer and yet you can't truly own it. When you have something saved to your hard drive, you don't have to worry about the streaming video becoming unavailable later on. The ability to capture media to disc insures you will always have it available to you. But unfortunately too many online resources that offer up streaming video and audio such as YouTube and Hulu offer no way to save their content to your hard drive. As long as these sites offer their content, you can watch it. But when they're gone, they're gone. It would really be nice to have the ability to save these media streams to disc and fortunately Applian Technologies offers a product that lets you do exactly that.

Replay Media Capture is a streaming video and audio downloader that lets you capture an exact digital copy of what you are seeing and hearing to your computer's hard disk drive. This is not to be confused with similar products that screen capture what is being displayed on your computer's monitor. In fact, Applian actually does offer a media screen capture product called Replay Video Capture that copies the digital information within your computer's video memory. But Replay Media Capture works in a totally different way.

When you watch a YouTube video for example, a server at the other end begins to deliver the digital information to your computer. According to Applian, their Replay Media Catcher is able to access those servers and intercept the live stream directly. This process allows you to make an exact digital copy of the streaming media unlike screen capture products that usually yield a capture result that's inferior in quality to the original stream.

According to Applian, Replay Media Capture supports more streaming protocols than any other media capture programs and they continue to expand the number of supported websites that deliver various types of streaming media. Applian's website maintains a listing of hundreds of currently supported media streaming website locations. Check it out to see if what you want to capture is on a supported website service.

Once captured, Replay Media Capture stores the media data as an FLV file that can be watched on the included media player. If you want to convert these files into other formats, Replay Media Capture offers conversion to most of the popular media formats such as WMV, MPEG, MP3, MP4 and 3GP. A special included converter lets you modify these files so that they can be played on an iPod and iPhone. If there's embedded naming information within the streaming data, Replay Media Capture will automatically name and tag the files for you.

Recording takes place in real time so plan to spend some time when using Replay Media Capture. If you know in advance what you wish to record, you can begin the viewing process and work on something else or just go away until the download is complete. Replay Media Capture has the ability to capture several media streams simultaneously making the unattended capture process even easier.

So if you've ever watched something on your computer and have it disappear from the website on which you viewed it, now you can capture what you see and hear to your hard disk to be played whenever you like, even without an Internet connection. Replay Media Capture sells for $39.95 and is available only for Windows.

www.applian.com

(Craig Crossman is a national newspaper columnist writing about computers and technology. He also hosts the No. 1 daily national computer radio talk show, Computer America, heard on the Business TalkRadio Network and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network — Monday through Friday, 10 p.m.-midnight ET. For more information, visit his web site at www.computeramerica.com.)

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(c) 2009, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

How 2... Insert images in Gmail messages

By Etan Horowitz

The Orlando Sentinel

(MCT)

Instead of having to attach an image in a message for someone to open, you can now insert images directly into a Gmail message so they are visible in the body of the message.

1. Log into your account at Gmail.com. Click on "Settings" in the upper right corner of the page.

2. Click on the "Labs" tab under Settings. (If you don't see the "Labs" tab, make sure you have the latest version of your Web browser.) Scroll down and click on "Enable" next to "Inserting images." Click on "Save Changes."

3. Open up a new message and you should see a little picture icon in the toolbar. If you don't see it, make sure your e-mail message is not in plain text formatting.

4. Click on the picture icon to choose the image you want to upload. You can use an image from your computer, or an image that exists online by pasting in the URL where that photo is located. Click "Add image."

5. Your image should now appear in the body of your e-mail message. You can click one of the links below it to resize it before sending.

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(c) 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).

Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

For prom, think pretty not pricey


Prom fashion is all about choice this year, whether it is strapless, halter or one-shoulder style, long, short or in-between, black, white or bright. But for many girls this prom season, the big question is not about style. It's about cost. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel/MCT)

By Jean Patteson
The Orlando Sentinel
(MCT)

Prom fashion is all about choice this year.

Strapless, halter or one-shoulder style? Long, short or in-between? Black, white or bright? Solid color or jazzy print? Plain or embellished with sequins, crystals, rhinestones?

And that's just the dress.

Shoes: heels or flats? Accessories: handbag or clutch? Necklace, bangles, earrings — or all three?

But for many girls this prom season, the big question is not about style. It's about cost.

In many households, budgets are tighter than they've been in years. There is no money for splurging on high-priced prom outfits. But that doesn't mean you have to step out on prom night looking less than lovely.

Here are ways to cut back on costs — but not glamour.

Shop around. Most stores, anticipating the economic downturn, stocked up on moderately priced prom dresses.

At the Forever 21 chain at the Mall at Millenia in Orlando, Fla., for example, dressy designs can be found for about $25. At Macy's and Dillard's, short prom dresses start at $79 — and some are already on sale for even less. Dillard's also is offering $45 worth of gift certificates with the purchase of a regularly priced prom dress on April 17-19.

Shop thrift and consignment stores. This is an especially good year to find prom bargains, says Cheryl Wood, owner of Classic Consignments in Altamonte Springs and Winter Park, Fla., where prices start at $19.99. "Lots of stores are closing, and we're getting their inventory," she says.

Shop at school. A number of high schools have collections of donated prom attire and accessories, which are free to students from all area high schools.

Shop online. But remember, there's no guarantee the dress will fit properly when it arrives, and shipment may be delayed — so allow time for dealing with such problems.

Shop short. Short dresses often cost less than long gowns and are very much in fashion this year. They're also more useful than long gowns after the prom is a mere memory.

Shop simple. Unadorned, clean-cut designs are generally less expensive than elaborate styles. Dress up plain dresses with glitzy accessories or sew on your own trimmings — beads, sequins, flowers, feathers, etc.

Beg, borrow or trade. Friends and relatives are sure to have jewelry, evening bags, even shoes you can use.

Buy flats. They often cost less than heels, are more comfortable for dancing and come in really cute styles. Besides, under a long dress, on a dark and crowded dance floor, shoes are virtually invisible.

Skip the fancy, high-priced hairdo. Keep your hair simple and natural (guys prefer it that way), but dress it up with a decorated headband. They cost just a few dollars, or are easy to make by gluing craft-store silk flowers onto drug-store headbands.

Get a cut-rate hairdo. Ask if your salon is offering special prom rates. Or check with hairstyling colleges, where the cost of services is far lower than at salons.

Skip the costly makeover. You can do your own nails and makeup. Just don't leave your nails to the last minute. And remember that practice makes perfect.

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(c) 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).

Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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National Hurricane Center posts best-ever storm prediction accuracy

By Ken Kaye

Sun Sentinel

(MCT)

The National Hurricane Center again broke accuracy records while predicting the tracks of 16 tropical systems in 2008, according to a report released Thursday.

The center reduced the mean track error to 55 miles when storms are 24 hours from landfall compared with a long-term error of 67 miles.

In the past 15 years, the center has improved track predictions by about 50 percent largely because models continue to be more sophisticated, said James Franklin, author of the report and team leader over the center's hurricane specialists.

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(c) 2009, Sun Sentinel.

Visit the Sun-Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.SunSentinel.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Small School Store Fire Causes Evacuation

By James Brierton
ST. JAMES (TheMatadorOnline.com) - A small fire in the Smithtown High School East school store caused a brief evacuation of the school Monday.

Around noon, smoke began pouring out of the microwave in the school store. As a precaution, the fire alarm was activated and students and staff evacuated the building.

Despite a cool breeze and some light rain, students and staff stood in staging areas around the building for much of seventh period as the situation was brought under control. The St. James Fire Department could be seen arriving on the north side of the building around 12:30 p.m.

No damage was reported to the school store and no one was injured in the incident.

Live: Fire Alarm Activation

Live Posts:
During Monday's brief evacauation, TheMatadorOnline.com's James Brierton sent updates from his wireless device to the Web.

12:20 pm : students and staff remain outside high school east much of seventh period after an activation of the fire alarm shortly after noon. The cause of the activation remains unknown. No fire department personnel can be seen from my vantage point on the north side of the building. Updates on thematadoronline.com as we get them.- james brierton reporting

12:30 pm : one fire truck and a chief's vehicle have arrived on the north side of the building. No visible signs of a fire.

Apx. 12:40 pm : All students and staff have returned to the building

During breaking news events such as on Monday, TheMatadorOnline.com uses remote access to our newsroom to post updates through what is called 'Live Blogging.' Short segments of information, rather than complete articles, are sent from our reporters in the field to the Web. At the conclusion of the incident, the newsroom compiles all the reports and puts together a finished publication.

Cost of college, economic woes have high school seniors weighing options


From left, Alden Mitchell, 16, Rachel Brown, 17, and Sheri Park, 18, critique paintings during an advanced placement art class at Menlo-Atherton High School in Atherton, California, on April 15, 2009. Brown is a senior who is currently deciding on colleges for the next school year. This is the time of year that students and parents must finally commit to the school of their choice. (Gary Reyes/San Jose Mercury News/MCT)

By Dana Hull
San Jose Mercury News
(MCT)

SAN JOSE, Calif. _ Mike Maietta was eating lunch when he got a text message from his mom.

"Notre Dame," it said. "Big envelope!"

Mike, a senior in high school, whooped for joy. The big envelope meant the storied Catholic university in South Bend, Ind., had offered him a coveted slot in its Class of 2013. But the $51,300 annual price tag is a formidable obstacle. So Mike and his parents are considering offers from several other colleges and calculating the costs _ tuition, housing, holiday trips home.

This year, money is the driving factor for a growing number of high school seniors, who are spreading out the acceptance letters and crunching the numbers to decide what colleges to attend this fall. Layoffs, plunging home values and decimated college savings accounts have vastly changed family finances.

"We're ecstatic that Mike got into so many great schools," said Michael Maietta, his father, an engineer at Microsoft. "But if you consider going to school out of state, you've got to think about all of the other costs: moving, flying back and forth for the holidays. You're looking at about $3,000 a year just for travel."

More than 7.6 million students have filled out the FAFSA, or Free Application for Federal Student Aid, a 19.9 percent increase over last year.

The federal Department of Education this month urged college financial aid officers to give more help to families suffering from the recession. And a record 30,428 students applied for 2,300 slots at Stanford, in part because the university boosted financial aid for families earning below $100,000.

Students have until May 1 to decide on a school, and many campuses require "matriculation deposits" up to $400 to secure their slots for the fall. As families weigh their options, some are going back to financial aid offices in hopes that packages can be boosted.

"The most heartbreaking appeals at this point are from families where parents are just being told about layoffs in the last few weeks," said Karen Cooper, director of financial aid at Stanford. "Even those who thought they had a plan in place are scrambling to come up with new options."

Mary Nucciarone, an assistant director of financial aid at Notre Dame, said several families of admitted students are asking the university to consider new information.

"Loss of bonus income, loss of home equity, decrease in assets, mortgages underwater," she said. "People are coming back to us and saying, 'Did you consider this?'"

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Santa Clara University, where tuition, room and board top $46,000 a year, is concerned accepted students may choose more affordable alternatives instead. So nearly 400 alumni volunteers are now telephoning every admitted student; the most highly valued prospective students receive calls from President Michael Engh or Provost Lucia Albino Gilbert.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Mike Maietta got into eight colleges, and narrowed his top choices to a final five: Notre Dame, Vanderbilt, Loyola Marymount, Gonzaga and the University of San Diego.

As the Maiettas turn the options over in their minds, numerous factors come into play. Loyola Marymount and Gonzaga offered Mike partial scholarships, but Notre Dame and Vanderbilt did not. Loyola, in Los Angeles, is within driving distance. But the cost of housing at Gonzaga, in Spokane, Wash., is slightly cheaper.

"Fifty thousand dollars a year is a lot of money," said Mike, who wants to study mechanical engineering. "I'd like to go to Notre Dame or Vanderbilt, but I can see myself at LMU."

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

Rachel Brown was ecstatic when she got a thick envelope from New York University; she's always wanted to live in Manhattan. But given tuition and the cost of living in New York, she's seriously considering the University of California-San Diego.

"The tuition for NYU is like twice as much as UCSD," said Rachel, 17, who is struggling to decide. "My mom doesn't want me to have a big debt when I graduate, and I don't want that either. I'd have to take out a loan for like $15,000 ... I'm going to check and see if there's any way that NYU can offer me any financial aid."

Jonathan Kaslow got into nine colleges, including Occidental, George Washington University and Lewis & Clark. But he's pretty much decided on UCSD.

"The cost of the private schools just isn't worth it," said Jonathan, who plans to study political science. "My mom got laid off from Sun Microsystems and is completely flipping out about money. I can see myself at UCSD, and sometimes Southwest has $40 fares so it won't cost too much to fly home."

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© 2009, San Jose Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.).

Visit MercuryNews.com, the World Wide Web site of the Mercury News, at http://www.mercurynews.com.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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PHOTOS (from MCT Photo Service, 202-383-6099): COLLEGECOSTS

School strip-search case reaches Supreme Court this week

By David G. Savage

Chicago Tribune

(MCT)

SAFFORD, Ariz. _ When Savana Redding, now 19, talks of what happened to her in 8th grade, it is clear the painful memories linger.

She speaks of being embarrassed and of fearing and distrusting a nurse, and of staying away from school for two months. And she recalls whispers and stares from others in the small eastern Arizona mining town of Safford after she was strip-searched in the nurse's office because a vice principal suspected she might be hiding an extra-strength ibuprofen in her underwear.

This week, the Supreme Court will hear her case. Its decision, the first to address the issue of strip-searches in schools, will set the legal limits, if any, on the authority of school officials to search for drugs or weapons on campus. And while Savana's story provokes outrage from many who hear it, the school district warns that its ability to keep all drugs out of its schools must be preserved.

Matthew Wright, the school district's lawyer, said the vice principal was concerned because one student had gotten seriously ill from taking unidentified pills.

"That was the driving force for him. If nothing had been done, and this happened to another kid, parents would have been outraged," Wright said. "If there are drugs and weapons at school, how much do we want to tie the hands of the administrators?"

Only once has the high court ruled on a school-search case, and it sounds quaint now. It arose in 1980 when a New Jersey girl was caught smoking in the bathroom, and the principal searched her purse for cigarettes.

The justices upheld this search because the principal had a specific reason for looking in her purse. However, they did not say how far officials can go _ and how much of a student's privacy can be sacrificed _ to maintain safety at school. That's the issue in Safford Unified School District v. Redding.

Savana was an honors student, shy and "nerdy" when the 8th grade began in the fall of 2003, she said.

She first learned she was in trouble when Kerry Wilson, the vice principal, came into a math class one morning and told her to come with him to the office.

He was in search of white pills. "District policy J-3050 strictly prohibits the non-medical use or possession of any drug on campus," he said later in a sworn statement.

Wilson knew a boy had gotten sick from pills he obtained at school. And that morning, another 8th-grader, Marissa Glines, was found with what turned out to be several 400 mg ibuprofen pills tucked into a folded school planner. A few days before, Savana had lent Marissa the folder. The vice principal also found a small knife, a cigarette and a lighter in the folder. When asked where she got the pills, Marissa named Savana Redding.

These "could only be obtained with a prescription," Wilson reported. Marketed over the counter as Advil and Motrin with recommended doses of 200 to 400 mg, they are commonly used for headaches or to relieve pain from menstrual cramps.

Savana, however, said she knew nothing of the pills in Marissa's folder.

"He asked if he could search my backpack. I said, 'Sure,' " she recalled. When nothing was found, Wilson sent Savana to the nurse's office, where the nurse and an office assistant were told to "search her clothes" for the missing pills.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Savana said she kept her head down, embarrassed and afraid she would cry. After removing her pink T-shirt and black stretch pants, she stood in her bra and panties. She was told to pull her underwear to the side and to shake to see if any pills could be dislodged.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

It was "the most humiliating experience" of her life, she said.

"We did not find any pills during our search of Savana," Wilson reported.

Upset and angry, Savana's mother, April Redding, complained to the principal's office, then to the superintendent's office nearby. Both denied at first knowing that a student had been strip-searched.

"It was wrong. I didn't think anything like that could happen to my daughter at school," she said. "Why didn't they call me? I couldn't get them to explain it."

Contacted at the school last week, Wilson declined to discuss the case, as did other school officials.

When no one apologized, April Redding sued the school district. Her lawyers say the strip-search goes far beyond the bounds of reasonableness, especially when there was no imminent danger.

April Redding says she had a simple goal. "I wanted a judge to say what they did was wrong," she said.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

After the strip-search, Savana refused to return to the middle school. She did not want to be in the presence of the nurse or the office assistant who humiliated her. She went to an alternative high school in Safford, but dropped out before graduating. She is taking psychology classes at nearby East Arizona College.

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© 2009, Chicago Tribune.

Visit the Chicago Tribune on the Internet at http://www.chicagotribune.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

EPA declaration sets stage for more regulation

By Jim Tankersley

Tribune Washington Bureau

(MCT)

WASHINGTON _ The federal government's declaration Friday that greenhouse gases are a threat to public health marked a first step toward likely regulation of the tailpipe emissions of cars, power plants and factories that scientists blame for global warming.

The decision by the Environmental Protection Agency was a clear break with the Bush administration, which downplayed concerns about global warming, and set the stage for a possible national standard for vehicle emissions and other federal efforts to curb such pollution.

The Obama administration already is developing a plan to make the U.S. auto fleet cleaner by regulating carbon dioxide emissions from tailpipes. But the move Friday also gives it the capacity to either regulate larger emissions producers like power plants or prod Congress to set limits, which the administration would prefer.

Lawmakers have begun debating legislation that would crack down on power plant emissions, which generate twice as much greenhouse gas as cars and trucks. But the prospect of the White House taking action could push Congress to come to an agreement.

"The Obama administration now has the legal equivalent of a .44 magnum" to fight global warming, said Frank O'Donnell, president of the environmental group Clean Air Watch. "The bullets aren't loaded yet, but they could be."

Environmentalists celebrated the EPA's action as the clearest signal yet that the Obama administration is prepared to act boldly to combat global warming. O'Donnell called the move "a landmark moment in environmental history."

But critics say the EPA decision, and the regulations that could accompany it, could chill an already recessionary economy.

"An endangerment finding would lead to destructive regulatory schemes that Congress never authorized," a group of eight leading conservative and free-market activists warned the EPA in a letter this week. They added that "the administration will bear responsibility for any increase in consumer energy costs, unemployment and GDP losses" that result.

In its ruling, the EPA declared that carbon dioxide and five other greenhouse gases endanger public health. "In both magnitude and probability, climate change is an enormous problem," the agency declared. "The greenhouse gases that are responsible for it endanger public health and welfare within the meaning of the Clean Air Act."

The ruling includes a lengthy summation of scientific warnings about human contributions to climate change, and of the potentially devastating impacts that could result.

But in finding that greenhouse gases endangered public health "within the meaning of the Clean Air Act," the EPA also moved beyond what most Americans think of as air pollution, said Bill Farland, a former top EPA scientist who is now senior vice president for research and engagement at Colorado State University.

The EPA is equating otherwise benign gases that are leading to rising temperatures with traditional pollutants such as smog and lead, he said.

"Clearly, you can expose animals and humans to (carbon dioxide) without a harmful effect," Farland said. "On the other hand, in today's society there's mounting information that if you continue to release CO2, it's going to be problematic from a climate change perspective."

Friday's decision said that automobiles, which produce about 20 percent of the nation's greenhouse gas emissions, contribute directly to climate change. The administration is expected to develop vehicle emissions limits along the lines of strict regulations that California and other states are attempting to adopt.

Some industry groups said the text of the decision appeared to give the administration an "off ramp" to avoid widespread regulation.

William Kovacs, a vice president for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said the finding allows the EPA to delay emissions limits until technology improves and compliance costs fall, a move he said would avoid "disastrous" regulations that would all but put the EPA in control of the entire economy.

Obama often links carbon emissions limits _ and the price increases they would assuredly impose on fossil fuel energy _ with the creation of millions of jobs through renewable energy development. EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson said in a press release Friday that global warming "has a solution _ one that will create millions of green jobs and end our country's dependence on foreign oil."

The next move belongs to Congress. The House will reconvene Monday after a two-week break, with a major climate bill on its agenda. One of that bill's drafters, Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass., on Friday called the EPA decision a "game-changer" that will force representatives to assume that if they don't limit emissions, the administration will.

Markey was echoed by the Senate's lead climate bill drafter, Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., who said that if Congress fails to pass a climate bill, "then I will call on EPA to take all steps authorized by law to protect our families."

The EPA will accept public comments on its finding for two months, and it has scheduled public hearings in suburban Washington and in Seattle. Industry groups will ramp up their economic warnings. The Sierra Club on Friday launched a campaign to generate a half-million comments in support of the finding and other parts of Obama's climate agenda.

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© 2009, Tribune Co.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Motorcyclist Killed in Saint James Motor Vehicle Crash

***UPDATE***
Serkan Senal, 30, of 19 Orchid Drive, Port Jefferson Station, has been identified as the motorcyclist who was killed in a motor vehicle crash in Saint James on April 19. Valerie Campbell, 19, of 26 Cambon Place, Nesconset, has been identified as the driver of the 2004 Jeep. The investigation is continuing.

ST. JAMES (Suffolk County Police Department) - Suffolk County Police Fourth Squad detectives are investigating a motor vehicle crash that killed a motorcyclist in Saint James today.

The motorcyclist whose identity has not been released pending notification of his family was riding a 2005 Suzuki motorcycle eastbound on Route 25 in Saint James at approximately 1:55 p.m. At the intersection of Route 25 and Cambon Place, the motorcycle struck a 2004 Jeep that was proceeding northbound on Cambon Place.

The motorcyclist and the driver of the Jeep were transported to Stony Brook University Medical Center where the motorcyclist was pronounced dead at 2:20 p.m. The driver of the Jeep was treated and released.

Both vehicles were impounded for safety checks. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Fourth Squad at 631-854-8452.