From the Wires

Israeli Schools Under Fire As Underperforming

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Israeli Schools Under Fire As UnderperformingIn this Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012 photo, Ultra Orthodox school children walk to school in the Mea Shearim Ultra Orthodox Jewish neighborhood in Jerusalem. About one-quarter of Israel's first graders study in ultra-Orthodox Jewish schools that give short shrift to subjects like reading, science and math. Another quarter study in underfunded classes in the Arab sector. Israeli high school students rank below average among developed countries on international tests. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)(Credit: AP)

JERUSALEM (AP) — About one-quarter of Israel’s first graders study in ultra-Orthodox Jewish schools that give short shrift to subjects like reading, science and math. Another quarter study in underfunded classes in the Arab sector. Israeli high school students rank below average among developed countries on international tests.

A growing chorus of critics is warning that this is a toxic educational mix that will compromise Israel’s ability to continue generating dazzling technology, an enviably long list of Nobel laureates and an economy that has outperformed key Western markets for years.

“A generation is growing up in Israel that does not know how to count,” cautioned Daniel Schechtman, who last month collected the Nobel Prize in chemistry. He became the 10th Israeli, a country of just 7.6 million, to receive a Nobel.

Parents, educators and politicians the world over bemoan the state of their school systems. But few countries have such an overwhelming number of first graders liable to go through school without cultivating solid basic skills.

In 2010, Israel joined the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, an exclusive club of the world’s 34 strongest economies. At a time when most nations were posting sluggish growth, Israel’s economy — which boasts strong human capital but few natural resources — expanded a strong 4.8 percent. Its technology remained a hot commodity, and living standards are relatively high.

But when it comes to educational achievements, considered by many as an important indicator for future economic health, Israel has had less to be proud about. Israeli teenagers scored below average in reading on the latest OECD-sponsored scholastic tests in 2009 and sharply below average in math and science. Even high achievers underperformed OECD peers.

In recent years, the Israeli government has invested more heavily in education and drafted reforms including higher salaries and additional teaching hours. On Tuesday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he would ask his Cabinet to approve free compulsory schooling from age 3, rather than kindergarten.

“Ultimately, we will be judged on our knowledge economy,” he said.

The government has also revamped curricula to cover material that appears on international tests and focused heavily on narrowing large gaps between affluent and lower-income Jewish students, improving scores in the Arab sector, and bringing up high achievers’ results, said the just-retired director of the Education Ministry, Shimshon Shoshani.

Shoshani is confident Israeli students will perform significantly better on the next round of international tests.

“Generally speaking, Israeli students are more creative,” Shoshani said. “What tarnished our image was the lack of success on international tests. We will show that with investments in education, you can be creative and succeed on international tests.”

In its economic survey of Israel released last month, the OECD applauded the planned school reforms but cautioned that “much remains to be done, particularly as regards Arab-Israeli and ultra-Orthodox education.”

Shortfalls in education contribute to Israel’s high rate of poverty and “compromise the development of the economy’s skill base,” it warned.

Israel’s 20 percent poverty rate is the second-highest in the OECD and is centered largely in the Arab and ultra-Orthodox sectors, both of which have higher-than-average birth rates.

The government, historically dependent on ultra-Orthodox kingmakers in parliament, gives generous welfare payments to thousands of ultra-Orthodox men so they can spend their days in religious studies instead of working. It has also allowed the community to establish a separate, state-funded school system where secular studies take a distant back seat.

Boys study secular subjects fewer hours than their non-Orthodox peers, and only through seventh grade. Girls spend more time on secular studies, but aren’t schooled to achieve academically or learn professions, Shoshani said.

A highly influential ultra-Orthodox rabbi, Shalom Yosef Elyashiv, recently reiterated the call to shun secular college programs, saying their purpose “is to change our way of life.”

Shechtman, the Nobel laureate, proposed that state funding be withheld from schools that don’t offer a strong curriculum of basics.

“You can pray for God’s providence, but it won’t put bread on the table,” he said.

While the religious are accorded special privileges, Israel’s Arab minority, making up about one-fifth of the population, has long complained of widespread discrimination. This has included chronic underfunding of their separate school system.

Arab officials, citing Education Ministry data, say there is a shortage of 6,000 classrooms in the Arab sector even after more than 3,000 were built since 2007. They also say Arab schools are budgeted fewer teaching hours than Jewish schools.

The OECD acknowledged efforts to rectify problems with class size but noted Israeli Arabs performed worse on math and science tests in 2009 than on previous tests.

Shoshani says he expects to see that turn around in the next round of tests “because of the large investments and special interest paid to the Arab sector,” including more teaching hours.

While agreeing Israeli schools need to raise their standards, technology entrepreneur Jon Medved doesn’t think Israel’s test scores tell the whole story. He says informal education, through the military, youth movements, and extracurricular activities, builds skills. He also praised programs for gifted children.

Consequently, Medved says he isn’t worried that Israel’s tech-driven economy will slide because of deficiencies in the school system.

“While I think it’s important to sound alarm signals, I haven’t heard from tech companies … ‘the employees we’re getting are not educated,’” Medved said.

Funky Winkerbean and its creator graying together

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MEDINA, Ohio (AP) — Like two aging baby boomers, “Funky Winkerbean” and creator Tom Batiuk have turned gray and have experienced their share of life’s ups and downs in a 40-year run on the funny pages.

Batiuk, 65, has morphed his characters over the years from mop-headed beatniks to graying 60-somethings, much like the changes for Batiuk, his hair over his collar in the 1970s but now graying and cut short.

The story lines have changed, too, from high school hijinks and awkward teen dating moments in the early years to dealing with more adult issues like alcoholism, suicide and fighting cancer. His latest hot topic story line during May: two boys who want to go to the high school prom together.

The strip debuted in more than 70 papers on March 27, 1972, and has grown to about 400. The first strip introduced the high school-age characters, including Funky (“I’m just an average kid”) and Les (“I really want to be far out like Roland”) and issues important to teens, including meeting a girl, getting a date and dealing with acne.

To Batiuk, delving back into the high school years with the gay prom issue underscores the generational changes and contemporary challenges his characters faced once he decided to let them begin aging along with Batiuk and the rest of us.

“I had crossed the threshold and I had grown up and the characters wanted to grow up too, it seemed like,” Batiuk said in an interview in his cozy and bright studio jammed with books and mementos.

“Funky Winkerbean” might have a lower profile in mainstream culture than, say, “Doonesbury,” possibly because “Funky” was a gag cartoon in the early years when society was highly politicized in the Vietnam era and has become more issue-oriented since the 1990s, said industry watcher Robert Thompson of Syracuse University.

Batiuk has taken Funky, Les and companions up the gym climbing rope in terror, through the ordeal of teen bullying, that first dating kiss and even Lisa’s struggle with cancer. One paper pulled the strip during the cancer story line and complained that it wasn’t funny.

Himself a cancer survivor, Batiuk said Lisa’s cancer, while traumatic for a funny-page audience resistant to change, opened new opportunities for him.

“After that story, I realized that I could go forward,” he said. “It sort of opened the door or me.”

Such issues may depress some readers and turn away younger ones, said Charles Coletta, an instructor in pop culture at Bowling Green State University.

“He’s dealing with alcoholism and people losing limbs and cancer and all at this stuff,” Coletta said. “I don’t think he’s going to be attracting lots of younger readers with this. It’s all sort of, kind of sad a little bit.”

For Batiuk, though, the cartoon’s ups and downs were kind of like growing up and dealing with life.

“It became more nuanced and it became more complicated,” he said.

“And that’s just a lot of fun. The job became more interesting. That’s probably what drives it, gave me a chance to go into these more complicated, more interesting adult areas.”

A strip lasting 40 years is notable but ranks behind the nearly half-century of “Peanuts” or, with some interruptions, the century-plus of the “Katzenjammer Kids,” Thompson said.

The strip is a “very profitable” superstar, said Brendan Burford, comics editor at the strip’s King Features Syndicate, who added that the aging of Funky has sharpened Batiuk’s storytelling.

“He’s been there and he’s traveled that path himself. He’s able to provide perspective from different generations,” Burford said.

Like Baby Boomers facing wrinkles, Social Security and worse, there’s no turning back for Batiuk’s minions.

“That’s a funny thing,” he says, turning the idea over. “Once you’ve taken your characters to a certain point and they’ve experienced certain things, it sort of trivializes that experience if you go back and regress them and go back to a more childish time.”

Aging opens another door for Batiuk: What happens if?

Batiuk wouldn’t criticize end-of-career cartoonists who have passed their strips onto relatives or collaborators, but said he doubted he would do it.

“I haven’t put anything in place like that, but I don’t have an ending in mind,” he said. Still, he allowed, “Occasionally you think about it.”

Batiuk hinted at a possible handling of the story lines.

“When it comes time to finish Funky, I don’t think anything’s going to be solved, I don’t think anything’s going to really be resolved. It’s just going to end.”

Mulling over the idea, Batiuk said it would be hard for someone else to do Funky “because Funky is a very personal idiosyncratic work.”

“My suspicion is when the time comes, Funky will just stop.”

The 40th anniversary was marked by the publication of the start of a multi-volume complete set of the strips. The first volume has years 1972-74 and includes comments from comics chronicler Robert Harvey, who recognized Batiuk’s improving artistry in those early years.

“Batiuk’s drawings become somewhat crisper as he achieved greater assurance in rendering the wrinkles in clothing, for instance,” Harvey said in a foreward.

“And over the years, Batiuk would become better and better at depicting his characters and telling their stories.”

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China denies diplomat spied on Japan

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BEIJING (AP) — China is denying spying allegations against one of its diplomats who left Japan this month after refusing a police request to appear for questioning.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin told reporters Wednesday it was baseless to call Li Chunguang a spy.

Japanese reports say police suspect Li was collecting intelligence on Japanese politicians and businessmen. The case points to enduring mistrust between the sides stemming from historical enmity, economic rivalry, and a territorial dispute over uninhabited islands in the East China Sea.

Liu described Li as an expert on China who worked for the official Chinese Academy of Social Sciences before being assigned to Japan.

Japan’s Kyodo News service says allegations against Li include that he opened bank accounts using fraudulent documents and engaged in unauthorized commercial activities.

Search on for 1 missing in Italy’s 2nd May quake

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MIRANDOLA, Italy (AP) — Rescue workers are searching for one person still unaccounted for in the second deadly earthquake to hit northern Italy’s Emilia region this month.

Sixteen people were killed Tuesday in the magnitude-5.8 temblor that felled old buildings as well as new factories and warehouses in a swath of Italy north of Bologna. The quake, which followed a May 20 magnitude-6.0 quake in the same area, dealt another blow to one of the country’s most productive regions at a time when Italy is struggling to restart its anemic economy.

Premier Mario Monti has promised the government would do whatever is necessary to rebuild a region so important to the country’s economic health. He was chairing a Cabinet meeting early Wednesday aimed at directing reconstruction assistance to the area.

Guitar picking master Doc Watson dies in NC at 89

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You could hear the mountains of North Carolina in Doc Watson’s music. The rush of a mountain stream, the steady creak of a mule in leather harness plowing rows in topsoil and the echoes of sounds made by a vanishing people were an intrinsic part of the folk musician’s homespun sound.

It took Watson decades to make a name for himself outside the world of Deep Gap, N.C. Once he did, he ignited the imaginations of countless guitar players who learned the possibilities of the instrument. From the folk revival of the 1960s to the Americana movement of the 21st century, Watson remained a constant source of inspiration and a treasured touchstone before his death Tuesday at age 89.

Romney clinches nomination, but Trump overshadows

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — Mitt Romney has won the Republican presidential nomination after years of fighting, though his triumph was partially overshadowed by the celebrity businessman who helped him along the way.

As primary voters in Texas on Tuesday pushed him past the 1,144-delegate threshold he needed to win the nod, Romney was raising money in Las Vegas with Donald Trump, the real estate mogul who has stoked doubts about whether President Barack Obama was born in America.

It’s the start of a weeklong push to raise millions of dollars during a West Coast swing as Romney looks to bring in as much cash as possible ahead of a ramped-up campaign schedule later this summer.

“Mr. Trump, thank you for letting us come to this beautiful hotel and being with so many friends. Thank you for twisting the arms that it takes to bring a fundraiser together,” Romney told the approximately 200 people who paid thousands to attend the event at the Trump International Hotel. “I appreciate your help.”

The Trump event and surrounding controversy overshadowed the Texas primary win that officially handed Romney the nomination, a triumph of endurance for a candidate who came up short four years ago and had to fight hard this year as voters flirted with a carousel of GOP rivals. According to the Associated Press count, Romney surpassed the 1,144 delegates needed to win the nomination by winning at least 97 delegates in the Texas primary.

The former Massachusetts governor reached the nomination milestone with a steady message of concern about the U.S. economy, a campaign organization that dwarfed those of his GOP foes and a fundraising operation second only to that of Obama, his Democratic general election opponent. He outlasted a half-dozen Republican opponents to clinch the nomination later in the calendar than any recent GOP nominee.

Romney must now fire up conservatives who still doubt him while persuading swing voters that he can do a better job fixing the nation’s struggling economy than Obama. In Obama, he faces a well-funded candidate with a proven campaign team in an election that will be heavily influenced by the economy.

Romney will continue his push to raise money with fundraisers this week in wealthy California enclaves like Hillsborough, near San Francisco, and Beverly Hills. He has at least one major fundraising event every day for the rest of the week, as well as a series of smaller events.

But the focus Tuesday was on Trump, who once led polls of GOP primary voters. He endorsed the former Massachusetts governor just before the February Nevada caucuses, offering his support at a morning endorsement event in ballroom in the hotel that bears his name. In the same room Tuesday night for the fundraiser, Trump introduced Romney. He steered clear of the “birther” issue as he spoke to donors, though just hours earlier he had repeated his doubts about the authenticity of the birth certificate that shows Obama was born in Hawaii.

“A lot of people do not think it was an authentic certificate,” Trump told CNN of Obama’s birth certificate. Such allegations have been repeatedly proven false. The state of Hawaii recently re-affirmed that Obama was born there.

Trump’s comments, repeated in several media interviews Tuesday, overshadowed Romney’s attempts to focus on failed stimulus projects and federal money given to companies like Solyndra, the green energy company that received millions from the government only to go bankrupt.

Romney hasn’t condemned Trump’s assertions. On Monday night, he told reporters aboard his campaign plane that Trump is entitled to his opinion. Even as Trump-related criticism from Democrats and Republicans intensified in recent days, Romney showed no sign of distancing himself from the polarizing figure.

“I don’t agree with all the people who support me. And my guess is they don’t all agree with everything I believe in,” Romney said. “But I need to get 50.1 percent or more.”

Trump remains popular among the conservative base and boasts ties to deep-pocketed donors. He has recorded automated phone calls for Romney, hosted a fundraiser with Romney’s wife, Ann, in New York, and pressed the candidate’s case as a television surrogate.

The Obama campaign released a video Tuesday criticizing what it considers Romney’s unwillingness to stand up to Trump and the more extreme elements in his party.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, once a rival for the GOP nomination and now a Romney supporter, suggested that the Trump issue will not derail Romney’s campaign.

“Gov. Romney’s not distracted. The Republican Party’s not distracted,” said Gingrich, who attended the Trump fundraiser. “We believe that this is an American-born job-killing president. Other people may believe that he was born somewhere else and still kills jobs.”

Gingrich was one in a series of rivals who challenged Romney during the prolonged primary fight.

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