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Thenie-Proverba |
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Ndershmeria eshte per sovranet nje takse morale.
--- Bonaparte
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Vizitoret e castit? |
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Kemi 109 vizitor(e) dhe 0 anetar(e) ne faqe ne kete moment.
Ju jeni vizitor anonim. Mund te rregjistroheni ne cast falas duke klikuar ketu
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Perkujtimore |
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Nje dite si kjo ...
2008 Kongresi i Dytė i Napolit
Nė 29 prill 1901 me nismėn e arbėreshėve tė Italisė u zhvillua Kongresi i Dytė i Napolit, i cili nuk doli jashtė kuadrit gjuhėsor, madje diskutoi kryesisht ēėshtjen e alfabetit unik tė shqipes, duke shtruar nevojėn e njė alfabeti latin qė tė shprehte besnikėrisht tėrė tingujt e gjuhės shqipe.
Televizioni Shtetėror Shqiptar
Nė 29 prill 1960 Televizioni Shtetėror Shqiptar transmetoi programin e parė eksperimental, duke nisur kėshtu rrugėn e emisioneve televizive nė Shqipėri.
Deklaratėn mbi Lirinė e Shprehjes dhe te Informacionit
Nė 29 prill 1982 Komiteti i Ministrave tė shteteve anėtare tė Kėshillit tė Europės miratoi Deklaratėn mbi Lirinė e Shprehjes dhe te Informacionit.
Anri Ogust Barbie
Nė 29 prill 1905 lindi poeti i njohur francez Anri Ogust Barbie', i cili pati njė ndikim tė madh nė letėrsinė e vendit tė tij me veprat qė shkroi: "Jambet", "Vajet", etj. Madje prej poezive tė tij u frymėzua edhe piktori i madh Delakrua pėr tė krijuar tablonė e famshme "Liria nė barrikada".
Alfred Hiēkok
Nė 29 prill 1980 u nda nga jeta njėri nga figurat e ndritura tė kinematografisė botėrore -Alfred Hiēkok, mjeshtėr dhe novator i kinematografisė dhe i filmave artistikė nė veēanti. Nė filmat e tij tė pavdekshėm , Hiēkoku , pėrveē regjisė, realizonte edhe kolonėn zanore, edhe ngjyrat, skenografinė e skenarin, madje shpesh ishte edhe aktor. Filamt mė tė mirė tė tij janė: "Lavdia e keqe" "Psikozė", "Hija e dyshimit", etj.
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Ky eshte nje shkrim i New York Times ne te cilin shprehen disa ndryshime dhe opinione ne lidhje me ligjin e emigracionit persa i perket studenteve te huaj ne SHBA.
Duke patur parasysh qe ne SHBA ka edhe shume studente shqiptare, mendova qe ky artikull, megjithese ne gjuhen angleze, mund t'ju duket interesant.
Immigration Policy to Bar Canadian and Mexican Part-Time Students By DANNY HAKIM
ETROIT, July 8 Government efforts to enforce immigration laws strictly since last year's terrorist attacks will bar thousands of Canadian and Mexican college students from returning to school in the fall and cost colleges and universities near the borders millions of dollars, college officials say.
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Under federal immigration law, a foreign student must study full time to be granted a visa. In years past, such policies were enforced only sporadically, and commuter students could easily enter the country. But the Immigration and Naturalization Service plans to enforce the policy broadly by the fall semester and says Congress will have to rewrite the law before the policy changes.
"Currently there is no way for a commuter student to be granted admission to the United States," said Chris Bentley, a spokesman for the immigration service. Mr. Bentley added that commuter students "don't fall under the classification of a foreign student, and they don't meet the definition of the classification of a visitor for tourism, either."
After embarking on its new policy in May, the immigration service retreated a bit and said current students could complete the academic year. But by the fall students will have either to enroll as full-time students or leave their colleges.
"There will be a number of instructors who will not have classes to teach," said Daryl Hendry, admissions director at El Paso Community College in Texas.
The college expects that most of its 2,400 Mexican commuter students, out of an enrollment of 18,000, will not return. It stands to lose $2 million in state financing, as well as tuition losses "too mind boggling" to calculate, Mr. Hendry said.
"Obviously the teachers are concerned, because that's their livelihood," he added. "The students are concerned because they want to go to school."
Wayne State University in Detroit expects to lose more than 500 students, or 2 percent of enrollment, costing $1 million in lost tuition.
"Hopefully, I'll get across for my graduation, if I'm able to graduate," said Angela Lengendre, 28, who commutes to Wayne State from nearby Windsor, Ontario.
"A lot of students were just starting up last year and they'd invested a lot of time and energy," Ms. Lengendre said, "and now they can't get their degrees."
Some of the hardest-hit colleges are smaller ones with slimmer budgets. In Lewiston, a town in western New York, Niagara University has 105 Canadian commuters out of 3,300 students and expects to lose $250,000 in tuition revenue.
"The financial effect is significant on a school of our size," said Linus Ormsby, a Niagara spokesman.
John Bray, a spokesman for D'Youville College, in Buffalo, which has 2,400 students, including 167 part-timers from Canada, said the college would lose $900,000 in the coming year, "a significant financial impact for a small school."
The policy has schools reassessing programs designed to attract foreign students. The University of Buffalo recently began promoting a teacher training institute intended for a large enrollment of Canadians. Stephen Dunnett, vice provost for international education, said that without Canadian commuters, the institute could be cut in half.
"We now have no idea what's going to happen to it," Mr. Dunnett said.
Buffalo State College hoped to add to its few dozen Canadian students by striking agreements with junior colleges in Canada that simplified transfers. Buffalo State also planned a Canadian studies department.
"Now we're saying, Should we even consider going in that direction?" said Muriel Howard, Buffalo State's president.
Ms. Howard, also the chairwoman of the Western New York Consortium of Higher Education, recently wrote James W. Ziglar, commissioner of the immigration service, asking him to rethink the policy.
"Not only would the action unfairly penalize law-abiding students who are seeking to further their education," said the letter, which was signed by 15 college presidents, "but it would also result in significant economic loss."
On the Mexican border, the University of Texas at El Paso has a special program to train Mexican and United States citizens in mechanical engineering, offering other advanced degrees as well. Eric Tiel, director of the department of international programs, said that if Mexican students were prevented from studying for the degrees, El Paso and neighboring Ciudad Juįrez, Mexico, would be faced with a shortage of highly trained workers.
"What affects one side affects the other," Mr. Tiel said. "El Paso and Juįrez are almost one city."
For students like Jenny Stranges, who lives in Windsor and is halfway to a master's degree in social work at Wayne State, being the focus of a security measure is puzzling.
"I guess there is a lot of confusion as to why this particular law would make a difference with national security," Ms. Stranges, 31, said. "It's not like there's a lot of part-time students traveling across from, I don't know, the Middle East."
Two congressmen from border states, Representative Jim Kolbe, Republican of Arizona, and Representative John J. LaFalce, Democrat of New York, introduced a bill last month to create a nonimmigrant visa category to include part-time students from Canada and Mexico.
"If Canadians can come to shop or watch a hockey game, they can surely come to take a class," Mr. LaFalce said in a statement.
Mr. Kolbe said he thought the bill would not meet much opposition, but there is also little chance it would work its way through the House and Senate, and the Bush administration, before the coming academic year.
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