BOGUS HALLMARK GREETING

I received this email today. Every link on the page except for the link to view the card is a genuine link to the Hallmark site. The viewing link is to an executable file. I didn’t take it any farther than that. You may also notice that “recieved” is misspelled twice. If you’ve opened this booger, you’d better do some serious scanning. If you can’t read this email at all because your PC crashed, well…

It’s always possible this is some kind of a safe joke. It’s also possible that the Bush twins will be going to Iraq — in uniform.  This is especially clever, because if you click on any other links, you’ll get the Hallmark site and are very likely to go back and do the nasty on the other link.

LIFE Network: Environmental Education, Florida DEP

Learning in Florida’s Environment (LIFE) is an initiative to establish a series of field-based, environmental-science, education programs around the state. Each program will represent a partnership between the Florida Department of Environmental Protection and a local school district. The goal of each LIFE Program site is increased student achievement and teacher professional development in science. The content and delivery of each program will vary from site to site, however, each LIFE Program will share a core set of guiding principles:

LIFE Network | Environmental Education | Florida DEP

Will Floridians Vote?

In the past two presidential primaries, only one in five registered voters in Florida bothered to cast ballots.

This year looks different: thousands of people have registered or switched parties in recent months, leading some elections officials to predict the highest turnout in at least a decade.

In Sarasota County alone, 4,200 residents registered to vote in the past two months. Charlotte County received twice as many requests for absentee ballots as in 2004.

More register, but will they vote?

Boynton Beach: save or raze old high school

“All I hear is talk . . . talk is cheap and that’s what’s happened for the past three years,” said Taylor, a member of the Historic Palm Beach Preservation Board from 1988 to 1991. “I don’t see the historic significance. I think it has a sentimental value for a lot of people in Boynton. My school is probably older and that doesn’t make it historic, it just makes it old.”

Taylor, instead, suggests saving the schoolhouse’s facade. And if no one steps up with a solid plan complete with funding sources, Taylor’s ready to set the wrecking ball loose as soon as Tuesday, he said.

Boynton Beach considering whether to save or raze old high school — South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com