relojes-con-mucho-mundo-619x348Tamaulipas, Mexico, December. 13, 2012. - Official specialists Import Customs and Border Protection U.S. discovered and seized a shipment  French brand watches that proved false or "hackers" valued at $ 83 million.

This is the second shipment of counterfeit watches within 6 months. The shipment was insured at the premises of World Trade International Bridge.

After a legal review and check the Intellectual Property Rights, the use of the trademark was not authorized.

This past July was insured a cargo of four thousand 200 watches "pirates" from Hong Kong, and China, to Mexico, valued at 28.7 million dollars.

"They came to California, with a target to Coahuila, Mexico, Laredo", said Joe Uribe, director of Customs at the World Trade Bridge.

The shipment came by sea ports of the coast of California in the U.S., and from there by road to Laredo.

The original brand of watches was registered French.

[readon1 url="http://noticierostelevisa.esmas.com/estados/537159/decomisan-relojes-piratas-tamaulipas-valuados-83-mdd/"]Source:noticierostelevisa.esmas.com- Translation by Suyapa Ajuria [/readon1]

pilotos-de-jenni-rivera-619x348It was announced that the license of Captain Miguel Pérez Soto, who was piloting the Learjet, had several restrictions. the card was of type "visual flight rules only", meaning that he could not travel at night, instrument and could not carry people. Besides, he was forced to fly accompanied by a Mexican driver. This document was among the remains that were found at the crash site.

However, Communications and Transportation denied it. A statement said the pilot license Miguel Perez Soto, was issued by U.S. authorities for unrestricted flight.

He said that in the area of ​​the accident also found other belongings of the pilot, including a temporary certificate whose photograph has been shown in several media.

He said the ship was brought to the country on August 31, 2012, for a period of six months, and went through an office of admission issued by Mexican authorities

[readon1 url="http://noticierostelevisa.esmas.com/nacional/536703/polemica-licencia-del-piloto-del-avion-jenni-rivera/"]Source:noticierostelevisa.esmas.com-Translation by Suyapa Ajuria  [/readon1]

cementerioprehispanoA pre-Hispanic cemetery, located 300 meters from the village of Onavas, south of Sonora, and about a thousand years old, was discovered by archaeologists, which gives evidence of the ancient practices of cultural groups entity.

This is a site where the remains of 25 individuals, 13 of whom have intentional skull deformation and five dental mutilation, in a statement to the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH).

The archaeologist Cristina Garcia Moreno, head of the research project conducted by Arizona State University (USA), under the approval of the INAH Archaeology Council, said that this discovery realizes unregistered customs in ancient cultural groups in the state .

This is demonstrated in cranial deformation (frontal occipital) in the 13 individuals and modification by the wear of the side of the pieces to give them a "V" said Garcia Moreno.

"The area meets unique finding because mixed expressions of groups of northern Mexico, as the use of ornaments made from sea shells Sea of ​​Cortes, with Western traditions never before found in Sonoran territory. This discovery expands the limit of influence of Mesoamerican peoples farther north than was recorded archeology, "he said.

In Sonora, he said, he had not discovered a graveyard as such, the closest is in the archaeological site of La Playa, where they have recovered more than 400 burials, but stressed that in that place the skeletons were buried in and out of houses , but in this case it is a specific area for burying dead.

"The closest cultural groups who developed these traditions are in northern Sinaloa and the National Wetlands area (southern Sinaloa and northern Nayarit), which incorporated some of their culture and customs of Western Mesoamerica," the researcher.

Of the skeletal remains of 25 individuals recovered, 17 are minors-of between five months and 16 years and eight are adults, only one is attributed to the female sex. The datings performed on human remains Epiclassic match the Mesoamerican period (900-1200 AD).

According to historical sources, he said, the space must have belonged to the old Pima Indians, cultural group in the region, whose descendants moved to the state line between Sonora and Chihuahua.

"It could be part of a settlement located within the area of ​​traffic were the peoples of the west coast of the U.S. southwest trade in turquoise," and then move populations, the Pimas adopted new traditions from Mesoamerica " he added.

The archaeologist said that these findings give rise to other investigations in the southeastern part of Sonora, poorly studied, "the North, the desert, the Northeast and the coast are the most researched, from these findings it is known that the southeast is different from what was known, this side is completely new. "

[readon1 url="http://noticierostelevisa.esmas.com/cultura/536699/hallan-cementerio-prehispanico-sonora/"]Source:noticierostelevisa.esmas.com-Translation by Suyapa Ajuria  [/readon1]

AANNBWith hectic tours to often remote places, the music world has been hit hard by air tragedies over the years. On Sunday, Mexican singing star Jenni Rivera and six others were killed when their Learjet crashed in rugged territory following a concert in Monterrey, Mexico. Here are other famous singers who died in plane crashes:

Famous singers who died in plane crashes

1— Dec. 15, 1944: Glenn Miller, the trombonist and leader of a hugely popular dance band, was killed when his plane disappeared between England and Paris while Miller was entertaining troops.

2— June 30, 1954: Gospel singers R.W. Blackwood and Bill Lyles died when the group’s private plane crashed in Clanton, Ala.

3— Feb. 3, 1959: Rock stars Buddy Holly, J.P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson and Ritchie Valens are among famous singers who died in plane crashes. They were killed when their chartered plane crashed near Mason City, Iowa, en route to a show.

4— March 5, 1963: Country singer Patsy Cline, whose hits included “Crazy” and “She’s Got You,” and fellow singers Cowboy Copas and Hawkshaw Hawkins died in a plane crash near Camden, Tenn.

5— July 31, 1964: Jim Reeves, a country balladeer known for “Four Walls” and “Welcome to My World,” was killed in the crash of a small plane in Nashville, Tenn.

6— Dec. 10, 1967: Soul singer Otis Redding died when his plane crashed into a lake near Madison, Wis.

7— Sept. 20, 1973: Singer Jim Croce, known for hits such as “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown,” was killed in a plane crash near Natchitoches, La.

8— Oct. 21, 1977: Lead singer Ronnie Van Zant and guitarist Stevie Gaines of the rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd died in a plane crash in McComb, Miss.

9— March 19, 1982: Randall “Randy” Rhoads, lead guitarist in rock star Ozzy Osbourne’s band, along with two others, were killed when their Beechcraft Bonanza allegedly flew too low while “buzzing” a band van on tour in Leesburg, Fla.

10— Dec. 31, 1985: Rick Nelson, “Ozzie and Harriet” TV star turned rock ‘n’ roller, died when his plane caught fire and crashed near DeKalb, Texas.

11— March 21, 1987: Dean Paul Martin, former member of the 1960s band Dino, Desi and Billy and son of entertainer of Dean Martin, was killed with his co-pilot. The two, flying an F-4 phantom, were members of the California Air National Guard.

12— Aug. 27, 1990: Blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan died when his helicopter crashed into a hill in East Troy, Wis., after departing from a concert.

13— Oct. 25, 1991: Bill Graham, who built an empire promoting concerts as rock ‘n’ roll turned psychedelic in the 1960s with groups including Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead and Santana, was killed in a helicopter crash near Vallejo, Calif.

14— Oct. 12, 1997: John Denver, 1970s superstar with hits like “Take Me Home, Country Roads,” died in the crash of his experimental plane off the California coast.

15— Aug. 25, 2001: Actress and R&B singer Aaliyah was killed in a plane crash in the Bahamas along with eight others. The twin-engine Cessna went down shortly after takeoff.

16— Nov. 24, 2001: Melanie Thornton, half of the pop duo La Bouche, which had ’1990s hits such as “Be My Lover” and “Sweet Dreams,” died in an airline crash in Switzerland.

17— Feb. 12, 2009: Two members of jazz musician Chuck Mangione’s band, Gerry Niewood and Coleman Mellett, are among famous singers who died in pane crashes. They were killed in a commuter plane crash outside Buffalo, NY, along with 48 others.

[readon1 url="http://www.voxxi.com/famous-singers-who-died-in-plane-crashes/"]Source:www.voxxi.com [/readon1]

thousandsstudents

Michigan teachers statewide are catching flack after calling in sick on Tuesday to attend protests in Lansing where Gov. Rick Snyder signed right-to-work legislation. Estimates show more than 25,000 students missed school.

The Michigan Education Association, a self-governing education association representing more than 157,000 teachers, faculty and education support staff, encouraged its members to join the peaceful “Day of Action,” with Michigan becoming the 24th right-to-work state.

Joining in was also the AFT Michigan, AFL-CIO, which is a union of 35,000 educators working in K-12 and intermediate school districts, community colleges, and universities across the state.

The result left school districts with empty schools and plenty of questions

“Our decision to close school was based solely on student safety given the number of staff who called in absent,” said Warren Superintendent Robert Livernois in a statement. “At the time we made the decision (Monday), we had nearly 500 staff members already notify the district of their absence for today. This number was far beyond the amount able to be covered by substitute staff. [Tuesday] we had a total of 750 staff call in absent, making our decision to close school a very smart and prudent one for the sake of our students.”

Livernois stressed in his statement that the Board of Education didn’t close the schools so the district staff could go to Lansing.

He said, “We are currently reviewing all options related to today’s school closure, especially as it relates to the loss of instruction and the number of staff absent.”

Added Warren School Board Member Ben Lazarus to Michigan Capitol, “I do understand that [teachers] have a political position, [but] the first priority of a teacher should be student learning. I don’t think this adds to that.”

In the Taylor School District, teachers were encouraged to attend the protests.

“A number of teachers have chosen to use a personal day, which is their right,” Taylor Federation of Teachers President Linda Moore told the Oakland Press. She characterized the actions of state officials as making an attack on “our students’ future.”

She added that response among parents and the public had been supportive. “Taylor is a working-class community,” Moore said. “We have received a lot of calls from parents in support to go.”

Union officials are worried what effect the new right-to-work legislation, which was forced through the House of Representatives and Senate last week, will have on his organization.

Last week Detroit Federation of Teachers President Keith Johnson said he’s unsure his union could survive the passage of right-to-work legislation, pointing out many teachers could opt out of paying their dues while the union would still be forced to provide services in the form of contract negotiations and arbitration, reported CBS News. The recently passed legislation bans automatic payroll deductions of union dues.

When visiting Michigan earlier in the week, President Barack Obama, said the new legislation was a political ploy.

“We should do everything we can to keep creating good middle-class jobs that help folks rebuild security for their families,” Obama said, reported the Huffington Post. “And by the way, what we shouldn’t do – I’ve just got to say this — what we shouldn’t be doing is trying to take away your rights to bargain for better wages and working conditions.”


[readon1 url="http://www.voxxi.com/students-miss-class-right-to-work/#ixzz2EsDxwciI"]Source:www.voxxi.com [/readon1]

mayanMEXICO CITY (AP) — The clock is ticking down to Dec. 21, the supposed end of the Mayan calendar, and from China to California to Mexico, thousands are getting ready for what they think is going to be a fateful day.

The Maya didn't say much about what would happen next, after a 5,125-year cycle known as the Long Count comes to an end. So into that void have rushed occult writers, bloggers and New Age visionaries foreseeing all manner of monumental change, from doomsday to a new age of enlightenment.

The 2009 disaster flick "2012" helped spark doomsday rumors, with its visions of Los Angeles crashing into the sea and mammoth tsunami waves swallowing the Himalayas. Foreboding TV documentaries and alarmist websites followed, sparking panic in corners of the globe thousands of miles from the Mayan homeland of southern Mexico and Central America.

As the big day approaches, governments and scientists alike are mobilizing to avoid actual tragedy. Even the U.S. space agency NASA intervened earlier this month, posting a nearly hour-long YouTube video debunking apocalyptic points, one by one.

The Internet has helped feed the frenzy, spreading rumors that a mountain in the French Pyrenees is hiding an alien spaceship that will be the sole escape from the destruction. French authorities are blocking access to Bugarach peak from Dec. 19-23 except for the village's 200 residents "who want to live in peace," the local prefect said in a news release.

"I think this tells us more about ourselves, particularly in the Western world, than it does about the ancient Maya," said Geoffrey Braswell, an associate professor of anthropology and leading Maya scholar at the University of California, San Diego. "The idea that the world will end soon is a very strong belief in Western cultures. ... The Maya, we don't really know if they believed the world would ever end."

As the clock ticks down, scenarios have mounted about how the end will come.

Some believe a rogue planet called Nibiru will emerge from its hiding place behind the sun and smash into the Earth. Others say a super black hole at the center of the universe will suck in our planet and smash it to pieces. At least two men in China are predicting a world-ending flood. They're both building arks.

Lu Zhenghai has spent his life savings, some $160,000, building the 70-foot-by-50-foot vessel powered by three diesel engines, according to state media.

"I am afraid that when the end of the world comes, the flood will submerge my house," the 44-year-old ex-army man was quoted as saying.

China's most innovative ark builder, however, may be Yang Zongfu, a 32-year-old businessman in eastern China.

His vessel, Atlantis, a three-ton yellow steel ball 13 feet (four meters) in diameter, is designed to survive a volcano, tsunami, earthquake or nuclear meltdown, according to the state-run Liao Wang magazine.

Jose Manrique Esquivel, a descendent of the Maya, said his community in Mexico's Yucatan peninsula sees the date as a celebration of their survival despite centuries of genocide and oppression. He blamed profiteers looking to scam the gullible for stoking doomsday fears.

"For us, this Dec. 21 is the end of a great era and also the beginning of a new era. We renew our beliefs. We renew a host of things that surround us," Esquivel said.

In fact, anthropologists aren't even sure whether the end of the Mayan calendar falls on Dec. 21, or whether it's already happened or is still to come, Braswell said. The date is mentioned in only two known cases, including an etching that says nine gods will descend from heaven to Earth. The verb describing what the gods will do is illegible in the etching.

"It probably was a ritual of some sort, and even if we had the glyph we wouldn't understand what it is," Braswell said. "What we know for sure is there's no discussion of the end of the world on that date."

The mystery isn't only inspiring dread: Some are whipping out their yoga tights and meditation cushions and joining a global counter-movement promoting the date as the start of a new era of hope.

Thousands of New Age adherents are expected to fill ancient sites across Mexico in the days leading up to Dec. 21, while their spiritual brethren party in hotspots as diverse as Culver City, Calif., and Byron Bay, Australia.

One of the biggest movements is Birth 2012, which is using the Mayan date to launch what it hopes will be a global spiritual reset. Some 40 events around the world will mark the change.

"We've activated this campaign for three days of love," said movement co-founder Stephen Dinan. "Let's have generosity and kindness be the operative fare, rather than people hunkering down in fear."

In Mexico's Mayan heartland, nobody is preparing for the end of the world; instead, they're bracing for a tsunami of spiritual visitors of the terrestrial variety.

Hotels near the Mayan ruins at Chichen Itza have been sold out, with many rooms booked a year in advance. Volunteers at the Kinich Ahau center — dedicated to spreading the "authentic wisdom of the Maya" — were busy chopping resinous wood to mix with incense for a sacred fire ceremony to greet visitors from around the world. Mass tribal drumming, circles of energy and ritual dancing were also planned.

For Esquivel and other modern-day Maya, Dec. 21 is a chance to raise awareness about rescuing the planet, not prepare for its demise. People all over the world need to focus on the very real damage people have done to the Earth, he said, and sound the alarm about growing catastrophes, such as climate change.

"We're putting in danger the existence of our world," Esquivel said. "It's our goal for this date to create consciousness about our Earth. We want to say to everybody that the Maya live and we want to gather our strength to save the Earth."

[readon1 url="http://news.yahoo.com/mayan-prophecy-sparks-dread-celebration-worldwide-195712183.html"]Source:news.yahoo.com[/readon1]

gaslineexplodesAt least five homes went up in flames Tuesday afternoon and a badly burned section of Interstate 77 in West Virginia was closed after a natural gas line exploded in an hour-long inferno.

No injuries were immediately reported, but firefighters had just begun to reach damaged structures late in the afternoon after the intense flames kept them at bay for several hours.

Several people were treated for smoke inhalation, and a shelter was set up at Sissonville High School, where Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin planned a late-afternoon press conference

State Police spokesman Sgt. Michael Baylous said a slight risk of a secondary explosion remained, but people were told to stay inside their homes rather than evacuate. The explosion occurred near Sissonville just before 1 p.m. in a 20-inch transmission line owned by NiSource Inc., parent of Columbia Gas.

The gas flow was shut off, but 1st Sgt. James Lee said there was still pressure on the transmission line.

"The gas company is doing a check on it now," he said.

Kent Carper, president of the Kanawha County Commission, said flames had been shooting 50 to 75 feet into the air before the fire was extinguished.

"It sounded like a Boeing 757. Just a roar," he said. "It was huge. You just couldn't hear anything. It was like a space flight."

Trevor Goins lives about a half-mile from the explosion and was watching television in his apartment when he saw a ripple in his coffee cup and the floor shook.

"I thought possibly (it was) a plane crash," said Goins, who immediately went outside with several neighbors. "It was so loud it sounded like a turbine engine. You almost had to put your hands over your ears."

He got in his car and drove closer, seeing fire that stretched as high as the hilltops.

"The flames were so high, they were so massive," he said. "I could only imagine what had happened"

Carper said the flames spanned about a quarter of a mile and ran through a culvert under the interstate.

"It actually cooked the interstate," he said. "It looks like a tar pit."

The interstate will be shut down for two days while engineers and inspectors repair the damage and assess whether a bridge was compromised, said State Police Sgt. Chris Zerkle. Route 21 will also be closed until further notice, he said.

Zerkle said a State Police helicopter team was going up to ascertain the extent of the damage while a command center was being set up nearby.

Mike Banas, communications manager for NiSource, said the company was still gathering facts.

"Our first priority is the safety of our employees and the community," he said, adding that no impacts on customers are anticipated.

Sissonville Fire Chief Tim Gooch said a nursing home is less than a mile from the site of the blast, but the patients are safe. Paramedics were sent to check on them as a precaution.

[readon1 url="http://news.yahoo.com/w-va-gas-line-explodes-burns-homes-roads-204556962.html"]Source:news.yahoo.com[/readon1]

americanschoolpvThe American School of Puerto Vallarta is an independent, nonprofit, nonsectarian, coeducational institution offering a bilingual, bicultural education for students from nursery through grade 12. The School was founded in 1986 by local business leaders, intent upon offering an American-type education to the children of Puerto Vallarta. The school year consists of 185 days and extends from September to June.

Organization: The School is governed by a 5-member School Board comprised of parents and interested members of the community. The board has the same responsibilities and authority as private and public school boards in the United States. Members are appointed by a Board of Founders and serve for 5 years.

Curriculum: The curriculum is that of general academic private and public schools in the United States and Mexico. Instruction is in English and Spanish. Both English and Spanish are offered as a Second-Language. Strong emphasis is placed on individualized instruction, Second-Language acquisition, cooperative teaching, and individualized study techniques. Nursery, prekindergarten, kindergarten, and transitional first grade are total English immersion programs. In grades 1-6, students are enrolled in the U.S. program one half of the day and in the Mexican program one half of the day. In grades 7-12, all instruction is in English, except Spanish and Mexican social studies, supplemented by special classes in English and Spanish as Second-Languages, when needed. In addition, there are extensive computer classes, music, art, and physical education. High school students are offered both an American high school diploma program and/or the Mexican Preparatoria diploma program of studies. The School is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, the Mexican Ministry of Education, and the National University of Mexico.

Faculty: As of September 2011, there were 40 full-time and 1 part-time faculty members.

Enrollment: Enrollment at the beginning of the 2011-2012 school year, was 316 (N, PK-kdg.: 52; pre-first-grade 6: 158; grades 7-9: 65 and grades 10-12: 64).

Facilities: The school plant consists of 7 buildings which house 26 classrooms; two administrative suites and one conference room, 1 fully equipped infirmary, 2 full libraries, 2 science and 2 computer laboratories, administrative offices, restrooms, storerooms, and a cafeteria. The grounds include 2 cement play patios, 3 grass-covered sports fields, 2 basketball courts, a running track, an open theater, and a preschool play area. The School's property extends to more than 7 acres, which is sufficient for future growth and expansion.

Finances: The school's operational budget is derived from enrollment and tuition fees. Annual tuition rates during the 2011-2012: nursery: $5,423; PK: $5,423; kdg.: $5,423; pre–first- grade 6: $7,089; grades 7-9: $7,320; and grades 10-12: $7,833. Enrollment fee: nursery: $904; PK: $1,036; kdg.: $1,107; pre-first: $1,333; grades 1-6: $1,440; grades 7-9: $1,476; and grades 10-12: $1,494. New student enrollment fees: nursery-grade 12: $1,538. (All fees are quoted in U.S. dollars.)

[readon1 url="http://www.state.gov/m/a/os/1556.htm"]Source:www.state.gov[/readon1]

Pozos-001In support to the agricultural sector, the Municipal Government of San Pedro Tlaquepaque through the Agricultural Development Division provides maintenance to 106 absorption wells that are distributed in various parts of the different suburbs, informed a statement the City.

Esteban Duran Ramos, head of the agency, explained that these wells will contribute to improve crop yields and reduce the impacts of droughts in time, because they are built on plots, increasing moisture and helps them the crops.

Besides helping that excess water does not damage the roads, because it goes directly to the groundwater and this favors the agricultural zone, therefore, stressed the importance of proper maintenance to each of these when so ejidatarios required.

The 106 absorption wells that allow recharge of aquifers are distributed in the various suburbs of the city, such as San Martín, Tateposco, Toluquilla, Santa Ana Tepetitlán, the estate's Pomas, The Calerilla, San Sebastianito, Los Ranchitos, posts and Santa Anita.

The official said that the Municipal Government performs maintenance actions once the ejidatario requires the support, that is, communicating to mobile 36 01 0119 and 36 01 1405, to be scheduled in the work schedule or directly in the office dependency, located in street 52 González Gallo Toluquilla delegation, with hours from 9:00 to 15:00 pm Monday to Friday.

[readon1 url="http://www.informador.com.mx/jalisco/2012/423154/6/dan-mantenimiento-a-los-106-pozos-de-absorcion.htm"]Source:www.informador.com.mx - Translation by Suyapa Ajuria [/readon1]

seaturtle1The researcher of Jose Antonio Trejo Robles  reported that this year achieved a record six thousand 13 protect sea turtle nests at Camp La Gloria, located on the beaches of this municipality.

The coordinator of the Sea Turtle Conservation said the Department of Sustainable Development Studies of the University Center Coastal South Coast (CUCSUR)  the University of Guadalajara takes various actions to protect sea turtles .

They work to contribute to the conservation of sea turtles in the state of Jalisco by implementing strategies to profitability and taking responsibility of local communities.

He noted that to prevent poaching, slaughter of females and traffic products perform protection strategies, research and monitoring, environmental education and community involvement.

He stressed that the results of the 2012 Programme of the Sea Turtle Conservation of CUCSUR at Camp La Gloria in 2012 "are excellent, registering record compared to the 27 past years of work, to get six thousand 13 nests protected this year. "

He regretted that 171 thousand and 289 nests were poached females were sacrificed (whose remains were found in the area), but estimates that the number of turtles killed could rise to 489 by certain evidence found throughout the year.

He noted that in 2010 had five thousand 170 protected nests, eggs protected 493,000,686, 379,000,527 hatchlings released, and in 2011 four thousand 250 nests protected, protected 395,000 250 eggs, and 276,000,201 hatchlings released.

"So in the last three years are reported nests protected 15,000 433,481,000,261  million eggs protected, and a million 101,000 114 hatchlings released," he said.

He stressed that to achieve these results conducted patrols on the beach, collecting turtle nests, incubating eggs, hatchlings released to the sea, voluntary participation of fishing cooperatives and ejidos, coordination with government agencies, and support from domestic and foreign volunteers

[readon1 url="http://www.informador.com.mx/jalisco/2012/423154/6/dan-mantenimiento-a-los-106-pozos-de-absorcion.htm"]Source:www.informador.com.mx - Translation by Suyapa Ajuria [/readon1]

acedulasninosIn the presence of educational authorities, students, teachers and parents, Jalisco Secretary of Education, José Antonio Gloria Morales, delivered 24 Personal identity cards to students at Benito Juarez Elementary School Night, located in Colonia Echeverría in Guadalajara the beginning of a series of deliveries throughout the state.

He said the Personal Identity Card is an important document because it not only gives identity to children, but also is an identification that says who you are, what's his name, all your data and it helps them to an institution that requires a identification.

He said that with this record students are safer, because of the risk of lost and someone finds and exploits in an illegal manner, thus with the Personal Identity Card will be protected because they have a full identification of those who are .

"It is a very important document, no other identification other children there and make it official today adults over 18 have the voter and ask us everywhere as well identifying children may be able to clearly identified, "he said.

He explained that the evening schools are important to Jalisco, with 50 campuses of the modality and about three thousand students, for whom this option is the best opportunity to stay in school and complete primary school.

The head of the agency said that the living conditions of night school a child, are more difficult than children attending in the morning or afternoon.

"It takes courage to after a day of work all day, still come to school to study it requires courage, character and enthusiasm made ??the effort worth much and is an engine that will help you move forward and continue their studies in secondary school and the University, "he said.

Meanwhile, the rector of the Universidad Tecnológica de Jalisco (UTJ), Jose Antonio Herrera Lomeli, said the Personal Identity Card means that all students are unique and unrepeatable and for this university, is a joy to be part of this program.

Lomeli Herrera noted that the Secretary of Education Jalisco entrusted year and a half ago the task of registering the children most of the state, "Today we meet the goal over a million records around 100,000 Jalisco, now the task is deliver the identity card and as we have a higher voter presume that sometimes, children also may assume his identity card bearing his photograph, "he said.

The principal of Benito Juarez Elementary School Night, Alicia Gamez Margarita Diaz, thanked the support that has been given to this campus and the needs of their students and reported that this school has support programs like "school lunches" "See Well to Learn Better", "School for Parents" and especially the delivery of credentials to children.

[readon1 url="http://www.vallartatoday.com"]Source:vallartatoday.com - Translation by Suyapa Ajuria[/readon1]