Lindsey Girls School Sri Lanka - News


9/11 Day of Remembrance

For more information or questions about the Day of Remembrance, call Malcolm MacPhail at 427-5947. If you know of a Sept. 11 memorial service or event to recognize the 10th anniversary of 9/11, send the information to City Editor Lindsay Weaver at



England v India, fourth Test day four, The Oval as it happened
England v India, fourth Test day four, The Oval as it happened

England v Sri Lanka. Tuffers is getting slogged while Hick takes wickets at the other end." Stuart Broad to bowl from the Pavilion End, while Aggers recalls playing cricket in a frozen lake in St Moritz, after DI Gower had managed to put a car in the




The Zawahiri Era - By Michael Scheuer | Sailan Muslim - The Online ...

LE 2 MAI 2011, the head of al-Qaeda Osama bin Laden has left this world to the next, and the American bipartisan political elite, not to mention the US-Euro war loving quintet composed of Senators John McCain, Joe Lieberman and Lindsey Graham, British Prime Minister, David Cameron, and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, jumped into the abyss of unreality in the surrounding rarefied simple fantasy true. They are behaving as if bin Laden’s death has ushered in an era in which the United States and the West will at long last get their way in the Muslim world through diktat backed by military force, which, of course, amounts to making our little Muslim brothers just like us . . . Au contraire. Since 2001, ten thousand U.S. citizens have died, more than thirty thousand have been wounded or maimed, two U.S. field armies are quitting wars without winning, and the public purse will incur costs estimated at up to $4 trillion when all is said and done. Each component of this laundry list of failures is in one way or another attributable to bin Laden. No individual, moreover, has had a greater negative impact on Americans in the last fifty years. From the way U.S. citizens look at their government (can it protect us?), immigrants (what are they really up to in that garage?) or the police (how secure are our civil liberties?), the assumptions of everyday life have been changed for the worse by bin Laden’s words and deeds. At the least Americans will be able to welcome the absence of a man who for fifteen years bombed their cities, ships and embassies; killed their soldier-children; helped ruin their economy; and consistently made asses out of their presidents and generals. But while killing bin Laden is a significant achievement for the military and the CIA (and for the U.S. public), those levelheaded folks will take it for what it is, a major tactical victory that will only lead to a strategic defeat of the enemy should extreme—and highly unlikely—good fortune prevail. Being a highly talented combination of seventh-century believer and twenty-first-century CEO, bin Laden built, in al-Qaeda, an absolutely unique Muslim organization: multiethnic, multilingual, organizationally sound and resilient, religiously tolerant and militarily effective. We will see in the next few years if bin Laden was the indispensable glue that kept al-Qaeda together or if his skill, his leadership and its nearly twenty-five years of being institutionalized as an organization created a survivable entity. The question on everyone’s lips is whether new al-Qaeda head Ayman al-Zawahiri is up to the job. My own bet is that al-Qaeda will survive, as it did after near economic ruin in Sudan (1994–96); after the pounding it took from the U.S.-NATO-Pakistan coalition (2001–02); and after the U.S. military helpfully killed Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, al-Qaeda’s chief in Iraq (2006), whose indiscriminate targeting of Muslims almost pushed al-Qaeda to the brink of defeat. EVEN BEFORE 9/11, bin Laden made it clear to those taking time to read what he said—not many, sadly, in the last three U.S. administrations—that he knew the war he had declared on the United States in 1996 would last for decades and perhaps generations, and that he, naturally enough, would not live to see it through to the end. Indeed, he often said he wished to die fighting America; the U.S. Navy SEALs should expect a thank-you note from the great beyond. Wanting as protracted a war as possible—it was the only one Islamists could win, and the one Americans would surely lose—bin Laden set himself the goal of building an organization that could survive both a war against the U.S. superpower backed by its NATO vassals and his own capture or death. Concern about al-Qaeda’s survivability is such a strong and often-repeated theme in bin Laden’s oeuvre that the White House’s breathless post–May 2 “leaks” of data from his residence showing he worried about the group’s staying power say far less about bin Laden and al-Qaeda’s condition than they do about the failure of U.S. civilian and military officials to read and ponder their enemies’ words. For all the Obama-administration rhetoric to the contrary, bin Laden’s creation of a survivable entity was an unqualified success. To protect his organization against decapitation—something he knew America’s legalistic “catch ’em, try ’em, hang ’em” ethos would focus on—bin Laden began dispersing al-Qaeda soon after 9/11. The first step was to send fighters home who were not needed in the early stages of war with the U.S.-NATO coalition; after all, the fewer fighters forced to run and hide in the Afghan mountains or Pakistan the better.The second step, catalyzed by the so stupidly 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, was bin Laden and his lieutenants building and strengthening organizational ramifications in Iraq, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, the Levant, Palestine and North Africa. As he drew his last breath, in fact, bin Laden knew horizontal growth of Al Qaeda since 2001 had given him seven places from which to plan, train and launch operations, as opposed to a 9/11-none that, except Pakistan, was only marginally damaged by U.S. forces or Western military over the past decade. He also knew that al-Qaeda’s multiyear investment in inciting young Muslims worldwide, from Nigeria to New Delhi to the North Caucasus, had been a substantial success. More specifically, al-Qaeda’s recruitment of talented, young U.S.


Lindsey Girls School Sri Lanka - Bookshelf

The Girls

The Girls


School, the story of American public education

School, the story of American public education


School

School

After watching the eight oldest children in the mouse family prepare for a day of school, the littlest mouse, Little Bitty, decides to find out for herself what ...

At School, Long Ago and Today

At School, Long Ago and Today

This book is an introduction to how education has changed in the past one hundred years, discussing how buildings and classrooms, books and lessons, recess and ...

Hearts Aflame

Hearts Aflame

New York Times bestseller Johanna Lindsey presents a searing novel of historical romance set in the perilous Viking period.

Everyday Guide Directory


Sri Lanka Sports News | Online edition of Daily News ...
Sri Lanka Under 16 Junior Badminton team comprises 16 players (8 boys and 8 ... Weerasinghe (Lindsey girls school), Kavidi Schadika (Lindsey Girls School), Puneesha ...

Sri Lanka, 9 - 19 - 2008: Top marks in Sri Lanka's Tamil ...
Sri Lanka : Top marks in Sri Lanka's Tamil medium scholarship exam goes to Jaffna (Sri Lanka - latest news stories and top headlines)

Sri Lanka News : InfoLanka News Room
InfoLanka News Room: News Reports about Sri Lanka, updated regularly. ... banning of Muslim girl students in Lindsey Girls School and Baron Jayatilleke Vidyalkaya ...

The Gathering of the Elephants.... " Griffin Girls Rugby 2010 ...
The Colombo Spirit – School Spotlight – Catching Up with Natasha Nats' Perera. Lankan girls finish off in ... of elephants found in Sri Lanka, working elephants, wild elephants, ...

Meredith College : Sri-Lanka Journals
Meredith College,the largest private women's college in the Southeast,offers undergraduates more than 35 majors,internships in Raleigh and the Research Triangle Park, ...