Republican Glenn Youngkin is betting his road to the governor s mansion runs through Virginia s schools, as he steers the race straight into the contentious relationship developing between some parents and their school boards.He has made education his closing message and is going after Democratic opponent and former Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe on several fronts: the state s learning standards and a debate quote he s fond of bringing up on the trail mdash; McAul <a href=https://www.stanleycups.it>stanley quencher</a> iffe s comment that he doesn t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach. The former governor s remark came as he defended his veto of a bill that would require that parents be informed about sexually explicit content in their children s assigned readings. File images of Terry McAuliffe and Gle <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.fr>stanley france</a> nn Youngkin, candidates for Virginia governor. Steve Helber / AP McAuliffe / Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images Youngkin A group backed by the right-wing Concord Fund, Free to Learn Action, that argues parents should have more of a role in developing school curriculum, is launching a $1 million dollar ad buy in Virginia that targets McAuliffe on education and two alleged sexual assault inciden <a href=https://www.stanley-tumbler.us>stanley cup</a> ts in Loudoun County. The ads go up on TV Friday and run through Election Day. Here s the ad: Pay the Price by Free to Learn Action on YouTube Yxwr U.S. makes Cuba staffing cuts permanent in wake of health attacks
President Obama is in the midst of his first trip to the Middle East as president, a region that many Americans think the U.S. is too involved in. The public is divided as to how effective the U.S. can be in promoting peace there.Mr. Obama s first stop in the region is Saudi Arabia. Many Americans view that country negatively: a February Gallup Poll found 31 percent had a favorable opinion of Saudi Arabia, w <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.at>stanley cup becher</a> hile twice as many, fully six in 10, we <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.pt>garrafa stanley</a> re unfavorable. CBS One reason for some of those negative views may be that many Americans see the country s government as repressive. In April of 2008, 64 percent of Americans told the Pew Global Attitudes Project Poll that the government of Saudi Arabia does not respect the personal freedoms of its people. The public s views of Saudi-U.S. relations are more positive. A December 2006 CNN Poll found more than half of Americans described Saudi Arabia as friendly or an ally, and 36 percent considered it unfriendly or an enemy. CBS News Polls conducted in 2003, just after the start of the war in Iraq, found similar results. Only one in 10 Americans viewed Saudi Arabia as a U.S. ally, although <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.de>stanley cup</a> about another four in 10 saw it as friendly to the U.S. Thirty-eight percent thought that country was unfriendly or an enemy of the U.S. CBS For many years, the polling firm Louis Harris and Associates has been asking Americans to evaluate U.S. relations with other countries. The most positive assessmen