doing something on emergent relief is very, very difficult. you look for a reputable horn in success, and two things that they won t be able to carry the water on this in case. so allison, come wednesday, we will have gay marriages tuesday night at midnight into wednesday morning, they will start again in california? i am not sure, and the reason is because the last time this happened, and there was a problem, and this supreme court said, yes, we will uphold prop 8, however, those marriages that came before those 18,000 are still valid. so this argument now is, wait a minute, there will be a lot of confusion if it later turns out that prop 8 is still the law in california. let s not let those floodgates open just yet. and confusion to the state? or confusion to the individuals? the argument in their 73-page emergency motion was both, that it will be confusion to the state, that we will now, every county clerk s office will have
bars if he is convicted. the conservative group that pushed for the same-sex marriage in california has filed an appeal to stop the marriages from being stopped in the state. it is being considered by three appellant judges and if they refuse to intervene, same sex couples can marry again in california resuming wednesday. to talk about this is karen desoto and allison triso. thank you both. karen, this group, project marriage is appealing the judge against the august 4th ruling of the gay marriage ban is unconstitutional and they want to stop gay marriages from taking place until the appeals court has been able to weigh in, right? right. they are not going beyond that at this point? no, what they want right now is they want a stay, and hold off, and let the 9th circuit do the appeal, but unfortunately,
and say, well, this applies to us, and here is why. okay. well, allison from california, we should say, and karen desoto in from new jersey. thank you, ladies. now continuing the special week long coverage of the crisis of education in america, and our series called making the grade. several public schools are looking abroad for picking up new techniques and solutions. rehama ellis has this story. reporter: life can be hard in this area, with 1,100 students at this school. for a year, there was no permanent science teacher here, and similar teacher shortages district-wide. i have more challenging working environments. i have higher class sizes, and lower salariesalaries, and not conditions that compete with my more wealthy suburban neighbors. reporter: desperate,