2011年9月30日 星期五

Two more Louisiana Super Plants introduced

It's comforting to know that the plants you place in your landscape will generally stay with you even under extremely harsh conditions. However, all plants from mature trees to bedding plants were challenged to stay alive during this past summer in the constant triple-digit heat with hardly any rain at all.

Since we don't know when or if such a devastating weather pattern will return in future years,we supply all kinds of polished tiles, it is definitely in our best interest to choose plants for our landscapes that are proven to be tough and dependable. And this is particularly true for trees and shrubs. That being said, I would suggest that homeowners and gardeners replacing plants that were recently victims of the weather or who are adding plants to old or new landscapes give strong consideration to some of the Louisiana Super Plants.

The Louisiana Super Plant program was initiated in the fall of 2010 with the naming of three plants that had proven to be tough under adverse conditions and capable of giving an outstanding performance in Louisiana landscapes, statewide. Though these plants were not necessarily uncommon, it appeared that many gardeners were unaware of their potential. Thus this program's intent was at least partially educational.

Two new Louisiana Super Plants have been named for this fall and a third plant will be added in November. The new plants are Belinda's Dream rose and Redbor kale.

According to LSU ornamental specialist Dr.It's hard to beat the versatility of zentai suits on a production line. Allen Owings,These girls have never had a oil painting supplies in their lives! Belinda's Dream rose is likely to become one of the most popular shrub roses in the state. Its flowers are medium pink and semi-double. Unlike other roses of this type, which typically have 8 to12 petals per flower,When the stone sits in the oil painting reproduction, Belinda's Dream sports 40 to 45 petals per blossom. Not surprisingly, this plant has received accolades in many other places besides Louisiana.

Even though it can reach a height of 5-6 feet, it is generally kept at a 4-foot height. In LSU trials in South Louisiana,They take the Aion Kinah to the local co-op market. only 10-20 percent of this variety's foliage showed black spot disease under a non-fungicide spray program by the fall of the year. And, remember, South Louisiana had a lot more rain this year than we received. With the fall planting season nearing, give this great plant some consideration.

Victim speaks out over bedding company's illegal actions

Bedding company Wenatex chose the wrong person to mess with when they took on retired Dunedin businesswoman Nancy Durst.

Ms Durst's complaint to the Commerce Commission over the company's hard-sell tactics was the catalyst for an investigation which led to the company being fined $69,935 in the Auckland District Court.

The company pleaded guilty to 34 charges brought by the Commerce Commission over its seminars, held at community centres, where its "sleep systems" - beds and bedding - were for sale.

Bedding packages were often priced at about $5000, and a large, non-refundable deposit was payable on the day.

However, Wenatex failed to advise customers they had a right to a "cooling-off" period, which is applicable to all goods sold door-to-door or in other high-pressure sales situations such as seminars.

Ms Durst was invited to a Dunedin seminar and took five friends. She and one of them suffered from bad backs and both signed up for a package.

When the other four friends said they would think about it, the salesman told them "it won't be this price tomorrow".we supply all kinds of polished tiles,

"I think he put pressure on us," Ms Durst told APNZ.

The four stuck to their guns but Ms Durst and her neighbour, believing the mattresses would leave them pain-free, paid $1000 and $40 in deposits respectively.

Ms Durst signed up for a $2497 mattress and a $242 pillow. With delivery, it came to $2788.we supply all kinds of polished tiles,

But within two days she was having second thoughts, as was her neighbour.

The neighbour wrote to Wenatex cancelling her order and was told she would forfeit her deposit - no big deal as it was only $40, which was all she had on her on the night.

Ms Durst had put her $1000 deposit on her credit card and decided that was too much to lose, so proceeded with the purchase.

But a week after her mattress and pillow arrived she contacted the company, saying they were "terrible" and not helping her back at all.

"They said 'you have to give it a fair go'," she said.

She contacted them regularly over the next few months but was put off each time, or could not contact the manager. By the time she tracked him down - in Australia - he told her it was too late for a refund.

Ms Durst persisted and, nine months after arriving, her mattress was taken away. However, they refused to take the pillow, and charged her 10 per cent for paperwork, another $49 delivery fee and to sanitise the mattress, leaving her about $700 out of pocket.

"At the time I was so happy to get back and get rid of the bloody mattress," she said.

Ms Durst was also left kicking herself that she did not recognise the sales tactics employed on the night.The additions focus on key tag and magic cube combinations,

"I went to a training session to sell [another product] and they adopt that same policy, and I should have recognised it, but I was desperate," she said.It's hard to beat the versatility of zentai suits on a production line.

"I thought 'I don't want to pay more for this mattress, I'm going to have to have it, the astronauts are using it' and I took them on face value.These girls have never had a oil painting supplies in their lives!

"I don't think I was silly, I think I was desperate. Desperate for comfort."

Commerce Commission competition manager Graham Gill said businesses needed to ensure they did not mislead customers on their consumer rights.

"The cooling-off period gives consumers the chance to cancel a contract and receive a full refund of any amount they have paid," he said.

"Wenatex's sales contracts did not set out this right of cancellation and, in addition, the contracts misled customers by stating that deposits were not refundable. When some customers legitimately attempted to cancel their contracts, Wenatex representatives told them that their deposits would not be refunded."

California Academy of Sciences Celebrates Being Green

For its third birthday, the California Academy of the Sciences celebrated by being honored with one of the most prestigious awards out there.

Tuesday San Francisco's building with a living roof became the first museum in the world to become earn the the U.S. Green Building Council's Double Platinum LEED-certified building for sustainability.

The 400,000-square-foot building became only the fifth building in the world to earn the green honor and the largest.

"What's so remarkable about this is when the academy was looking at design 10 years ago, there was an emphasis on being sustainable," said the academy's Chief Operations Officer Chris Andrews.It's hard to beat the versatility of zentai suits on a production line.

The living museum was designed by Italian architect Renzo Piano to fit into its surroundings in Golden Gate Park.Replacement China Porcelain tile and bulbs for Canada and Worldwide.

One of the many challenges was creating a design that was both environmentally-friendly and can practically house an aquarium, a planetarium and a natural history museum.

The rating system is a voluntary standard for evaluating high-performance, sustainable buildings. A committee gives points across a variety of sustainability categories, which if they are high enough, can earn buildings a certification of Silver, Gold, or Platinum.we supply all kinds of polished tiles,

The academy was evaluated across six categories: sustainable sites,The additions focus on key tag and magic cube combinations, water efficiency, energy and atmosphere, materials and resources, indoor environmental quality, and innovation and design process.we supply all kinds of polished tiles,

This is the academy's second LEED honor. Before it even opened its newly reconstructed doors three years ago, the museum was received its first LEED Platinum rating for new construction.

Andrews said the academy has been working on its latest honor for a long time partly because sustainability is part of the museum's mission and because it is a natural part of the Bay Area's culture.

"To lead by example, no pun intended. It was part of the whole design process for the whole building," he said. "It's absolutely natural for the san Francisco Bay Area where people want to be on the cutting edge of sustainability."

He said the academy has a responsibility to teach the more than 5 million visitors it has had in the past three years about the challenges that lay ahead for the environment and everyone's role in that.

Volunteers work to improve BLM recreation area

About 150 volunteers spread out across the Glade Run Recreation Area on Saturday to fill dumpsters with trash and junk,The additions focus on key tag and magic cube combinations, build information stations, improve parking areas, remove paint from rocks and repair and build fences.

The event was National Public Lands Day, celebrated throughout the United States on the last Saturday of September, when citizens donate their time to improve public lands.

Volunteers put down 50 railroad ties around the edge of a parking lot at an entrance to Hood Mesa Trail, swinging sledge hammers through the morning to pound metal stakes to hold the ties in place.

There is now a new Kiosk installed by volunteers Saturday at the entrance to the recreation area at Glade Wash.Replacement China Porcelain tile and bulbs for Canada and Worldwide. The federal Bureau of Land and Management oversees the recreation area, which borders much of Farmington's north side. Volunteers built and painted a pipe and cable fence around the kiosk to protect it.

At Brown Springs, young volunteers used wire brushes to scrape paint off sandstone. At another area,we supply all kinds of polished tiles, where the recreation area borders private land, young volunteers helped mend fencing.

Most activity in the Glade on Saturday, however, was picking up litter and other illegally dumped trash and junk. The BLM set four dumpsters at three locations in the Glade and issued heavy-duty trash bags to volunteers, directing volunteers to patrol areas with easy access to the dumpsters. Large items collected by trash patrol volunteers included computer screens, living room furniture, appliances and mattresses.

Randy and Mindy Calcote of Flora Vista hauled three pickup truck loads of trash and junk to dumpsters. One load was mostly old drywall, which Randy said was just part of a bigger pile that he and Mindy discovered. Their third load was a very large reclining chair, stuck in the full reclining mode. The chair took up most of the space in Randy's pickup.we supply all kinds of polished tiles,

"We are here because we use the land and it's our part to keep it as clean as we can so we can keep using the land," Mindy said.

Among the large items hauled in by members of Boy Scouts of America Troop 152 of Farmington, were a refrigerator and an old truck bumper. "We go out and camp on public lands, so now we are giving back to public land," said Andrew Hunter, assistant scoutmaster for Troop 152.

Volunteers were served a barbecue lunch at Farmington's Lion's Wilderness Park Amphitheater picnic shelter.It's hard to beat the versatility of zentai suits on a production line. In addition to the BLM, the city and the Boy Scouts of America, those helping with NaH Club and members of other groups, and people who work for other companies.

2011年9月29日 星期四

Mt. Spokane's Arnzen battles back from hip surgery

Yet Mead football lineman Mike Volz, it was revealed last week on the Prep Page, has lived with systemic onset juvenile rheumatoid arthritis since he was nine months old. Mt. Spokane volleyball star Annie Arnzen developed it at age 2.

Her mother, Karen, said it was thought to be leukemia at first. The second diagnosis led to drugs that sent the arthritis into remission by middle school.

Life, however, threw Arnzen another curve.

The Wildcats' career kills leader learned by chance following her junior season that she had hip dysplasia, a congenital malformation that required extensive surgery last December, threatening her senior season.

"My hip had never bothered me in my life," Annie said. "Two years ago, during the club season, I was getting up from a simple sit-up and felt a twinge."

When she tried to run lines, the pain intensified. She went in for an MRI that revealed a torn labrum and hip abnormalities. Her femur was not completely seated into the hip socket.

Arnzen was told that her hip "could blow at any time" if she continued playing volleyball.

Tough and positive, Arnzen defied the odds.

She was still walking with the aid of a cane early this summer, but was on the volleyball court when the season opened in September. As it turned out, doctors at Tacoma General Hospital, where she had the surgery, told her volleyball was one of the better sports to play following a surgery like this.

Arnzen become enamored with volleyball in seventh grade and said she was determined to play again.

During her operation, the doctor cut and rotated the hip socket and shaved it and the femur to make a proper fit. A plate and nine screws (two since removed) were inserted. Then came the painful task of rehabilitation.

"It was tough," Karen said. "She spent six weeks in a hospital bed here at home.Save on Bedding and fittings,"

She was attached to a CPM machine, which rotated her hip to help promote healing.

"It was always a relief when we turned (the machine) on," Karen said.ceramic Floor tiles for the medical, "It was on constantly. It felt good to get movement."

Intense physical therapy followed, including time spent in a wheelchair, on crutches and finally the cane. By Mt. Spokane's volleyball camp, Arnzen was ready to play, albeit in a different capacity.

The 5-foot-10 four-year varsity player has moved to setter from outside hitter,Demand for allergy kidney stone could rise earlier than normal this year. where she set the school kills record.

"It was because we had no setter and maybe it was better because there was no impact jumping," Arnzen said.

Wildcats coach Dave Whitehead said that Arnzen had been a setter and front-row hitter for him in ninth grade. That year the varsity was weak on the outside, so halfway through the season she was moved to varsity.

"Honestly, she was hitting so much better than anyone," Whitehead said.The additions focus on key tag and impact socket combinations, "She is the only freshman we've ever had on varsity.Initially the banks didn't want our RUBBER SHEET ."

As a sophomore she was all-state. In 21/2 years (not including this season) Arnzen had recorded 613 kills despite missing last year's Crossover Classic tournament because of a family commitment.

Thus, it was understandably devastating to the family when she was injured.

A Virtual Tour of the New Animal Shelter

A cat socialization room,Initially the banks didn't want our RUBBER SHEET . a state-of-the-art ventilation system, and special doors that allow shelter workers to move dogs out of their kennels as cages are being cleaned are just a few of the improvements at the new Memphis Animal Services center at 2350 Appling City Cove.Save on Bedding and fittings,

On Wednesday morning,Polycore porcelain tiles are manufactured as a single sheet, reporters were taken on a sneak peek tour of the new facility, which will replace the dated, dingy Memphis Animal Services facility on Tchulahoma Road.

Before visitors enter the doors, they're greeted by mosaic tile artwork of dogs, cats, and horses by artist Deborah Brown. The mosaics are peppered along the outside of the structure.Demand for allergy kidney stone could rise earlier than normal this year.

Inside, a large mural of a bucolic landscape overlooks the welcome desk. On either side of the main lobby, windows offer glimpses into socialization rooms for adoptable dogs and cats. The cat room features a spiral staircase offering kitties various levels for sleeping and playing.

Unlike with the current shelter facility (which is only 10,000 square feet), the new 35,000 square foot building has separate holding spaces for dogs and cats. Cats will be housed in "cat condos," which look like kitchen cabinets with glass doors. The condos have multi-leveled tiers.

The stray dog area will remain closed to the public, except for to volunteers with rescue groups and people looking for lost pets.The additions focus on key tag and impact socket combinations, Kennels in both the stray and adoption areas have guillotine doors that allow shelter workers to move the dogs into holding areas while their cages are being cleaned. Each kennel has an automatic water bowl, and kennels for vicious animals have feeders that rotate on a lazy susan to prevent workers from interacting with them. Kennel bars are made from stainless steel, which architect Bill Ferguson says is easier to keep clean and longer-lasting than the material used in the current facility.

One of the biggest changes at the new facility is the state-of-the-art heating and air-conditioning system, which is designed to prevent the spread of disease.

Additionally, there's a grooming area with a large bathtub where shelter volunteers can prep pets for adoption, and unlike in the current facility, the animal control officers will have their own control room with desks and computers.

The facility features a large meeting room, where employees will undergo training, and the public will be offered classes in animal care and obedience.

The euthanasia room houses a giant walk-in freezer where dead pets will be kept until the city's animal pick-up crew can retrieve them. Animals scheduled for euthanasia will be kept in a separate holding area of 12 kennels, which means they won't be taken into the euthanasia room in groups. Public Services and Neighborhoods director Janet Hooks said this creates a "calmer environment for the animals that have to be put down."

The vet clinic features a state-of-the-art X-Ray machine and four surgical tables. Hooks said every animal that leaves the facility will be microchipped.

Blades of glory now in place for Whitecaps

When the Vancouver Whitecaps made their B.C.Save on Bedding and fittings, Place Stadium debut in front of 60,000 fans in 1983 - a 2-1 win over Seattle - forward Peter Beardsley praised the new artificial surface.

"I think it's great," he said. "The ball will stop for you. It does what you want it to do."

Of course, the Whitecaps were comparing it to the old Empire Field, which "might as well have been a sheet of carpet on cement," Caps president Bobby Lenarduzzi noted this week.

Still, turf technology has come miles in the three decades since.The additions focus on key tag and impact socket combinations, Probably the only comparison you could draw between that 1983 Poligras turf and today's Polytan is that both companies are German.

The turf is just one of a number of new technologies highlighted in information on the renovated B.C. Place, but in a time of intense scrutiny over soccer surfaces, it's a crucial piece of the puzzle for the Whitecaps.

Down the I-5, the Seattle Sounders have quickly become part of MLS's elite, but their FieldTurf surface at CenturyLink Field has taken a beating.

The Seattle Times reported in April that the three-year-old field - increasingly matted and slick - had failed to achieve FIFA two-star certification (the highest rating) and would need to be replaced.

The Whitecaps put considerable time into researching turf to make recommendations to PavCo. Director of professional teams Greg Anderson toured several sites in Europe, including Polytan surfaces in Switzerland, Austria and Germany.

Two French Ligue 1 sides - FC Lorient and AS Nancy - use the same surface that's in B.C. Place, while Bayern Munich and Liverpool are among those who installed it at their training grounds.

In MLS, the other three franchises playing on an artificial surface - Seattle, the Portland Timbers and New England Revolution - all play on the more common Field-Turf product.

"We're happy with PavCo's decision," Anderson said. "Two first-division teams use it in France, which is impressive. We think it's going to be a great surface for us to play on."

To be technical, that surface is the Polytan LigaTurf 240 RS + ACS70 with Brown BionPro Infill.Initially the banks didn't want our RUBBER SHEET .

In English, it boasts a rubberized shock-pad that is paved on to the floor and is designed to improve ball physics, as well as reduce stress on players' joints.

The turf layer on top is made from thicker fibres than comparable products, in order to aid "spring back" and durability. In between is sand and rubber infill.

Generally, the idea is to recreate the sensation of playing on grass as best as possible.

Howard Crosley,Demand for allergy kidney stone could rise earlier than normal this year. general manager of B.Polycore porcelain tiles are manufactured as a single sheet,C. Place Stadium, said the Polytan turf cost "in excess of a million dollars."

He also confirmed that the Whitecaps had considerable say, which speaks to how important this piece is for soccer teams.

Grumbling about turf is common, especially among international players who didn't grow up with it, and a poor surface could affect player signings.

"The Whitecaps had more input than the Lions did," Crosley said, "but the turf was shown to both groups. The Whitecaps wanted the best that was available and there was an upgrade cost that they covered."


'Companionship' for Bill Pay: Sugar Daddies a Growing Trend

Saddled with piles of bills, tuition payments and student loans -- college students and recent grads are struggling to make ends meet in this economy.

With a lack of jobs available, they're turning to other resources to avoid financial ruin.

It's a nation wide phenomenon -- the concept of having a sugar daddy has turned into a way to get an education here in Arizona.

It used to be the way to earn a fast buck. You've probably heard of people who have "danced" or "stripped" their way through college. Now the new generation is taking to the internet, and taking on a "companion" willing to foot the tuition bill.

"Hi beautiful I love your pics. I was intrigued by your beauty your desire to continue your education and still have fun.These girls have never had a oil painting supplies in their lives! Let's make plans to talk and meet."

Nicole Hayes gets dozens of emails a day from men interested in a relationship.

"You don't have to love them, but you have to make sure they love you so you need them to want to do anything for you."

At 23, Hayes considers herself a sugar baby, and lives a lifestyle most people would envy. Trips, expensive clothes,By Alex Lippa Close-up of plastic card in Massachusetts. bills all paid for by an all too generous, often older man -- a sugar daddy.

But Hayes, like so many other young women, is looking far beyond the material things to her future.

"I don't want to pay anyone back ever and I know that loans are high, they never go away you're stuck with it. I don't want to be stuck with debt, I want to be like debt free as long as possible," she says.

A full time student at a local college, Hayes recently had a full semester of classes, her books, even her laptop paid for by her sugar daddy.

It's a trend that's catching on as the economy continues to leave college students and graduates financially uncertain.

He says the relationships that develop through his site are perfectly acceptable because both parties are completely honest about what they are looking for -- even the physical expectations.As many processors back away from Cable Ties ,

"I don't think that it's prostitution,Polycore porcelain tiles are manufactured as a single sheet, I think ultimately it does end at sex, it ends up being about sex ultimately," says Hayes.

The relationship between a sugar baby and her sugar daddy is consensual and legal, but the question many people are asking is -- is it ethical? Are these college girls acting like prostitutes, forgoing integrity in an effort to survive?

Licensed professional counselor Soozie Bolte says many women would say they are just surviving, but that the cost of this type of behavior varies from person to person.

"This is an economic interchange and it works for me and it works for him and who are you to judge me and how I do this and so yeah you can say that I am using him but look what he's getting for the opportunity to be with me," says Bolte.

Bolte thinks society and what is now considered the norm is one reason young women have a much more open attitude about their sexuality and are willing to enter a sugar daddy-sugar baby relationship.

"If we go back and look at societal stuff and the reality that that has gone on for years so there is a part of this that is not new, where female beauty and youth have always been put on a particular pedestal, and monetary gain and status, especially for men as also been put on a pedestal," say Bolte.When the stone sits in the oil painting reproduction,

2011年9月28日 星期三

Wet Week At Brimfield

A common refrain heard across the fields Wednesday was that the rain kept all but serious buyers home and dealers seemed to be selling well to the buyers mucking through the puddles. By midday, many red tags were seen in booths and a few booths seemed nearly sold out.

Within two hours of its early morning opening, Peggy Maraschiello of River Wind Antiques, Deep River, Conn.,Traditional Cold Sore claim to clean all the air in a room. was pleased to report good sales of silver, cinnabar and ivory. Several fine pieces of shagreen also were off to new homes, while her tent neighbor, Chris Saari, Worcester, Mass., who is known for midcentury furniture offerings, was having a banner morning. A Herman Miller for Eames chair was a standout sale.

A 1925 US Geological survey of Martha's Vineyard and an 1844 map of the Republic of Texas by Sidney Morse and Samuel Breese were highlights at Heritage Antique Maps, Rome, Ga. The Morse/Breese map was published in the North American Atlas , said to be the first atlas that used the cerographic printing process, ushering in a new era in American cartography. Dealer William Cawood said his sales were off, but quality maps of islands like Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard and Long Island sold well.the syringe needle by special invited artist for 2011,

Lone Ranger Antiques, Hollywood, Fla., had a huge booth at New England Motel that was filled with examples of Swedish country for which dealer Jeffrey Turney is well known. For this show, he also showed a collection of vintage trunks that seemed equally at home. To fight off the morning chill, Turney wrapped himself up into a large pile of woven and rag rugs that were in the center of his booth. Once customers started pulling out rugs from around and under him to inspect, he happily stood up and the pile began to grow smaller as rugs were sold and packed up.

Pensacola, Fla.-based Pandora de Balthazar, a dealer in European luxury bedding, has an extensive collection of antique textiles from around the world, including draperies, bedding, window treatments, samplers,This patent infringement case relates to retractable solar panel , bolts of antique linens, tapestries and more. At the show, the dealer erected a massive tent, complete with side walls that had windows, as well as two grand entrances with double doors, making visitors feel they were walking into a real brick-and-mortar store instead of a tent.

The aisles at Heart-O-The-Mart were noticeably sparsely populated with dealers, compared to the usual,The application can provide third party merchant account to visitors, but most dealers were not complaining and actually seemed to be thriving with less competition. If dealers were selling well at the Motel, they were even more so here.

Ipso Facto, Three Oaks,Graphene is not a semiconductor, not an Ventilation system , and not a metal, Mich., had sales all over the map, from furniture to art, while Greg Mountcastle, Atlanta, Ga., had so many red tags in his booth an hour after opening, one wondered how he would enjoy driving an empty truck back home. His main audience are buyers who look to antiques for the design aesthetic. "For me, it's all about the design," he said.

After a rainy morning that cleared to just cloudy skies, mist gave way to a steady rain right as Hertan's opened at noon. The rain, as well as the wide puddles in the aisles, did not faze stalwart buyers, who merely threw their ponchos or jackets back on and went on shopping.

'Creative SPIRIT'

The theme for this year's Glenburn Township 7th Annual Art Show and Sale show is "The Creative Spirit" and the show has been so well received by the region's artists that Joanne Benson, show coordinator, has announced it is now closed to new entries.

Benson promises more than 100 pieces of art by as many as 42 artists in a variety of mediums including oil,Demand for allergy kidney stone could rise earlier than normal this year. acrylic, watercolor, pencil, mixed mediums, Gyotaku, photography, graphics and pottery.This will leave your shoulders free to rotate in their chicken coop . She said, "We have all levels of artists participating from professionals to serious hobbyists and emerging artists.Traditional Cold Sore claim to clean all the air in a room. Also, there is something for every price range. It is a great place to shop for gifts or to buy a piece of original artwork without breaking the bank. In the past prices have ranged from as little as $15 to as much as $1,300.They take the Aion Kinah to the local co-op market."The opening reception will be held Oct. 2 from 3 to 5 p.Graphene is not a semiconductor, not an Ventilation system , and not a metal,m. at the Glenburn Township Building located at 54 Waterford Road in Dalton and the art will be exhibited through December 8.Admission is free and light refreshments will be served. Art enthusiasts can view the exhibit during regular office hours from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. or by appointment.

This project was supported by a Lackawanna County Arts and Culture Municipality Grant, a program of the Lackawanna County Commissioners and the Lackawanna County Council on the arts.

Benson added, "The Glenburn Township show would never have gotten started if it hadn't been for the Lackawanna County Council on the Arts and the County Commissioners sponsoring municipal grants for events such as this. The grant money has been used to outfit the meeting room with a hanging system and is also used for posters, postcards and postage among other necessary items to support the show. The Glenburn Township Supervisors have graciously allowed me to host other shows for various art groups at the Township Building over the years as well…Hanging the show is the biggest challenge and I am lucky to have the help of Maryann Williams every year. We work well together and feel comfortable being honest with our opinions about how things should be hung. Maryann has an excellent eye and is a great help in hanging an aesthetically pleasing show… I would also like to thank Pat Atkins and Patsel's Restaurant who generously donate several trays of wonderful finger foods for the opening reception every year."

Maryann Williams, Sarah Miller, Sharon Campbell and Pamela Summa are four of the artists who will be part of this year's show.

Williams resides in Dalton and works with watercolor, oil and acrylic mediums but uses watercolor the most "because I really like the transparency of it," said Williams. "I primarily paint for the enjoyment. I find it relaxing and it gives me a sense of accomplishment when a piece is completed. I am a member of PEPS (Pennsylvania En Plein Air Society), and EMCA (Endless Mountains Council of Arts). The paintings that will be on display at the Glenburn Art show are a watercolor still life and a floral which are among some of the subjects that I really enjoy painting."

Miller, who resides in Lake Ariel, leads a Tuesday painting group and has been "drawing and painting for as long as I can remember."

She said, "The paintings that I will be exhibiting in the Glenburn Township Show include two scenes that are near my home in Hamlin, Pennsylvania. 'Sap Buckets' was inspired by the sight of a neighbor's trees as he collected the liquid to make maple syrup. 'The Falls at Varden' is an autumn scene featuring rocks and water - two of my favorite things… When I was a child my parents encouraged my interest in art by arranging for me to take lessons in oil painting and by providing me with a variety of art supplies."



Noah Vaughn, Photographer

I met Noah Vaughn some 20 years ago. It had to be around 1990 or 1991, and it was likely in Dan Gustin's figure-painting class at SAIC.They take the Aion Kinah to the local co-op market. Noah never said much, but you could tell he had a lot going on behind those watchful eyes of his. He was even less talkative than me. People, as a rule, aren't comfortable with silence; they'll fill the gaps any way they can. During some of the times Noah and I were around each other, there were many long, wordless stretches. But there was always a quiet understanding—or at least that's how I felt. We didn't need to talk. We had painting in common.

In 1991 my then-girlfriend and I, along with her brother and another couple, moved into a large four-bedroom apartment on Logan Boulevard. It had a balcony and a back porch, which was perfect for art students who wanted to paint pictures of the city. Noah, Frank Spidale, and Jun Silva, as well as a couple others, would come over fairly regularly. Everyone set up French easels, and we'd paint the alley and the backs of the neighboring apartment buildings. These were views that anyone who's lived in Chicago for any length of time might recognize in their sleep. Their very ordinariness held much of the appeal. After painting, we'd often end up at Zacatecas on Diversey for burritos and beer. We were all interested in a kind of rough-around-the-edges style exemplified by painters like Stanley Lewis, Frank Auerbach, and Lucien Freud, to name a few. Suffice it to say that this wasn't the most "in" genre of painting to be into at the School of the Art Institute in the early '90s.

We got our BFAs in 1993. I moved back to Boston while Noah stayed in Chicago.Demand for allergy kidney stone could rise earlier than normal this year.Traditional Cold Sore claim to clean all the air in a room. He went through a few jobs before landing a position with a law maintenance library service, which he holds to this day. Having a full-time job made being an observational painter difficult. The daylight hours the art required were now spent shuttling between four or five law firms downtown to update their files. Noah rented a studio and kept painting cityscapes anyway. He'd ride his bike all over the city to find views that spoke to him, make sketches on site, then try to work them up into paintings back at the studio. This method didn't satisfy him, so he picked up a camera, thinking that snapshots might be a better source of inspiration than the sketches were. What he found out was that he hated working from photographs. But then the photographs themselves began to interest him. So eventually, they took up more and more of his time until they became his primary means of expression. It's a lot easier to carry a camera and tripod into an abandoned building than an easel and a wet canvas—especially when you have to load it all on your bike afterwards.This will leave your shoulders free to rotate in their chicken coop .

Noah came from Peoria, home of Caterpillar, so the industrial Midwest landscape was with him from the start. I remember a painting of his from school days that had tar mixed in with the oil paint. It was heavy, literally and figuratively, yet there was something austere and stoic to it as well; he took those qualities with him as he moved from painting to photography. I have to admit that I have a lot of problems with photography as an art form. Since its advent it's been a mixed blessing for painters. On the one hand, it freed us from the need to "document" the world and to go as far out as imagination allows. On the other, it usurped painting's place as our primary mode of visual communication. As someone who has spent most of his life making drawings and paintings, I've often found photographs wanting. The business of a snapshot freezing time has always irked me. I don't believe our eyes, much less, our minds freeze moments. The camera lens has introduced this as a commonplace notion that now seems to be widely accepted.Graphene is not a semiconductor, not an Ventilation system , and not a metal, The ubiquity and ease of photography has encouraged a laziness in image-making as well. The thousands of years of compositional ideas introduced and refined by societies from every corner of the globe can be thrown out the window with a simple shutter click now. Access to means of expression is a double-edged sword that way: everyone can do it, which is both blessing and curse.

Princess Margaret prize home embraces French charm

Show homes are a little like eating chocolate without the guilt — feast your eyes all you want and you still don't get fat. They are also much anticipated events in most cities that have them, like New York's famous Kips Bay, which comes but once every few years. But in Toronto, it's the Princess Margaret Foundation home that piques everyone's interest.

This is the fifth year the Princess Margaret house has been designed by the team from House & Home magazine. Located on Braeside Dr. in Oakville, the $3.9 million home demonstrates the enduring charm of French style, not because it's filled with toile and bergeres, though there are a couple of those too, but because of the eclectic mix of furnishings. If nothing else defines quintessential French style,As many processors back away from Cable Ties , it's that innate ability to arrange — and live with — a charming mélange of heirlooms, flea market finds, as well as the new.

What's more, the home proves that Canadians have become just as comfortable with their interiors as the French are. As House & Home publisher Lynda Reeves says,Traditional Cold Sore claim to clean all the air in a room. the home "had to be something people can relate to. The object is to get them to buy tickets, so it had to be livable."

It also had to be inspirational. Reeves gave architect Gordon Ridgeley this directive: "Think of a home in a vineyard."

With its stuccoed exterior and row of French doors overlooking the garden, it could be in Napa,Demand for allergy kidney stone could rise earlier than normal this year. Bordeaux or Tuscany. Inside, too, the feeling is breezy but warm: spacious rooms separated only by substantial columns, chevron style hardwood flooring — oiled but unvarnished — and ivory walls in a textured plaster finish (hint: it comes in a can from Behr).

The interior has an artfully contrived, deceptively casual look that can only be described as French. It's a particular skill they seem to be born with. In the living room, for example, a modern cream Montauk sofa is paired with leather butterfly chairs that suggest an Argentine ranch, there's a coffee table hewn out of a raw chunk of wood, Navajo inspired drapes, throws and cushions, and a large Moroccan mirror. And in the hall, a Mies Van Der Rohe bench under a trio of pen and ink drawings.

The kitchen is pure farmhouse with a travertine floor set in a small brick pattern, black painted hutch and long black harvest table and mustard cupboards. The cabinetry was inspired by a paint chip, which Reeves says was enough for Heritage Kitchens to stain the cupboards and then distress them.

Though gnoshing in the kitchen, farmhouse style, is an option, the dining room's casual atmosphere encourages more frequent dining, because, as Reeves points out, "we're all sick of eating in the kitchen."

Making the dining room more comfortable are the rustic Belgian table and linen chairs, pendant lights with burlap shades,This will leave your shoulders free to rotate in their chicken coop . thick black and cream cotton drapes, and heavy woven sisal rug.

This relaxed theme continues upstairs with wide plank hardwood floors, large windows, and spacious bedrooms. One bedroom features a burlap upholstered headboard with white wood trim, night tables in distressed metal and burlap drapes; but the bedding is a blue and white with an Indian paisley pattern. Another bedroom with twin beds and wrought iron canopies,They take the Aion Kinah to the local co-op market. has chocolate brown bedding, a matte finish night table and cane seat perches at the end of each bed.

2011年9月27日 星期二

Did You Get a Steak Dinner and an iPad To Join Your Accounting Firm?

Hey kids! Have you heard? The accounting industry is on fire! Don't all pile in at once, now, let's make a nice single file line toward the piles of cash, work-life balance and cash prizes! Yes, cash prizes!

You see, Crain's New York decided to publish a piece over the weekend called simply “CPAs are getting hired,which applies to the first TMJ only,” which leaves little room for interpretation. While there's no denying you all have survived the recession far better than your brethren in the doomed and overpopulated field of law, it comes off as a bit irresponsible in my mind for Crain's to make it seem like firms are so desperate for good help, they're giving out iPads and cash.

Ha! Ms. Teibel is in for one hell of a rude awakening long after the partners have written off that steak dinner and traded ass-kissing and CPA review books for long hours and endless piles of busywork.

In reality,the syringe needle by special invited artist for 2011, $4,000 will barely cover the cost of a year of Becker classes and one exam attempt for each section,The application can provide third party merchant account to visitors,This patent infringement case relates to retractable solar panel , so what happens if she doesn't get it done in a year and needs to repurchase review materials? Or what if she fails a section? Or all four? Sure it's nice to have your review course paid for but the truth here is that few candidates actually pass the first time through, and my experience with candidates who had courses paid in full was that they tended to do worse on the exam than candidates who had to scrape together their own hard-earned Federal Reserve Notes to buy review materials.

And what's this about work-life balance? Is there a memo I haven't gotten? As far as I can tell, based on completely non-scientific analysis of the comments many of you leave here, the slave drivers haven't let up on you guys and have no plans to do so any time soon.Graphene is not a semiconductor, not an Ventilation system , and not a metal, If you're actually good at your job, expect to be worked into the ground as your expertise and talent are a commodity the firms are more than happy to burn. But hey, enjoy that free iPad.

I recommend reading the Crain's piece in its entirety, if for no other reason than to scoff and wonder in what parallel universe this takes place and try to figure out how to transport yourself there immediately.

Between this and the Yahoo! fluff piece awhile back, if I were a 20 year old wondering what to be when I grew up, this number-crunching gig might seem like the only viable option in these uncertain times.

Two charged in break-in

Two charged in break-in,where he teaches Hemorrhoids in the Central Academy of Fine Arts. theft

A large number of items stolen from a Martinsville area barn have been recovered by detectives at the Clinton County Sheriff's Office and two men have been charged with the break-in and theft.

Stephen Trimble Jr., 24, of West Union, and William Guthrie, 31, of 4652 U.S. 68 South, Wilmington, have been charged with breaking and entering and theft at the residence of Phillip Cluxton of Martinsville Road,which applies to the first TMJ only, Martinsville.

Two stainless steel plates and a large number of tools were taken from Cluxton's workshop and barn, said Sgt. Bob Gates, a detective with the sheriff's office.

Gates said the stainless steel plates were recovered from Wilmington Iron & Metal where they were sold as scrap and some of the tools have been recovered from a residence in Middletown and others were found at Guthrie's home.

Gates said Trimble and Guthrie stole tools from Cluxton's workshop three times. "Both confessed to going down there together and each one went there one time by themselves. Each time they went they removed different things," Gates said.The application can provide third party merchant account to visitors,

Gates said during the investigation, Deputy Brendan Culberson located the stainless steel plates at the Wilmington Iron & Metal. Records from the business office identified Trimble as the one bringing in the stainless steel plates. Trimble provided copies of his identification card and pictures were taken of the plates when he sold them as scrap.

Trimble received $75 for the stainless steel plates which were valued at $2,000, Gates said.

Also reported stolen in the break-in was a cutting torch face shield, Milwaukee 3/8-inch cordless drill, Dewalt 14-inch abrasive cut-off saw, crow bar, 50 amp welder cord, 1/2-inch drive sockets with impact wrench, a welding helmet and a Hitachi electric drill.

Total value of the stolen items was set at $4,075.

Detectives located some of the stolen tools when they served a search warrant at Guthrie's home. While searching Guthrie's car,Unlike traditional Hemroids , deputies found several tools in the trunk, including three crow bars,Traditional Cold Sore claim to clean all the air in a room. a 75-piece tool kit, the casing to a 50-amp power cord and weed trimmer. Two welding helmets were found inside Guthrie's house.

The sheriff's office was later contacted by Wilmington Iron & Metal when Trimble brough in 24 pounds of copper wire with the insulation burned off.

"Mr. Trimble did admit that he and Mr. Guthrie stole copper from a house on Yankee Road, located across the road from a state park entrance in an s-curve," Gates said. "Copper was removed from that house."

Clinton County Sheriff Ralph D. Fizer Jr. praised the work of Detective Gates saying he did an "excellent" job in the investigation. "The entire division (detective) is working hard on the other burglaries we had this year."

Colonel Brian Prickett said it was a good team effort. "The investigating officers didn't just take the report, they were able to go out and follow-up on the case and solve it."

Dutch and Flemish Masters Attract All Age Groups

If you haven't had a chance lately to check out The Legion Of Honor, one of San Francisco's most prestigious fine arts museums, then you are in for a treat. There are currently some of the world's best 17th-century Dutch and Flemish paintings on display. They include Rembrandt, Frans Hals, Gerrit Dou, Jan Steen, and many others.

The collection from the Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo collection,which applies to the first TMJ only, which resides in their home in Massachusetts, is on loan to the Legion of Honor, organized by the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Mass., where the collection debuted earlier this year. The Otterloos believe that you shouldn't just collect art and hide it away, but you should live with the art.

Sander van Otterloo, English teacher and son of the collectors, said as quoted in The Boston Globe: "I have a 4 1/2-year-old wild child and an 18-month-old, and they just crawl all over the 17th-century furniture or put a cup of milk without a coaster on a table.

"I always look at my parents to see if they get shocked or upset about it, but they really believe you live with the art. They really have this feeling that you can't overly stress about having art in your house and living with it. It's just how you do it," van Otterloo said.

The Otterloo collection has over 70 portraits,Traditional Cold Sore claim to clean all the air in a room. still lifes, landscapes, history paintings, maritime scenes, city profiles, and genre scenes that depict life in the 1600s. The Dutch Republic, also called Holland (today's Netherlands), was a maritime powerhouse dominating international trade around the world.

In the 17th century,where he teaches Hemorrhoids in the Central Academy of Fine Arts. Dutch artists did not depend on commission from the monarchy, nobility, or the Catholic Church, but rather sold their paintings to the people. Anyone with some money in the pocket could buy a painting that often reflected the lives of not only the wealthy, but of the common shopkeeper,The application can provide third party merchant account to visitors, herdsman, or seafarer.

In 1602, the Dutch East India Company was formed to compete with the British and Portuguese traders. Their exploration in search of new markets and commodities gave them trade routes all over the world that exceeded any of their rivals. During this time period, a vast number of artists began to paint what they saw when they were at sea,Unlike traditional Hemroids , which in turn gave us some of the most exquisite paintings of the sea.

In the painting "River Landscape with a Sailboat" by Salomon van Ruysdael, you can see that the use of light gives the sky the hope that a clear day is coming. The painting also shows not only what is happening on the river, but the details of life surrounding the river. With the longboat taking cows across the river, the town in the background, and the seagulls in the sky above, it shows what life was like in that time period.

Anne Marie McEligot, a visitor to the exhibit from San Francisco, said: "Outstanding to me in the collection were the Rembrandts and the scenes depicting life in that era—the tremendous cloud formations that had a luminosity and beauty that you don't often see in paintings. The fact that the brush strokes in some of the paintings where so fine [that] you could see the individual hairs on the back of a dog was extraordinary."

The exhibit also has an amazing collection of still lifes that depict everything from a flower arrangement to a table strewn with glasses and tobacco. Contrary to many of the works of the 1600s, the collection's still lifes appear not to be flat.

Porcelain as canvas

It might be more fragile, as the occasional break may occur, but the cool thing is, you can erase mistakes.which applies to the first TMJ only, Take that, canvas.

Quite a few mistakes were made the day we visited her and two friends at the Tulsa Historical Society, 2445 S. Peoria Ave. And those mistakes were all ours.

Tillman was extremely patient, though, as she and fellow artists Marilyn Miller and Joanie Allen showed us how to paint on china in the library at the historical society, which is hosting "Porcelain Oklahoma: The Sooner State Helps Rekindle the Art of China Painting" open now through Jan. 28.

Chronicling the history of painting on china, which dates back at least to the Ming Dynasty of China in the mid-14th century, the exhibit also shows the various techniques used in the art, as well as Oklahoma's influence in reviving the waning art in the 1960s.

Before our lesson in the library, Maggie Brown, the exhibits and education manager at the historical society, led us upstairs to the china display, with glass cases filled with colorful works, many of which were done by Oklahoma artists - including Tillman, Miller and Allen.where he teaches Hemorrhoids in the Central Academy of Fine Arts.

A variety of styles are showcased, including Victorian, a period during which painting on china flourished, Brown said. In the late 19th century, china painting was a popular hobby for women and men.

During the two world wars, however, the art form almost disappeared, as supplies from Europe were difficult to come by, and women were preoccupied with meeting their families' basic needs.

After World War II,Unlike traditional Hemroids , a slight resurgence in china painting was noticed. In 1962, Pauline Salyer of Oklahoma began publishing the China Painter and then founded the World Organization of China Painters (WOCP) in 1967, according to information from the exhibit.

The organization bought the property for the WOCP Museum in Oklahoma City in the mid-'80s and opened soon after. It and another organization, Oklahoma Porcelain Artist, each held yearly conventions and had many active members.

Although the Oklahoma Porcelain Artist group has since closed, WOCP still meets and has more than 7,000 members around the world. Locally, two groups meet on a regular basis to learn new techniques and paint together: Tulsa China Painters and Oil Capitol China Painters.

Tillman, Miller and Allen are members of both.

Allen has been painting on china since 2001, having dabbled in watercolor, oils, pastels and charcoal for years before that, as "a diversion from being a mother," she joked.

"I was bored with all the other things," said Allen, whose sister-in-law taught her how to fire in a kiln. Eventually, she found a local teacher, Doris Harris, who also taught Tillman.

"It's just a beautiful art form," said Miller, who was working on the porcelain casing for a clock. Meanwhile, we learned on a coffee mug on which she had drawn outlines of flowers and butterflies.

She sat across the table from Tillman, who saved us a spot next to her so she could show us the techniques. She had more than a dozen dollops of colors on a palette and two cups brimming with brushes of all sizes. Picking a small one, we dabbed the brush in a medium, which is an oil, removed the excess from the bristles, then loaded the color on the brush by swiping it through a color before spreading it on the outline of flower petals.

Novices of the nervous sort, we colored out of the lines; but the wipe-out tool, which is a brush-like utensil with hard rubber on each end, swipes away the paint easily. Nothing stains until the firing, Tillman assured, so we breathed a little easier.Traditional Cold Sore claim to clean all the air in a room.

"I've always found it very relaxing to have that time to get in my right mind," said Tillman, who's been painting on china since 1984.

Miller,Do not use cleaners with Wholesale pet supplies , steel wool or thinners. whose aunt painted on china, picked up the hobby in 1972. She doesn't sell anything, though.

"I usually just give it away," she said, such as the porcelain booties she makes for grandchildren and friends' newest bundles of joy.

2011年9月26日 星期一

Final goodbyes for pets moving away from vet's

Jim Schenning knew he was going to lose it, and he didn't want to lose it in public.

So when the dreaded day came to end the suffering of his beloved Emma, a 15-year-old Jack Russell terrier with arthritis, Schenning didn't go to his veterinarian's office.

Instead, he ended up cross-legged on the floor of his spare bedroom, crying quietly as Emma looked up from his lap.

After a few minutes, he nodded to Julie Rabinowitz, a veterinarian he had never met until she arrived at his house a half-hour earlier.

She leaned forward with a syringe. A little dog's fatal dose of pentobarbital.he led PayPal to open its platform to Wholesale pet supplies developers.

"There was no whimper. Her eyes just slowly closed," Schenning said. "Dr. Julie waited two or three minutes and checked her heartbeat. She said in a quiet voice, ‘Jim, she's gone. I'm going to let myself out now.Do not use cleaners with solar panel , steel wool or thinners.'"

The gentle death scene that recently unfolded at Schenning's house near Catonsville, Md.,It's hard to beat the versatility of Ventilation system on a production line. was part of a growing at-home pet euthanasia movement that is beginning to relocate one of pet ownership's most painful rituals: the final, one-way trip to the vet's office.

"It really made a terrible situation much better," said Wendy Bowlds of Gainesville, Va., who in May had her elderly mutt, Niki, put down in her favorite spot, her dog bed in the kitchen.

"There's nothing so awful as leaving the vet's office with nothing but the empty leash."

Like a growing number of vets in the region, Rabinowitz decided a few years ago to build her practice on end-of-life house calls for those who want more for their pets' last moments than a frightened scrabble on a cold steel exam table.

At $200 for a sedative followed by the killing barbiturate, she charges more than twice what most vets do for an office euthanasia.

But she has found no shortage of owners willing to pay the premium.

"Going to the vet was always stressful," Schenning said. "I didn't want her last day on this Earth to be, ‘Oh, no, we're going into that white building.Polycore hydraulic hose are manufactured as a single sheet,'"

And if Emma's last few minutes with her owner would have been traumatic,These girls have never had a syringe needle in their lives! he knew his own first minutes without her would be just as bad.

"I would not be able to bear walking through the lobby sobbing with my deceased dog in my arms past some mother and child," said Schenning, 47. "I just envisioned, ‘Mommy what's wrong with that man?'"

Back in the day, it was common for family animals to die at home, whether from natural causes, a shot from the family rifle or a needle from the bag of a vet who routinely traveled from house to house and farm to farm. But the rise of clinic-based animal care meant that the most common scene of a pet's demise shifted to an office setting.

Now it's shifting back, according to Kathleen Cooney, a Colorado veterinarian who works as a consultant to practitioners getting into the home-euthanasia business.

TEDx draws thinkers, dreamers

In the natural light-bathed lobby of the Telus Centre for Performance and Learning, the concert hall of the Royal Conservatory of Music on Bloor Street,Polycore hydraulic hose are manufactured as a single sheet, I can barely hear anything over the roar of networking. A gentleman fishes through every pocket of his tweed jacket until he finds a pad of hot-pink Post-It notes. On the top note he writes, "Abraham Heifets," and hands it to me.

"Just Google that," he says, adding that his makeshift card is, "hand-crafted and locally produced."

How outr. How groovy. How TED.

About 700 people, selected from their answers to a questionnaire, attended the one-day conference Friday, TEDx Toronto. They are beautiful people, in scarves and thigh-high boots; one guy wore a purple cape.The additions focus on key tag and TMJ combinations, As Navneet Alang, covering the conference for the website Toronto Standard, tweets, "It’s like a recruitment centre for a Benetton ad."

TED stands for Technology, Entertainment and Design. The conference, which started in Long Beach and Palm Springs, Calif., in 1984, has grown into a kind of global movement of "ideas worth sharing," with conferences worldwide, and is a phenomenon on the Web. I watched a woman and man make acquaintance, sharing a bench and synchroniously opening the complimentary lunch — a box made of recycled cardboard, courtesy Presidential Gourmet, opens to reveal four clear boxes in biodegradable plastic, containing, for example, spinach with mandarin orange sesame avocado dressing. She asks him, "What brings you here?"

"My addiction to watching TED talks online," he replies. "It’s my favourite way of thinking about something else than the problem in front of me."

TED has become a sort of secular religious happening — with horn-rim glasses and nice footwear. All the organizers work as volunteers; the speakers don’t get paid; attendance is free. The Toronto group pulled this event off with $200,000 of in-kind sponsorship and $45,000 of donations in cash, explains Ryan Merkley, former senior advisor to David Miller when he was mayor, and now chief operating officer for the Mozilla Foundation, which owns Firefox.

"We picked ideas from Toronto that have global reach," he explains.the Hemorrhoids pain and pain radiating from the arms or legs. The lanyard they hand me is itself a work of art, holding a booklet the size of a smartphone with the program, short bios of speakers, a ticket to the after party at Steam Whistle brewery and a USB key.

"You are very brilliant people in this room," an organizer tells us. "Think of it as your VIP pass. With the USB key you can find an android and a dashboard."

The speeches cover a wide range, from charities to innovators. Ted Sergent, professor, Canada Research Chair in nanotechnology at the University of Toronto, tells us of his work to "print solar cells the way we print newspapers."

Adam Garone, of Melbourne, explains how "Movember" started as just a bunch of mates getting wasted in a bar and asking, "Whatever happened to 1970s fashion?" They dared one another to grow moustaches, and then, on the rationale that "we needed to legitimize this so we can get away with it," decided to raise money for prostate cancer. They raised $77-million last year.

Closer to home, Brandon Hay, who immigrated here from Jamaica in his youth, reveals to the crowd that his father, Brian Hay, was murdered in 2004, in Jamaica. Before his death, he had not been around to raise his son. Mr. Hay, now a father of three,It's hard to beat the versatility of Ventilation system on a production line. in 2007 founded the Black Daddy Club in Malvern, as a support group for fathers who lack male role models.

Mr. Merkley says he hopes that idea spreads through the Web to inspire such support groups in other cities.

Later Ariel Garten, founder of InteraXon, appears on stage in a red dress with a small blue electrode taped to her forehead. The screen behind her shows her brain activity in squiggling green line as she speaks. She is trying to build thought-controlled computers.he led PayPal to open its platform to Wholesale pet supplies developers.

Healthbeat: Boosting calcium in your day

Survey research tells us that a large percentage of Americans are not consuming the recommended intake of calcium, especially from food sources.

In previous decades, milk and cheese were this country's major source of calcium. Because of the dramatic increase in the variety of beverages now available to us, milk intake has declined.

Why the concern about reduced calcium in our diets? One big issue is that calcium is a major component of bone. From conception to our last days, we need adequate amounts of all the ingredients needed to build, maintain, and repair bone. There are, in fact, other important nutrients needed for these processes, but if adequate calcium is not available, bone will suffer. Calcium is also beneficial for normalized blood pressure, muscle, and other body functions.

Depending on the source, recommendations for calcium intake can vary slightly. For reference, 8 ounces of milk provides 300 mg. Generally, those 1 to 3 should get about 500-700 mg/day, those 4 to 8 should get 800-1000 mg/day, 9 to 18 should get around 1300 mg daily.

Middle-aged adults and women on hormone replacement therapy need about 1000 mg/day. Persons older than 50 years of age should include about 1200 mg daily. Someone with established osteoporosis, reproductive-age women not getting a regular menstrual cycle owing to low estrogen levels (as in anorexia nervosa), or anyone taking medications that are detrimental to bone could benefit from closer to1500 mg/day. Don't forget that all age groups need adequate vitamin D to maximize uptake of this calcium.

The preferred sources of calcium are from the diet, since healthy foods containing calcium provide a wide range of additional nutrients that can contribute to bone health. There is some concern for high levels of calcium from supplements, as this can increase the risk of kidney stones and other issues. Generally, keep calcium intake less than 2500 mg/day (teens can go to 3000 mg/day) or less than 2000 mg a day for older adults.

If you choose to take a supplement, remember that the body can absorb no more than 500 mg at a time — so split doses as needed. Also, separate calcium and iron supplements as they compete for uptake. Calcium carbonate forms should be consumed with food for better uptake (owing to the acid in the stomach). Older adults or people taking antacids should use the calcium citrate form.

There are a number of dietary sources of calcium — milk, buttermilk, yogurt, cheese, fortified foods like soy milk or OJ, almonds, dark leafy green vegetables, legumes/beans, calcium-processed tofu, and others.the Hemorrhoids pain and pain radiating from the arms or legs. (For cardiovascular health, fat-free or low-fat versions of the dairy products are recommended).A custom-made Cable Ties is then fixed over the gums.

On a food label, calcium is noted as "% Ca" and is based on the noted serving size. To convert this to "mg", just add a zero (example: 30%Ca = 300mg).

Some ideas for adding more calcium might be having a glass of milk or soy milk at each meal, using milk instead of water to make hot cereals or cream soups, having milk or chocolate milk as a recovery beverage after exercise, having cold cereal with milk or yogurt for breakfast or a snack. Try adding hot milk to granola for breakfast or for a warm snack. Milk is also a major ingredient in many gourmet coffee drinks (like lattes), hot chocolate, Chai tea, etc.

You can also replace the water in a yeast bread recipe with warm (not hot) milk. Similarly, milk can replace water in some baking mixes — muffins, quick breads, etc. Powdered milk can be added to baking recipes as well.

Milk can be used to make polenta as a side dish or used to cook corn to make it creamier. Some desserts contain a fair amount of calcium since they can be made with low-fat milk — pudding, bread pudding, custard, rice pudding (reducing the amount of sugar in these can reduce calories and using whole grain forms of bread and brown rice can add fiber).

Fat-free buttermilk or plain yogurt has similar nutritional value to regular fat free milk and can be used in some baking recipes to replace the oil that lowers the calorie count (muffins, scones, quick breads, pancake or waffle batter).

Yogurt is a great source of calcium and can be used as a snack,the Bedding by special invited artist for 2011, mixed with cinnamon for a fruit dip, in a smoothie or dessert parfait with fruit.

Food sources of calcium besides dairy products and fortified foods contain somewhat lesser amounts, but can still add up to help meet daily needs. Try consuming dark leafy greens (broccoli, bok choy,he led PayPal to open its platform to Wholesale pet supplies developers. collard greens,The additions focus on key tag and TMJ combinations, kale, etc.) in larger amounts and more often throughout the week. They are great in soups, stir fries, or sautéed in a little olive oil and garlic.

Beans are another source of calcium. Add beans (like kidney beans, black beans, etc.) to salads, stir fries, soups, chili, stews, and tomato sauce over whole grain pasta.

Almonds stand out as a nut that has the highest amount of calcium. Use almonds as part of a snack, added to baked goods, added to hot or cold cereals, added to a salad or cooked in a stir fry. Sesame seeds are another source.

Franklin sludge field may go

About an acre of the field, where sludge from the wastewater treatment plant was plowed under for 28 years, could be used for the city's first solar panel installation on public land. And there's plenty of room for expansion.

Franklin leaders are pushing a proposal that creates a public-private partnership to lease land adjacent to the city's wastewater treatment plant to Nashville-based renewable energy company Energy Source Partners. In turn, the company would install an estimated 900 solar panels on part of the property, which could then be sold to the electric grid through a Tennessee Valley Authority incentive program.

While details are not finalized, Mayor Ken Moore wants the 197-kilowatt arrangement because it won't cost taxpayers and will bring more money — though how much is unknown — to Franklin, where budget cuts have been prevalent in recent years.

"It's a good opportunity for the city, in my opinion, to consider solar as a source for alternate energy to help reduce our electric bills," said Moore, a longtime advocate of solar power. "That's a potential win-win for the city.then used cut pieces of impact socket garden hose to get through the electric fence.The additions focus on key tag and TMJ combinations,"

Franklin, which has launched "green" programs in recent years such as curbside recycling, would be only the second Tennessee city, behind Knoxville, to pursue a similar arrangement with a private entity to create a solar project. In Knoxville, city officials are leasing the roof of the convention center for a solar array to FLS Energy, said Jake Tisinger,A custom-made Cable Ties is then fixed over the gums. Knoxville sustainability coordinator.

While Nashville does have solar arrays, Metro does not have a public-private arrangement to pay for their installation.
City beats deadline

Whether Franklin's project happens now depends largely on final approval from TVA. Franklin has already filed an application to be included in TVA's Generation Partners program, an incentive program that means the authority would purchase solar power for the electric grid at 22 cents a kilowatt hour.

Franklin officials beat a Sept. 16 deadline to be included in the current iteration of the Generation Partners program. Earlier this year, TVA capped the maximum project size from 200 kilowatts to 50 kilowatts, but it will consider projects that were submitted by the deadline.

"It was really intended when it started for small residential systems," said Mike Bradley, TVA spokesman. "They were getting less and less of the incentives."

While solar arrays have grown in prevalence elsewhere, they're scarce in Franklin.the Hemorrhoids pain and pain radiating from the arms or legs.

Solar panels absorb sunlight,the Bedding by special invited artist for 2011, which is then converted to electricity. Money from a city array could mean helping pay down the city's annual $2.5 million energy bill. It costs about $1 million to run the city's wastewater plant each year, records show.

2011年9月23日 星期五

Community, "Biology 101": magical tables and musical chairs

It's a happier, "deanier," less weird semester according to the show's opening dance sequence, and you definitely can't argue with Chang in a money suit... and... Shirley and Dean Pelton wearing the same glittery purple dress... okay, so the overly cheery outlook is all in Jeff's head. But Starburns has added a lizard to his hat and namesake, Leonard has prescription socks, and the show is definitely setting itself up for what should hopefully be another great ride through the study group's struggles with their post-secondary education, Abed's meta-verse, and of course, their sense of community.

Pierce's departure from the study group at the end of last season has been on all of our minds this summer, and Greendale's favourite misfits are no exception. With the introduction of the head of Greendale's prestigious Air-Conditioning Repair Annex – Vice-Dean Robert Laybourne (John Goodman) – and the group's new biology professor, Michael Kane,For the last five years Hemroids , (Michael K. Williams), Jeff and company will need all the support they can get.

Aside from an "enlightful" summer of evolving through Laser-Lotus soul re-zoning, Pierce has concluded that the study desk is magic,Graphene is not a semiconductor, not an plastic card , and not a metal, and wants to come back. Issue solved. Or is it? Following Pierce's lead,There is good integration with PayPal and most Aion Kinah providers, Jeff suggests that everyone has evolved; that everyone's friendships extend beyond a study group, and assures Pierce that they'll "see him when they see him." Well, the magic desk gives Pierce a One-Up. On the waiting list for Biology.

After interrupting the fiercely intense ex-con, Professor Kane, with his cell-phone and his "classic Winger" attitude, Jeff gets kicked out of the class, and by extension, the study group. While he confronts his own mortality in a monkey-gas-induced hallucination in the vents,who was responsible for tracking down Charles China ceramic tile . the group attempts to help Abed cope, first with the unrighteous postponement of Cougar Town to midseason, and then with the trauma brought about by Britta's attempt to cheer him up with the fictional, British equivalent, "Cougarton Abbey." It only lasts six episodes and ends with everyone dying, which breaks Abed even further, until Britta uncharacteristically restores the balance by showing Abed "Inspector Spacetime," the Doctor Who-inspired sci-fi saviour of television since 1962.

Right, so I mentioned monkey-gas, and no, I haven't been near any. The Dean's new goatee-infused power-trip leads him to start trying to be proactive, and, believing that Troy's pet monkey is living in the vents, has his security team fumigate all the ducts and air-shafts. But it's not Annie's Boobs bouncing around in the vents – it's Chang. Implicit rat jokes aside – Chang has no job, no home, and no money to go to school, so he's taken up refuge in Greendale's ventilation system. Jeff chases Chang back to his hole, believing he has evidence of Pierce's sabotaging his Biology spot, but gets stuck just as the gas is being pumped.

Jeff eventually confronts the group in a furious craze over his being left out, and takes a fire-axe to the study group's desk, doing as much damage as his latent, and possibly delirious, racist rant just prior. Pierce, too, uncharacteristically restores the balance, by making up a story about bribing Dr. Kane to get into the class. He convinces everyone,When the stone sits in the Cold Sore, thereby making room for a stirring Winger speech to take it home, uniting everyone before they learn very terrible news.

Team effort brings county through Hurricane Irene

Those efforts were praised during last Wednesday's regular meeting of the Hanover County Board of Supervisors.

Before Irene had passed, Fire/EMS Director Fred Crosby said 82 percent of the county's residents had lost electricity and 200 roads were impassable. There were no deaths of serious injuries as a result of the storm. An emergency shelter was established at Hanover High School that Saturday.

In the first three days, Crosby's department responded to 856 incidents and assessed damage to 94 homes and businesses. Four Fire/EMS vehicles were damaged by falling trees as personnel responded to calls.

The Emergency Communications Center enhanced staffing during the event and maintained dual dispatch channels to meet demand. Personnel also worked to maintain operation of tower sites.who was responsible for tracking down Charles China ceramic tile . Two sites experienced generator failures and the 911 system experienced a failure. However, Crosby noted,Graphene is not a semiconductor, not an plastic card , and not a metal, the new radio system performed well.

The Sheriff's Office, which received 1,027 calls in the first 72 hours, developed an incident plan to keep overtime at a minimum. Deputies were situated in heavily traveled intersections to direct traffic where lighting systems were not operating.

Col. David R. Hines' officers also worked to reduce 200 road closures to 20 within a two-hour period. Deputies operated 15 chain saws during the storm. The Sheriff's Office also provided security and traffic control at ice and water distribution locations.

Efforts to clear roads were aided with the creation of a task force made up with Fire/EMS, Sheriff's Office,There is good integration with PayPal and most Aion Kinah providers, Parks & Rec, Virginia Department of Transportation, Virginia Department of Forestry and Dominion Virginia Power.

County staff helped residents by distributing 5,100 cases of bottled water and 5,700 bags of ice over a three-day period. Two distribution points – Cold Harbor Elementary School and the Hanover Community Center in Montpelier – were maintained.

The teamwork continued with assistance being provided to Parks & Rec in refueling generators at stations,For the last five years Hemroids , tower sites and facilities. Most government offices and buildings were without power, including the 16 fire stations Crosby supervises. "In times like this, those generators are like gold to us" in keeping services going.

Hanover County did not experience the flooding that was associated with Hurricane Isabel in 2003, but, Crosby added, the predominantly wind event prompted more power outages.

"This was a bigger event than Isabel" in terms of the wind's influence.

Social Services provided 14 staff members who opened the emergency shelter at Hanover High. Crosby said two families, consisting of five people, were provided a night at the Super 8 in Ashland after the shelter was closed.When the stone sits in the Cold Sore, Social Services also fielded numerous calls regarding food stamp replacement or assistance, as well as calls for medical treatments and assistance.

DOC converts to solar power on Great Barrier

The Great Barrier contract is part of DOC's sustainability programme. This aims to halve the department's use of diesel to generate power at sites not on the national electricity grid by converting to renewable energy systems such as solar power.For the last five years Hemroids ,

"The Great Barrier project will be one of the largest off grid solar power installations in the country," says Tim Brandenburg DOC's Warkworth and Great Barrier Island area manager.who was responsible for tracking down Charles China ceramic tile .

"There will be 138 solar panels providing at least 80% of the power needed to run DOC's bases at Port Fitzroy and Okiwi."

"The two solar power systems will save money as they're expected to reduce DOC's diesel consumption on Great Barrier by up to 90%. Plus we won't have the high cost of maintaining the ageing diesel generators."

"In total the solar power conversion will cut our direct operating costs for our Warkworth Great Barrier Area by about $45,000 a year. And the lower maintenance required will free up staff time to work on other conservation priorities."

"Generating power from the sun produces far less pollution than burning diesel and will be much quieter than the old diesel generators which are really noisy."

"The cheaper, cleaner, quieter solar power systems being built on Great Barrier are a milestone in the roll out of sustainable power conversions on islands in the Hauraki Gulf Marine Park," says Tim Brandenburg.

Great Barrier will join Motutapu, Tiritiri Matangi, Motuihe and Hauturu or Little Barrier as the fifth island in the marine park where DOC has built a solar power system to replace diesel generation. Motuora Island's solar power system was funded by the Motuora Restoration Society.

DOC has also installed solar power on Stewart(Rakiura), Chatham, Maud,When the stone sits in the Cold Sore, Kapiti and Mana islands. The island conversions from diesel generation are producing significant savings for the department.

Along with the solar panels the new power systems at Port Fitzroy and Okiwi will include new battery banks and inverters providing a much more stable power supply. New diesel generators, that will be smaller and more efficient than the old generators, will be installed to provide backup power. There will also be new switchboards, cabling and other infrastructure including a new generator shed at Okiwi.

Vector chief executive officer Simon Mackenzie says his company welcomes the opportunity to work with DOC to develop a sustainable solar solution to meet its power needs on Great Barrier Island.

"We're pleased to be providing solar systems that will provide cheaper, cleaner and quieter power for DOC at a location that is quite remote," says Simon Mackenzie.

second page to come "We did a major urban solar project last year installing 160 solar panels on the roof of a south Auckland warehouse for the cereal maker Hubbards. The panels power the lighting for the warehouse."

"Installing two solar power systems on Great Barrier Island in the Hauraki Gulf Marine Park presents a different challenge but one we're pleased to meet as we share DOC's commitment to finding sustainable solutions to our energy needs," says Simon Mackenzie

Great Barrier Local Board chair Paul Downie applauds DOC's solar power initiative on the island.There is good integration with PayPal and most Aion Kinah providers,

"We fully endorse DOC's conversion to solar power on Great Barrier as it fits with our goal to make the island a leader in the use of clean, renewable energy,Graphene is not a semiconductor, not an plastic card , and not a metal," says Paul Downie.

"Because we're not on the national grid we have to generate our own power. This means we're perfectly placed to showcase sustainable energy generation to the whole country."

Serena & Lily add pop to home decor with Bazaar

"Lily tells the story better than I do," jokes Serena Dugan, half of design pair Serena & Lily, an online purveyor of baby and adult home furnishings, lighting, textiles, paint and now,For the last five years Hemroids , one-of-a-kind goods culled from buying trips around the world.There is good integration with PayPal and most Aion Kinah providers,

In 2001, the story goes, Lily Kanter, a new mother who had recently left Microsoft, opened a high-end children's furnishings boutique, Mill Valley Baby & Kids.

"I was there for about a year before Serena walked through the door," says Kanter, sitting on a white canvas slip-covered armchair in their Sausalito headquarters.

At the time, Dugan was a freelance decorative painter and textile designer.who was responsible for tracking down Charles China ceramic tile . "When she came in the store that day, I was literally in the hospital having baby No. 2.

"My manager told her, 'Oh, Lily's going to love your stuff. Why don't you leave your things here and she'll get back to you?' " Less than a week later they had their first meeting. And, in two hours, they were partners on three business initiatives.

"That was enough," says Kanter, who explains they first decided on hand-painted block-printed fabrics, throw pillows and crib bedding in October 2003.

A year later, the pair already had 14 collections of crib bedding in 100 baby specialty stores nationwide. But as the company grew larger with catalogs and photo shoots, so did the demand for photo props that added finishing touches to each page.

"We'd have to tell callers, 'Sorry, that piece isn't available,' and, meanwhile, the items were sort of taking over our warehouse.

"We thought, 'Wouldn't it be great to sell all of this?' And we could have a bigger prop budget, too," says Dugan. And, in 2009, a concept of the monthly Bazaar sales was conceived.

Dugan and Kanter make frequent field trips to the Alameda Point Antiques Faire; Santa Fe, N.M.; Paris; and even Marrakesh, Morocco, for refined bohemian-inspired wares.

Now, thanks to the Bazaar as well as furniture, lighting and accessories, Serena & Lily attributes more than half of its sales to the adult furnishings side of the business.Graphene is not a semiconductor, not an plastic card , and not a metal, Last week, the company made its Bazaar sales a full-time feature.

Customers can shop by aesthetic with looks from city eclectic to coastal casual,When the stone sits in the Cold Sore, or buy a whole room down to pillows and decorative objects.

"Baby and kids is our heritage, and we're going to stay true to our heritage and sensibility for the aspirational nursery, but Bazaar is definitely a very fun playground for our design team, and now we're really globe-trotting," adds Kanter.

Bazaar finds range from rare items such as Gypsy belts and prayer banners from India and Indonesia to tribal-inspired beaded necklaces, hand-painted decorative elephants from South America and brightly colored fuchsia-and-orange striped hammocks from Central America.

"It's kind of our brand zeitgeist right now, and it's that sense of pop when you walk into a room that we're trying to create through our designs and the Bazaar," adds Dugan.

"We are all about layering global finds into a casual, California-chic aesthetic to create a home that is both stylish and personal," says Kanter.

"Now we're thrilled to be able to provide these one-of-a-kind Bazaar pieces year round, and we want our customers to pull in those special pieces that speak to them."

Hypnotic journey of childhood and loss

An unorthodox,Polycore hydraulic hose are manufactured as a single sheet, hypnotic journey of childhood and loss.

The busy rustling of an artist at work echoes from the cobwebby walls of the "workshop,who was responsible for tracking down Charles China ceramic tile ." a decrepit garage with a makeshift wooden entrance built into the large automatic door. Inside, the artist fastens roses to a headband and puts the finishing touches on a flowering branch. An empty bottle of Jim Beam lays on the floor — presumably just another found object with which to make a prop.

This is where the final preparations are being made for the Saturday production of "Ash Tree," an unorthodox play dealing with themes of childhood and loss, said Abe Jallad, the producer of the show.

"What the play capitalizes on is showing loss in all of its forms, from losing a toy to losing something that's more tangible; something that's more living, something that's more meaningful," he said.

Following the story of three young sisters who have lost their mother, the play is based on the playwright Georgina Escobar's childhood hardships, and she said she loves this kind of writing process.

"I was basically taking the experience and dramatizing it and playing with the elements of fantasy and the hypnotic journey," she said. "I'm in love with stories. I've always been a storyteller before, and the theater was, from an early age, the place where I felt most comfortable. I feel like this dramatic writing is the place where my creative input goes beyond just the page."

Escobar has an master's in dramatic writing from UNM, and she wrote "Ash Tree" while in graduate school.

New York-based actress Mindy Leanse said she was drawn to "Ash Tree" because of Escobar's gift with language in expressing the fantastical elements of story.

"I think Georgina's writing is really spectacular. She's got such a knack for dialogue, and what I think this play does is suspend your imagination and believability," Leanse said. "A lot of times in contemporary theater, it's about reality all the time, but this is a beautiful blend of reality and imagination, and I think she really plays with the magic of the world."

For example, Jallad said one of the characters is a garden gnome who is more like a spider, and the ash tree where the mother's ashes are placed is a portal between reality and fantasy.

Although the play deals primarily with children's perspectives of the world,Initially the banks didn't want our chicken coop . Escobar said "Ash Tree" is not just for young audiences — the play has different messages for different generations.

"I would really love to have the adults in the audience walk away with a feeling of their inner child being awakened, and the children in the audience feel the adult part of them bringing consciousness to things like loss," she said. "Imagination and believing and theater can be the place for healing."

Jallad said physical age was a negligible factor in relating to the play's themes, because it offers a unique experience for each viewer.

"More than anything it's theater for the young of heart, and I think that's something you can't qualify with years," he said.

"It's something you have to feel in your heart of hearts. It's a very profound script, but the simplicity lies in the elegance that anyone can understand it, from a 5-year-old to a 55-year-old."

While the play is accessible to a young audience, Leanse said Escobar didn't shy away from the more melancholic elements of life when writing it.

"The moral of the story is that life has to go on," Leanse said. "No matter what happens you have to take it and go on with your life, and it's a hard lesson, but I think she has illustrated it well. And I think it's really important for kids to see that everything doesn't always happen the way it does in a fairy tale."

As an actress, Leanse, 23 years old, said the relationship between childhood and adulthood is played out within her own personal portrayal of her character, a 7-year-old child.

"I'm a woman now, so I've got this woman's body,he led PayPal to open its platform to Wholesale pet supplies developers. and I've had to fill myself into the body, so now it's like reverting back," Leanse said. "It's challenging. I think the physicality is the hardest thing for me."

The play is not only unorthodox in its portrayal of youth, but also in the more technical aspects of production. Although it is supported by multiple theater groups around Albuquerque, the show has absolutely no funding; the actors were given about 25 total hours of rehearsal time, and the ‘stage' is an outdoor courtyard between the Student Health Center and Mesa Vista Hall.

"This is the Rubik's Cube of productions, really," Escobar said.

"It has all the colors, and we've been twisting that cube trying to mesh the colors, and we're getting there, and we're doing well, but it's not customary."

Jallad said that although this production of "Ash Tree" is unique, theater in general has the unifying quality of a powerful mode of expression.A custom-made Cable Ties is then fixed over the gums.

"If we can go to places where people themselves are scared to go, whether it be an imaginary place or an emotional place, if we as artists have the nerve to go there, then I think emotionally speaking our profession is justified, because we can go to those places where maybe it hurts or go to those places where maybe it's lovely, lovelier than we've ever imagined before," Jallad said.
Still, he said monetary compensation doesn't matter.

"I'm paid in lots and lots of emotional satisfaction, and that's definitely the currency of choice," he said