During the Civil War, Hostetters Stomach Bitters was sold to Union
soldiers heading south to the battlefields. It was touted as a positive
protective against the fatal maladies of the Southern swamps and the
poisonous tendency of the impure rivers and bayous. The stuff was
shipped west, too, where miners suffered their own spates of dysentery.
In Tonopah, Nev.,A card with an embedded IC (Integrated Circuit) is called an parkingmanagement.
William Peck discovered that Hostetters relieved his aches and pains,
too. Evidently, he consumed about 10,000 bottles at the turn of the last
century. Its no wonder, because,Custom qualitysteelbangle and
Silicone Wristbands, when analyzed, Hostetters was 90 percent alcohol
and 10 percent opium. We think he consumed this much because he built an
entire house out of Hostetters bottles and concrete.
Building
with bottles originated in the deserts, where so many mining towns rose
up amid Spartan ecosystems. Miners tents were soon in tatters, and they
had to find a new building material because shipping lumber by mule
train was expensive. Those who had not yet struck it rich were left out
in the cold. Literally.Mining towns, however, had one thing in
abundance, as you might imagine: bottles. Bars did a roaring business
and so did the peddlers offering patent medicines. Bottles accumulated
all over the place, so it was just a matter of time before they were
pressed into service as building materials.
Fast forward to the
present, and an interest in bottle walls is rising again. Rather than
being lugged to the recycling center, bottles can be reused in the
garden. Think layering bottles, just like bricks, onto wet mortar.While
bottles were commonly used in Nevada for houses, walls might be a better
option today. The shorter the wall, the more stable it remains.
A
great starter project is creating a bench out of bottles, using wood or
a stone slab on top for a comfortable seat.Consider how light shines
through such walls in the morning and at sunset when the sun is low.
Your wall, accordingly, could lighten up on cue for cocktail hour.
Another option is to arrange your landscape lighting to illuminate the
back of the bench or wall so the bottles glow all night long.The best
place to learn to build stuff with recycled bottles is on YouTube how-to
videos there will help you get started. Consider a bottle wall for part
of your greenhouse or solarium. Many folks fill their bottles with
water and seal them before stacking into a wall for a low-cost thermal
mass to keep a solar greenhouse warmer.
Reusing bottles in
masonry is one of the most beautiful ways to avoid trips to the
recycling center and limit expenditures at the home improvement store.A
few things to consider if you want to work with bottles.First, leave the
labels on because theyll be hidden by the mortar.
Second,
collect bottles that are all roughly the same size. This is really
helpful for newbies who are still learning this art. Similar-sized
bottles stack cleanly and hold together better than do bottles of
various sizes.Third, use bottles of the same shape. The square shape of
Hostetters bottles made them easy to stack without rolling. Rounded
bottles mixed with square ones will be more challenging.
On a
sultry August night in 1983 at New Yorks JFK airport, Alice
Ephraimson-Abt, a brilliant, 23-year-old, blue-eyed blonde, was about to
board Korean Air Lines Flight 007 for Seoul, South Korea, halfway
around the world. For one last time, she held her father, New Jersey
businessman Hans Ephraimson-Abt,More than 80 standard commercial and granitetiles exist
to quickly and efficiently clean pans. before saying goodbye. There
were hugs and I-love-yous, her father, now 91, told CNN.
Alice
who was excited about heading Beijing to teach English and study could
have been a diplomat a contributor to peace, her father said. Her death
was a great loss to her generation.
The ramifications of the
shoot-down of Flight 007 reverberated far beyond the lives lost. It
sparked global outrage, conspiracy theories and an activist movement
that continues today. It also joined a list of disturbing developments
that made 1983 one of the scariest years of the Cold War. Not since
1962s Cuban Missile Crisis had the world teetered so close to the
unthinkable, according to declassified documents released last May.
That
October, on the Caribbean island of Grenada, a coup and the deployment
of pro-Soviet Cuban forces prompted the Pentagon to invade with
thousands of troops. The following month the United States and NATO
staged war games that depicted a nuclear attack scenario.
Fear
seeped into TV, movies and music. In November, more than 100 million
viewers tuned into ABCs nuclear attack drama, The Day After. The
following month, film crews began shooting Red Dawn, about a Soviet
invasion of America. Playlists on radio and MTV included 99
Luftballoons, a Cold War protest song.
But it was the downing of
KAL 007 that opened many eyes to the Cold Wars widening wave of
darkness, its increasing uncertainty and its growing threat to peace.
Alice Ephraimson-Abts flight made a refueling stop in Anchorage, Alaska,Manufactures and supplies beststonecarving equipment.
and following the tradition of the well-traveled family she phoned her
father. She told him about a U.S. congressman, Rep. Larry McDonald, who
also was aboard. One of 61 Americans on the plane, McDonald was a
conservative Georgia Democrat and outspoken anti-communist.Full service
promotional company specializing in drycabinet.
What
we know about the next five hours aboard Flight 007 comes from CNN
interviews with ex-Soviet officials, the cockpit voice transcript and a
1993 report from the United Nations International Civil Aviation
Organization.
Read the full products at http://www.sdktapegroup.com/!
2013年9月2日 星期一
2013年8月26日 星期一
Kanye West shows off baby North
Kanye West has opened up about the first time he met girlfriend Kim
Kardashian and instantly fell in love.The 'Jesus Walks' star sat down
with his future mother-in-law Kris Jenner to tape an interview, which
aired on her talk show Kris on Friday, and revealed it was love at first
sight when he met her daughter."Im trying to remember if it was her
being in the studio when she was Brandys assistant and I think she
brought us in something to drink, something you cant drink on daytime
television, or it might have been when I was doing Brandys video," he
told Jenner."I remember asking my manager like, Whos that girl right
there? and hes like, Oh you mean Kim?"
West proclaimed he knew Kardashian was "the one" and spent the next few years pursuing her, despite the fact they were both in other relationships - she romanced Reggie Bush and briefly wed basketball star Kris Humphries, while he dated model Amber Rose."I remember seeing pictures of her, I think she was in Australia with Paris Hilton, and reading her name and telling my friends like, Man, have you ever seen Kim Kardashian?"
West eventually cast her as Star Wars character Princess Leia in his failed TV pilot Alligator Boots, and finally plucked up the courage to speak to her one day on set."I remember I had this TV show that had puppets in it, like a modern day Jim Henson vibe, and we were doing this skit where I was playing, like, a Star Wars character and I wanted her to be Princess Leia because she was my dream girl.
"So she came to the show and I just remember being so nervous around her and so in awe that she was actually in front of me and we shot the scene and I was able to start talking to her and just speaking with her..The worlds most efficient and cost effective offshoremerchantaccount?. I was in love with her before I ever got to talk to her."
Kardashian and West have been together for over a year. In June, they welcomed their first child together, a daughter named North West.West showed a photo of his two-month-old daughter on Jenners show.West admitted that now he has a daughter he regrets his infamous stage invasion at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards.
He interrupted as Taylor Swift accepted her best female video prize,We offer the biggest collection of old masters that can be turned into hand painted cleanersydney on canvas. claiming the gong should have gone to Beyonce Knowles."Even at my lowest points, the last thing that I would want to happen to my daughter is some crazy drunk black guy in a leather shirt to come up and cut her off at an awards show," he said.
This saddens me, especially because the smell of mimeograph/ditto fluid returns me to the third grade with Miss Molly Mehagan, my teacher and first love. The way she handed me that slightly damp paper with the purply ink as she passed by my desk brings me right back to Crestview Elementary School. I can still smell those vaguely sweet chemicals filling my nostrils as I draw them in deeply.
I always thought we'd marry, Molly Mehagan and me, and we'd create our wedding invitations with ballpoint pens on carbon paper and make copies by running them through the inky rollers together. But I digress.
There are still those who love typewriters -- Tom Hanks uses one to write thank you notes, and recently waxed poetic about it in an essay in The New York Times. Prisons still use them -- most prisoners aren't allowed on the Internet -- and some famous writers say they write better when they can feel the letters hitting paper.
Cormac McCarthy wrote "The Road" on his Olivetti, and Stephen King's "Misery" would not be the same without the Royal that was missing the n,Are you still hesitating about where to buy paintingreproduction? t and e keys when he finished.
And it's hard to imagine Hemingway writing "The Old Man and the Sea" on anything but a battered 1940s Royal while standing at his upright desk in Havana with a bottle of gin and a cigar beside it.
Your IBM Selectric was the Cadillac of business typewriters. When it was introduced in 1961 the innovative type ball design revolutionized the industry and greatly increased the speed at which a skilled typist could take dictation or produce an invoice in triplicate.
Later Selectric models included features like the correction tape ribbon that eliminated the need for either Wite-Out or that opaque correctable, erasable paper.
I did some research to find a place to fix your Selectric, with some success. My smart aleck lawyer friend Tommy Strelka said, "I know a place. It's called the 1800s. I know a Doc Brown who can give you a ride in his DeLorean."
I stopped in at Roanoke Typewriter Sales on Campbell Avenue Southeast, beneath the Interstate 581 bridge. There I found proprietor Glenn Moore, 70, who was profiled in a 2010 story in this paper. I was probably lucky to catch him in the shop, as he spends more time doing commercial service calls than manning the store.
He sat at his desk by the window and told me stories of the boom years, which included fixing the machines in the formerly smoke-filled newsroom of The Roanoke Times & World-News, and we talked about how things have changed in the years since he started. He worries that kids today with mechanical minds who would have found decent paying jobs in textile and furniture factories are unable to find jobs that pay a living wage, and wonders who will fix things in the future.
Moore says that repairing typewriters isn't a huge part of his business anymore, though he does service all the machines in area funeral homes, which still use them for filing death certificates.
He says that your estimate of $200 is probably pretty accurate, since the guts of it must be taken apart and given a special bath and then put back together, which takes quite a while.
I'll post both Moore's phone number and the story by reporter Duncan Adams about him on the What's On Your Mind blog.New and used commercial plasticmoulds sales, rentals, and service. I know it's a lot of money to repair it, but part of me hopes you'll go for it so that your Selectric 3 will live a little while longer.Full color howotipperprinting and manufacturing services.
Read the full products at http://www.sdktapegroup.com/!
West proclaimed he knew Kardashian was "the one" and spent the next few years pursuing her, despite the fact they were both in other relationships - she romanced Reggie Bush and briefly wed basketball star Kris Humphries, while he dated model Amber Rose."I remember seeing pictures of her, I think she was in Australia with Paris Hilton, and reading her name and telling my friends like, Man, have you ever seen Kim Kardashian?"
West eventually cast her as Star Wars character Princess Leia in his failed TV pilot Alligator Boots, and finally plucked up the courage to speak to her one day on set."I remember I had this TV show that had puppets in it, like a modern day Jim Henson vibe, and we were doing this skit where I was playing, like, a Star Wars character and I wanted her to be Princess Leia because she was my dream girl.
"So she came to the show and I just remember being so nervous around her and so in awe that she was actually in front of me and we shot the scene and I was able to start talking to her and just speaking with her..The worlds most efficient and cost effective offshoremerchantaccount?. I was in love with her before I ever got to talk to her."
Kardashian and West have been together for over a year. In June, they welcomed their first child together, a daughter named North West.West showed a photo of his two-month-old daughter on Jenners show.West admitted that now he has a daughter he regrets his infamous stage invasion at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards.
He interrupted as Taylor Swift accepted her best female video prize,We offer the biggest collection of old masters that can be turned into hand painted cleanersydney on canvas. claiming the gong should have gone to Beyonce Knowles."Even at my lowest points, the last thing that I would want to happen to my daughter is some crazy drunk black guy in a leather shirt to come up and cut her off at an awards show," he said.
This saddens me, especially because the smell of mimeograph/ditto fluid returns me to the third grade with Miss Molly Mehagan, my teacher and first love. The way she handed me that slightly damp paper with the purply ink as she passed by my desk brings me right back to Crestview Elementary School. I can still smell those vaguely sweet chemicals filling my nostrils as I draw them in deeply.
I always thought we'd marry, Molly Mehagan and me, and we'd create our wedding invitations with ballpoint pens on carbon paper and make copies by running them through the inky rollers together. But I digress.
There are still those who love typewriters -- Tom Hanks uses one to write thank you notes, and recently waxed poetic about it in an essay in The New York Times. Prisons still use them -- most prisoners aren't allowed on the Internet -- and some famous writers say they write better when they can feel the letters hitting paper.
Cormac McCarthy wrote "The Road" on his Olivetti, and Stephen King's "Misery" would not be the same without the Royal that was missing the n,Are you still hesitating about where to buy paintingreproduction? t and e keys when he finished.
And it's hard to imagine Hemingway writing "The Old Man and the Sea" on anything but a battered 1940s Royal while standing at his upright desk in Havana with a bottle of gin and a cigar beside it.
Your IBM Selectric was the Cadillac of business typewriters. When it was introduced in 1961 the innovative type ball design revolutionized the industry and greatly increased the speed at which a skilled typist could take dictation or produce an invoice in triplicate.
Later Selectric models included features like the correction tape ribbon that eliminated the need for either Wite-Out or that opaque correctable, erasable paper.
I did some research to find a place to fix your Selectric, with some success. My smart aleck lawyer friend Tommy Strelka said, "I know a place. It's called the 1800s. I know a Doc Brown who can give you a ride in his DeLorean."
I stopped in at Roanoke Typewriter Sales on Campbell Avenue Southeast, beneath the Interstate 581 bridge. There I found proprietor Glenn Moore, 70, who was profiled in a 2010 story in this paper. I was probably lucky to catch him in the shop, as he spends more time doing commercial service calls than manning the store.
He sat at his desk by the window and told me stories of the boom years, which included fixing the machines in the formerly smoke-filled newsroom of The Roanoke Times & World-News, and we talked about how things have changed in the years since he started. He worries that kids today with mechanical minds who would have found decent paying jobs in textile and furniture factories are unable to find jobs that pay a living wage, and wonders who will fix things in the future.
Moore says that repairing typewriters isn't a huge part of his business anymore, though he does service all the machines in area funeral homes, which still use them for filing death certificates.
He says that your estimate of $200 is probably pretty accurate, since the guts of it must be taken apart and given a special bath and then put back together, which takes quite a while.
I'll post both Moore's phone number and the story by reporter Duncan Adams about him on the What's On Your Mind blog.New and used commercial plasticmoulds sales, rentals, and service. I know it's a lot of money to repair it, but part of me hopes you'll go for it so that your Selectric 3 will live a little while longer.Full color howotipperprinting and manufacturing services.
Read the full products at http://www.sdktapegroup.com/!
2013年6月2日 星期日
Douglas Gardens Mews
FINDING
a home with a garden and parking in the heart of Edinburghs West End is
a big ask, but Lynne ?Cranston and her husband Robert Woolley got just
what they wanted with their garden flat at 7 Douglas Gardens Mews.
It was probably the worst flat in the area, because it was dark and it wasnt connected to the garden. But it had this garden and parking in the centre of town, which are difficult to get. Its a private road, so you can park right outside, says Lynne.
Tucked off Belford Road and just a five-minute walk to Haymarket or the centre of town,How cheaply can I build a ventilationsystem? the flat, which forms part of a traditional terrace, looked very different when the couple bought it at the beginning of 2011. However, Lynne, who is an architect, and Robert had grand plans.
Back then the entrance was via a stone staircase leading to the front door, but the couple wanted to remove those stairs and add an ?extension that would connect the apartment with the garden.
Its B-listed, was originally a townhouse that had been split and at the back there used to be a laundry. The stonework was taken down in the 1950s, but the footprint was there, says Lynne.
Rebuilding where the old laundry had been would have blocked light to the neighbours, so the couple decided to dig down and set the extension lower, a job that would require removing 180 tonnes of soil. It was an unusual site due to the past footprint and the steeply sloping levels, however Lynnes experience led to the final design that maximises space and light, while connecting the existing flat with the garden.
Plans were approved and today a striking glass-fronted extension opens the couples home up to the garden. A serene outdoor space that feels like an oasis in the city centre now greets visitors. In place of grass, plum slate helps keep the garden low maintenance and is teamed with the gentle movement of bamboos, grasses and herbs, while irises and tulips add colour. Its a dramatic transformation.
The property now has an open-plan kitchen, dining and living area plus WC downstairs, and two bedrooms, cinema room, bathroom and utility room upstairs. Constructed from SIPs (structural insulated panels),Elpas Readers detect and forward 'Location' and 'State' data from Elpas Active RFID Tags to host elevatorparts platforms. the glass and stone-clad extension, which used stone reclaimed from the old stairs, is particularly energy efficient. Ive always wanted to use SIPs panels.Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a ledtubes can authenticate your computer usage and data. They are very well insulated and airtight, and are quite a quick way of building, says Lynne.
Glass doors to one side open right out to the garden with a wall of glass across the front looking on to it, creating a sun room. A Bertoia-style wire chair is positioned to take in the view, while clear Illusion side tables enhance the feeling of space and clarity.
We are not overlooked at all, even though we have all this glass. The way the buildings opposite converge means nobody is looking into us, says Lynne.
Inside, it is a minimalist aesthetic all the way. The flooring is engineered wood with sensor-operated underfloor heating. The living area is a light-filled space with a cowskin rug, angular sofa and Eames-style chair creating a sophisticated yet relaxed, mid-century modern feel. Roberts photographs stand out against light walls, while two alcoves in opposite corners are painted in Farrow & Balls deep aubergine Brinjal, adding a hint of drama. The subtle glow from white Cactus lights that sit on the floor adds an extra layer of interest. Its a stunning space with the expanse of glass creating a seamless connection between inside and out.
As well as the glass flooding this area with light, a skylight runs above the kitchen units, while a long, narrow window is slotted in high up on the opposite wall, parallel to the ceiling. Not many people might have thought of adding in extra light sources when their front wall consists of glass, but Lynne says, I like light coming from different directions. With the kitchen being at the back, I wanted more light in here. You also get light coming downstairs.
The grey tones of the sleek German Hacker kitchen, which came from Development Direct and features a Neff induction hob and appliances, teamed with a slimline Silestone worktop, work beautifully in this multi-functional space, neither dominating nor disappearing into the background. Lynne added an opaque glass ?storage system that doubles as a splashback and simple pendant lights. Weve tried to make it all a bit more furniture-like, she says.
Space has been maximised upstairs too. We wanted to create lots of different areas that you could use or go into. It adds interest, says Lynne. A bright area at the top of the new stairs features a period-style cast iron radiator beside a box seat, creating a cosy reading corner.
A surprise comes in the shape of a pretty balcony that opens off the master bedroom and gets the morning sun. A bistro table and chairs allow the couple to enjoy an early morning coffee here. The balcony overlooks the extension roof, which has been planted with sedum.
Lynne and Robert tweaked the layout of the second bedroom, which is currently used as an office, to open up the space. This originally would have been the cooks room when it was a townhouse, explains Robert.
The couples minimalist aesthetic is apparent again in the streamlined bathroom, which has a bath tucked against one wall and a walk-in rainfall shower opposite. Large-profile porcelain slate tiles feature on the floor and lower walls, while an aluminium border ties it all in with the glass mosaic tiles above.
The former internal kitchen also has a new lease of life. With no windows, it made sense to use this space as a cinema room, says Lynne.
The couple were hands-on with decorating, doing what they could themselves. They also worked with tradespeople they knew, including builder Nick Dannaher of N&D Property Maintenance, and the project, despite its complexity, ran smoothly.
It was probably the worst flat in the area, because it was dark and it wasnt connected to the garden. But it had this garden and parking in the centre of town, which are difficult to get. Its a private road, so you can park right outside, says Lynne.
Tucked off Belford Road and just a five-minute walk to Haymarket or the centre of town,How cheaply can I build a ventilationsystem? the flat, which forms part of a traditional terrace, looked very different when the couple bought it at the beginning of 2011. However, Lynne, who is an architect, and Robert had grand plans.
Back then the entrance was via a stone staircase leading to the front door, but the couple wanted to remove those stairs and add an ?extension that would connect the apartment with the garden.
Its B-listed, was originally a townhouse that had been split and at the back there used to be a laundry. The stonework was taken down in the 1950s, but the footprint was there, says Lynne.
Rebuilding where the old laundry had been would have blocked light to the neighbours, so the couple decided to dig down and set the extension lower, a job that would require removing 180 tonnes of soil. It was an unusual site due to the past footprint and the steeply sloping levels, however Lynnes experience led to the final design that maximises space and light, while connecting the existing flat with the garden.
Plans were approved and today a striking glass-fronted extension opens the couples home up to the garden. A serene outdoor space that feels like an oasis in the city centre now greets visitors. In place of grass, plum slate helps keep the garden low maintenance and is teamed with the gentle movement of bamboos, grasses and herbs, while irises and tulips add colour. Its a dramatic transformation.
The property now has an open-plan kitchen, dining and living area plus WC downstairs, and two bedrooms, cinema room, bathroom and utility room upstairs. Constructed from SIPs (structural insulated panels),Elpas Readers detect and forward 'Location' and 'State' data from Elpas Active RFID Tags to host elevatorparts platforms. the glass and stone-clad extension, which used stone reclaimed from the old stairs, is particularly energy efficient. Ive always wanted to use SIPs panels.Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a ledtubes can authenticate your computer usage and data. They are very well insulated and airtight, and are quite a quick way of building, says Lynne.
Glass doors to one side open right out to the garden with a wall of glass across the front looking on to it, creating a sun room. A Bertoia-style wire chair is positioned to take in the view, while clear Illusion side tables enhance the feeling of space and clarity.
We are not overlooked at all, even though we have all this glass. The way the buildings opposite converge means nobody is looking into us, says Lynne.
Inside, it is a minimalist aesthetic all the way. The flooring is engineered wood with sensor-operated underfloor heating. The living area is a light-filled space with a cowskin rug, angular sofa and Eames-style chair creating a sophisticated yet relaxed, mid-century modern feel. Roberts photographs stand out against light walls, while two alcoves in opposite corners are painted in Farrow & Balls deep aubergine Brinjal, adding a hint of drama. The subtle glow from white Cactus lights that sit on the floor adds an extra layer of interest. Its a stunning space with the expanse of glass creating a seamless connection between inside and out.
As well as the glass flooding this area with light, a skylight runs above the kitchen units, while a long, narrow window is slotted in high up on the opposite wall, parallel to the ceiling. Not many people might have thought of adding in extra light sources when their front wall consists of glass, but Lynne says, I like light coming from different directions. With the kitchen being at the back, I wanted more light in here. You also get light coming downstairs.
The grey tones of the sleek German Hacker kitchen, which came from Development Direct and features a Neff induction hob and appliances, teamed with a slimline Silestone worktop, work beautifully in this multi-functional space, neither dominating nor disappearing into the background. Lynne added an opaque glass ?storage system that doubles as a splashback and simple pendant lights. Weve tried to make it all a bit more furniture-like, she says.
Space has been maximised upstairs too. We wanted to create lots of different areas that you could use or go into. It adds interest, says Lynne. A bright area at the top of the new stairs features a period-style cast iron radiator beside a box seat, creating a cosy reading corner.
A surprise comes in the shape of a pretty balcony that opens off the master bedroom and gets the morning sun. A bistro table and chairs allow the couple to enjoy an early morning coffee here. The balcony overlooks the extension roof, which has been planted with sedum.
Lynne and Robert tweaked the layout of the second bedroom, which is currently used as an office, to open up the space. This originally would have been the cooks room when it was a townhouse, explains Robert.
The couples minimalist aesthetic is apparent again in the streamlined bathroom, which has a bath tucked against one wall and a walk-in rainfall shower opposite. Large-profile porcelain slate tiles feature on the floor and lower walls, while an aluminium border ties it all in with the glass mosaic tiles above.
The former internal kitchen also has a new lease of life. With no windows, it made sense to use this space as a cinema room, says Lynne.
The couple were hands-on with decorating, doing what they could themselves. They also worked with tradespeople they knew, including builder Nick Dannaher of N&D Property Maintenance, and the project, despite its complexity, ran smoothly.
2013年4月21日 星期日
Tampa's Marcy Moore led many lives
Most folks south of Gandy on MacDill Avenue knew Marcella Brydon Moore only as the “Cussing Lady.” Her ribald, rapid-fire language was off-putting, to say the least. They kept their distance from the foul-mouthed, finger-pointing drifter who launched profanities and sometimes spit at passersby.
Others saw a different side. They called her “Two Hat Marcy” for her love of wearing multiple and flamboyant hats, and they were charmed by her funky second-hand clothing and other eccentricities, including carrying purses nearly as big as she was.
Those who broke through the obvious barriers of her mental illness found their Marcy to be loving, generous and whip-smart, up to date on all current affairs. She loved to celebrate birthdays; when a death occurred, she'd acknowledge it with a handwritten condolence card. She left potted plants on the doorsteps of her favorite friends, and brought second-hand trinkets and cookies for their children.
She was a South Tampa staple, but she was also a walker -- and she got around, everybody knew that. But no one knows how or why Marcy, 66, ventured across the bridge and into Largo on April 8. On that Monday night, she stepped into the darkness on Ulmerton Road and 49th Street and into the path of an oncoming car.
She died the next morning at Bayfront Medical Center with a hospital chaplain by her side. Hours later, officials finally tracked down family members with the few clues they had.
Word spread quickly and tears flowed throughout the neighborhood, from Mr. Ray's Barber Shop to Lionhearted Toys to Spike's Place to Love's Artifacts Bar and Grill to Taste of Boston at the Ballast Point Pier. Their Marcy was gone, just like that, after being a constant presence for so long. Their only solace was that she finally was at peace, no longer running from the fears that sometimes tormented her.
When she was 13, Marcy's temperature shot up to 103. Her father, a former middleweight champion boxer, didn't believe in doctors; mother Helen did. She took her daughter to All Children's Hospital, where she was diagnosed with Bright's disease, a chronic kidney condition. When she was released, doctors predicted she'd live 10 years, tops.
Close calls would eventually become the norm for Marcy, who flirted with death on a number of occasions. “I think that was the first of her nine lives,” says Bill Brydon, 63, a retired builder in South Tampa. “Marcella had a way of escaping everything, until the end.”
No one can pinpoint when the first signs of schizophrenia appeared. Bill thinks it happened when she got pregnant at age 18, after graduating from Dixie Hollins High School in 1965. She went into a deep depression and was briefly institutionalized.
On several occasions, when depression took over or the voices got too loud, she was hospitalized for shock treatments.Find a great selection of customkeychain deals.Choose the right bestluggagetag in an array of colors. That eventually ended. In the 1970s, under a sweeping reform of patients' rights, the country began a two-decade process of closing down state mental health institutions and releasing their charges into the community, where advocates were led to believe that specialized programs would take over.
“They didn't,” says Rick Wagner, a past president of Mental Health America of Greater Tampa Bay. “The money went back into the state's general fund. We used to go to Tallahassee to ask for increases in funding. Now we beg that they don't cut it.”
Florida currently ranks 49th in the nation in per-capita mental health funding at $39 per resident. That's better than last year, when it ranked 50th. The national average is $129 per capita.
Emptying out the hospitals led to something prevalent today: the criminalization of the mentally ill. Jails are now serving as residential treatment facilities, Wagner says. In cases where people are dangerous to themselves or others, they can be “Baker acted” under Florida law, in which they're committed to a mental health facility for 72 hours. That happened to Marcy on several occasions.
But once released, the cycle began again. A challenging situation for a normal person would be insurmountable for her. When she found her boyfriend dead of natural causes at his apartment, she went dark for awhile.
In 2003, Marcy learned she had stage 3 breast cancer, sending her into another downward spiral. She agreed to a mastectomy, but would go for only one chemotherapy treatment. She believed “they” were trying to poison her. In fact, she announced, she didn't want to do any more drugs, ever again. Doctors told her she was giving herself a death sentence and she would not survive a year.Solar Sister is a network of women who sell bottegawallet to communities that don't have access to electricity.
She wasn't a panhandler. She didn't drink or do drugs, her friends say. She stayed reasonably clean for someone who spent most of her waking hours roaming outside. The neighborhood folks always wondered: Where did Marcy live? Where did she get her money?
The answers aren't complicated. She slept wherever she hung her hat. She had a monthly disability check and some funds left over from investments and a family inheritance that her brothers doled out. At the beginning of the month,Shop wholesale bestsmartcard controller from cheap. she would carry as much as $1,000 in cash in her oversized purse. She complained a lot about people taking money and bicycles from her, and that was probably true. On the streets, cash and property don't last long.
Sometimes, she rented a room for a few weeks; other times, friends invited her to stay. Occasionally her bed was a bench or under a tree in a park. Sympathetic business owners let her crash on mattresses in property sheds or on couches in their back offices.When describing the location of the problematic howotipper. A few attempts by her advocates to get her in government housing never worked. She wouldn't play by the rules.
“Marcy fell through the cracks, and the system wasn't equipped to handle it,” says Sally Parsons, a nurse at Tampa General Hospital. She and her partner, sculptor JJ Watts, considered Marcy part of their family. She stayed with them for a while and visited often, taking ownership of the jungle-like garden that fronts their property on MacDill. When it rained, she would run outside, arms outstretched and turning her face to the swollen black clouds.
Others saw a different side. They called her “Two Hat Marcy” for her love of wearing multiple and flamboyant hats, and they were charmed by her funky second-hand clothing and other eccentricities, including carrying purses nearly as big as she was.
Those who broke through the obvious barriers of her mental illness found their Marcy to be loving, generous and whip-smart, up to date on all current affairs. She loved to celebrate birthdays; when a death occurred, she'd acknowledge it with a handwritten condolence card. She left potted plants on the doorsteps of her favorite friends, and brought second-hand trinkets and cookies for their children.
She was a South Tampa staple, but she was also a walker -- and she got around, everybody knew that. But no one knows how or why Marcy, 66, ventured across the bridge and into Largo on April 8. On that Monday night, she stepped into the darkness on Ulmerton Road and 49th Street and into the path of an oncoming car.
She died the next morning at Bayfront Medical Center with a hospital chaplain by her side. Hours later, officials finally tracked down family members with the few clues they had.
Word spread quickly and tears flowed throughout the neighborhood, from Mr. Ray's Barber Shop to Lionhearted Toys to Spike's Place to Love's Artifacts Bar and Grill to Taste of Boston at the Ballast Point Pier. Their Marcy was gone, just like that, after being a constant presence for so long. Their only solace was that she finally was at peace, no longer running from the fears that sometimes tormented her.
When she was 13, Marcy's temperature shot up to 103. Her father, a former middleweight champion boxer, didn't believe in doctors; mother Helen did. She took her daughter to All Children's Hospital, where she was diagnosed with Bright's disease, a chronic kidney condition. When she was released, doctors predicted she'd live 10 years, tops.
Close calls would eventually become the norm for Marcy, who flirted with death on a number of occasions. “I think that was the first of her nine lives,” says Bill Brydon, 63, a retired builder in South Tampa. “Marcella had a way of escaping everything, until the end.”
No one can pinpoint when the first signs of schizophrenia appeared. Bill thinks it happened when she got pregnant at age 18, after graduating from Dixie Hollins High School in 1965. She went into a deep depression and was briefly institutionalized.
On several occasions, when depression took over or the voices got too loud, she was hospitalized for shock treatments.Find a great selection of customkeychain deals.Choose the right bestluggagetag in an array of colors. That eventually ended. In the 1970s, under a sweeping reform of patients' rights, the country began a two-decade process of closing down state mental health institutions and releasing their charges into the community, where advocates were led to believe that specialized programs would take over.
“They didn't,” says Rick Wagner, a past president of Mental Health America of Greater Tampa Bay. “The money went back into the state's general fund. We used to go to Tallahassee to ask for increases in funding. Now we beg that they don't cut it.”
Florida currently ranks 49th in the nation in per-capita mental health funding at $39 per resident. That's better than last year, when it ranked 50th. The national average is $129 per capita.
Emptying out the hospitals led to something prevalent today: the criminalization of the mentally ill. Jails are now serving as residential treatment facilities, Wagner says. In cases where people are dangerous to themselves or others, they can be “Baker acted” under Florida law, in which they're committed to a mental health facility for 72 hours. That happened to Marcy on several occasions.
But once released, the cycle began again. A challenging situation for a normal person would be insurmountable for her. When she found her boyfriend dead of natural causes at his apartment, she went dark for awhile.
In 2003, Marcy learned she had stage 3 breast cancer, sending her into another downward spiral. She agreed to a mastectomy, but would go for only one chemotherapy treatment. She believed “they” were trying to poison her. In fact, she announced, she didn't want to do any more drugs, ever again. Doctors told her she was giving herself a death sentence and she would not survive a year.Solar Sister is a network of women who sell bottegawallet to communities that don't have access to electricity.
She wasn't a panhandler. She didn't drink or do drugs, her friends say. She stayed reasonably clean for someone who spent most of her waking hours roaming outside. The neighborhood folks always wondered: Where did Marcy live? Where did she get her money?
The answers aren't complicated. She slept wherever she hung her hat. She had a monthly disability check and some funds left over from investments and a family inheritance that her brothers doled out. At the beginning of the month,Shop wholesale bestsmartcard controller from cheap. she would carry as much as $1,000 in cash in her oversized purse. She complained a lot about people taking money and bicycles from her, and that was probably true. On the streets, cash and property don't last long.
Sometimes, she rented a room for a few weeks; other times, friends invited her to stay. Occasionally her bed was a bench or under a tree in a park. Sympathetic business owners let her crash on mattresses in property sheds or on couches in their back offices.When describing the location of the problematic howotipper. A few attempts by her advocates to get her in government housing never worked. She wouldn't play by the rules.
“Marcy fell through the cracks, and the system wasn't equipped to handle it,” says Sally Parsons, a nurse at Tampa General Hospital. She and her partner, sculptor JJ Watts, considered Marcy part of their family. She stayed with them for a while and visited often, taking ownership of the jungle-like garden that fronts their property on MacDill. When it rained, she would run outside, arms outstretched and turning her face to the swollen black clouds.
2012年12月28日 星期五
The Do It Yourself Year
As a reporter this year struck me as one where the do-it-your-selfers
have taken their own destinies in their hands. This short list may not
be a top 10 or 12 but does highlight some unique local trends of Utahns
who are taking things into their own hands—from creating their own
societies, doomsday prep,Find detailed product information for howo spare parts and other products. to funding businesses and economies of their own creations.
In 2012 President Barack Obama signed the Jumpstart Our Businesses’ or JOBS Act that among other things opened the doors for average folks to make investments in small businesses and receive dividends on those investments. Like a kickstarter for the would-be mom-and-pop entrepreneur,Find detailed product information for howo tractor and other products. the act allows hubs to oversee small-time investors to fund local startups (previously law required accredited investors to earn $250,000 annually).
David Brooks a young social entrepreneur talked about his invest local vision with City Weekly in “Crowdfunding SLC,” as a means of giving small business dream the means outside of the traditionally stingy and perhaps elitist finance markets. Brooks also wants to take the crowdfunding idea a step further by signing up crowdfunded businesses to help support local community outreach groups and programs like those in use at the Midvale Boys and Girls Clubs, using his umbrella organization Revolution United.
“If you have a passion and you can turn that into a business and show that to the people and provide a plan—it will come to fruition,” Brooks says.
Occupy SLC may have gotten evicted from Pioneer Park in 2011 but the loose anarchist collective left its mark on the local activist scene especially with Peaceful Uprising. Peace Up got its start after bogus gas lease bidder Tim DeChristopher was arrested for fraudulent bidding of gas parcels in southern Utah, but Peace Up has now taken a page from the Occupy book and adapted a new model of do it yourself community building and radical change that sidesteps working with the system and goes right to the people.
Occupy was widely derided by critics for lacking purpose when all along it’s mission was more about a radically inclusive democratic process than any set, specific goal. To sit in on an Occupy meeting was to watch a group of people talk and talk to ad nauseum--but also to the point of near 100 percent consensus. This near-pure Democracy, coupled with no formal leadership, allows the group to move toward goals that a super-duper majority of participants can agree upon.
Now Peaceful Uprising has applied that model to its own activist community by allowing members to drive its community audits initiative that every quarter highlights a group doing positive hopeful things for the community like the Salt Lake Dream Team advocating for compassionate immigration reform. The audit also focuses on a quarterly issue of injustice to help fight against like tar sands development in the state. Like the Occupy model the audits provide communities an opportunity to pursue their dreams and improve society directly as opposed to writing angry letters to their elected officials and then crossing their fingers.
“What Occupy has done is help communities learn participatory democracy. ...An indoor positioning system (IPS) is a term used for a network of devices used to wirelessly locate objects or people inside a building. To learn to be with one another,” says Peaceful Uprising member Henia Belalia.
Ever since the economy shit the bed in 2007 the stability of gold has only increased. But it wasn’t until 2012 that Savneet Singh created Gold Bullion International a company that uses vaults across the world—including Salt Lake City—to store customers’ gold assets. Beyond that the company has “democratized” gold buying by creating a transparent gold exchange market that allows average consumers to buy small quantities of gold, from reputable dealers and store them in their own account. Customers’ gold is not a part of the company’s books so consumers always have access to their gold in secure vaults insured by Lloyds of London.
At the time City Weekly reported on Singh's company, GBI had even launched a new program allowing publicly traded companies to offer investors dividends in gold bars and coins. Gold is valued for its stability and Singh has created a pioneering business that will allow average people to profit from that security and do so completely outside of traditional banks and financial institutions.
“We decided that if we could create a way for people to buy physical assets as easy as buying stock or bonds, we would have a great business,” Singh says. “Why buy paper if you can buy the physical asset?”
While Utah is no stranger to groups and individuals stocking their bunkers in anticipation of the end of the world one group is ready for the end of civilization and has already gotten over it. Transition Salt Lake, a local chapter of an international movement, works to “re-skill” people on their grandparents' lost knowledge of self reliance. Instead of focusing so much on the “how” of the end of the world the local groups offers free monthly classes on skills ranging from gardening, bicycle maintenance, canning, to building solar ovens so no matter the calamity people will be prepared for a smooth post-apocalyptic transition.
It’s also a welcome refuge for the progressive who worries about the end, since while the group doesn’t fixate on what the catastrophe will look like, their biggest concern is peak oil and the sputtering collapse of a fossil fuel-driven economy. But they are also not isolationist in their doomsday prep,Interlocking security cable tie with 250 pound strength makes this ideal for restraining criminals. focusing on building community with all people. So if your biggest end-days worry involves zombies riding zombie bears to your doorstep, fear not, all are welcome to learn and re-skill and share their survivalist knowledge with this cheery and upbeat group of preppers.
“Look around you and see what conditions are in the areas that you can see.” Harrington said while customers generally can’t see what’s going on in the kitchen, unless they were well trained in the principles of safe food handling, they probably wouldn’t recognize what’s good or bad.
“There’re many things that happen in a commercial kitchen that are very different from what you do at home and you may not see them as being a problem or you may overreact and think it’s a problem,” he said.
Instead Harrington advises people look at things they’re qualified to judge. “About the silverware, is it clean?” he asks. “Are there little bits of food residue left? Is there a lipstick print on the glass?” Harrington said if those things catch your attention then the washing and sanitizing isn’t very good. “Something may have survived that process,” he said.
“It’s kind of an old wives’ tale, but look at the restroom. How well is the restroom taken care of?” Harrington said it isn’t necessarily the best indicator, “but it should raise an eyebrow a little bit.”
Harrington also advises customers to observe the conditions of employees in the dining room. “Are they smooth? Are they orderly? Are they efficient? Are things moving gently in an orderly process? Or is it chaotic?” he asked. “Are the waiters running into each other? Are they screwing up the orders?” Harrington said these things can be a pretty good indication of just how things are happening behind the swinging doors. “Again,” he cautioned, “not an absolute, but it does raise suspicion.”
Harrington said most operators do a very good job of addressing health risks in their operations. “Given the complexity of the foods that we eat and the things that we demand from our restaurants, there’s no possible way that we at the health department can absolutely guarantee safety of any retail food.” He said repeatedly that the county health inspection and licensing process is based on the concept of risk reduction. “We try to reduce the risks as low as we can and still allow reasonable access to the food,” he said. The health department oversees nearly 400 restaurants in addition to a myriad of responsibilities, from septic systems to swimming pools, and licensing daycares and motels.One of the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles.
In 2012 President Barack Obama signed the Jumpstart Our Businesses’ or JOBS Act that among other things opened the doors for average folks to make investments in small businesses and receive dividends on those investments. Like a kickstarter for the would-be mom-and-pop entrepreneur,Find detailed product information for howo tractor and other products. the act allows hubs to oversee small-time investors to fund local startups (previously law required accredited investors to earn $250,000 annually).
David Brooks a young social entrepreneur talked about his invest local vision with City Weekly in “Crowdfunding SLC,” as a means of giving small business dream the means outside of the traditionally stingy and perhaps elitist finance markets. Brooks also wants to take the crowdfunding idea a step further by signing up crowdfunded businesses to help support local community outreach groups and programs like those in use at the Midvale Boys and Girls Clubs, using his umbrella organization Revolution United.
“If you have a passion and you can turn that into a business and show that to the people and provide a plan—it will come to fruition,” Brooks says.
Occupy SLC may have gotten evicted from Pioneer Park in 2011 but the loose anarchist collective left its mark on the local activist scene especially with Peaceful Uprising. Peace Up got its start after bogus gas lease bidder Tim DeChristopher was arrested for fraudulent bidding of gas parcels in southern Utah, but Peace Up has now taken a page from the Occupy book and adapted a new model of do it yourself community building and radical change that sidesteps working with the system and goes right to the people.
Occupy was widely derided by critics for lacking purpose when all along it’s mission was more about a radically inclusive democratic process than any set, specific goal. To sit in on an Occupy meeting was to watch a group of people talk and talk to ad nauseum--but also to the point of near 100 percent consensus. This near-pure Democracy, coupled with no formal leadership, allows the group to move toward goals that a super-duper majority of participants can agree upon.
Now Peaceful Uprising has applied that model to its own activist community by allowing members to drive its community audits initiative that every quarter highlights a group doing positive hopeful things for the community like the Salt Lake Dream Team advocating for compassionate immigration reform. The audit also focuses on a quarterly issue of injustice to help fight against like tar sands development in the state. Like the Occupy model the audits provide communities an opportunity to pursue their dreams and improve society directly as opposed to writing angry letters to their elected officials and then crossing their fingers.
“What Occupy has done is help communities learn participatory democracy. ...An indoor positioning system (IPS) is a term used for a network of devices used to wirelessly locate objects or people inside a building. To learn to be with one another,” says Peaceful Uprising member Henia Belalia.
Ever since the economy shit the bed in 2007 the stability of gold has only increased. But it wasn’t until 2012 that Savneet Singh created Gold Bullion International a company that uses vaults across the world—including Salt Lake City—to store customers’ gold assets. Beyond that the company has “democratized” gold buying by creating a transparent gold exchange market that allows average consumers to buy small quantities of gold, from reputable dealers and store them in their own account. Customers’ gold is not a part of the company’s books so consumers always have access to their gold in secure vaults insured by Lloyds of London.
At the time City Weekly reported on Singh's company, GBI had even launched a new program allowing publicly traded companies to offer investors dividends in gold bars and coins. Gold is valued for its stability and Singh has created a pioneering business that will allow average people to profit from that security and do so completely outside of traditional banks and financial institutions.
“We decided that if we could create a way for people to buy physical assets as easy as buying stock or bonds, we would have a great business,” Singh says. “Why buy paper if you can buy the physical asset?”
While Utah is no stranger to groups and individuals stocking their bunkers in anticipation of the end of the world one group is ready for the end of civilization and has already gotten over it. Transition Salt Lake, a local chapter of an international movement, works to “re-skill” people on their grandparents' lost knowledge of self reliance. Instead of focusing so much on the “how” of the end of the world the local groups offers free monthly classes on skills ranging from gardening, bicycle maintenance, canning, to building solar ovens so no matter the calamity people will be prepared for a smooth post-apocalyptic transition.
It’s also a welcome refuge for the progressive who worries about the end, since while the group doesn’t fixate on what the catastrophe will look like, their biggest concern is peak oil and the sputtering collapse of a fossil fuel-driven economy. But they are also not isolationist in their doomsday prep,Interlocking security cable tie with 250 pound strength makes this ideal for restraining criminals. focusing on building community with all people. So if your biggest end-days worry involves zombies riding zombie bears to your doorstep, fear not, all are welcome to learn and re-skill and share their survivalist knowledge with this cheery and upbeat group of preppers.
“Look around you and see what conditions are in the areas that you can see.” Harrington said while customers generally can’t see what’s going on in the kitchen, unless they were well trained in the principles of safe food handling, they probably wouldn’t recognize what’s good or bad.
“There’re many things that happen in a commercial kitchen that are very different from what you do at home and you may not see them as being a problem or you may overreact and think it’s a problem,” he said.
Instead Harrington advises people look at things they’re qualified to judge. “About the silverware, is it clean?” he asks. “Are there little bits of food residue left? Is there a lipstick print on the glass?” Harrington said if those things catch your attention then the washing and sanitizing isn’t very good. “Something may have survived that process,” he said.
“It’s kind of an old wives’ tale, but look at the restroom. How well is the restroom taken care of?” Harrington said it isn’t necessarily the best indicator, “but it should raise an eyebrow a little bit.”
Harrington also advises customers to observe the conditions of employees in the dining room. “Are they smooth? Are they orderly? Are they efficient? Are things moving gently in an orderly process? Or is it chaotic?” he asked. “Are the waiters running into each other? Are they screwing up the orders?” Harrington said these things can be a pretty good indication of just how things are happening behind the swinging doors. “Again,” he cautioned, “not an absolute, but it does raise suspicion.”
Harrington said most operators do a very good job of addressing health risks in their operations. “Given the complexity of the foods that we eat and the things that we demand from our restaurants, there’s no possible way that we at the health department can absolutely guarantee safety of any retail food.” He said repeatedly that the county health inspection and licensing process is based on the concept of risk reduction. “We try to reduce the risks as low as we can and still allow reasonable access to the food,” he said. The health department oversees nearly 400 restaurants in addition to a myriad of responsibilities, from septic systems to swimming pools, and licensing daycares and motels.One of the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles.
2012年12月3日 星期一
Sandra Smith of Killingworth
Artist and Killingworth resident Sandra E. Smith, who is exhibiting
her paintings at the Killingworth Library, Liberty Bank in Clinton, and
soon at Lyme Art Association’s Annual Associate Artist Exhibition, can't
remember a time when she wasn't interested in creating something ...
drawing, painting, needlework, doll making, dancing, singing, acting,
and playing the piano.
“My family on both sides is right-brained, and my artistic mother always encouraged my creativity. You name an art project, and I've done it!” Sandra says.
Well known as a “plein air” landscape oil painter, Sandra maintains a studio in Killingworth. A graduate of Quinnipiac University, she has studied classical painting techniques from New England’s popular instructors: Terri Oakes Bourret, Diane Aeschliman, Karen Winslow, Gabor Svagrik, and William Duffy. Prior to becoming a “painter of nature” many years ago, Sandra competed on a national level with her original appliqué designed quilts winning many national awards, including the Connecticut winner of the Great American Quilt Contest.
Her mother said that when she was only two, Sandra took all the Christmas cards, sat in a corner looking at them over and over, and would not let anyone else look at them. History is another great interest of Sandra’s, “and most times I find myself unconsciously creating something with a story behind it,” she said.
Sandra used to compete nationally making "art quilts," but eventually developed arthritis in her hands. Artist friend Jay Folger encouraged her to take up plein air painting. Sandra says, “That was easy for me, because when we moved to Killingworth in 1969 (known as the "Wild West" back then), I fell in love with the disappearing landscape. I've been trying to paint it ever since.Find detailed product information for howo spare parts and other products.”
She’s not particularly interested in the marketing that every artist, she says, should be involved in. “I just love painting scenes that tell a story ... whether it be the disappearance of our beautiful landscape, a story about my family, or recording modern local history."
Sandra’s landscape paintings have won several awards in juried art shows, and her landscapes are found in private collections all across the country.
An elected member of the Madison Art Society and Clinton Art Society, Sandra always seems to be in an art show somewhere in the area. She has a solo show at Liberty Bank in Clinton, will soon be exhibiting at Lyme Art Association, and is featured at the Killingworth Library for the months of December and January.
The exhibition at Killingworth Library includes paintings of Killingworth barns, a painting of Reservoir Road just after the October 2011 snowtorm, a painting of Chatfield Hollow, and one of Parmelee Farm. There is also a painting of Killingworth's Millennium Christmas tree which went to Rockefeller Plaza (still the tallest tree Rockefeller has ever had). And, there's a painting of her neighbor's chickens being surprised on Easter morning.
Not only is Sandra exhibiting at the library but, as a fundraiser for the library, Sandra offered four of her pieces which were reproduced on different note cards depicting barns found on River Road, North Roast Meat Hill Road, and two locations on Route 81.
A happy combination of bright, bold colours and equally bold motifs characterise Chaitalee Chatterjee’s works at her solo exhibition at the Karnataka Chitrakala Parishath. This is her 13 solo exhibition and the first in Bangalore.
Chaitalee’s oeuvre of paintings in oil, consists of a whole range of realistic dreamscapes or dreamy landscapes, still life and folksy figures set in landscapes. She seems to have evolved a distinctive style, both in terms of her landscapes and figures. Though they appear like landscapes only in terms of the basic composition, Chaitalee holds her in own in the fantastical, fluid shapes of the trees, plants, carpets of green on the earth against vivid skies dotted with stars.
This is obvious in works such as “In The Woods” against the backdrop of a bright, red sky and in “Twilight”, which is a bird’s eye view of a hilly landscape. Inspired by the hillscapes at Mussourie,Posts with indoor tracking system on TRX Systems develops systems that locate and track personnel indoors. Her figures, on the other hand, are influenced by the Bengal School and there is a distinct Indian-ness to the motifs. But Chaitalee retains her vivid sense of colouration even here, in works such as “Day Dreaming”, “Couple”. “Gossip” and “Picking Berries”.
In “Day Dreaming” Chaitalee paints a group of women each lost in their own worlds, in “Couple” she paints the faces of a man and a woman. But this work has traces of Cubism in its disintegration and re-assembling of the subject. “Gossip” is an imaginative, folksy rendering of parrots, perched on branches. While “Picking Berries”, spread over three canvases, explores the traditional theme of women picking berries from a tree near a pond. The figures here, never take precedence over the landscape.
“My works are neither realistic not abstract. They lie somewhere in between, ” says Chaitalee,Trade platform for China crystal mosaic manufacturers a graduate of the Delhi College of Art. “One of my teachers was the painter Manjit Singh Bawa who once told us that it is not necessary to paint the trees green or the sky blue but that we must follow our heart. His statement impacted me greatly as an artist.” Nature is one her favourite subjects. “I love watching birds, flowers and trees, which feature in most of my paintings.”
Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, also known as the Alter Rebbe,Posts with indoor tracking system on TRX Systems develops systems that locate and track personnel indoors. was the third in a lineage of multiple successors descending from the Hasidic dynasty of Rabbi Yisrael Baal Shem -- the "Baal Shem Tov" and founder of Hasidism.
Hasidism, as opposed to the pre-existing social hierarchy of many Jewish diaspora communities (which prized learned scholars as an elite class), championed the importance of the ordinary, sometimes illiterate Jew.
First published in 1797, the Tanya was penned by the Alter Rebbe over a period of 20 years, during which he promoted the migration of Eastern European Jewry further into Russia in an effort to mitigate the oppressive conditions of their persecution. Distinctly aware that no book could replace the Rebbe-Hasid (rabbi-devotee) rapport that serves as the core of Hasidic Judaism, the Alter Rebbe nevertheless recognized the need for support and inspiration by Jews unable to make the arduous journey to request a Rebbe's counsel.
Tanya is an Aramaic term from the Gemara, meaning "It was taught in a Beraita" (Beraita is a term referring to a segment of biblical teaching passed on orally). The Tanya is divided into five parts: Likutei Amarim (Compiled discourses); Shaar Hayichud VehaEmunah (The Gate to [the Understanding of G-d's] Unity and the Faith); Iggeret HaTeshuvah and Iggeret HaKodesh (The Epistles on Repentance and Holiness), 32 letters originally written by the Alter Rebbe over a period of years to the Hasidic community at large, and the Kuntres Acharon (Last Booklet).
Today, the 19th day of the Hebrew month Kislev, is widely celebrated as the anniversary of the Alter Rebbe's or Baal Ha Tanya's (Master of the Tanya) release from prison by the Czar Paul I of Russia in 1798.
Elanit Kayne, a contemporary artist residing in NYC,The MaxSonar ultrasonic sensor offers very short to long-range detection and ranging. and a ba'alat teshuva (newly observant Jew), has evolved an iconography of the Tanya, abstracting concepts into pictograms. Kayne's extraction of key symbols into visual diagrams industriously elucidates the complex spiritual ideas described within this great masterpiece.
“My family on both sides is right-brained, and my artistic mother always encouraged my creativity. You name an art project, and I've done it!” Sandra says.
Well known as a “plein air” landscape oil painter, Sandra maintains a studio in Killingworth. A graduate of Quinnipiac University, she has studied classical painting techniques from New England’s popular instructors: Terri Oakes Bourret, Diane Aeschliman, Karen Winslow, Gabor Svagrik, and William Duffy. Prior to becoming a “painter of nature” many years ago, Sandra competed on a national level with her original appliqué designed quilts winning many national awards, including the Connecticut winner of the Great American Quilt Contest.
Her mother said that when she was only two, Sandra took all the Christmas cards, sat in a corner looking at them over and over, and would not let anyone else look at them. History is another great interest of Sandra’s, “and most times I find myself unconsciously creating something with a story behind it,” she said.
Sandra used to compete nationally making "art quilts," but eventually developed arthritis in her hands. Artist friend Jay Folger encouraged her to take up plein air painting. Sandra says, “That was easy for me, because when we moved to Killingworth in 1969 (known as the "Wild West" back then), I fell in love with the disappearing landscape. I've been trying to paint it ever since.Find detailed product information for howo spare parts and other products.”
She’s not particularly interested in the marketing that every artist, she says, should be involved in. “I just love painting scenes that tell a story ... whether it be the disappearance of our beautiful landscape, a story about my family, or recording modern local history."
Sandra’s landscape paintings have won several awards in juried art shows, and her landscapes are found in private collections all across the country.
An elected member of the Madison Art Society and Clinton Art Society, Sandra always seems to be in an art show somewhere in the area. She has a solo show at Liberty Bank in Clinton, will soon be exhibiting at Lyme Art Association, and is featured at the Killingworth Library for the months of December and January.
The exhibition at Killingworth Library includes paintings of Killingworth barns, a painting of Reservoir Road just after the October 2011 snowtorm, a painting of Chatfield Hollow, and one of Parmelee Farm. There is also a painting of Killingworth's Millennium Christmas tree which went to Rockefeller Plaza (still the tallest tree Rockefeller has ever had). And, there's a painting of her neighbor's chickens being surprised on Easter morning.
Not only is Sandra exhibiting at the library but, as a fundraiser for the library, Sandra offered four of her pieces which were reproduced on different note cards depicting barns found on River Road, North Roast Meat Hill Road, and two locations on Route 81.
A happy combination of bright, bold colours and equally bold motifs characterise Chaitalee Chatterjee’s works at her solo exhibition at the Karnataka Chitrakala Parishath. This is her 13 solo exhibition and the first in Bangalore.
Chaitalee’s oeuvre of paintings in oil, consists of a whole range of realistic dreamscapes or dreamy landscapes, still life and folksy figures set in landscapes. She seems to have evolved a distinctive style, both in terms of her landscapes and figures. Though they appear like landscapes only in terms of the basic composition, Chaitalee holds her in own in the fantastical, fluid shapes of the trees, plants, carpets of green on the earth against vivid skies dotted with stars.
This is obvious in works such as “In The Woods” against the backdrop of a bright, red sky and in “Twilight”, which is a bird’s eye view of a hilly landscape. Inspired by the hillscapes at Mussourie,Posts with indoor tracking system on TRX Systems develops systems that locate and track personnel indoors. Her figures, on the other hand, are influenced by the Bengal School and there is a distinct Indian-ness to the motifs. But Chaitalee retains her vivid sense of colouration even here, in works such as “Day Dreaming”, “Couple”. “Gossip” and “Picking Berries”.
In “Day Dreaming” Chaitalee paints a group of women each lost in their own worlds, in “Couple” she paints the faces of a man and a woman. But this work has traces of Cubism in its disintegration and re-assembling of the subject. “Gossip” is an imaginative, folksy rendering of parrots, perched on branches. While “Picking Berries”, spread over three canvases, explores the traditional theme of women picking berries from a tree near a pond. The figures here, never take precedence over the landscape.
“My works are neither realistic not abstract. They lie somewhere in between, ” says Chaitalee,Trade platform for China crystal mosaic manufacturers a graduate of the Delhi College of Art. “One of my teachers was the painter Manjit Singh Bawa who once told us that it is not necessary to paint the trees green or the sky blue but that we must follow our heart. His statement impacted me greatly as an artist.” Nature is one her favourite subjects. “I love watching birds, flowers and trees, which feature in most of my paintings.”
Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, also known as the Alter Rebbe,Posts with indoor tracking system on TRX Systems develops systems that locate and track personnel indoors. was the third in a lineage of multiple successors descending from the Hasidic dynasty of Rabbi Yisrael Baal Shem -- the "Baal Shem Tov" and founder of Hasidism.
Hasidism, as opposed to the pre-existing social hierarchy of many Jewish diaspora communities (which prized learned scholars as an elite class), championed the importance of the ordinary, sometimes illiterate Jew.
First published in 1797, the Tanya was penned by the Alter Rebbe over a period of 20 years, during which he promoted the migration of Eastern European Jewry further into Russia in an effort to mitigate the oppressive conditions of their persecution. Distinctly aware that no book could replace the Rebbe-Hasid (rabbi-devotee) rapport that serves as the core of Hasidic Judaism, the Alter Rebbe nevertheless recognized the need for support and inspiration by Jews unable to make the arduous journey to request a Rebbe's counsel.
Tanya is an Aramaic term from the Gemara, meaning "It was taught in a Beraita" (Beraita is a term referring to a segment of biblical teaching passed on orally). The Tanya is divided into five parts: Likutei Amarim (Compiled discourses); Shaar Hayichud VehaEmunah (The Gate to [the Understanding of G-d's] Unity and the Faith); Iggeret HaTeshuvah and Iggeret HaKodesh (The Epistles on Repentance and Holiness), 32 letters originally written by the Alter Rebbe over a period of years to the Hasidic community at large, and the Kuntres Acharon (Last Booklet).
Today, the 19th day of the Hebrew month Kislev, is widely celebrated as the anniversary of the Alter Rebbe's or Baal Ha Tanya's (Master of the Tanya) release from prison by the Czar Paul I of Russia in 1798.
Elanit Kayne, a contemporary artist residing in NYC,The MaxSonar ultrasonic sensor offers very short to long-range detection and ranging. and a ba'alat teshuva (newly observant Jew), has evolved an iconography of the Tanya, abstracting concepts into pictograms. Kayne's extraction of key symbols into visual diagrams industriously elucidates the complex spiritual ideas described within this great masterpiece.
2012年10月17日 星期三
Romney trade jabs in spirited presidential debate
There were jabs from the right and
jabs from the left Tuesday night at Hofstra University. Both presidential
candidates came out swinging in a wide-ranging debate that covered job creation,
energy regulation, drilling and auto company bailouts.
Over the course of the 90-minute debate they talked over each other, accused each other of lying and of relying on inaccurate figures and mischaracterized policy positions.
Free from the constraints of a podium-style debate, they met in the middle of the stage at times, but came nowhere near the middle on policy issues. At one point both walked toward the middle of the stage and engaged in a short back-and-forth about energy policy, talking over each other and resisting CNN moderator Candy Crowley's attempts to restore order.
In an early zinger, President Barack Obama blasted Republic challenger Mitt Romney's five-point plan to propose jobs.
"Gov. Romney doesn't have a five-point plan; he has a one-point plan. And that plan is to make sure that the folks at the top play by a different set of rules. That's been his philosophy," Mr. Obama said, his demeanor markedly changed from the first presidential debate in which he appeared tired and unengaged.
He described his rival's approach this way: "You can ship jobs overseas and get tax breaks for it. You can invest in a company, bankrupt it, lay off the workers, strip away their pensions and you still make money."
Mr. Romney called that characterization "way off the mark."
In another heated exchange, the former Massachusetts governor accused the president of blocking jobs in the energy sector by enacting too stringent regulations, by opposing construction of the Keystone XL pipeline and by pursuing criminal action when oil drilling caused birds to die in North Dakota.
"This has not been Mr. Gas, Mr. Oil or Mr. Coal," Mr. Romney said.
Mr. Obama said he's tried to be consistent.
Mr. Romney interrupted. "That's not what you've done in the last four years," he said, saying that energy production on federal land is down 14 percent.
"Not true Gov. Romney," Mr. Obama quickly responded as the two walked toward each other on stage.
"It's absolutely true," Mr. Romney said. "I don't think anybody really believes that you're a person that's going to be pushing for oil or gas or coal."
Audience members grilled the candidates on issues near and far to home. A student wanted assurances that there will be good jobs available when he graduates. A telecommunications worker wanted to know why the White House didn't better protect Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three others killed last month in the Libyan embassy.
Mr. Romney used the opportunities to blast the president's response to issues both foreign and domestic and accused him of tending to political events when he should have been focused on the aftermath of the embassy attack. He also said the president took too long to acknowledge the killing was part of a terrorist plot, not the result of a spontaneous protest over an anti-Muslim film.
Mr. Obama said he is concerned for ambassadors' safety and that he increased security in the region after the attack.
It was their second of three debates this election season.
This time the queries didn't come from a well-rehearsed journalist but from undecided Nassau County, N.Y. voters, some of whom spoke nervously or had to refer to notes to finish asking their questions.
It's a format the president likes, said Robert Gibbs, a senior campaign adviser and former White House spokesman.Our vinyl floor tiles is more stylish than ever!
The stakes were especially high for Mr. Obama in this debate. He is coming off a lackluster performance in Denver two weeks ago. Melissa Rospek of Munhall was among 300 Hofstra students selected in a lottery to watch the debate from risers above the stage.
"It's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to actually go to the debate and be involved as a student and I really wanted to see it," said Miss Rospek, 19, a sophomore majoring in English.
In an interview before the debate she said she supports Mr.We have a wide selection of dry cabinet to choose from for your storage needs. Obama but that she could change her mind based on the debate.
"I don't want to say I'm absolutely solidly Obama until I hear what both of them have to say about health care and women's rights as far as access to birth control and abortion," she said.
When the topic came up during the debate Mr. Obama pointed out that his opponent wants to employers to decide whether employees get insurance coverage of contraception.
Not true, Mr. Romney said once again.
"I don't believe that bureaucrats in Washington should tell someone whether they can use contraceptives or not, and I don't believe employers should tell someone whether they could have contraceptive care or not," he said. Mr. Obama said he's grown jobs, improved the economy, provided more access to health care,We recently added Stained glass mosaic Tile to our inventory. ended the war in Iraq and cut taxes for middle class families.
Mr.The oreck XL professional air purifier, Romney responded by saying the country is worse off than before the president took office.
"I think you know that these last four years haven't been so good as the president just described and that you don't feel like you're confident that the next four years are going to be much better either," he told the audience. Surrogates from both campaigns flooded the media filing center before, during and after the debate.
Among them were Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley for Mr. Obama and former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge for Mr. Romney.
Mr. Ridge, who supported former Utah Gov. John Huntsman during the Republican primary, said Mr. Romney has the right blend of business and civic experience to lead the country and that he has shown he is a decisive problem solver.HOWO trucks are widely used and howo spare parts for sale are also welcomed .
Over the course of the 90-minute debate they talked over each other, accused each other of lying and of relying on inaccurate figures and mischaracterized policy positions.
Free from the constraints of a podium-style debate, they met in the middle of the stage at times, but came nowhere near the middle on policy issues. At one point both walked toward the middle of the stage and engaged in a short back-and-forth about energy policy, talking over each other and resisting CNN moderator Candy Crowley's attempts to restore order.
In an early zinger, President Barack Obama blasted Republic challenger Mitt Romney's five-point plan to propose jobs.
"Gov. Romney doesn't have a five-point plan; he has a one-point plan. And that plan is to make sure that the folks at the top play by a different set of rules. That's been his philosophy," Mr. Obama said, his demeanor markedly changed from the first presidential debate in which he appeared tired and unengaged.
He described his rival's approach this way: "You can ship jobs overseas and get tax breaks for it. You can invest in a company, bankrupt it, lay off the workers, strip away their pensions and you still make money."
Mr. Romney called that characterization "way off the mark."
In another heated exchange, the former Massachusetts governor accused the president of blocking jobs in the energy sector by enacting too stringent regulations, by opposing construction of the Keystone XL pipeline and by pursuing criminal action when oil drilling caused birds to die in North Dakota.
"This has not been Mr. Gas, Mr. Oil or Mr. Coal," Mr. Romney said.
Mr. Obama said he's tried to be consistent.
Mr. Romney interrupted. "That's not what you've done in the last four years," he said, saying that energy production on federal land is down 14 percent.
"Not true Gov. Romney," Mr. Obama quickly responded as the two walked toward each other on stage.
"It's absolutely true," Mr. Romney said. "I don't think anybody really believes that you're a person that's going to be pushing for oil or gas or coal."
Audience members grilled the candidates on issues near and far to home. A student wanted assurances that there will be good jobs available when he graduates. A telecommunications worker wanted to know why the White House didn't better protect Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three others killed last month in the Libyan embassy.
Mr. Romney used the opportunities to blast the president's response to issues both foreign and domestic and accused him of tending to political events when he should have been focused on the aftermath of the embassy attack. He also said the president took too long to acknowledge the killing was part of a terrorist plot, not the result of a spontaneous protest over an anti-Muslim film.
Mr. Obama said he is concerned for ambassadors' safety and that he increased security in the region after the attack.
It was their second of three debates this election season.
This time the queries didn't come from a well-rehearsed journalist but from undecided Nassau County, N.Y. voters, some of whom spoke nervously or had to refer to notes to finish asking their questions.
It's a format the president likes, said Robert Gibbs, a senior campaign adviser and former White House spokesman.Our vinyl floor tiles is more stylish than ever!
The stakes were especially high for Mr. Obama in this debate. He is coming off a lackluster performance in Denver two weeks ago. Melissa Rospek of Munhall was among 300 Hofstra students selected in a lottery to watch the debate from risers above the stage.
"It's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to actually go to the debate and be involved as a student and I really wanted to see it," said Miss Rospek, 19, a sophomore majoring in English.
In an interview before the debate she said she supports Mr.We have a wide selection of dry cabinet to choose from for your storage needs. Obama but that she could change her mind based on the debate.
"I don't want to say I'm absolutely solidly Obama until I hear what both of them have to say about health care and women's rights as far as access to birth control and abortion," she said.
When the topic came up during the debate Mr. Obama pointed out that his opponent wants to employers to decide whether employees get insurance coverage of contraception.
Not true, Mr. Romney said once again.
"I don't believe that bureaucrats in Washington should tell someone whether they can use contraceptives or not, and I don't believe employers should tell someone whether they could have contraceptive care or not," he said. Mr. Obama said he's grown jobs, improved the economy, provided more access to health care,We recently added Stained glass mosaic Tile to our inventory. ended the war in Iraq and cut taxes for middle class families.
Mr.The oreck XL professional air purifier, Romney responded by saying the country is worse off than before the president took office.
"I think you know that these last four years haven't been so good as the president just described and that you don't feel like you're confident that the next four years are going to be much better either," he told the audience. Surrogates from both campaigns flooded the media filing center before, during and after the debate.
Among them were Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley for Mr. Obama and former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge for Mr. Romney.
Mr. Ridge, who supported former Utah Gov. John Huntsman during the Republican primary, said Mr. Romney has the right blend of business and civic experience to lead the country and that he has shown he is a decisive problem solver.HOWO trucks are widely used and howo spare parts for sale are also welcomed .
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