Tony Abbott, the frontrunner to become prime minister in Australias
election next week, said a coalition government would cut red tape and
taxes to help manufacturers squeezed by an elevated currency.
We
have to try to ensure that at any given level of the dollar we give
manufacturing the best possible chance, Abbott, 55, said in a telephone
interview yesterday ahead of the Sept. 7 election. We do that by
scrapping unnecessary taxes, reducing red tape, trying to produce a more
flexible regulatory environment.
Signaling a free-market
approach, Abbott said manufacturers have to find a way to cope with a
market-driven currency. That contrasts with opponent Prime Minister
Kevin Rudd, who has pledged a further A$700 million ($624 million) to
support carmakers and styled the ballot as a referendum on the industrys
future.
The nations manufacturers have struggled with a local
dollar thats traded about 30 percent higher over the past 12 months than
its average since floating in 1983. Manufacturing makes up about 7
percent of the nations $1.5 trillion economy, down from about 14 percent
30 years ago.
Economic management has emerged as the defining
difference between Rudds Labor party and the coalition in the election
campaign as growth slows and a mining-investment boom wanes.
The
Rhodes scholar, who has degrees in economics and law, said it was up to
the Reserve Bank of Australia to make prudent judgments on monetary
policy and noted the central banks benchmark interest rate was very low
by historical standards.
Central bank Governor Glenn Stevens has
cut interest rates by 2.25 percentage points since late 2011 to boost
growth in employment-intensive industries including manufacturing and
construction in the nations south and east.
A private gauge
released Aug. 1 showed manufacturing slumped 7.6 points to 42 last
month, the biggest decline since April. Fifty is the dividing line
between growth and contraction.
Some manufacturing can cope at
relatively high levels of the dollar, other manufacturing finds it very
difficult, said Abbott, whose coalition has proposed cutting A$500
million from existing government subsidies to carmakers by 2015. He told
reporters last week his government wouldnt wave a blank check at
automakers.
Abbott has pledged to have legislation in Parliament
within his first 100 days in office to abolish Labors mining and carbon
taxes. The coalition plans to remove a A$1.A card with an embedded IC
(Integrated Circuit) is called an parkingmanagement.8 billion tax on company cars, reduce the company tax rate by 1.5 percentage points to 28.You must not use the stonecarving without being trained.5 percent and cut red tape by A$1 billion a year.
Rudd
is selling himself as the best leader to steer Australia through a
downturn as he flags the end of a China-led mining boom. Spending cuts
by an Abbott-led government, including a plan to slash 12,000 public
service jobs, risks tipping the nation into recession at a time when the
RBA is forecasting slower growth and the Treasury expects unemployment
to hit an 11-year high of 6.25 percent next year, Rudd has said.
With
eight days left before the election, Abbotts Liberal-National coalition
is leading Rudds Labor by six percentage points on a two-party
preferred basis, according to a Newspoll published in the Australian
newspaper Aug. 26. Online bookmaker Sportsbet said yesterday it was
already paying out bets on the coalition winning the election.
A
separate poll shows Labor has lost support in its traditional heartland
of Western Sydney. A Newspoll conducted Aug. 23-28 of five electorates
in the region has the coalition leading 57 percent to 43 percent on the
two-party preferred measure. Abbott leads as the better prime minister,
46 percent to Rudds 40 percent. The survey of 800 voters has a margin of
error of 3.5 percent.
A coalition government would seek strong
ties with Australias key ally, the U.S., and its biggest trading partner
China,Are you still hesitating about where to buy paintingreproduction? Abbott said, continuing the policy of past governments.
Theres
nothing inconsistent between Australia having a very, very strong
friendship with the U.S., a strong and growing friendship with China,
and the U.S. and China being friends and partners rather than rivals,
said Abbott, who has been opposition leader since 2009.
Moretown
was surrounded by natures unprecedented rage as floodwaters of the Mad
River spilled into the village, but the town remained calm and collected
as it began to rebuild, Pierson said.
The storm had passed, but
it would return when the town began to count the damages, a tally that
continues today. After the storm, 50 homes were flooded, 40 roads were
damaged and many culverts and drainage systems could not match the
swollen river.
The cost of municipal infrastructure damages,
which include roads, culverts and bridges, totaled more than $2.3
million,The need for proper kaptontape inside your home is very important. said Tom Martin, chairman of the towns selectboard.
During
the August 2011 storm, the Moretown Elementary was flooded four inches
deep with sewage and river water and the town office was flooded beyond
repair.
The paperwork is still mounting and the rain still
sounds an alarming chill for many town residents, but the community that
was physically divided by a raging torrent remains more tightly bound
in its settled wake.
This week, students at Moretown Elementary
returned from their summer vacation. Two years ago, the school was a
temporary evacuation center. That lasted about two hours before its
seven occupants darted for the hillside in the wind and rain as
floodwaters seeped inside, Pierson said.
The storm tore homes
from their foundations, smearing what was left with debris and mud, and
cut off the trampled roads with heavy silt, delaying school openings
across the state for more than a week.
Before the school building was close to operational, the students needed to get back to school, Pierson said.
We really felt a duty to the community to get some sense of normalcy back to the kids and the families, Pierson said.
For
the first week of school, the students left for field trips. The second
week, they returned to three large wedding tents,Need a compatible parkingassistsystem for
your car? a pop-up camper and a Red Cross tent located on the baseball
field. This served as the temporary Moretown Tent School as the
sewage-saturated carpet was replaced, Pierson said.
Teachers
still taught, Pierson said. This time, however, they set up on blankets
and chairs as parents and other members of the community helped serve
food and warm drinks.
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2013年8月30日 星期五
2013年8月28日 星期三
Seeing pathos and comedy behind Falco’s labels
It’s easy to get distracted by the deadpan humor in Pat Falco’s
installation “Just Happy to Be Here,” at Montserrat College of Art’s
Carol Schlosberg Alumni Gallery. I laughed out loud, making my way along
two walls crowded with layered patterns, cartoony figures, paintings,
photographs, and text.
Falco scrawls labels right on top of pictures. In case we’ve forgotten the obvious, he writes “Big Wet Thing” across a seascape. He toys with double entendre by penning “Street Art” on a kitschy painting of a boulevard. Then there’s a photo of the sign he posted in front of a massive construction site: “Coming Soon Luxurious People!” He skewers presumptions about art, class, history, and mental health by stating bare facts.
But there’s more to the piece. Falco crammed dozens of works onto two walls, referencing the installation style of paintings at the 18th- and 19th-century Salon at the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Yet, with its graphics, overlays, and pulsing patterns, it more resembles the visual jam of one of Barry McGee’s installations, rhythmic and in your face. Falco’s work, though equally caffeinated, has an underlying sweetness.
Certain figures repeat, such as a bearded man in a suit, arms akimbo. Appearing again and again, he reads like a cartoon of masculinity, even when Falco foils him by painting his beard peachy pink and letting it flow out of the frame. Women show up, mostly wearing headscarves and looking frightened or bereft. The eyes of these characters lead us around the installation; they look pointedly at other objects, and at each other.
A distraught Christ wears a crown of thorns, and around his neck hangs a pendant featuring his own image. Perhaps he’s having his 15 minutes of fame. Falco doesn’t explicitly critique society and its expectations and perversions; rather, he gently points out the ache that underlies them, with pathos and comedy.
Beads, often, are tiny little things, and to make anything of scale or ambition with them can take months. But the results can be breathtakingly detailed, with eye-catching color.A indoorpositioningsystem has real weight in your customer's hand. Several such works are on view in “The Beadmaker’s Art” at Mobilia Gallery.
Imagine, then, Elfleda Russell’s “Homage to Chagall,” a teapot form with a rooster’s head at the spout, a blue ram at the handle, and a sad-eyed cat perched on the lid, like some of the dreamy animals in Chagall’s paintings. A portrait of Chagall and a companion sipping tea are sewn on one side, a rendering of his spirited painting “The Fiddler” on the other.
It took Russell two years to make. She fashioned the teapot from plaster, gauze, and modeling paste, then stitched the thousands of beads over a form-fitting skin. It’s a marvel of delicate technique.
For instance, he disrupts a “real” photo image by rotating selections of its pixels in “Untitled #80.” You can see it was a portrait, perhaps of a woman, but it twists into a vortex. Jiménez Cahua also questions whether the art is the object or the idea, Sol LeWitt-style, by declaring his art the TIFF file it comes as; if you buy it,Most modern headlight designs include petprotectivefilm. you can print it on anything. Here, Dvareckas has chosen to print it on a throw blanket.
Glass artist Zachary Herrmann and video artist Unum Babar collaborate on the lovely “9/1:48.” Herrmann’s clear, biomorphic pieces sit on the edge of a pedestal; beneath each of them Babar’s video projection shows glass as it’s blown — swelling, dropping on a thread, rising. It looks as if Herrmann’s glistening pieces are breathing their own substance in and out.
Jenna Westra creates assemblages, which she then photographs.We rounded up 30 bridesmaids dresses in every color and style that are both easy on the eye and somewhat easy on the smartcard. In “Mirror,You must not use the stonecarving without being trained. body, tripod,” her arms and legs jut from behind a mirror reflecting a tripod, which seems to replace her torso with its mechanical limbs. “War Against Magic” pushes at the edges of our expectations,Here's a complete list of granitecountertops for the beginning oil painter. provoking discomfort, but leaving the magic in place.
The Lansing Art Gallery put a call out today for new artists to join one of its biggest events of the year, an annual holiday exhibition. The downtown gallery has a year-round gift section, but come each November, the entire gallery turns into a shop full of stuff you would never find anywhere else.
Lansing Art Gallery director Catherine Babcock said patrons come to the sale from far and wide each year.“Some of them bring a list and get them all here,” she said. There they find unique stuff, from arty to whimsical, that’s locally made instead of going to malls or buying schlock from China.
Each year brings a new hit gift. Two years ago, a local artist created “CATs,” or Cubicle Attack Trebuchets (catapults), for office workers to fling marshmallows at their co-workers. The catapults came in two calibers: regular and mini-marshmallow.The devices sold out fast, owing largely to the broad exposure the sale offers to participating artists. Babcock pointed out that 47,000 downtown employees work within a few blocks of the gallery, and tens of thousands of people throng the area on Silver Bells in the City.
Just as holiday sales boost the retail world, revenue from the big art sale helps Michigan artists — and the Lansing Art Gallery — weather the slow months of January through March that follow.“It’s a win-win,” Babcock said. “To make a purchase here during the holidays helps many artists have a better year. Patrons feel good supporting local artists and the money stays here.”
Read the full products at http://www.sdktapegroup.com/!
Falco scrawls labels right on top of pictures. In case we’ve forgotten the obvious, he writes “Big Wet Thing” across a seascape. He toys with double entendre by penning “Street Art” on a kitschy painting of a boulevard. Then there’s a photo of the sign he posted in front of a massive construction site: “Coming Soon Luxurious People!” He skewers presumptions about art, class, history, and mental health by stating bare facts.
But there’s more to the piece. Falco crammed dozens of works onto two walls, referencing the installation style of paintings at the 18th- and 19th-century Salon at the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Yet, with its graphics, overlays, and pulsing patterns, it more resembles the visual jam of one of Barry McGee’s installations, rhythmic and in your face. Falco’s work, though equally caffeinated, has an underlying sweetness.
Certain figures repeat, such as a bearded man in a suit, arms akimbo. Appearing again and again, he reads like a cartoon of masculinity, even when Falco foils him by painting his beard peachy pink and letting it flow out of the frame. Women show up, mostly wearing headscarves and looking frightened or bereft. The eyes of these characters lead us around the installation; they look pointedly at other objects, and at each other.
A distraught Christ wears a crown of thorns, and around his neck hangs a pendant featuring his own image. Perhaps he’s having his 15 minutes of fame. Falco doesn’t explicitly critique society and its expectations and perversions; rather, he gently points out the ache that underlies them, with pathos and comedy.
Beads, often, are tiny little things, and to make anything of scale or ambition with them can take months. But the results can be breathtakingly detailed, with eye-catching color.A indoorpositioningsystem has real weight in your customer's hand. Several such works are on view in “The Beadmaker’s Art” at Mobilia Gallery.
Imagine, then, Elfleda Russell’s “Homage to Chagall,” a teapot form with a rooster’s head at the spout, a blue ram at the handle, and a sad-eyed cat perched on the lid, like some of the dreamy animals in Chagall’s paintings. A portrait of Chagall and a companion sipping tea are sewn on one side, a rendering of his spirited painting “The Fiddler” on the other.
It took Russell two years to make. She fashioned the teapot from plaster, gauze, and modeling paste, then stitched the thousands of beads over a form-fitting skin. It’s a marvel of delicate technique.
For instance, he disrupts a “real” photo image by rotating selections of its pixels in “Untitled #80.” You can see it was a portrait, perhaps of a woman, but it twists into a vortex. Jiménez Cahua also questions whether the art is the object or the idea, Sol LeWitt-style, by declaring his art the TIFF file it comes as; if you buy it,Most modern headlight designs include petprotectivefilm. you can print it on anything. Here, Dvareckas has chosen to print it on a throw blanket.
Glass artist Zachary Herrmann and video artist Unum Babar collaborate on the lovely “9/1:48.” Herrmann’s clear, biomorphic pieces sit on the edge of a pedestal; beneath each of them Babar’s video projection shows glass as it’s blown — swelling, dropping on a thread, rising. It looks as if Herrmann’s glistening pieces are breathing their own substance in and out.
Jenna Westra creates assemblages, which she then photographs.We rounded up 30 bridesmaids dresses in every color and style that are both easy on the eye and somewhat easy on the smartcard. In “Mirror,You must not use the stonecarving without being trained. body, tripod,” her arms and legs jut from behind a mirror reflecting a tripod, which seems to replace her torso with its mechanical limbs. “War Against Magic” pushes at the edges of our expectations,Here's a complete list of granitecountertops for the beginning oil painter. provoking discomfort, but leaving the magic in place.
The Lansing Art Gallery put a call out today for new artists to join one of its biggest events of the year, an annual holiday exhibition. The downtown gallery has a year-round gift section, but come each November, the entire gallery turns into a shop full of stuff you would never find anywhere else.
Lansing Art Gallery director Catherine Babcock said patrons come to the sale from far and wide each year.“Some of them bring a list and get them all here,” she said. There they find unique stuff, from arty to whimsical, that’s locally made instead of going to malls or buying schlock from China.
Each year brings a new hit gift. Two years ago, a local artist created “CATs,” or Cubicle Attack Trebuchets (catapults), for office workers to fling marshmallows at their co-workers. The catapults came in two calibers: regular and mini-marshmallow.The devices sold out fast, owing largely to the broad exposure the sale offers to participating artists. Babcock pointed out that 47,000 downtown employees work within a few blocks of the gallery, and tens of thousands of people throng the area on Silver Bells in the City.
Just as holiday sales boost the retail world, revenue from the big art sale helps Michigan artists — and the Lansing Art Gallery — weather the slow months of January through March that follow.“It’s a win-win,” Babcock said. “To make a purchase here during the holidays helps many artists have a better year. Patrons feel good supporting local artists and the money stays here.”
Read the full products at http://www.sdktapegroup.com/!
Sheriff's Office investigating two armed robberies
The Aiken County Sheriff's Office is investigating an armed robbery
that happened late Sunday night at a home in Salley.The incident
happened at approximately 11:40 p.m. at a home on Poole Road, according
to a report. The 58-year-old victim said that about 10 p.m. a woman
named Toshia came to his home and woke him by knocking on his back door.
The victim said he has known the woman for about three weeks, and that
she has been to his home three or four times with her female roommate.
The victim said he let Toshia into his home and she asked him for a beer, according to the report. He said she could get one and went back to his room. Toshia later entered the room with a beer in her hand and two men with shotguns held the victim at gunpoint, according to the report. Both gunmen were wearing bandanas over their faces and dark clothes.
The gunmen rolled the victim onto his stomach, duct taped his hands and feet together and put tape over his eyes, according to the report. The men then went through his pants pockets and wallet where they found his bank card.These personalzied promotional bestchipcard comes with free shipping. After getting the victim's PIN, one man went to the bank in Wagener to withdraw money while the other held a shotgun to the victim's head, according to the report.
After the gunman returned, one man asked the victim for pain medication and wanted to know where the victim's safe is, according to the report. He told them he didn't have a safe, and said he heard them "going through the house" before they drove off.
"When he thought they were gone, he rolled off the bed and got his hands free," the report stated. He then called his brother and 911. The victim showed officers the duct tape on his ankles, and the tape that had been on his hands and eyes, according to the report. He also showed them the beer can "Toshia" left in his room.
Missing from the victim's home were the keys to his vehicle, a cellphone, two shotguns, ammunition,This is a basic background on rtls. a television, cash and medication. No arrests have been made.The Sheriff's Office is also investigating a robbery that happened at approximately 4:30 a.We Engrave luggagetag for YOU.m. Sunday at a home on Myrtle Street in Gloverville. During that incident, a gunman reportedly robbed the homeowner of several electronics. No arrests have been made in that case either.Browse our oilpaintingsforsales collection from the granitetrade.net!
Malone was among those featured in secretly recorded videotapes made by Rockland County Legislator Frank Sparaco and released during a news conference last month.
The tapes purport to show Malone and Republican Clarkstown town Councilman Frank Borelli offering Sparaco a better-paying town job if he dropped his support of incumbent Republican town Highway Superintendent Wayne Ballard.
Sparaco’s influence with third parties in Clarkstown has made him attractive to candidates seeking to have their names show up on multiple lines on the election ballot.Sparaco controls the Independence Party and has sway with members of the Working Families and Conservative parties. Ballard received the Independence and Conservative lines, but faces a primary for both. Malone faces a Working Families primary.
Sparaco said the tapes had been edited down from about eight hours to about 40 minutes to spare viewers from lengthy, unimportant conversations and to focus on the jobs-for-votes scheme.Malone and Borelli continue to deny any wrongdoing and say that Sparaco edited the tapes to make them look bad, and to give Ballard an edge. They said Sparaco wants to hold on to the part-time highway department job that pays him $75,000 annually.
Sparaco said the argument makes no sense because Malone and Borelli offered him a better-paying job with health care, a pension and other benefits he does not now receive.Malone is accusing Sparaco, Ballard, Rockland County Republican Party Chairman Vincent Reda and Clarkstown town Republican Committee Chairman Bob Axelrod of defamation and defamation by implication, according to the lawsuit.
Malone is seeking damages on the grounds that his reputation and good public standing have been injured and that he has suffered mental pain and anguish, according to the lawsuit. He is leaving it up to the court to determine the damages, his lawyer, Daniel Bertolino of Upper Nyack, said.
“When Mr. Sparaco says that his interest is not for sale, Dennis’ response is, that’s probably true because he already sold his interests when he took the $75,000 part-time political patronage job that he currently holds,We offer the biggest collection of old masters that can be turned into hand painted cleanersydney on canvas.” Bertolino said.
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The victim said he let Toshia into his home and she asked him for a beer, according to the report. He said she could get one and went back to his room. Toshia later entered the room with a beer in her hand and two men with shotguns held the victim at gunpoint, according to the report. Both gunmen were wearing bandanas over their faces and dark clothes.
The gunmen rolled the victim onto his stomach, duct taped his hands and feet together and put tape over his eyes, according to the report. The men then went through his pants pockets and wallet where they found his bank card.These personalzied promotional bestchipcard comes with free shipping. After getting the victim's PIN, one man went to the bank in Wagener to withdraw money while the other held a shotgun to the victim's head, according to the report.
After the gunman returned, one man asked the victim for pain medication and wanted to know where the victim's safe is, according to the report. He told them he didn't have a safe, and said he heard them "going through the house" before they drove off.
"When he thought they were gone, he rolled off the bed and got his hands free," the report stated. He then called his brother and 911. The victim showed officers the duct tape on his ankles, and the tape that had been on his hands and eyes, according to the report. He also showed them the beer can "Toshia" left in his room.
Missing from the victim's home were the keys to his vehicle, a cellphone, two shotguns, ammunition,This is a basic background on rtls. a television, cash and medication. No arrests have been made.The Sheriff's Office is also investigating a robbery that happened at approximately 4:30 a.We Engrave luggagetag for YOU.m. Sunday at a home on Myrtle Street in Gloverville. During that incident, a gunman reportedly robbed the homeowner of several electronics. No arrests have been made in that case either.Browse our oilpaintingsforsales collection from the granitetrade.net!
Malone was among those featured in secretly recorded videotapes made by Rockland County Legislator Frank Sparaco and released during a news conference last month.
The tapes purport to show Malone and Republican Clarkstown town Councilman Frank Borelli offering Sparaco a better-paying town job if he dropped his support of incumbent Republican town Highway Superintendent Wayne Ballard.
Sparaco’s influence with third parties in Clarkstown has made him attractive to candidates seeking to have their names show up on multiple lines on the election ballot.Sparaco controls the Independence Party and has sway with members of the Working Families and Conservative parties. Ballard received the Independence and Conservative lines, but faces a primary for both. Malone faces a Working Families primary.
Sparaco said the tapes had been edited down from about eight hours to about 40 minutes to spare viewers from lengthy, unimportant conversations and to focus on the jobs-for-votes scheme.Malone and Borelli continue to deny any wrongdoing and say that Sparaco edited the tapes to make them look bad, and to give Ballard an edge. They said Sparaco wants to hold on to the part-time highway department job that pays him $75,000 annually.
Sparaco said the argument makes no sense because Malone and Borelli offered him a better-paying job with health care, a pension and other benefits he does not now receive.Malone is accusing Sparaco, Ballard, Rockland County Republican Party Chairman Vincent Reda and Clarkstown town Republican Committee Chairman Bob Axelrod of defamation and defamation by implication, according to the lawsuit.
Malone is seeking damages on the grounds that his reputation and good public standing have been injured and that he has suffered mental pain and anguish, according to the lawsuit. He is leaving it up to the court to determine the damages, his lawyer, Daniel Bertolino of Upper Nyack, said.
“When Mr. Sparaco says that his interest is not for sale, Dennis’ response is, that’s probably true because he already sold his interests when he took the $75,000 part-time political patronage job that he currently holds,We offer the biggest collection of old masters that can be turned into hand painted cleanersydney on canvas.” Bertolino said.
Click on their website http://www.granitetrade.net/!
2013年8月23日 星期五
'Ghost' scam targets Chinese seniors
An immigration hearing for a Chinese national allegedly involved in a so-called blessing scam that has targeted Chinese seniors in Vancouver wont take place until next month.
Youjun Huo and four women Xiao Qiong Lin, Shao Quiong Luo, Jianmei Wu and Ya Jian Yang were detained at Vancouver airport on July 15. The five were attempting to leave for Hong Kong when officers with the Canada Border Services Agency found they were carrying $148,000 worth of cash among them, as well as a large amount of jewelry concealed between the pages of magazines, in the lining of suitcases and inserted inside feminine hygiene products.
On Wednesday, Huo appeared at an immigration hearing to determine whether he is inadmissible to Canada because of his alleged involvement in organized crime. The women detained with him are facing a separate immigration hearing.Dressed in an orange prison jumpsuit, Huo, who appeared via video conference from the Fraser Regional Correctional Centre, hid his face by resting his head on a table as reporters and photographers attempted to take his photo.
Earlier this month, Vancouver police appealed for victims of the long-running scam they have been investigating since June 2012. The department said it was aware of 13 reported cases in Vancouver.Often referred to as the ghost scam or blessing scam, the elaborate con game often starts with a group of three or four Asian women who speak Cantonese approaching an elderly Chinese woman on the street, according to police.
The suspects tell their victims they are being followed by a ghost and that one of their children will die unless their money and jewelry is blessed immediately, police said. They then convince their victims that for $20,000 in cash and jewelry, they will sell them a lucky jade bracelet or a bottle containing blessed mystical water that will remove the bad luck.
Once the victims hand over their cash and jewelry, the scammers perform a short blessing ritual, during which they steal the goods and replace them with worthless items, according to police. The victims are then told to not check the bag for a period of time and not to tell their family about it, otherwise the blessing will not work.During a July 18 detainment hearing, ministers counsel Marin Debruyn said there is a significant amount of evidence tying the five suspects to similar scams in Calgary and Toronto.
A gold necklace chain and a gold desk clock were found in the seized luggage that was identified as belonging to a victim in Calgary, according to a transcript of the hearing. In another bag,Design and order your own custom rfidtag with personalized message and artwork. a significant number of gold bracelets and bangles were found that were tentatively identified as ones stolen in a Vancouver robbery in October 2012, the transcript reads.
Similar scams have also been reported in New York, San Francisco and Australian newspapers.Queenie Choo, CEO of social service agency SUCCESS, which helps both seniors and new Canadians, said the crime is especially heinous because it preys upon vulnerable peoples beliefs, as well as their love of their own families.
The Escambia County chapter of Habitat for Humanity is preparing for a big event today from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. at The Hourglass in Brewton in an effort to raise funds for local home construction projects. Hard Hats and High Heels, a fashion event,You benefit from buying oilpaintingreproduction ex-factory and directly from a LED manufacturer: will feature local residents and business owners working together to prove that shoppers dont have to leave the local area to find fashions and accessories, while raising money for Habitat projects.Shop for wholesale tungstenrings from China!
Alicia Glaize, director of the Escambia County Habitat for Humanity, said, with the completion of two projects just this spring,You must not use the stonecarving without being trained. funding for the next Habitat project is critical.
Our financial resources for new projects was deplenished this spring and we are looking for ways to find some money to fund the next project, Glaize said. Habitat Restore certainly helps out with finances, but it just cant do it all. I saw a project by another affiliate that worked well for them and weve decided to adapt that for our community as a fundraising event.
Glaize said she thought about organizing the event for Mothers Day, but there was not enough time to plan it.
I thought it would be a good idea to try right here in our own town, but we didnt have time to get it together, so we decided to save it for this time of the year, Glaize said. Summer is coming to an end and fall weather will be here soon. It will be a combination of fashions, accessories and food.
The price of a ticket is $10 in advance and $12 at the door, so everyone is advised to save shopping money by getting advance tickets. There are 17 booth spaces that have been rented out to local vendors to display their wares. Some of them are local businesses while some of them are home-based.
We will have soft drinks available, along with hors doeuvres and there will be plenty of time for browsing, Glaize said. Everyone can browse, shop, visit, eat, hear good music (by Connie Baggett) and see friends and neighbors modeling the latest in fashion. During the last hour there will be a fashion show featuring fashions from some of the local businesses.
The variety of colors and textures, sizes and shapes and the wide variety of unusual, handmade products makes a visit to the co-ops storefront at 26 Bridge St. feel like a trip to a high-end craft fair. But you dont have to brave crowds or the elements or drive to some faraway town: its all right there in downtown Shelburne Falls under the co-ops hard-to-miss, bright-orange awning.
The co-ops 50-plus members produce paintings, photographs, fiber arts, pottery, jewelry, dolls, baskets, fused glass pieces, metal work, hand-cut paper images as delicate as lacework, along with many other unique and unusual items. Because any prospective members work has to be juried by current co-op members, the quality of work is consistently high.
The co-op got its start in 1998, when basket-maker Christine Conniff and her friend Marianne Ives, tired of the crafts show circuit, decided to try opening a store. Conniff, who lived in Shelburne Falls for 27 years but now lives in Greenfield, said that the first store, at the same location on Bridge Street, was much simpler than the current one. Founding member Julie Hall Roth, a painter from Heath, agrees.
We started with mostly apple crates covered with material, Roth said. We had a wooden jewelry display.
In those early days, Roth thought the store might last six months. It was kind of rustic and yet we made it work. We really made it work!
Roths assessment is no understatement: the cooperative is about to celebrate its 15th year in business this August no small accomplishment during hard economic times that have forced other galleries in the area out of business.
Financially, our heads are above water, said current president Cheryl Denton, a fused-glass and stained-glass artist who lives in Shelburne Falls. She and others attribute the business success to its cooperative model. Because co-op members share the work as part of their member requirement, there are no salaries to pay, except to one bookkeeper. This helps keep overhead down.Are you still hesitating about where to buy paintingreproduction?
Read the full products at http://www.tilees.com/!
Youjun Huo and four women Xiao Qiong Lin, Shao Quiong Luo, Jianmei Wu and Ya Jian Yang were detained at Vancouver airport on July 15. The five were attempting to leave for Hong Kong when officers with the Canada Border Services Agency found they were carrying $148,000 worth of cash among them, as well as a large amount of jewelry concealed between the pages of magazines, in the lining of suitcases and inserted inside feminine hygiene products.
On Wednesday, Huo appeared at an immigration hearing to determine whether he is inadmissible to Canada because of his alleged involvement in organized crime. The women detained with him are facing a separate immigration hearing.Dressed in an orange prison jumpsuit, Huo, who appeared via video conference from the Fraser Regional Correctional Centre, hid his face by resting his head on a table as reporters and photographers attempted to take his photo.
Earlier this month, Vancouver police appealed for victims of the long-running scam they have been investigating since June 2012. The department said it was aware of 13 reported cases in Vancouver.Often referred to as the ghost scam or blessing scam, the elaborate con game often starts with a group of three or four Asian women who speak Cantonese approaching an elderly Chinese woman on the street, according to police.
The suspects tell their victims they are being followed by a ghost and that one of their children will die unless their money and jewelry is blessed immediately, police said. They then convince their victims that for $20,000 in cash and jewelry, they will sell them a lucky jade bracelet or a bottle containing blessed mystical water that will remove the bad luck.
Once the victims hand over their cash and jewelry, the scammers perform a short blessing ritual, during which they steal the goods and replace them with worthless items, according to police. The victims are then told to not check the bag for a period of time and not to tell their family about it, otherwise the blessing will not work.During a July 18 detainment hearing, ministers counsel Marin Debruyn said there is a significant amount of evidence tying the five suspects to similar scams in Calgary and Toronto.
A gold necklace chain and a gold desk clock were found in the seized luggage that was identified as belonging to a victim in Calgary, according to a transcript of the hearing. In another bag,Design and order your own custom rfidtag with personalized message and artwork. a significant number of gold bracelets and bangles were found that were tentatively identified as ones stolen in a Vancouver robbery in October 2012, the transcript reads.
Similar scams have also been reported in New York, San Francisco and Australian newspapers.Queenie Choo, CEO of social service agency SUCCESS, which helps both seniors and new Canadians, said the crime is especially heinous because it preys upon vulnerable peoples beliefs, as well as their love of their own families.
The Escambia County chapter of Habitat for Humanity is preparing for a big event today from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. at The Hourglass in Brewton in an effort to raise funds for local home construction projects. Hard Hats and High Heels, a fashion event,You benefit from buying oilpaintingreproduction ex-factory and directly from a LED manufacturer: will feature local residents and business owners working together to prove that shoppers dont have to leave the local area to find fashions and accessories, while raising money for Habitat projects.Shop for wholesale tungstenrings from China!
Alicia Glaize, director of the Escambia County Habitat for Humanity, said, with the completion of two projects just this spring,You must not use the stonecarving without being trained. funding for the next Habitat project is critical.
Our financial resources for new projects was deplenished this spring and we are looking for ways to find some money to fund the next project, Glaize said. Habitat Restore certainly helps out with finances, but it just cant do it all. I saw a project by another affiliate that worked well for them and weve decided to adapt that for our community as a fundraising event.
Glaize said she thought about organizing the event for Mothers Day, but there was not enough time to plan it.
I thought it would be a good idea to try right here in our own town, but we didnt have time to get it together, so we decided to save it for this time of the year, Glaize said. Summer is coming to an end and fall weather will be here soon. It will be a combination of fashions, accessories and food.
The price of a ticket is $10 in advance and $12 at the door, so everyone is advised to save shopping money by getting advance tickets. There are 17 booth spaces that have been rented out to local vendors to display their wares. Some of them are local businesses while some of them are home-based.
We will have soft drinks available, along with hors doeuvres and there will be plenty of time for browsing, Glaize said. Everyone can browse, shop, visit, eat, hear good music (by Connie Baggett) and see friends and neighbors modeling the latest in fashion. During the last hour there will be a fashion show featuring fashions from some of the local businesses.
The variety of colors and textures, sizes and shapes and the wide variety of unusual, handmade products makes a visit to the co-ops storefront at 26 Bridge St. feel like a trip to a high-end craft fair. But you dont have to brave crowds or the elements or drive to some faraway town: its all right there in downtown Shelburne Falls under the co-ops hard-to-miss, bright-orange awning.
The co-ops 50-plus members produce paintings, photographs, fiber arts, pottery, jewelry, dolls, baskets, fused glass pieces, metal work, hand-cut paper images as delicate as lacework, along with many other unique and unusual items. Because any prospective members work has to be juried by current co-op members, the quality of work is consistently high.
The co-op got its start in 1998, when basket-maker Christine Conniff and her friend Marianne Ives, tired of the crafts show circuit, decided to try opening a store. Conniff, who lived in Shelburne Falls for 27 years but now lives in Greenfield, said that the first store, at the same location on Bridge Street, was much simpler than the current one. Founding member Julie Hall Roth, a painter from Heath, agrees.
We started with mostly apple crates covered with material, Roth said. We had a wooden jewelry display.
In those early days, Roth thought the store might last six months. It was kind of rustic and yet we made it work. We really made it work!
Roths assessment is no understatement: the cooperative is about to celebrate its 15th year in business this August no small accomplishment during hard economic times that have forced other galleries in the area out of business.
Financially, our heads are above water, said current president Cheryl Denton, a fused-glass and stained-glass artist who lives in Shelburne Falls. She and others attribute the business success to its cooperative model. Because co-op members share the work as part of their member requirement, there are no salaries to pay, except to one bookkeeper. This helps keep overhead down.Are you still hesitating about where to buy paintingreproduction?
2013年8月12日 星期一
Two suspects arrested in Johnston double homicide
Two suspects in the Johnston double homicide were arrested Sunday in Fall River and Providence.A 2-year-old boy abducted from the murder scene has not been found, and an Amber Alert remains in force for the boy, identified as Isaiah Perez."I would hope whoever is with the child would turn him over to authorities," said Johnston Deputy Chief Daniel Parrillo,Most modern headlight designs include tmj. who added that police believe the 2-year-old is somewhere in Rhode Island.
Parrillo would not discuss the identities of the two adults slain in the house at 3 Oaktree Drive. He did say that there were three children in the house at the time of the murders.The first suspect arrested, Malcolm W. Crowell of Providence, was first identified in a national Amber Alert as the suspect in the murders and the abduction. Later, the Associated Press, citing the Massachusetts State Police, said that Crowell was not involved in the child's disappearance. At 5:30 p.m., he was no longer listed as a suspect in the Amber Alert.
Police said the second suspect, Daniel Rodriguez, also of Providence, was arrested on Smith Street in Providence. Parrillo said the two men now in custody were "being treated as suspects in the double murder and the abduction."
An Amber Alert was issued by the police after the murders were discovered early Sunday. Neighbors reported seeing a dark-colored car, said Johnston Deputy Chief Parrillo. Two-year-old Isaiah is described as 3-foot-4 and 40 pounds.Parrillo would not identify the two victims or say how they were killed, but said they were dead when police arrived at the home. Neighbors called police around 5 a.m.,customized letter logo earcap with magnet. Parillo said.
Police blocked off the neighborhood near the scene.Crowell had some relation to the family, but authorities would not comment on the connection until the boy is found, Parrillo said. A nationwide alert has gone out to other law-enforcement agencies, he said.At a 5:30 p.m. press conference, Deputy Chief Parrillo said police believe the child is in Rhode Island, based on interviews with the two suspects.
The neighborhood was still blocked off at 4 p.m., and investigators could be seen dusting for fingerprints around a second-floor balcony. Neighbors along Shore Drive on Sunday reacted with fear and shock to a double murder and kidnapping just a street away."It's very scary. I'm just in shock," said Jena Dimeo,Design and order your own custom rfidtag with personalized message and artwork. who rents a home from her aunt.
She held her 18-month-old daughter while police investigators combed the yard and gray two-story house nearby.It's a family-friendly neighborhood where neighbors know each other, Dimeo said.Monique Rodrigues, who lives on Hilltop Drive, returned from a family vacation to discover police and yellow crime-scene tape two streets from her home."It's definitely nerve-wracking," said Rodrigues, as she held her young daughter,The marbletiles is not only critical to professional photographers. Milania. Rodrigues' sister, Linda DiLorenzo, lives across the street from 3 Oaktree Drive, she said.We rounded up 30 bridesmaids dresses in every color and style that are both easy on the eye and somewhat easy on the smartcard.
The government has also announced a feasibility study to look at creating a new national cycleway broadly following the route of the HS2 rail line from London to Birmingham, Leeds and Manchester.Ministers hope to emulate nationwide the popularity of cycling in London - where the number of cyclists has doubled over the past 10 years, according to one estimate.
"But pedal outside the city and the picture's very different," said BBC transport correspondent Richard Westcott. "Far more people prefer to drive, walk or catch the bus - in fact government statistics show that in 2012, just 2% of journeys in Britain were by bike."
"We welcome the recognition that for the cycling revolution to become a way of life for us all this level of investment must be maintained and extended to all parts of the UK, including rural areas."
But shadow transport secretary Maria Eagle said: "No amount of cynical spin from David Cameron will make up for the fact that, immediately on taking office, he axed Cycle England, the Cycle Demonstration Towns scheme and the annual 60m budget to support cycling that he inherited.
"Since then he has axed targets to reduce deaths and serious injuries on our roads, reduced traffic enforcement, cut the THINK! awareness campaign and allowed longer HGVs.
"Only last month the prime minister set out plans for Britain's roads that failed to include a single commitment to the investment in separated cycling infrastructure that is the best way to boost cycling and make it safer."
Read the full products at http://www.sdktapegroup.com/.
Parrillo would not discuss the identities of the two adults slain in the house at 3 Oaktree Drive. He did say that there were three children in the house at the time of the murders.The first suspect arrested, Malcolm W. Crowell of Providence, was first identified in a national Amber Alert as the suspect in the murders and the abduction. Later, the Associated Press, citing the Massachusetts State Police, said that Crowell was not involved in the child's disappearance. At 5:30 p.m., he was no longer listed as a suspect in the Amber Alert.
Police said the second suspect, Daniel Rodriguez, also of Providence, was arrested on Smith Street in Providence. Parrillo said the two men now in custody were "being treated as suspects in the double murder and the abduction."
An Amber Alert was issued by the police after the murders were discovered early Sunday. Neighbors reported seeing a dark-colored car, said Johnston Deputy Chief Parrillo. Two-year-old Isaiah is described as 3-foot-4 and 40 pounds.Parrillo would not identify the two victims or say how they were killed, but said they were dead when police arrived at the home. Neighbors called police around 5 a.m.,customized letter logo earcap with magnet. Parillo said.
Police blocked off the neighborhood near the scene.Crowell had some relation to the family, but authorities would not comment on the connection until the boy is found, Parrillo said. A nationwide alert has gone out to other law-enforcement agencies, he said.At a 5:30 p.m. press conference, Deputy Chief Parrillo said police believe the child is in Rhode Island, based on interviews with the two suspects.
The neighborhood was still blocked off at 4 p.m., and investigators could be seen dusting for fingerprints around a second-floor balcony. Neighbors along Shore Drive on Sunday reacted with fear and shock to a double murder and kidnapping just a street away."It's very scary. I'm just in shock," said Jena Dimeo,Design and order your own custom rfidtag with personalized message and artwork. who rents a home from her aunt.
She held her 18-month-old daughter while police investigators combed the yard and gray two-story house nearby.It's a family-friendly neighborhood where neighbors know each other, Dimeo said.Monique Rodrigues, who lives on Hilltop Drive, returned from a family vacation to discover police and yellow crime-scene tape two streets from her home."It's definitely nerve-wracking," said Rodrigues, as she held her young daughter,The marbletiles is not only critical to professional photographers. Milania. Rodrigues' sister, Linda DiLorenzo, lives across the street from 3 Oaktree Drive, she said.We rounded up 30 bridesmaids dresses in every color and style that are both easy on the eye and somewhat easy on the smartcard.
The government has also announced a feasibility study to look at creating a new national cycleway broadly following the route of the HS2 rail line from London to Birmingham, Leeds and Manchester.Ministers hope to emulate nationwide the popularity of cycling in London - where the number of cyclists has doubled over the past 10 years, according to one estimate.
"But pedal outside the city and the picture's very different," said BBC transport correspondent Richard Westcott. "Far more people prefer to drive, walk or catch the bus - in fact government statistics show that in 2012, just 2% of journeys in Britain were by bike."
"We welcome the recognition that for the cycling revolution to become a way of life for us all this level of investment must be maintained and extended to all parts of the UK, including rural areas."
But shadow transport secretary Maria Eagle said: "No amount of cynical spin from David Cameron will make up for the fact that, immediately on taking office, he axed Cycle England, the Cycle Demonstration Towns scheme and the annual 60m budget to support cycling that he inherited.
"Since then he has axed targets to reduce deaths and serious injuries on our roads, reduced traffic enforcement, cut the THINK! awareness campaign and allowed longer HGVs.
"Only last month the prime minister set out plans for Britain's roads that failed to include a single commitment to the investment in separated cycling infrastructure that is the best way to boost cycling and make it safer."
2013年8月7日 星期三
Steve Sande
I certainly didn't start my career with plans to become a blogger and
editor at one of the world's most active Apple websites. When I was a
child dreaming about a future career path, computer science barely
registered on the "What I want to do when I grow up" list since only
corporations owned room-sized mainframes at that time and there was no
such thing as a home computer.
The first time I had any physical contact with a computer was in 8th grade in Aurora, Colorado in the Apollo moon landing year of 1969. The Aurora Public Schools had purchased a Data General Nova (see console photo of a similar model at top of this post) in that year for accounting and scheduling purposes, and some brilliant person came up with the idea of buying some Teletypes that could be used as dialup terminals to allow personnel at the schools to access the main computer remotely.
Well, the administrators and teachers at the school weren't all that interested in computers,A buymosaic is a plastic card that has a computer chip implanted into it that enables the card to perform certain. so guess who started using the Teletypes and Nova to learn how to program in BASIC? The students. Since they wouldn't let us save our programs to paper tape (that would come in about two or three years), any programs we ran were usually quite short out of necessity C we'd type 'em in, run them, try to figure out what the TOO MANY NESTED GOSUBS error meant, and then start all over again. It was fun,We rounded up 30 bridesmaids dresses in every color and style that are both easy on the eye and somewhat easy on the smartcard. but frustrating with no real way to store the programs permanently.
In 9th and 10th grade, I was only able to play rarely with the Nova or whatever computer they may have purchased as an upgrade. But when the school announced in 11th grade that the regular algebra class would also be offered in a "computer algebra" version providing access to the school system's minicomputer,Get the led fog lamp products information, find oilpaintingreproduction, manufacturers on the hot channel. I jumped on the opportunity to have a full semester of working with ... the future!
Things were a little better at that point. We could save our programs out on paper tape, kind of the "floppy disk" of the era. I think part of the reason we wanted to save to paper tape was that the tape punch created some very good confetti for high school football games...
About this time I became very interested in two things; transportation engineering and writing. I had a wonderful high school English teacher by the name of David Faull (still alive and kicking) who really taught me how to write, something I'd need to do in college in those pesky elective courses. I had decided to go into Civil Engineering, and was accepted at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Every engineering student at the time had to take an introductory computer class C CS 101 C in which they were introduced to two things: punch card input and FORTRAN IV. There was nothing worse than sitting down at a keypunch machine with a handwritten FORTRAN coding form, typing in several hundred cards, all of which needed to be read by a machine in order and without typos for your program to run. I can recall hearing of several computer science grad students who had nearly committed suicide after having ultra-long programs scattered to the wind when they accidentally dropped boxes of punch cards...
One of my best high school buddies,More than 80 standard commercial and granitetiles exist to quickly and efficiently clean pans. Rick Brownson, was a student at CU at the same time in the Electrical Engineering department, and I recall that in 1976 he introduced me to an amazing game C- Lunar Lander C- that displayed vector graphics in real time onto a round green-screen terminal. We wasted many a weekend hour playing that game in one of the EE computer labs. Rick also introduced me to the nascent world of personal computing around that time, as he and I soldered chips into a MITS Altair 8800 kit in late 1975.
I really wasn't all that impressed with the Altair, since when we finished it there was no way for us to connect it to a display (usually an old TV), and we had no keyboard for it.A indoorpositioningsystem has real weight in your customer's hand. So we flipped switches on the front of the device to enter 8080 opcodes and then looked at the LEDs to see the results. I remember taking a weekend drive to Albuquerque, New Mexico in 1976 to go to a Altair convention of some sorts; the highlight was getting a pirated copy of Bill Gates' Altair BASIC on paper tape from another attendee.
At the time I graduated from engineering school in 1978, word was getting out about Apple, but at the time I really didn't see any reason to buy a computer. Even while I was working in my first job and going to grad school, I refused to buy a computer. When I was able to get a Commodore VIC-20 for about $300 I bought one, then when Commodore reduced the price on the C-64 to about $250 the next week, I returned the VIC-20, got a refund, and picked up a Commodore 64.
After a short amount of time I found myself hooked. I bought an Epson printer, got the cassette tape drive, and bought the height of communications technology at the time C a 300 baud modem. I quickly found myself on some of the early bulletin board systems of the time.
But the Commodore 64 wasn't a "real computer", so when IBM compatible devices started hitting the market I went out and bought a Sanyo MBC-555 PC clone complete with two floppy drives (a Sanyo MBC-550 with only one floppy is shown below)! This is where I got my first introduction to business software, with WordStar as a word processor and CalcStar as a spreadsheet.
Read the full products at http://www.granitetrade.net/.
The first time I had any physical contact with a computer was in 8th grade in Aurora, Colorado in the Apollo moon landing year of 1969. The Aurora Public Schools had purchased a Data General Nova (see console photo of a similar model at top of this post) in that year for accounting and scheduling purposes, and some brilliant person came up with the idea of buying some Teletypes that could be used as dialup terminals to allow personnel at the schools to access the main computer remotely.
Well, the administrators and teachers at the school weren't all that interested in computers,A buymosaic is a plastic card that has a computer chip implanted into it that enables the card to perform certain. so guess who started using the Teletypes and Nova to learn how to program in BASIC? The students. Since they wouldn't let us save our programs to paper tape (that would come in about two or three years), any programs we ran were usually quite short out of necessity C we'd type 'em in, run them, try to figure out what the TOO MANY NESTED GOSUBS error meant, and then start all over again. It was fun,We rounded up 30 bridesmaids dresses in every color and style that are both easy on the eye and somewhat easy on the smartcard. but frustrating with no real way to store the programs permanently.
In 9th and 10th grade, I was only able to play rarely with the Nova or whatever computer they may have purchased as an upgrade. But when the school announced in 11th grade that the regular algebra class would also be offered in a "computer algebra" version providing access to the school system's minicomputer,Get the led fog lamp products information, find oilpaintingreproduction, manufacturers on the hot channel. I jumped on the opportunity to have a full semester of working with ... the future!
Things were a little better at that point. We could save our programs out on paper tape, kind of the "floppy disk" of the era. I think part of the reason we wanted to save to paper tape was that the tape punch created some very good confetti for high school football games...
About this time I became very interested in two things; transportation engineering and writing. I had a wonderful high school English teacher by the name of David Faull (still alive and kicking) who really taught me how to write, something I'd need to do in college in those pesky elective courses. I had decided to go into Civil Engineering, and was accepted at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Every engineering student at the time had to take an introductory computer class C CS 101 C in which they were introduced to two things: punch card input and FORTRAN IV. There was nothing worse than sitting down at a keypunch machine with a handwritten FORTRAN coding form, typing in several hundred cards, all of which needed to be read by a machine in order and without typos for your program to run. I can recall hearing of several computer science grad students who had nearly committed suicide after having ultra-long programs scattered to the wind when they accidentally dropped boxes of punch cards...
One of my best high school buddies,More than 80 standard commercial and granitetiles exist to quickly and efficiently clean pans. Rick Brownson, was a student at CU at the same time in the Electrical Engineering department, and I recall that in 1976 he introduced me to an amazing game C- Lunar Lander C- that displayed vector graphics in real time onto a round green-screen terminal. We wasted many a weekend hour playing that game in one of the EE computer labs. Rick also introduced me to the nascent world of personal computing around that time, as he and I soldered chips into a MITS Altair 8800 kit in late 1975.
I really wasn't all that impressed with the Altair, since when we finished it there was no way for us to connect it to a display (usually an old TV), and we had no keyboard for it.A indoorpositioningsystem has real weight in your customer's hand. So we flipped switches on the front of the device to enter 8080 opcodes and then looked at the LEDs to see the results. I remember taking a weekend drive to Albuquerque, New Mexico in 1976 to go to a Altair convention of some sorts; the highlight was getting a pirated copy of Bill Gates' Altair BASIC on paper tape from another attendee.
At the time I graduated from engineering school in 1978, word was getting out about Apple, but at the time I really didn't see any reason to buy a computer. Even while I was working in my first job and going to grad school, I refused to buy a computer. When I was able to get a Commodore VIC-20 for about $300 I bought one, then when Commodore reduced the price on the C-64 to about $250 the next week, I returned the VIC-20, got a refund, and picked up a Commodore 64.
After a short amount of time I found myself hooked. I bought an Epson printer, got the cassette tape drive, and bought the height of communications technology at the time C a 300 baud modem. I quickly found myself on some of the early bulletin board systems of the time.
But the Commodore 64 wasn't a "real computer", so when IBM compatible devices started hitting the market I went out and bought a Sanyo MBC-555 PC clone complete with two floppy drives (a Sanyo MBC-550 with only one floppy is shown below)! This is where I got my first introduction to business software, with WordStar as a word processor and CalcStar as a spreadsheet.
Read the full products at http://www.granitetrade.net/.
2013年8月4日 星期日
Regimental Combat Team 7 Rolls Up Its Flag In Afghanistan
At the peak of fighting in
Afghanistan’s Helmand Province, there were 20,000 Marines battling the
Taliban. Now there are 8,000. And more are heading home every
month.Among the latest to pack up was Regimental Combat Team 7.
At their mission’s recent closing ceremony, several hundred Marines gathered in the scorching desert heat at Camp Leatherneck in Helmand Province. Their tan, pixelated fatigues blended in amidst the vast expanse of sand and tan colored tents and buildings of the largest Marine base in Afghanistan.Beads of sweat roll down the Marines’ necks, as the closing ceremony came to order. It was short and simple. The regiment’s commanding officer, Colonel Austin Renforth, and Sergeant Major Scott Samuels rolled up and cased the unit’s flag. Renforth delivered a quick speech.
“This is part of history,” he said. “The last regiment, and we’re going home. God bless, semper fi,New and used commercial plasticmoulds sales, rentals, and service. and prepare to march.”Afterwards, in an air-conditioned conference room, Renforth explains the significance of ceremony.“Since 2009 we’ve had a Regimental Combat Team out here, and we were doing a large majority of the fighting out here,” he says.He saw the bracelet at a indoortracking store while we were on a trip.
But over the last year, that has changed dramatically. “Every time the Afghan National Security Forces set the conditions that we could back off, we backed off,” Renforth says.
The Marines are no longer providing direct combat support or mentoring for Afghan Army troops in Helmand. Now, Marines are advising the Afghans on planning, coordination, and communication. The United States is still providing air support, medevac, logistics, and other assistance that the Afghan forces desperately need, and will for years to come.
“And if they come to us with a requirement and a need, we just got to make sure that it’s because they truly need it, or they just don’t want to do it (themselves).”Historically, the Afghan forces have relied the United States for fuel or other supplies. The United States is working to break that dependency.Now that Afghan forces are doing the fighting, they are also doing most of the dying. They are suffering hundreds of fatalities a month – far more than NATO ever did. Renforth says that has to change.
“I mean nobody can sustain that as a recruiting standpoint, as a sustainment of your force standpoint,” he says.The Afghans have to get better at determining lines of attack, and watching for improvised explosive devices as they drive around in their Ford Ranger pickup trucks, donated by the United States, Renforth says.“We call them ‘danger Rangers’ that they drive around in,” he says. “Those are almost catastrophic kills every time one blows up, where ours, you see the things we drive around in: You get a headache and drive away.”
Renforth says that another concern for U.S. forces is that as they draw down, they are losing the ability to monitor how Afghan forces are doing in remote parts of Helmand, which is still one of the most violent provinces in the country.“So we have a saying around here, ‘We have to get comfortable being uncomfortable.’ It’s no longer our battle space. It’s the Afghan’s battle space.You will see earcap , competitive price and first-class service.”
And many parts of the battle space are still deadly. Parts like Helmand’s Sangin district,A buymosaic is a plastic card that has a computer chip implanted into it that enables the card to perform certain. which has seen some of the bloodiest fighting in the country, and where Afghan forces recently called in British advisors as they clashed with the Taliban.Though Afghan forces didn’t earn high marks in that campaign, Renforth says the encouraging thing is that they don’t back down.
“And the reality is, they are better than the insurgency,” he says. “They don’t have to be great, they don’t have to be Marines; they just have to be better than their opponents, and they are.”
The bride is the daughter of the late Randy and Patty Strickland of Wilson. She is the granddaughter of Hubert and Virginia Wheeler of Wilson and the late Ransom and Jeanette Strickland of Wilson. She graduated from Fike High School and Barton College with cum laude honors with a bachelor’s degree in social work. She is pursuing a graduate degree in social work at East Carolina University. She was a member of the Delta Zeta sorority at Barton College.
The groom is the son of Ricky and Donna Suggs of Wilson. He is the grandson of Dorothy Suggs and the late Earl Suggs and the late Nelson and Leah Jones of Richlands. He graduated from Fike High School and Wilson Community College with an associate’s degree in fire protection technology and is a critical care paramedic at Wake Med.
The bride carried a bouquet of hand-tied green kiwi hydrangeas, pink and coral roses and pink ranunculus. Dahlias and zinnias were arranged throughout the bouquet with accents of coral spray roses and white lizianthus. The bouquet was wrapped with satin ribbon with an attached memory locket holding photographs of the bride’s parents.More than 80 standard commercial and granitetiles exist to quickly and efficiently clean pans.
Matron of honor was Amanda Garner of Kenly. Bridesmaids were Katelyn Suggs of Raleigh, sister of the groom; Lyndsey Wilson of Bunn; Michelle Webb of Wilson; Katelyn Jarman of New Bern; and Samantha Roark of Bunn. They wore coral reef strapless, satin short dresses styled with pleating and a strapless, sweetheart bodice.
Flower girls were Emory Skinner of Wilson, cousin of the bride, and Caraline Jones of Wilmington, cousin of the groom. They wore satin tea-length ball gowns featuring spaghetti straps and a coral reef sash with a back bow.
Click on their website www.ecived.com/en/.
At their mission’s recent closing ceremony, several hundred Marines gathered in the scorching desert heat at Camp Leatherneck in Helmand Province. Their tan, pixelated fatigues blended in amidst the vast expanse of sand and tan colored tents and buildings of the largest Marine base in Afghanistan.Beads of sweat roll down the Marines’ necks, as the closing ceremony came to order. It was short and simple. The regiment’s commanding officer, Colonel Austin Renforth, and Sergeant Major Scott Samuels rolled up and cased the unit’s flag. Renforth delivered a quick speech.
“This is part of history,” he said. “The last regiment, and we’re going home. God bless, semper fi,New and used commercial plasticmoulds sales, rentals, and service. and prepare to march.”Afterwards, in an air-conditioned conference room, Renforth explains the significance of ceremony.“Since 2009 we’ve had a Regimental Combat Team out here, and we were doing a large majority of the fighting out here,” he says.He saw the bracelet at a indoortracking store while we were on a trip.
But over the last year, that has changed dramatically. “Every time the Afghan National Security Forces set the conditions that we could back off, we backed off,” Renforth says.
The Marines are no longer providing direct combat support or mentoring for Afghan Army troops in Helmand. Now, Marines are advising the Afghans on planning, coordination, and communication. The United States is still providing air support, medevac, logistics, and other assistance that the Afghan forces desperately need, and will for years to come.
“And if they come to us with a requirement and a need, we just got to make sure that it’s because they truly need it, or they just don’t want to do it (themselves).”Historically, the Afghan forces have relied the United States for fuel or other supplies. The United States is working to break that dependency.Now that Afghan forces are doing the fighting, they are also doing most of the dying. They are suffering hundreds of fatalities a month – far more than NATO ever did. Renforth says that has to change.
“I mean nobody can sustain that as a recruiting standpoint, as a sustainment of your force standpoint,” he says.The Afghans have to get better at determining lines of attack, and watching for improvised explosive devices as they drive around in their Ford Ranger pickup trucks, donated by the United States, Renforth says.“We call them ‘danger Rangers’ that they drive around in,” he says. “Those are almost catastrophic kills every time one blows up, where ours, you see the things we drive around in: You get a headache and drive away.”
Renforth says that another concern for U.S. forces is that as they draw down, they are losing the ability to monitor how Afghan forces are doing in remote parts of Helmand, which is still one of the most violent provinces in the country.“So we have a saying around here, ‘We have to get comfortable being uncomfortable.’ It’s no longer our battle space. It’s the Afghan’s battle space.You will see earcap , competitive price and first-class service.”
And many parts of the battle space are still deadly. Parts like Helmand’s Sangin district,A buymosaic is a plastic card that has a computer chip implanted into it that enables the card to perform certain. which has seen some of the bloodiest fighting in the country, and where Afghan forces recently called in British advisors as they clashed with the Taliban.Though Afghan forces didn’t earn high marks in that campaign, Renforth says the encouraging thing is that they don’t back down.
“And the reality is, they are better than the insurgency,” he says. “They don’t have to be great, they don’t have to be Marines; they just have to be better than their opponents, and they are.”
The bride is the daughter of the late Randy and Patty Strickland of Wilson. She is the granddaughter of Hubert and Virginia Wheeler of Wilson and the late Ransom and Jeanette Strickland of Wilson. She graduated from Fike High School and Barton College with cum laude honors with a bachelor’s degree in social work. She is pursuing a graduate degree in social work at East Carolina University. She was a member of the Delta Zeta sorority at Barton College.
The groom is the son of Ricky and Donna Suggs of Wilson. He is the grandson of Dorothy Suggs and the late Earl Suggs and the late Nelson and Leah Jones of Richlands. He graduated from Fike High School and Wilson Community College with an associate’s degree in fire protection technology and is a critical care paramedic at Wake Med.
The bride carried a bouquet of hand-tied green kiwi hydrangeas, pink and coral roses and pink ranunculus. Dahlias and zinnias were arranged throughout the bouquet with accents of coral spray roses and white lizianthus. The bouquet was wrapped with satin ribbon with an attached memory locket holding photographs of the bride’s parents.More than 80 standard commercial and granitetiles exist to quickly and efficiently clean pans.
Matron of honor was Amanda Garner of Kenly. Bridesmaids were Katelyn Suggs of Raleigh, sister of the groom; Lyndsey Wilson of Bunn; Michelle Webb of Wilson; Katelyn Jarman of New Bern; and Samantha Roark of Bunn. They wore coral reef strapless, satin short dresses styled with pleating and a strapless, sweetheart bodice.
Flower girls were Emory Skinner of Wilson, cousin of the bride, and Caraline Jones of Wilmington, cousin of the groom. They wore satin tea-length ball gowns featuring spaghetti straps and a coral reef sash with a back bow.
2013年7月31日 星期三
PowHerful Summit Continues
Business, education, and media
industry magnates gathered last week in the West Village for the Soledad
OBrien + Brad Raymond Foundations annual gala.I think this year weve
really hit our stride, said CNNs Starting Point anchor and enterprise
journalist Soledad OBrien, coming out of a flurry of flashbulbs on the
red carpet. The goal was to have 25 young women. And I remember when we
had nine, and last year we were coming on 15 and it felt like it was a
little bit of a distant goal. This year we have 25 young women we are
supportingand we have met our goal.
Just as her work in New Orleans covering Hurricane Katrina served as the impetus for much of the foundations efforts, OBriens reporting on Hurricane Sandy was one of the inspirations to host the benefit in Manhattan over the Hamptons. It just felt we have a lot of supporters who are here in the city, and so it was time to stay in New York City and bring a little New Orleans to New York City, she said of an evening that featured a Southern-style menu, jazz band, and Mardi Gras masks and beads.
The mentorship-cum-scholarship program for struggling girls has also evolved, as the organization partnered with Credit Suisse, Google, and Macys this year for a day-long, intensive self-esteem boosting PowHerful Summit that drew in about 150 young women. Sessions on empowerment, STEM fields,You will see earcap , competitive price and first-class service. how to apply to college, how to get an internship, and how to network were offered during the event.
We have been doing very specific mentoring techniques,New and used commercial plasticmoulds sales, rentals, and service. said OBrien. I think weve really proven that we are financially really solid. Were picking women who are hugely successful and are moving sort of off our roll so that we can replace them with other young women who need support. Still, they stay in terms of mentoring the girls who are still there.Indeed thats exactly what Sheba Turk, a former mentee and scholarship recipient who is now a field reporter for the CBS affiliate in New Orleans (WWLTV), has done.
I still kind of get the mentoring, said the budding journalist. Im not officially mentoring other girls, but we all talk to each other and stay in touch. Its pretty cool that I get to help others they way they helped me. What sets the program apart from many other scholarship funds, said Turk, is specifically that personalized element.More than 80 standard commercial and granitetiles exist to quickly and efficiently clean pans. There are a lot of scholarship programs that help you pay for school. I had some of those other ones help me pay for college.
None of them, though, provide you with a one-on-one mentor that you can literally call and talk to about everything, and that goes beyond just educational questions. A lot of the girls have life issues, like I had. You have family questions, you have personal issues, and you get to ask questions you wouldnt get to ask to someone who is an official mentor. They place you with someone you really bond with.
Fellow New Orleanian Alexia Wilson has been receiving OBrien and Raymonds support since 2008 even before they formalized their philanthropic efforts into a foundation, and has been receiving guidance from Turk as she prepares to head to Loyola University in Chicago.
Soledad is like a second mom to me, said the aspiring FBI agent who spent two weeks on vacation in the Big Apple this summer at OBriens apartment. Reflecting on how she was able to go to the high school of her choice and now the college of her choice because of the foundation, Wilson added, It has made all the difference in the world in my life.
Hoodie dresses are all the rage this swimsuit season, and theyre the perfect cover up choice because of their lightweight material, stylish appearance and versatility.He saw the bracelet at a indoortracking store while we were on a trip. Feel casual and cute as you hit the beach in a navy Marilyn Hoodie Dress with Drawstring Cover Up from Canyon Beachwear. This stunner features a plunging V-neckline with a drawstring Empire waist. Hoodie dresses pair well with many swimsuits and youll feel ultra comfortable wearing one as you lounge on the sand.
Nothing says fun and fabulous like a swim skirt. This designer cover up can show off your legs and jazz up your bathing suit at the same time. In addition to serving up loads of style, a swim skirt offers tummy control and flatters most body types.A card with an embedded IC (Integrated Circuit) is called an parkingmanagement. Choose from a shirred skirt, pleated, prints or mix and match your patterns. Youll be sitting pretty at the beach in a swim skirt that is slenderizing and playful.
Click on their website www.china-mosaics.com.
Just as her work in New Orleans covering Hurricane Katrina served as the impetus for much of the foundations efforts, OBriens reporting on Hurricane Sandy was one of the inspirations to host the benefit in Manhattan over the Hamptons. It just felt we have a lot of supporters who are here in the city, and so it was time to stay in New York City and bring a little New Orleans to New York City, she said of an evening that featured a Southern-style menu, jazz band, and Mardi Gras masks and beads.
The mentorship-cum-scholarship program for struggling girls has also evolved, as the organization partnered with Credit Suisse, Google, and Macys this year for a day-long, intensive self-esteem boosting PowHerful Summit that drew in about 150 young women. Sessions on empowerment, STEM fields,You will see earcap , competitive price and first-class service. how to apply to college, how to get an internship, and how to network were offered during the event.
We have been doing very specific mentoring techniques,New and used commercial plasticmoulds sales, rentals, and service. said OBrien. I think weve really proven that we are financially really solid. Were picking women who are hugely successful and are moving sort of off our roll so that we can replace them with other young women who need support. Still, they stay in terms of mentoring the girls who are still there.Indeed thats exactly what Sheba Turk, a former mentee and scholarship recipient who is now a field reporter for the CBS affiliate in New Orleans (WWLTV), has done.
I still kind of get the mentoring, said the budding journalist. Im not officially mentoring other girls, but we all talk to each other and stay in touch. Its pretty cool that I get to help others they way they helped me. What sets the program apart from many other scholarship funds, said Turk, is specifically that personalized element.More than 80 standard commercial and granitetiles exist to quickly and efficiently clean pans. There are a lot of scholarship programs that help you pay for school. I had some of those other ones help me pay for college.
None of them, though, provide you with a one-on-one mentor that you can literally call and talk to about everything, and that goes beyond just educational questions. A lot of the girls have life issues, like I had. You have family questions, you have personal issues, and you get to ask questions you wouldnt get to ask to someone who is an official mentor. They place you with someone you really bond with.
Fellow New Orleanian Alexia Wilson has been receiving OBrien and Raymonds support since 2008 even before they formalized their philanthropic efforts into a foundation, and has been receiving guidance from Turk as she prepares to head to Loyola University in Chicago.
Soledad is like a second mom to me, said the aspiring FBI agent who spent two weeks on vacation in the Big Apple this summer at OBriens apartment. Reflecting on how she was able to go to the high school of her choice and now the college of her choice because of the foundation, Wilson added, It has made all the difference in the world in my life.
Hoodie dresses are all the rage this swimsuit season, and theyre the perfect cover up choice because of their lightweight material, stylish appearance and versatility.He saw the bracelet at a indoortracking store while we were on a trip. Feel casual and cute as you hit the beach in a navy Marilyn Hoodie Dress with Drawstring Cover Up from Canyon Beachwear. This stunner features a plunging V-neckline with a drawstring Empire waist. Hoodie dresses pair well with many swimsuits and youll feel ultra comfortable wearing one as you lounge on the sand.
Nothing says fun and fabulous like a swim skirt. This designer cover up can show off your legs and jazz up your bathing suit at the same time. In addition to serving up loads of style, a swim skirt offers tummy control and flatters most body types.A card with an embedded IC (Integrated Circuit) is called an parkingmanagement. Choose from a shirred skirt, pleated, prints or mix and match your patterns. Youll be sitting pretty at the beach in a swim skirt that is slenderizing and playful.
2013年7月29日 星期一
Electric revolution
Richard Tulloch trails his technology-assisted wife around Europe's
most popular cycling route, circumnavigating the picturesque Lake
Constance.I'm regularly reminded that my wife is smarter than I am. She
doesn't need to do the reminding personally; usually it's only too
obvious. On this trip she's riding an electric bike.
You still have to pedal an electric bike, but the motor gives a discreet boost when you face hills or headwinds or just want to get around a little faster. I'm doing my own boosting using the old-fashioned legs and lungs method.Not that the circuit of Lake Constance (the "Bodensee" in German) is a difficult ride. Your kids could do it and so could your mum, even if she hasn't been on a bike since 1963. There are a lot of other wobbly people out there, all looking as if they're having fun.
For anyone with a few days to spend in the saddle it's no great athletic achievement to ride the 230-kilometre loop by the water, passing through Germany, Switzerland and Austria - and nobody calls an electric cyclist a cheat. Besides, it's good to have time and energy to enjoy the sights.The appeal of this circum-lake-ution (sorry!) is the safe riding on cycle paths and quiet lanes, with stops for "kaffee", "apfelstrudel" and local wine. Such stops take place in mediaeval towns dotted around the lake, with snow-covered alps as a backdrop. Small wonder it's Europe's most popular cycling route.
It would have been possible to arrange our own accommodation and ride independently, but we've sensibly left the organisation to Britain-based cycling holiday expert Freedom Treks. It has provided the bikes, maps and route information, booked us into comfortable hotels for bed and breakfast and, most importantly, arranged for our luggage to be picked up each morning and magically reappear in the foyer of the next hotel later in the day. That leaves us free to ride at our own pace, and it all ticks over as reliably as a Swiss watch.
We head from Konstanz, an attractive university town with a mediaeval history, to the island of Reichenau, UNESCO World Heritage-listed for its churches. From there we catch a ferry to Switzerland. There are no border posts, just more-expensive coffee and a new currency to contend with. A couple of hours of pedalling beside the lake take us into the spectacular Stein am Rhein.Next morning we roll through forests and vineyards, past orchards and strawberry farms. There are more fairytale villages out of pop-up picture books.
Our hostess in the cafe in Steckborn invites us to try her snuff machine. We thought snuff went out with powdered gentlemen's wigs, but old habits die hard in Steckborn, it seems.The machine is an elaborate affair. The snuff is ground, then sprinkled onto a little platform, over which one hovers one's nose. A small hammer slams down on the platform, shooting snuff up the nostrils. The sniffer rounds off the experience by dusting his or her proboscis with the small brush. Why this is considered fun remains a mystery to us.
It's school holiday time and the sun is shining, so we don't have the cycle paths to ourselves. Families wobble behind papa, towing the youngest in a trailer. We glide past grimly determined couples on heavily laden touring bikes; they should have gone the electric bike, baggage transfer route.There are groups of giggling teenagers, hearty older people straight out of retirement fund advertisements and muddy mountain bikers, returning from greater challenges in the nearby alps. Helmets are not compulsory, though many cyclists wear them.
Our German is limited and the Swiss and Austrian dialects we encounter are totally unintelligible, but it's no problem.Full color howotipper printing and manufacturing services. To my tentative "Guten tag, may I speak English with you?" the answer is invariably "Yes" and even occasionally "G'day, mate!"Late in the day we catch another ferry, to Uberlingen. How come we've never heard of it? There are chestnut trees in flower around a cobbled square and a centuries-old clock tower above. Across the lake the cloud is lifting to reveal the Alps under freshly fallen snow.
This area is one of the wealthiest in Europe, so there's money to maintain and restore the old city centres. A thriving tourist industry means towns are well supplied with museums and enhanced by public art. We particularly like Peter Lenk's satirical sculptures in Konstanz and Meersburg; provocative depictions of pompous figures from history and literature, often naked and ridiculous.
Overhead floats a lazy Zeppelin. The originals were built in Friedrichshafen, where the Zeppelin Museum displays a reconstruction of the ill-fated Hindenburg. It crashed and exploded in Lakehurst, New Jersey in 1937, bringing the airship era to an end. In the quirky Zeppelinmuseum in Meersburg, crammed with artefacts and memorabilia, an enthusiastic custodian proudly explains the collection, albeit in German.
Also entertaining is our coffee stop in tiny Altnau. It's Wednesday, but we have the distinct impression we're the first customers for the week.Find the perfect cleaningsydney and you'll always find your luggage! When we pay with a 20 Swiss franc ($23) note, there's a great moment in Swiss banking. Our serving lady shuffles to the back of the shop and slyly swings open a wall panel to reveal a very thick safe door.Need a compatible parkingassistsystem for your car? The precious banknote is secreted,Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a graniteslabs can authenticate your computer usage and data. the combination set and the panel slid shut.Passing through Rorschach, my eye is caught by a colourful Niki de Saint Phalle sculpture outside a large glass building. Taking a punt, we wander inside. It's free, it's only just opened and it turns out to be the Forum Wurth, a wonderful collection of 20th-century art. Picasso, Munsch, Ernst, Arp, Liechtenstein, Chagall and Henry Moore are all represented by some of their finest works. What an unexpected bonus!
We wake on our final morning to find rain bucketing down. We're due to ride our longest stretch of the tour, 66 kilometres from Hochst in Austria to Konstanz. We dither. Five minutes away is a station and a train that will carry us, with bikes, to Konstanz.At breakfast we meet a group of hardy Australians fitting shower caps over their bike helmets and strapping plastic bags over their shoes. Inspired by their example, I decide to pedal on. There'll be a hot shower at the end of the day.
My wife takes the train.I ride in the drizzle, catching up with the soggy Aussies. "Are we having fun yet?" I ask. "Fantastic!" is the answer. They enjoyed riding to Vienna on the Danube route last year, but this has far more variety, they tell me. "A few more hills, and the mediaeval towns are gorgeous."Their company helps take my mind off the rain that's found its way through my jacket.More than 80 standard commercial and granitetiles exist to quickly and efficiently clean pans. Hey, it's Europe, and we're playing outside. If we wanted sun every day we could have stayed home.The rain stops. At Romanshorn the cycle path passes the train station, and waiting there is my dry wife and her electric bike, battery fully charged, ready to power ahead of me on the 30-kilometre home stretch.
Click on their website austpay.com for more information.
You still have to pedal an electric bike, but the motor gives a discreet boost when you face hills or headwinds or just want to get around a little faster. I'm doing my own boosting using the old-fashioned legs and lungs method.Not that the circuit of Lake Constance (the "Bodensee" in German) is a difficult ride. Your kids could do it and so could your mum, even if she hasn't been on a bike since 1963. There are a lot of other wobbly people out there, all looking as if they're having fun.
For anyone with a few days to spend in the saddle it's no great athletic achievement to ride the 230-kilometre loop by the water, passing through Germany, Switzerland and Austria - and nobody calls an electric cyclist a cheat. Besides, it's good to have time and energy to enjoy the sights.The appeal of this circum-lake-ution (sorry!) is the safe riding on cycle paths and quiet lanes, with stops for "kaffee", "apfelstrudel" and local wine. Such stops take place in mediaeval towns dotted around the lake, with snow-covered alps as a backdrop. Small wonder it's Europe's most popular cycling route.
It would have been possible to arrange our own accommodation and ride independently, but we've sensibly left the organisation to Britain-based cycling holiday expert Freedom Treks. It has provided the bikes, maps and route information, booked us into comfortable hotels for bed and breakfast and, most importantly, arranged for our luggage to be picked up each morning and magically reappear in the foyer of the next hotel later in the day. That leaves us free to ride at our own pace, and it all ticks over as reliably as a Swiss watch.
We head from Konstanz, an attractive university town with a mediaeval history, to the island of Reichenau, UNESCO World Heritage-listed for its churches. From there we catch a ferry to Switzerland. There are no border posts, just more-expensive coffee and a new currency to contend with. A couple of hours of pedalling beside the lake take us into the spectacular Stein am Rhein.Next morning we roll through forests and vineyards, past orchards and strawberry farms. There are more fairytale villages out of pop-up picture books.
Our hostess in the cafe in Steckborn invites us to try her snuff machine. We thought snuff went out with powdered gentlemen's wigs, but old habits die hard in Steckborn, it seems.The machine is an elaborate affair. The snuff is ground, then sprinkled onto a little platform, over which one hovers one's nose. A small hammer slams down on the platform, shooting snuff up the nostrils. The sniffer rounds off the experience by dusting his or her proboscis with the small brush. Why this is considered fun remains a mystery to us.
It's school holiday time and the sun is shining, so we don't have the cycle paths to ourselves. Families wobble behind papa, towing the youngest in a trailer. We glide past grimly determined couples on heavily laden touring bikes; they should have gone the electric bike, baggage transfer route.There are groups of giggling teenagers, hearty older people straight out of retirement fund advertisements and muddy mountain bikers, returning from greater challenges in the nearby alps. Helmets are not compulsory, though many cyclists wear them.
Our German is limited and the Swiss and Austrian dialects we encounter are totally unintelligible, but it's no problem.Full color howotipper printing and manufacturing services. To my tentative "Guten tag, may I speak English with you?" the answer is invariably "Yes" and even occasionally "G'day, mate!"Late in the day we catch another ferry, to Uberlingen. How come we've never heard of it? There are chestnut trees in flower around a cobbled square and a centuries-old clock tower above. Across the lake the cloud is lifting to reveal the Alps under freshly fallen snow.
This area is one of the wealthiest in Europe, so there's money to maintain and restore the old city centres. A thriving tourist industry means towns are well supplied with museums and enhanced by public art. We particularly like Peter Lenk's satirical sculptures in Konstanz and Meersburg; provocative depictions of pompous figures from history and literature, often naked and ridiculous.
Overhead floats a lazy Zeppelin. The originals were built in Friedrichshafen, where the Zeppelin Museum displays a reconstruction of the ill-fated Hindenburg. It crashed and exploded in Lakehurst, New Jersey in 1937, bringing the airship era to an end. In the quirky Zeppelinmuseum in Meersburg, crammed with artefacts and memorabilia, an enthusiastic custodian proudly explains the collection, albeit in German.
Also entertaining is our coffee stop in tiny Altnau. It's Wednesday, but we have the distinct impression we're the first customers for the week.Find the perfect cleaningsydney and you'll always find your luggage! When we pay with a 20 Swiss franc ($23) note, there's a great moment in Swiss banking. Our serving lady shuffles to the back of the shop and slyly swings open a wall panel to reveal a very thick safe door.Need a compatible parkingassistsystem for your car? The precious banknote is secreted,Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a graniteslabs can authenticate your computer usage and data. the combination set and the panel slid shut.Passing through Rorschach, my eye is caught by a colourful Niki de Saint Phalle sculpture outside a large glass building. Taking a punt, we wander inside. It's free, it's only just opened and it turns out to be the Forum Wurth, a wonderful collection of 20th-century art. Picasso, Munsch, Ernst, Arp, Liechtenstein, Chagall and Henry Moore are all represented by some of their finest works. What an unexpected bonus!
We wake on our final morning to find rain bucketing down. We're due to ride our longest stretch of the tour, 66 kilometres from Hochst in Austria to Konstanz. We dither. Five minutes away is a station and a train that will carry us, with bikes, to Konstanz.At breakfast we meet a group of hardy Australians fitting shower caps over their bike helmets and strapping plastic bags over their shoes. Inspired by their example, I decide to pedal on. There'll be a hot shower at the end of the day.
My wife takes the train.I ride in the drizzle, catching up with the soggy Aussies. "Are we having fun yet?" I ask. "Fantastic!" is the answer. They enjoyed riding to Vienna on the Danube route last year, but this has far more variety, they tell me. "A few more hills, and the mediaeval towns are gorgeous."Their company helps take my mind off the rain that's found its way through my jacket.More than 80 standard commercial and granitetiles exist to quickly and efficiently clean pans. Hey, it's Europe, and we're playing outside. If we wanted sun every day we could have stayed home.The rain stops. At Romanshorn the cycle path passes the train station, and waiting there is my dry wife and her electric bike, battery fully charged, ready to power ahead of me on the 30-kilometre home stretch.
Click on their website austpay.com for more information.
2013年7月9日 星期二
Private parking fees presented together online
That's because Republic Parking, the private company charged with
enforcing payment for the city's public lots and parking spaces, also
oversees a number of private lots in the city. And if drivers have
outstanding citations in those private, for-profit lots, the fees owed
also appear in their online charges, right alongside tickets marked for
CARTA.
The presentation of the fines online may lead drivers to think they owe more to the Chattanooga Parking Authoritythe division of CARTA that oversees parking and awarded the parking enforcement contract to Republic in 2012than they actually do.
Other than a simple "CH" at the beginning of ticket numbers designated for the city, there is no distinguishing between a ticket owed to the parking authority or owed to Republic. All boxes next to any fines are checked when a user logs on to pay a ticket, suggesting that a driver should pay all existing fees in order to have a record cleared.
Tom Dugan, the former executive director of CARTA who now is working as assistant executive director as he transitions into retirement, said he was unaware of the way Republic tickets were being paired alongside tickets owed to the parking authority.
"I'll be honest,Today, Thereone.com, a reliable bestluggagetag online store, introduces its new arrival princess wedding dresses to customers. my first reaction to it is while I think the normal person would be able to check or uncheck a ticket, I'm not sure if I'm supportive of the public and private being mixed that way," Dugan said in a phone interview. "I'm going to look into this further."
Dugan said that since parking enforcement duties were assigned to Republic, approximately 70 percent of fines owed to the city had been paid online. The parking authority's contract with the company allows for use of Republic's online ticket-pay system, which applies to private parking lots in Chattanooga and across the nation.
Britton Stansell, general manager of Republic's Chattanooga operations, said the locally based company was simply trying to do its job in a way that "makes sense."
"Anybody who Republic works forthe private lots that we manage or the city streetsanyone we are an agent for, it's our job to collect those fees when people deliberately use services and do not pay for them," Stansell said. "We are trying to make people aware who have outstanding citations that they do have those. If we aren't making them aware of that, I don't feel that we're doing our job. We're not trying to hurt or penalize anyone; we're just working on behalf of the people who have hired us."
Since being contracted to handle enforcement for the parking authority, the number of parking tickets has more than doubled. According to a recent Chattanooga Times Free Press report, the arrangement between Republic and the parking authority has resulted in $438,774 in revenue during the first six months of managementmore than the total amount of revenue collected by the city from parking during the previous fiscal year.
To enhance the crackdown on parking, Republic, which employs approximately 100 people in Chattanooga, has assigned parking "ambassadors" to foot patrols of city streets, checking parking times on vehicles and writing citations if necessary.
In the early years, when XenServer was a little rough around the edges, VMware's ESX Server and then ESXi hypervisor was popular as the virtualization layer underneath XenDesktop.Parkeasy Electronics are dedicated to provide rtls. As XenServer got better and offered a price/performance advantage as well as the one-throat-to-choke that comes from buying an all-Citrix software stack, XenServer picked up steam and became the dominant hypervisor deployed by newbie XenDesktop users.
But now, Microsoft's Hyper-V 3.0 has become a safe option for Windows shops, and moreover, Microsoft's Azure cloud is based on Windows Server and Hyper-V, and therefore can relatively easily host XenDesktop brokers just like a server farm in your own data center C or one of a service provider C could.
It will be tough to compete with Microsoft (and Google and Amazon) when it comes to IT infrastructure pricing, and with the announcement from Citrix and Microsoft, the basic message is don't even bother trying if you are a service provider.
Joe Vaccaro, who led the "California" Unified Computing System launch at Cisco Systems and who is currently director of product management for the desktops and apps team at Citrix, explained in a blog post that both XenDesktop 6.5 and 7 would be supported running atop Windows Server and Hyper-V on the Azure cloud.
Citrix does not support XenDesktop on the EC2 compute cloud at Amazon Web Services, by the way,Parkeasy Electronics are dedicated to provide rtls. but it does allow for XenApp 6.Virtual indoorpositioningsystem logo Verano Place logo.0, its server-side application virtualizer, to run on EC2. AWS uses a homegrown variant of the open source Xen hypervisor as its virtualization layer, so in theory it should be possible to run the full XenDesktop on top of EC2, but in practice it may be simpler and easier to just send customers who want to create heavenly PCs in Microsoft's data center instead of virty ones in their own to go to Microsoft, the company's long-time partner (and often competitor) for remote application streaming.
Microsoft has its own application and desktop virtualization tools, and it can easily turn on Remote Desktop Services in the Azure cloud and do brokering with its own software. And indeed, there are rumors that Microsoft has started up an effort called "Project Mohoro" to do just that.
However, the Mohoro Windows desktop as a service on Azure is not expected until the middle of next year, and Microsoft would rather have Citrix hosting virty PCs on its cloud than on Amazon's.Aulaundry is a leading bestplasticcard and equipment supplier. And moreover, it is probably easier, too, and Microsoft gets to take whatever it learns from hosting XenDesktop and apply it to its own eventual Mohoro offering.
As far as El Reg knows, you can't license a Windows desktop operating system to run in a server slice on top of the Azure cloud, so Microsoft must have figured out pricing for this to enable Citrix to run XenDesktop on Azure and spew out virty PCs from the Redmond heavens. What those licensing terms are, we do not yet know, but we are pestering Microsoft to get some clarity.
Click on their website www.tilees.com for more information.
The presentation of the fines online may lead drivers to think they owe more to the Chattanooga Parking Authoritythe division of CARTA that oversees parking and awarded the parking enforcement contract to Republic in 2012than they actually do.
Other than a simple "CH" at the beginning of ticket numbers designated for the city, there is no distinguishing between a ticket owed to the parking authority or owed to Republic. All boxes next to any fines are checked when a user logs on to pay a ticket, suggesting that a driver should pay all existing fees in order to have a record cleared.
Tom Dugan, the former executive director of CARTA who now is working as assistant executive director as he transitions into retirement, said he was unaware of the way Republic tickets were being paired alongside tickets owed to the parking authority.
"I'll be honest,Today, Thereone.com, a reliable bestluggagetag online store, introduces its new arrival princess wedding dresses to customers. my first reaction to it is while I think the normal person would be able to check or uncheck a ticket, I'm not sure if I'm supportive of the public and private being mixed that way," Dugan said in a phone interview. "I'm going to look into this further."
Dugan said that since parking enforcement duties were assigned to Republic, approximately 70 percent of fines owed to the city had been paid online. The parking authority's contract with the company allows for use of Republic's online ticket-pay system, which applies to private parking lots in Chattanooga and across the nation.
Britton Stansell, general manager of Republic's Chattanooga operations, said the locally based company was simply trying to do its job in a way that "makes sense."
"Anybody who Republic works forthe private lots that we manage or the city streetsanyone we are an agent for, it's our job to collect those fees when people deliberately use services and do not pay for them," Stansell said. "We are trying to make people aware who have outstanding citations that they do have those. If we aren't making them aware of that, I don't feel that we're doing our job. We're not trying to hurt or penalize anyone; we're just working on behalf of the people who have hired us."
Since being contracted to handle enforcement for the parking authority, the number of parking tickets has more than doubled. According to a recent Chattanooga Times Free Press report, the arrangement between Republic and the parking authority has resulted in $438,774 in revenue during the first six months of managementmore than the total amount of revenue collected by the city from parking during the previous fiscal year.
To enhance the crackdown on parking, Republic, which employs approximately 100 people in Chattanooga, has assigned parking "ambassadors" to foot patrols of city streets, checking parking times on vehicles and writing citations if necessary.
In the early years, when XenServer was a little rough around the edges, VMware's ESX Server and then ESXi hypervisor was popular as the virtualization layer underneath XenDesktop.Parkeasy Electronics are dedicated to provide rtls. As XenServer got better and offered a price/performance advantage as well as the one-throat-to-choke that comes from buying an all-Citrix software stack, XenServer picked up steam and became the dominant hypervisor deployed by newbie XenDesktop users.
But now, Microsoft's Hyper-V 3.0 has become a safe option for Windows shops, and moreover, Microsoft's Azure cloud is based on Windows Server and Hyper-V, and therefore can relatively easily host XenDesktop brokers just like a server farm in your own data center C or one of a service provider C could.
It will be tough to compete with Microsoft (and Google and Amazon) when it comes to IT infrastructure pricing, and with the announcement from Citrix and Microsoft, the basic message is don't even bother trying if you are a service provider.
Joe Vaccaro, who led the "California" Unified Computing System launch at Cisco Systems and who is currently director of product management for the desktops and apps team at Citrix, explained in a blog post that both XenDesktop 6.5 and 7 would be supported running atop Windows Server and Hyper-V on the Azure cloud.
Citrix does not support XenDesktop on the EC2 compute cloud at Amazon Web Services, by the way,Parkeasy Electronics are dedicated to provide rtls. but it does allow for XenApp 6.Virtual indoorpositioningsystem logo Verano Place logo.0, its server-side application virtualizer, to run on EC2. AWS uses a homegrown variant of the open source Xen hypervisor as its virtualization layer, so in theory it should be possible to run the full XenDesktop on top of EC2, but in practice it may be simpler and easier to just send customers who want to create heavenly PCs in Microsoft's data center instead of virty ones in their own to go to Microsoft, the company's long-time partner (and often competitor) for remote application streaming.
Microsoft has its own application and desktop virtualization tools, and it can easily turn on Remote Desktop Services in the Azure cloud and do brokering with its own software. And indeed, there are rumors that Microsoft has started up an effort called "Project Mohoro" to do just that.
However, the Mohoro Windows desktop as a service on Azure is not expected until the middle of next year, and Microsoft would rather have Citrix hosting virty PCs on its cloud than on Amazon's.Aulaundry is a leading bestplasticcard and equipment supplier. And moreover, it is probably easier, too, and Microsoft gets to take whatever it learns from hosting XenDesktop and apply it to its own eventual Mohoro offering.
As far as El Reg knows, you can't license a Windows desktop operating system to run in a server slice on top of the Azure cloud, so Microsoft must have figured out pricing for this to enable Citrix to run XenDesktop on Azure and spew out virty PCs from the Redmond heavens. What those licensing terms are, we do not yet know, but we are pestering Microsoft to get some clarity.
Click on their website www.tilees.com for more information.
2013年6月30日 星期日
A Toxin Emerges As Health Threat
Industrial
pollution involving toxic chemicals is often associated with abandoned
factories in Rust Belt towns. The last place it might be expected to
pose a hazard is near a residential neighborhood and a new school in an
Ivy League college town.
But thats the case in Hanover, where earlier this year officials acknowledged that a cancer-causing chemical had been found at the border of the Armys Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory on Lyme Road. The chemical, trichloroethylene, or TCE, is a solvent that had been used at CRREL for nearly three decades until 1987.
In March, the Army Corps of Engineers began tests to determine if TCE had spread beyond the lab to reach Richmond Middle School across the street, along with Dartmouth College housing to the south and neighboring properties.No unsafe levels have been detected so far, but officials say the contaminants migrate slowly and will need to be monitored for years to come.
TCE from the Army lab had leaked into the ground during many years through the 1970s.An bondcleaningsydney is a device which removes contaminants from the air. Despite a much-heralded effort to clean up the chemical from groundwater beneath the labs campus, public records show that for the past decade, quieter concerns have swirled about another form of contamination TCE vapor traveling through the soil beyond the campus and possibly seeping into buildings where people live, work, study and play.
A decade ago, in 2003, a Dartmouth real estate official raised concerns about TCE vapor reaching homes to the south of the lab many of them occupied by Dartmouth staff and their families and posing a threat to a new cluster of college residences planned on the Rivercrest property to the north. In the years that followed, the real estate official asked for tests to determine if the threat was real.
Earlier, in 2001, Dartmouth, the town of Hanover and the Dresden School District had begun moving forward with a proposal for the college to provide a piece of land directly across Route 10 from the Army lab for what would become the new Richmond Middle School. The deal, part of a complicated land-swap transaction known as the tri-party agreement, was formally approved in 2004.
Questions about TCE vapor raised by the college apparently never made it to officials planning the school. A 2003 report by a school district consultant concluded that TCE did not pose a threat, but officials acknowledge that the report involved no independent testing and did not examine vapor contamination an issue that was just beginning to come to the attention of environmental regulators.
In 2006, the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services for the first time issued guidelines regarding TCE vapor contamination. Three years later, the Department of Defense came out with its own guidelines. But it wasnt until 2010 that formal testing began to determine if vapor had infiltrated work areas at the Army lab and an on-site child care center. And that testing took place over several years despite TCE levels that prompted the relocation of some Army lab employees from areas deemed a concern.
It wasnt until this year that the Army lab alerted neighbors and school district officials to the risk posed by TCE vapor, as testing began in classrooms, homes and businesses near the lab.
Residents in the neighborhoods surrounding the Army lab and Richmond Middle School said in interviews that the shock of hearing about TCE in March has subsided, and many expressed confidence that officials are handling the matter appropriately.
Meifang Chu, who lives on Dresden Road near Richmond Middle School and whose daughter attends the school, said she was pleased with school officials initial efforts to conduct tests and inform the public.
But now we dont hear anything,An bondcleaningsydney is a device which removes contaminants from the air. Chu, a part-time math and physics lecturer at Dartmouth, said recently as she stood in the doorway of her home. They dont come forward with information, they dont volunteer unless theyre pressured. The tests right now seem OK, but you dont want the problem to come up again and deal with it in 10 years time.
And to Lebanon resident Anthony Roisman a managing partner with the National Legal Scholars Law Firm who has been on the legal team in several cases involving TCE exposure, including a high-profile case in Woburn, Mass.,An cleaningservicesydney is a network of devices used to wirelessly locate objects or people inside a building. that became the basis for the book and movie A Civil Action the response has been underwhelming.
Long-term testing must be completed before officials can accurately judge the risk,An cleaningservicesydney is a network of devices used to wirelessly locate objects or people inside a building. he said.
There is no safe level of a human carcinogen. So there is a risk, even if its only a small risk, that you get cancer if youre exposed to trichloroethylene, Roisman said. Its true there are plenty of other things pumping your own gas that may expose you to a bigger risk, but this is an additional risk to all those risks you already have for no reason. Theres no reason people should be exposed to an additional risk.
Scientists at the Army lab study sea ice, permafrost and environmental factors in the Earths coldest regions. For instance, scientists study and develop the best ways to maintain a tunnel in Alaska and a runway in Greenland, both of which have permafrost issues.
Scientists also study questions such as how to detect oil under ice and how to safely clean up oil operations in ice regions.
At the Army lab, TCE was used as a solvent and refrigerant in rooms where the temperature can reach minus 31 degrees Fahrenheit as scientists test tools and materials.
CRREL has about 240 employees at its 28-acre campus north of downtown Hanover, and the facility has 24 cold rooms for research. Dartmouth and the lab have an intertwined history going back to the early 1960s, when college President John Sloan Dickey helped lobby to bring the research facility to Hanover. Most recently, Dartmouth sold a nearly 19-acre parcel, which is part of the Army lab campus, to the Army in 2012 for $18.6 million.
Two major TCE spills occurred at the Army lab that year, the first in May, when the refrigeration system was shut down due to a blown gasket, according to Farans report. It required eight days to transfer about 6,000 gallons of TCE into another storage tank.
Two months later, an explosion occurred when a welder was working on a partially filled TCE tank. About 3,Large collection of quality cleanersydney at discounted prices.000 gallons of the chemical spilled into a parking lot on the propertys northeast side. The Hanover Fire Department responded and washed most of the spilled chemical down a storm drain, according to Farans report.
Officials didnt keep records of the amounts of either spill, they say, so its impossible to know how much TCE soaked into the soil and the groundwater.
John Truman, a 61-year-old Grafton resident, was on Hanovers volunteer fire squad in 1970 when the call came in about the explosion. He said he and other firefighters were told that if they felt queasy, they should move away from the area and get some fresh air.
The firefighters were on scene for just a few hours, but Truman remembers the men didnt wear respirators and took turns giving each other breaks from the fumes.
Im wondering if people did any follow-up, Truman said. All the volunteer firemen, were we dropped through the cracks and missed? I would have thought that when this was deemed a carcinogen that they would have followed up.
Click on their website www.smartcardfactory.com for more information.
But thats the case in Hanover, where earlier this year officials acknowledged that a cancer-causing chemical had been found at the border of the Armys Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory on Lyme Road. The chemical, trichloroethylene, or TCE, is a solvent that had been used at CRREL for nearly three decades until 1987.
In March, the Army Corps of Engineers began tests to determine if TCE had spread beyond the lab to reach Richmond Middle School across the street, along with Dartmouth College housing to the south and neighboring properties.No unsafe levels have been detected so far, but officials say the contaminants migrate slowly and will need to be monitored for years to come.
TCE from the Army lab had leaked into the ground during many years through the 1970s.An bondcleaningsydney is a device which removes contaminants from the air. Despite a much-heralded effort to clean up the chemical from groundwater beneath the labs campus, public records show that for the past decade, quieter concerns have swirled about another form of contamination TCE vapor traveling through the soil beyond the campus and possibly seeping into buildings where people live, work, study and play.
A decade ago, in 2003, a Dartmouth real estate official raised concerns about TCE vapor reaching homes to the south of the lab many of them occupied by Dartmouth staff and their families and posing a threat to a new cluster of college residences planned on the Rivercrest property to the north. In the years that followed, the real estate official asked for tests to determine if the threat was real.
Earlier, in 2001, Dartmouth, the town of Hanover and the Dresden School District had begun moving forward with a proposal for the college to provide a piece of land directly across Route 10 from the Army lab for what would become the new Richmond Middle School. The deal, part of a complicated land-swap transaction known as the tri-party agreement, was formally approved in 2004.
Questions about TCE vapor raised by the college apparently never made it to officials planning the school. A 2003 report by a school district consultant concluded that TCE did not pose a threat, but officials acknowledge that the report involved no independent testing and did not examine vapor contamination an issue that was just beginning to come to the attention of environmental regulators.
In 2006, the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services for the first time issued guidelines regarding TCE vapor contamination. Three years later, the Department of Defense came out with its own guidelines. But it wasnt until 2010 that formal testing began to determine if vapor had infiltrated work areas at the Army lab and an on-site child care center. And that testing took place over several years despite TCE levels that prompted the relocation of some Army lab employees from areas deemed a concern.
It wasnt until this year that the Army lab alerted neighbors and school district officials to the risk posed by TCE vapor, as testing began in classrooms, homes and businesses near the lab.
Residents in the neighborhoods surrounding the Army lab and Richmond Middle School said in interviews that the shock of hearing about TCE in March has subsided, and many expressed confidence that officials are handling the matter appropriately.
Meifang Chu, who lives on Dresden Road near Richmond Middle School and whose daughter attends the school, said she was pleased with school officials initial efforts to conduct tests and inform the public.
But now we dont hear anything,An bondcleaningsydney is a device which removes contaminants from the air. Chu, a part-time math and physics lecturer at Dartmouth, said recently as she stood in the doorway of her home. They dont come forward with information, they dont volunteer unless theyre pressured. The tests right now seem OK, but you dont want the problem to come up again and deal with it in 10 years time.
And to Lebanon resident Anthony Roisman a managing partner with the National Legal Scholars Law Firm who has been on the legal team in several cases involving TCE exposure, including a high-profile case in Woburn, Mass.,An cleaningservicesydney is a network of devices used to wirelessly locate objects or people inside a building. that became the basis for the book and movie A Civil Action the response has been underwhelming.
Long-term testing must be completed before officials can accurately judge the risk,An cleaningservicesydney is a network of devices used to wirelessly locate objects or people inside a building. he said.
There is no safe level of a human carcinogen. So there is a risk, even if its only a small risk, that you get cancer if youre exposed to trichloroethylene, Roisman said. Its true there are plenty of other things pumping your own gas that may expose you to a bigger risk, but this is an additional risk to all those risks you already have for no reason. Theres no reason people should be exposed to an additional risk.
Scientists at the Army lab study sea ice, permafrost and environmental factors in the Earths coldest regions. For instance, scientists study and develop the best ways to maintain a tunnel in Alaska and a runway in Greenland, both of which have permafrost issues.
Scientists also study questions such as how to detect oil under ice and how to safely clean up oil operations in ice regions.
At the Army lab, TCE was used as a solvent and refrigerant in rooms where the temperature can reach minus 31 degrees Fahrenheit as scientists test tools and materials.
CRREL has about 240 employees at its 28-acre campus north of downtown Hanover, and the facility has 24 cold rooms for research. Dartmouth and the lab have an intertwined history going back to the early 1960s, when college President John Sloan Dickey helped lobby to bring the research facility to Hanover. Most recently, Dartmouth sold a nearly 19-acre parcel, which is part of the Army lab campus, to the Army in 2012 for $18.6 million.
Two major TCE spills occurred at the Army lab that year, the first in May, when the refrigeration system was shut down due to a blown gasket, according to Farans report. It required eight days to transfer about 6,000 gallons of TCE into another storage tank.
Two months later, an explosion occurred when a welder was working on a partially filled TCE tank. About 3,Large collection of quality cleanersydney at discounted prices.000 gallons of the chemical spilled into a parking lot on the propertys northeast side. The Hanover Fire Department responded and washed most of the spilled chemical down a storm drain, according to Farans report.
Officials didnt keep records of the amounts of either spill, they say, so its impossible to know how much TCE soaked into the soil and the groundwater.
John Truman, a 61-year-old Grafton resident, was on Hanovers volunteer fire squad in 1970 when the call came in about the explosion. He said he and other firefighters were told that if they felt queasy, they should move away from the area and get some fresh air.
The firefighters were on scene for just a few hours, but Truman remembers the men didnt wear respirators and took turns giving each other breaks from the fumes.
Im wondering if people did any follow-up, Truman said. All the volunteer firemen, were we dropped through the cracks and missed? I would have thought that when this was deemed a carcinogen that they would have followed up.
2013年6月20日 星期四
House creates 2 more Medicaid study panels
Having repeatedly rejected a Medicaid expansion, Missouri's Republican-led Legislature now plans to study and study,Starting today, you can buy these drycabinet and more from her Victoria. and study whether to revamp the health care program for the poor before it convenes again in 2014.
House Speaker Tim Jones created two new panels Thursday to examine a potential "Medicaid transformation." One group will pair citizens with legislators to gather testimony and research about potential Medicaid changes. That panel will then turn its work over to a newly created House interim committee, which could draft a proposal for the next legislative session.
The Senate already has created its own interim committee to study potential Medicaid changes. And a bill pending before Gov. Jay Nixon would authorize the appointment of a fourth Medicaid committee comprised of House and Senate members.
Medicaid is "one of the largest most complex issues that we confront every year in state government," said Jones, R-Eureka. "I think it's wise to have more eyes and hands working on the issue, and more diverse interests across the state rather than less."
During the legislative session that ended last month, Republican House and Senate members repeatedly defeated Democratic attempts to expand Medicaid eligibility for low-income working adults under the terms of President Barack Obama's 2010 health care law, the Affordable Care Act.
That plan, backed by Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon, would have added to next year's Medicaid rolls an estimated 260,000 adults earning up to 138 percent of the poverty level about $15,800 for an individual or $32,500 for a family of four. The federal government would have paid the full cost of more than $900 million during the state budget year that begins July 1. Eventually, the plan was projected to cover about 300,000 adults at an annual cost of about $2.3 billion, of which the federal government would pay 90 percent.
Republican lawmakers said they doubted the federal government would follow through on its long-range funding pledge. They also expressed concerns about expanding a social welfare program that they contend does not currently work well.You can make your own more powerful iphoneheadset.
A GOP plan endorsed by a House committee earlier this year would have expanded Medicaid eligibility by a lesser amount than what the Affordable Care Act called for, while remaking the program to more closely resemble private-sector insurance. But that legislation never came to a House vote or attracted much interest in the Senate.
State Rep.We are one of the leading manufacturers of chipcard in China Jay Barnes, R-Jefferson City, who sponsored this year's bill, will lead the House Interim Committee on Medicaid Transformation. The Citizens and Legislators Working Group on Medicaid Eligibility and Reform will be led by state Rep. Noel Torpey, R-Independence.
States have the option of expanding Medicaid eligibility under enhanced federal payment rates, because the U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that states could not be compelled to enact the expansion.
Barnes said the new committees will start with no preconceived conclusions about whether Medicaid should be expanded to the levels sought under the Affordable Care Act.
But Jones ruled out one possibility. He said the Legislature will not embrace a straight Medicaid expansion that is not accompanied by significant changes to the program.
"We see and I believe Missourians see expansion without reform as a massive misuse of taxpayer dollars on a program that provides inferior access to health care and poor health outcomes," Jones said.
He added: "If we dump hundreds of thousands of additional uninsured people into that system and give them a magical plastic card and simply say, 'Well now you have free health care,' we will further drive an already broken system into a bankrupt state."
Having repeatedly rejected a Medicaid expansion, Missouri's Republican-led Legislature now plans to study and study, and study whether to revamp the health care program for the poor before it convenes again in 2014.
House Speaker Tim Jones created two new panels Thursday to examine a potential "Medicaid transformation." One group will pair citizens with legislators to gather testimony and research about potential Medicaid changes.The term 'bondcleaningsydney control' means the token that identifies a user is read from within a pocket or handbag. That panel will then turn its work over to a newly created House interim committee, which could draft a proposal for the next legislative session.
The Senate already has created its own interim committee to study potential Medicaid changes. And a bill pending before Gov. Jay Nixon would authorize the appointment of a fourth Medicaid committee comprised of House and Senate members.
Medicaid is "one of the largest most complex issues that we confront every year in state government," said Jones, R-Eureka. "I think it's wise to have more eyes and hands working on the issue, and more diverse interests across the state rather than less."
Nixon had backed a plan that would have enlarged next year's Medicaid rolls by an estimated 260,000 adults earning up to 138 percent of the poverty level about $15,800 for an individual or $32,500 for a family of four. The federal government would have paid the full cost of more than $900 million during the state budget year that begins July 1. Eventually, the plan was projected to cover about 300,000 adults at an annual cost of about $2.3 billion,Large collection of quality cleanersydney at discounted prices. of which the federal government would pay 90 percent.
Republican lawmakers said they doubted the federal government would follow through on its long-range funding pledge. They also expressed concerns about expanding a social welfare program that they contend does not currently work well.
Click on their website www.smartcardfactory.com for more information.
A GOP plan endorsed by a House committee earlier this year would have expanded Medicaid eligibility by a lesser amount than what the Affordable Care Act called for, while remaking the program to more closely resemble private-sector insurance. But that legislation never came to a House vote or attracted much interest in the Senate.
State Rep. Jay Barnes, R-Jefferson City, who sponsored this year's bill, will lead the House Interim Committee on Medicaid Transformation. The Citizens and Legislators Working Group on Medicaid Eligibility and Reform will be led by state Rep. Noel Torpey, R-Independence.
House Speaker Tim Jones created two new panels Thursday to examine a potential "Medicaid transformation." One group will pair citizens with legislators to gather testimony and research about potential Medicaid changes. That panel will then turn its work over to a newly created House interim committee, which could draft a proposal for the next legislative session.
The Senate already has created its own interim committee to study potential Medicaid changes. And a bill pending before Gov. Jay Nixon would authorize the appointment of a fourth Medicaid committee comprised of House and Senate members.
Medicaid is "one of the largest most complex issues that we confront every year in state government," said Jones, R-Eureka. "I think it's wise to have more eyes and hands working on the issue, and more diverse interests across the state rather than less."
During the legislative session that ended last month, Republican House and Senate members repeatedly defeated Democratic attempts to expand Medicaid eligibility for low-income working adults under the terms of President Barack Obama's 2010 health care law, the Affordable Care Act.
That plan, backed by Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon, would have added to next year's Medicaid rolls an estimated 260,000 adults earning up to 138 percent of the poverty level about $15,800 for an individual or $32,500 for a family of four. The federal government would have paid the full cost of more than $900 million during the state budget year that begins July 1. Eventually, the plan was projected to cover about 300,000 adults at an annual cost of about $2.3 billion, of which the federal government would pay 90 percent.
Republican lawmakers said they doubted the federal government would follow through on its long-range funding pledge. They also expressed concerns about expanding a social welfare program that they contend does not currently work well.You can make your own more powerful iphoneheadset.
A GOP plan endorsed by a House committee earlier this year would have expanded Medicaid eligibility by a lesser amount than what the Affordable Care Act called for, while remaking the program to more closely resemble private-sector insurance. But that legislation never came to a House vote or attracted much interest in the Senate.
State Rep.We are one of the leading manufacturers of chipcard in China Jay Barnes, R-Jefferson City, who sponsored this year's bill, will lead the House Interim Committee on Medicaid Transformation. The Citizens and Legislators Working Group on Medicaid Eligibility and Reform will be led by state Rep. Noel Torpey, R-Independence.
States have the option of expanding Medicaid eligibility under enhanced federal payment rates, because the U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that states could not be compelled to enact the expansion.
Barnes said the new committees will start with no preconceived conclusions about whether Medicaid should be expanded to the levels sought under the Affordable Care Act.
But Jones ruled out one possibility. He said the Legislature will not embrace a straight Medicaid expansion that is not accompanied by significant changes to the program.
"We see and I believe Missourians see expansion without reform as a massive misuse of taxpayer dollars on a program that provides inferior access to health care and poor health outcomes," Jones said.
He added: "If we dump hundreds of thousands of additional uninsured people into that system and give them a magical plastic card and simply say, 'Well now you have free health care,' we will further drive an already broken system into a bankrupt state."
Having repeatedly rejected a Medicaid expansion, Missouri's Republican-led Legislature now plans to study and study, and study whether to revamp the health care program for the poor before it convenes again in 2014.
House Speaker Tim Jones created two new panels Thursday to examine a potential "Medicaid transformation." One group will pair citizens with legislators to gather testimony and research about potential Medicaid changes.The term 'bondcleaningsydney control' means the token that identifies a user is read from within a pocket or handbag. That panel will then turn its work over to a newly created House interim committee, which could draft a proposal for the next legislative session.
The Senate already has created its own interim committee to study potential Medicaid changes. And a bill pending before Gov. Jay Nixon would authorize the appointment of a fourth Medicaid committee comprised of House and Senate members.
Medicaid is "one of the largest most complex issues that we confront every year in state government," said Jones, R-Eureka. "I think it's wise to have more eyes and hands working on the issue, and more diverse interests across the state rather than less."
Nixon had backed a plan that would have enlarged next year's Medicaid rolls by an estimated 260,000 adults earning up to 138 percent of the poverty level about $15,800 for an individual or $32,500 for a family of four. The federal government would have paid the full cost of more than $900 million during the state budget year that begins July 1. Eventually, the plan was projected to cover about 300,000 adults at an annual cost of about $2.3 billion,Large collection of quality cleanersydney at discounted prices. of which the federal government would pay 90 percent.
Republican lawmakers said they doubted the federal government would follow through on its long-range funding pledge. They also expressed concerns about expanding a social welfare program that they contend does not currently work well.
Click on their website www.smartcardfactory.com for more information.
A GOP plan endorsed by a House committee earlier this year would have expanded Medicaid eligibility by a lesser amount than what the Affordable Care Act called for, while remaking the program to more closely resemble private-sector insurance. But that legislation never came to a House vote or attracted much interest in the Senate.
State Rep. Jay Barnes, R-Jefferson City, who sponsored this year's bill, will lead the House Interim Committee on Medicaid Transformation. The Citizens and Legislators Working Group on Medicaid Eligibility and Reform will be led by state Rep. Noel Torpey, R-Independence.
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