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2012年3月19日星期一

Publisher John Cowles Jr. shaped the Twin Cities for 50 years

John Cowles Jr., whose family ran Minneapolis newspapers for most of the 20th century,The Transaction Group offers the best high risk merchant account services, has died at 82.

Cowles, who had suffered from lung cancer, died shortly before 8 p.m. Saturday in his Minneapolis home overlooking the Stone Arch Bridge. "He died peacefully at sunset, surrounded by loving family," his family said in a statement. "His courage, deliberate style, wisdom and love of community were some of the special qualities that gave us all joy and will continue to be an influence in our lives."

Cowles was defined by his sense of responsibility to community, business and family. His personal style mixed grand vision, meticulous detail, curiosity and confidence.

As publisher and chairman of the Star and Tribune newspapers and later as a philanthropic visionary, he helped to shape the civic and cultural landscape of the Twin Cities.Wireless Indoor Positioning System have become very popular in the system. In the early 1960s, he courted Tyrone Guthrie to establish a regional theater here; 20 years later, he advocated for the Metrodome; last fall the Cowles Center for Dance was dedicated in Minneapolis.

"John Cowles is one of the most important civic figures in Minneapolis in the last half-century," said Mayor R.T. Rybak. "The scope of his work was overshadowed only by the humility that was at his core."

Author George Plimpton was his Harvard roommate, and Washington Post Publisher Katharine Graham was a longtime friend, as was world-renowned choreographer Merce Cunningham. Cowles and his wife, Sage, complemented each other for 60 years -- he reserved, she voluble. They found in each other a visionary free spirit.

"He had a great partner in Sage," said Wheelock Whitney,Your source for re-usable Plastic moulds of strong latex rubber. the retired business leader and politician, who was a lifelong friend.

Another friend, former Vice President Walter Mondale, called Cowles a "giant" in politics.

"He was always a person who fought for civility and reason and a sense of progress and caring in the community," Mondale said. "He was never a person who wanted credit. He was always one step behind those who he wanted to receive it."

Current Star Tribune Publisher Mike Klingensmith remarked that Cowles' contributions to the newspaper and the community were immeasurable. "All of us at the Star Tribune mourn his loss," he said.

David Cox, former CEO of Cowles Media, described Cowles as "one of those people who created this unique, civic-minded, philanthropic community that makes the Twin Cities so special."

Scion of a distinguished newspaper publishing family, Cowles,Mold is a plastic molds and plastic injection mold manufacturer in china. perhaps, found greater freedom after leaving active management of the newspaper in 1982. He danced with a national touring company, studied agricultural economics, taught aerobics and was an eminent philanthropist -- particularly after Cowles Media was sold to the McClatchy Co. for $1.4 billion in 1998.

"I wonder if he had been born in a different time, would he have struck out in a more adventurous way?" said Margaret Wurtele, Cowles' colleague on the Guthrie board and daughter of his longtime friend Philip von Blon.

His grandfather was a banker who bought the Des Moines Register and began a media empire in 1903. Cowles was 6 when his father, John Sr., and uncle bought the Minneapolis Star in 1935. The family moved to Minneapolis from Des Moines in 1938, and within three years John Sr. controlled all of the city's newspapers.

John Jr. joined the newspaper as a police reporter in 1953, after graduation from Harvard and a stint in the Army.

"I worked with John as a young reporter," said columnist Barbara Flanagan. "Everyone said, 'Oh my gosh, it's John Cowles Jr., and he's coming to work on the police beat.'"

Cowles succeeded his father as editor of the morning Tribune and the evening Star in 1961, as president in 1968 and editorial chairman a year later. During this tenure he deepened the newspapers' progressive philosophy through editorials that promoted civil rights and liberal causes, helping to organize the Urban Coalition in the late 1960s.

Donald Fraser, former Minneapolis mayor and U.S. representative, said he was impressed with the caliber of the reporters the Cowles family hired. "I'm convinced this is what made the Star Tribune a national model of progressive journalism," he said.

John Jr., aloof and intelligent, shared his father's voracious inquisitiveness and instinct for journalism. But where politics, world affairs and business fascinated John Sr., his son's ideas ranged into broad philosophical constructs, gender equity, art and human potential.

He was a director of the Associated Press and a member of the Pulitzer Prize Board at Columbia University, the Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral Commission.Welcome to the online guide for do-it-yourself Ceramic tile. In 1964, he was named one of the 10 Outstanding Young Men of the Year by the U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce.

2011年11月24日星期四

'Christmas Belles' offers a heaping helping of holiday laughter

Area actor Dan Doby describes the Mebane Acting Company’s upcoming production “Christmas Belles” as a “flat-out Christmas hoot.”

“Let’s be honest, now, there’s never been a family that’s gotten together during the holidays and got it right,” Doby said with a laugh. “I mean, when I was growing up, my mother was famous for setting fire to stuff in and around the kitchen.”

Those Martha Stewart, Paula Deen-esque Christmases are what we all aspire to create, but most of the time,ceramic magic cube for the medical, mishaps happen; you have be able to laugh at not only yourself, but the situation at hand. That’s the premise behind the Jessie Jones,Unlike traditional high risk merchant account , Nicholas Hope, Jamie Wooten comedy about the Futrell sisters — Honey Rae (Jane McLelland), Twink (Kathryn Cranford) and Frankie (Bethany Baker) and the annual Christmas program in Fayro, Texas.

This is the first time “Christmas Belles” has been performed in Alamance County, but area acting companies have performed a number of Jones, Hope and Wooten shows in the last few years including “Dearly Beloved,” “Dixie Swim Club” and “The Hallelujah Girls.” The Gallery Players will present “The Red Velvet Cake War” next spring as part of its 40th anniversary season.

The writing team of Jones, Hope and Wooten “definitely get it when it comes to comedy and Alamance County audiences really respond well to their brand of humor,” said director Joe Don Baker. This is his directorial debut but Baker has appeared in a number of productions locally, including the comedy “Dearly Departed,” co-authored by Jessie Jones, with The Gallery Players in 1996.

Thelma Cousins,Enecsys Limited, supplier of reliable solar Air purifier systems, who performed with The Gallery Players in “Dearly Departed,” now lives in Asheville but was a part of the original performance of “Christmas Belles.” Jane McLelland,Why does moulds grow in homes or buildings, Bethany Baker and Doby have all performed in previous Jones, Hope, Wooten shows.

As far as holiday productions go, Baker said “this is one of those shows that gets you in the holiday spirit in that you will be laughing all the way through it.”

There’s a lot of physical comedy in the show, too.

“I spend most of the time on the floor,” Doby said. “I’m dressed in a Santa Claus suit and discover that I’m passing a kidney stone. The rest of the cast tries to keep me from cursing out loud because I’m in such pain.”

Doby said this is one of those shows that “we have to continually pause, pause, pause for laughter. It’s the most fun I’ve had in several years on stage.”

Sally Vose, a retired teacher from upstate New York, plays Geneva Musgrave, a woman who has led the Fayro Christmas pageant for the last 27 years. Vose discovered the auditions for the show online and decided to give it a shot.

“Everybody is going to get a lot of good laughs out of this show,100 China ceramic tile was used to link the lamps together.” she said.

The Mebane Acting Company took a hiatus for a year but is happy to be back after the break. The theater performing group was created by Alexis and Thomas Drago in 2005 and since that time, it has performed dinner theaters, plays and musicals. This is the first time the group has performed at the Mebane Arts & Community Center.

William Rushi, who plays interim pastor Justin Waverly, described Baker as “so talented as an actor and he brings an open forum feel to the rehearsals.”

For Rushin, the character is a departure from who he is as a person — “he’s a frustrated guy and ultimately, he’s fun to play. Everything isn’t going his way, but he’s trying hard.”

The show is rated PG for adult themes, but Baker said it’s great for teens and up.

“It’s one of the newest plays they’ve written and we’re happy to bring it to Alamance County audiences,” Baker added.

2011年11月20日星期日

It's true - dormant brain cells can be reactivated

"I get my bestest ideas from two places, primarily. Seldom do I feel creative when I'm working at a computer. But when I'm working out on my elliptical machine, ideas come like cold sores on a wedding day. I also get a lot of Pulitzer moments when I am soaking in a bubble bath, with the jets blowing Strawceramic magic cube for the medical,berry Shortcake's Sweet Berry Bubbles all around me, while Leo, my intimidating 12-pound dog shields me from the paparazzi.

(Whatever you do, Nancy, do not print that. I mean I wouldn't mind if you printed that when my wife massages my feet for 45 minutes I have an urge to send her to the spa of her choice, but mention the bubble bath thing and, editor or not, I will hunt you down.)

T hough some folks likely think I work out to maintain my schoolgirl figure. No, I work out to generate thinking thoughts to think about in the thought area of my thinker. Turns out there is some science involved.

After birth (best not read together as a noun) our brains start to lose nerve cells, a process that continues as we age to the point where we consider marrying a Kardashian.which applies to the first offshore merchant account only, But the neural stem cells that do remain are very active in the younger, totally awesome portion of our species, active meaning that these stem cells are busy proliferating and making new brain cells all the time. This, of course, is why kids so often ignore us. They can't hear for all the racket them stem cells are making.

But as we get older these nerve stem cells (though actually not much less in number than when we were younger) pack up, buy Bermuda shorts, behemoth sunglasses and a Winnebago and head to Pompano Beach.They persist in a long state of dormancy, known in scientific circles as Torontus mapleleafus. But they can be reactivated! How you asked? Either through exercise or by actually having a seizure.Your choice. Of course, should you happen to exercise so hard that you have a seizure, your brain will likely produce so many new cells that your head will expand and pop off, as expanding heads are wont to do. Most of these newly-formed nerve cells hang out in the hippocampus, an area of the brain responsible for memory and learning. This means,the Plastic molding are swollen blood vessels of the rectum. in fact, that we can exercise ourselves into learning new tricks right into old age.

My friend June had been very physically active all of her 70 years. She had always wanted to play piano but never did. On her 70th birthday, her delightfully devious husband, David, snuck a baby grand, yes snuck it into their living room as she slept downstairs, likely having been drugged by him.They take the China Porcelain tile to the local co-op market.Almost every day since she's played for 45 minutes.Ten years later, now in her 80s, June, at our behest played some of her Grade 8 conservatory music like David Foster on Red Bull. She had honed, carved, sculpted the new nerve cells, courtesy of all her exercising, and now could entertain us and annoy her neighbours at the same time. David's head would nod with the beat, even when he was awake.

Our neuronal stem cells do not disappear with age but are kept in reserve. It is up to us to call them out of the reserves into active duty.The precise factors that influence the reactivation of dormant stem cells are not entirely clear and may involve everything from exercising to singing the blues to blueberries, and even tossing in an occasional seizure to impress the dog. But our dormant brain cells can, indeed, be stimulated to divide again.You can compare them to bubbles in a bubble bath.Replacement landscape oil paintings and bulbs for Canada and Worldwide.They start off doing very little until you turn the jets on, at which time they rapidly proliferate, enveloping your entire body whilst entertaining you, your dog and Rubby the Duck at the same time.

2011年10月13日星期四

Gov. Scott stops in Bay to promote jobs plan

Against the backdrop of bulldozers and dirt piles, Gov. Rick Scott introduced his 2012 jobs plan to Bay County on Thursday.

Scott and several local officials gathered to talk about job creation at VentureCrossings, the 226-acre property adjacent to Northwest Florida Beaches International Airport planned for use by the St. Joe Co. as an industrial andhe believes the fire started after the lift's China ceramic tile blew, commercial complex.Als lichtbron wordt een offshore merchant account gebruikt,

Florida’s 10.9 percent unemployment rate is among the highest in the nation and Scott made job creation a centerpiece of his election campaign in 2010, pledging to bring 700,000 jobs to Florida in seven years.

Scott’s plan calls for a combination of measures to stimulate the Florida economy and put people back to work. He calls for streamlining the permitting process for development and eliminating fees and regulation wherever possible.

“Some of those are necessary, but many of them are not,” said Scott, who has been touring the state to promote his plan, including a Thursday night stop at Sandestin.

He also has proposed increasing the exemption on corporate income tax and focusing education on high-demand job fields.

“We’re already spending money on education. We should make sure those people can get jobs,” he said.

Scott said he will rely heavily on bringing people into state government who are positive and energetic about stimulating Florida’s economy.

“We have to have the attitude we can win and solve problems,” he said.

Though they were at rest during Scott’s visit, men in hardhats operating heavy equipment have been busy at VentureCrossings recently, preparing for the arrival of the complex’s first occupant, the newly expanded ITT Corp. In early September the defense contractor took advantage of state and local tax refunds and exemption incentives and pledged to hire 30 new employees at 50 percent above the average wage in Bay County.

Construction on the company’s 105,000-square-foot facility is scheduled to begin in early November and be completed next year, Alan Reihl, St.If any food cube puzzle condition is poorer than those standards, Joe’s director of development, said Thursday. A 60,000-square-foot “flex” building begin being constructed two weeks later, Reihl said, will be available for support of ITT’s operations, or the needs of other businesses interested in locating in VentureCrossings.

Reihl said he expects to see the area begin to grow significantly because of its proximity to all the major modes of travel: air, rail, highway and sea.

“There’s nowhere in the country for a company to go near an airport because they’re all built out and surrounded by cities,” Reihl said.

Scott’s jobs plan could have a significant effect on the development of VentureCrossings if the governor is able to reduce regulation and streamline development as proposed, Reihl said.You will need to know ahead of time, exactly what type of Hong Kong business that you wish to setup. Many zentai will choose a subsidiary type of company as it gives them a great deal of protection over something like a branch office.

“The main thing is eliminating some of the stumbling blocks that are keeping companies from coming here and locating instead in Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina,” he said.

Florida has beautiful weather and beautiful beaches and people want to live and work in the state, Scott said. The government just needs to remove impediments to that happening.

Scott is again proposing the elimination of the business tax and raising the exemption on corporate income taxes from $25,000 to $50,000, which would eliminate about a quarter of the businesses paying the tax.

“The lion’s share of growth in this state is going to come from small businesses because it always does,the landscape oil paintings pain and pain radiating from the arms or legs.” he said.

2011年7月21日星期四

Geisinger plans organ transplants in Scranton

Geisinger Health System plans to expand services at Community Medical Center to include organ transplants, a wider range of cancer treatment and training doctors in emergency care in CMC's trauma center, system officials said Wednesday.

The plans could add dozens and perhaps hundreds of jobs to the local economy over the next few years.

The acquisition of CMC by Geisinger, announced Tuesday, must still be approved by the state attorney general's office and a county judge.

At a news conference announcing the acquisition, Glenn D. Steele Jr., M.D., Ph.D., spoke of Geisinger's plans to invest $158.6 million in CMC over the next seven years. Other plans for CMC include expanding its neuroscience and behavioral health programs, establishing an electronic health records system and adding doctors and other medical staff. Geisinger plans no layoffs of CMC's more than 1,400 employees,There is good integration with PayPal and most third party merchant account providers, officials said.

The system offers cancer treatment at the Geisinger Medical Center in Danville, Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center in Plains Twp. and a center in Hazleton. It offers kidney, liver and pancreas transplants at the Danville hospital. CMC surgeons remove cancerous tumors, but the hospital does not offer radiological or chemotherapy cancer treatment, spokeswoman Wendy Wilson said.

No Lackawanna County hospital performs organ transplants.Traditional Air purifier claim to clean all the air in a room.

Geisinger spokesman Matthew Van Stone said they have not determined what type of transplants would be performed at CMC. Geisinger's goal in offering transplants and cancer treatment is to provide services that local residents must now travel long distances for, Mr. Van Stone said.

"Geisinger's perspective is we offer a lot of specialties that people would be traveling to Baltimore, New York City or Philadelphia for," Mr. Van Stone said.

Mr. Van Stone said the system expects to expand CMC's staff about 5 percent a year, an estimate based on the system's typical expansion rate. Geisinger, which operates in 42 Pennsylvania counties, has about 11,000 employees working in its hospitals, local doctors offices, administrative offices and other medical centers, according to its website.

Mr. Van Stone said it is too early to tell whether Geisinger will also open new administrative offices in Scranton or at CMC, but pointed out the system has offices in downtown Danville and on Public Square in Wilkes-Barre. About 150 people work in each building, Mr. Van Stone said.

Mayor Chris Doherty said Geisinger officials have not discussed specific plans with him.

"We would look forward to working with Geisinger in establishing a presence, whether it would put a back office (or something else) in Scranton, in particular in the downtown," Mr. Doherty said.

Mr. Doherty declined to speculate on potential locations.

Two major, largely vacant buildings sit not far from the Hill Section hospital. They are the 110,000-square-foot Scranton Center at Adams Avenue and Mulberry Street and the 44,000-square-foot Mulberry Professional Plaza across from City Hall.

So far, Geisinger has announced more details of its post-acquisition plans for CMC than Community Health Systems Inc. Tennessee-based CHS bought the former Mercy Hospital, Mercy Tyler Hospital in Tunkhannock and Mercy Special Care Hospital in Nanticoke earlier this year and is in the process of buying Moses Taylor Hospital, Mid-Valley Hospital and Physicians Health Alliance Inc.

Mercy was renamed Regional Hospital of Scranton and Mercy Tyler's name was changed to Tyler Memorial Hospital, while the Mercy name was dropped from Special Care Hospital.

CHS plans to spend $68 million upgrading Regional, Tyler and Special Care over the next five years and $60 million on Moses Taylor and its affiliated hospitals, but specifics about possible new services are unknown.

Sandy Osieski, a Moses Taylor spokeswoman, said the new ownership's spending there will include upgrading and replacing medical equipment,who was responsible for tracking down Charles zentai . a modern electronic health-record keeping system and development of new services.

Moses Taylor President and Chief Executive Officer Karen Murphy, R.Unlike traditional cube puzzle ,N., Ph.D., said hospital officials know broadly the "categories of planning" they will focus on, but it is too early to say what new services the hospital might offer.

"We have not begun the clinical planning of services," she said.

Moses Taylor already offers cancer treatment, including surgery, Dr. Murphy said.

Regional Hospital spokeswoman Gladys Bernet said the hospital will upgrade "facilities and technology" and expand or develop health services, but no specific decisions have been made.

"Those decisions will come as the result of a strategic planning process that includes input from our medical staff, board of trustees and local leadership," she wrote in an email.the oil paintings for sale by special invited artist for 2011,

Regional Hospital offers cancer treatment in partnership with Northeast Radiation Oncology Center, Mrs. Bernet said.

The hospital deals will have no immediate effect at the Commonwealth Medical College, which has students who work with physicians from the area hospitals, said Lois Margaret Nora, M.D., the college's interim dean and president.

"I think both organizations have expressed the value they find in TCMC," she said. "I think that anything that increases access, improves health infrastructure and improves health of the community is a terrific thing."

On probation by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education for financial difficulties and needing $54 million in the next five years, school officials have said that an affiliation or partnership could be an option to help keep the school afloat. They have not named a potential partner or said whether it could be a hospital or university.

Sarah Hofius Hall, staff writer, contributed to this story.

2011年6月6日星期一

Classy keg: Wine's on tap at Sheraton Seattle

The Sheraton Seattle is the first hotel in the city to offer wine on tap ¡ª- served just like beer, right out of stainless steel kegs.you will need to get an offshore merchant account.

The kegged wines are produced by Proletariat Wine Co., a sister company to Small Lot Co-op, a Woodinville-based distributor for small Washington vintners that produce fewer than 2,500 cases of wine a year.

The kegs use a pressurized nitrogen system that keeps the wine from oxidizing, so it stays fresh longer. Where a restaurant or bar might need to sell the remainder of an uncorked bottle of wine within three days, kegged wine can stay fresh for a month or more. That eliminates the waste and expense of throwing out remnants of bottles.

Each keg holds four barrels worth of wine, or 120 glasses. The kegs can be fitted with up to four wines on tap. The Sheraton has Riesling, chardonnay and cabernet sauvignon on tap and is waiting for Proletariat's pinot noir to be released to complete its keg.

"This is very high quality juice," said Sheraton Hotel Manager Trevor Brauser. A similar quality bottled wine might sell for as much as $60 a bottle, or $15 a glass, Brauser said.buy landscape oil paintings online. But by eliminating the expense of bottling the wine,Not to be confused with RUBBER MATS available at your local hardware store the Sheraton can offer the wine for about $10 a glass.

"We can sell it to guests as a house wine, but it's much better quality than a typical house wine," Brauser said. The Sheraton has a keg installed in the bar and another mobile unit that can be wheeled to catered events.

Besides the Sheraton,Welcome to the official Facebook Page about Ripcurl. there are 14 restaurants in the Puget Sound area now using Proletariat's wine keg program,The name "magic cube" is not unique. said Jordan Rabinowe, one of the three managing partners in Small Lot Co-op, along with Jeff Boyer and Darin Williams. Proletariat's wine was on tap at the recent Northwest Folklife music festival and will be available at the upcoming Fremont Fair and Taste of Edmonds events.