Girl aids dad in Lake Holcombe boating accident

When a boat propeller sliced through James Braaten’s right Tiffany Signature bangle Sunday, the thought he might bleed to death flooded his mind.

“The knee is fine, and the hip is fine, but it ripped everything in between,” Braaten said. “You could see muscle and pieces of meat hanging. The whole leg was a big, open mess.”

The accident happened at about 9 a.m. on Lake Holcombe. Braaten, 31, a financial adviser from White Bear Lake, Minn., has a cabin on the lake, and he, his wife, Julia, and their girls, Rylee, 5, and Carly, 3, drove to Chippewa County on Friday to spend the weekend.

After spending a rainy Saturday indoors, Braaten decided to take his daughters and his 1-year-old nephew, Oliver, for a boat ride.

Oliver was in the boat with Braaten’s two girls while Julia stayed on shore to pack up the car. Everyone in the boat was wearing life jackets.

As Braaten slowed the boat in a no-wake zone, Carly and Oliver got on their knees and looked over the side of the boat at their reflections in the water. Then Oliver stood up and fell over the side.

“He fell over before I could reach him,” Braaten said. “The boat was still moving, slowly. I had a hold of his life jacket, but his face was dragging in the water.”

When Braaten couldn’t pull Oliver back into the Tiffany Somerset cuff, he decided to jump into the water, and he then held onto the boat’s edge. Suddenly, the 18-foot-long boat spun backward in circles toward Braaten and the boy.

“I knew if I let go, the boat would come around and hit us,” Braaten said.

Braaten struggled to keep Oliver’s face above the water’s surface, so he let go of the boat and pulled Oliver from the water, pushing him clear of the approaching boat.

A moment later, Braaten braced for the impact.

“The motor went right into my thigh,” he said. “I didn’t feel the pain much, initially.”

Braaten said he looked up at his daughter Rylee and told her to turn off the motor.

“I couldn’t have been more proud of her when she did what I asked her to do,” he said. “They had more confusion on their faces than anything. They weren’t afraid. They weren’t screaming.”

Resort owner Dan McConnell was alerted by a daughter who was on the Isle Bay Resort dock about 60 feet away from the boat. He and a resort guest jumped onto a pontoon boat and approached the boat, which had come close to hitting the boy in the water. McConnell Tiffany Somerset heart ring Rylee for pulling the key out of the ignition.

“She was a pretty smart, smart little girl,” McConnell said.

McConnell and his guest were able to retrieve the boy from the water and the two girls from the boat. Braaten somehow was able to get close to the dock, where McConnell’s daughter and a friend were able to pull him to shore. McConnell brought the children to the resort while emergency workers tended to Braaten.

Braaten was wrapped in towels and a tourniquet was placed on his leg in an effort to stop the bleeding until paramedics arrived.

He was flown to Luther Hospital in Eau Claire, where Braaten immediately went into surgery. He said he remained conscious until then.

Dr. Mark Herr performed the surgery that lasted between three and four hours.

“It was bad,” Herr said. “He was smart enough to take a terry cloth and wrap it around his leg.”

Herr said the challenge was sewing back together the frayed muscles.

“There were a lot of pieces missing,” he said. “There were muscles from the thigh that are just gone.”

Herr said that because Braaten is young and Tiffany Somerset ring, he has a good chance at full recovery.

Braaten said the medical staff did “an absolutely amazing job.”

Doctors will perform a skin graft on Braaten today, and he hopes to return home Monday.

Braaten said he has no regrets about his decision to let go of the boat, saying he was more fearful of Oliver drowning than of injuring himself.

“You go through a lot of what-ifs, and what you could have done different,” Braaten said. “I just reacted at the time.”

The Chippewa County undersheriff, Capt. Eugene Gutsch, was thankful no one was more seriously injured.

“Unfortunately we’re used to a lot more tragic things happening on our lakes,” Gutsch said. “This could have had a terrible, terrible, terrible ending. But with quick action by the people at Isle Bay and the 5-year-old, we had a very good outcome.”

Information from the Minneapolis Star Tribune was included in this report. Vetter can be reached at 715-723-0303 or chris.vetter@ecpc.com.

Missing Dog

In the confusion shortly after the boating accident, Toggle bracelet and Julia Braaten’s 2-year-old dog, Buddy, hopped out of the boat when it got to shore, and the family hasn’t seen him since.

The 50-pound terrier and Shetland shepherd mix is believed to be in the Lake Holcombe area, and the Braatens are hopeful the dog will be found soon.

Anyone with information should contact the Chippewa County Sheriff’s Department at 715-726-7701.

Price to be paid for the drop-dead gorgeous

THE ENVIRONMENT ; Fiona Harvey on the impact of high consumer demand for expensive baubles

Lustrous, bright red coral makes a beautiful necklace or bracelet, the fiery colour setting off skin tones to perfection. Coral like this is prized by jewellers as it can be carved into exquisite shapes without losing its perfect shine.

Coral, as everyone knows, grows in reefs at the bottom of the sea, created over hundreds or even thousands of years by tiny polyps, providing a nursery and hunting ground for multitudinous species of fish. These reefs, according to SeaWeb, an ocean conservation charity, are “in crisis”, dead and dying from “overharvesting that stems from high consumer demand [for coral], as well as from pollution, destructive fishing and rising sea temperatures”.

Is it ethical, then, to wear coral? No, says SeaWeb. Dawn Martin, the charity’s president, says: “Real corals are living animals worthy of protection – they are truly too precious to wear.”

SeaWeb’s campaign has the support of Tiffany & Co, and a long list of jewellery designers. Michael Kowalski, chief executive of Tiffany, which removed coral from its shops in 2001, says: “[We have] long believed that the only material to take from a coral reef is inspiration.”

Coral is just one of many rare and beautiful materials whose use in jewellery and watches is of concern to environmentalists. Every manufactured product has an environmental “footprint” – the impact on the climate, earth and atmosphere of mining or growing the raw material, and the energy and water used in the manufacturing process. Some of the materials used in top-end watches and jewelllery have a bigger footprint than most.

The issue that people are most familiar with is blood, or conflict, diamonds. As Solitaire Townsend, chief executive of Futerrra Sustainability Communications, a consultancy, notes: “Diamonds may be a girl’s best friend – unless, of course, you happen to be the girl mining them.”

But she says the problem goes much wider. “Over the past decade, the environmental and social cost of jewellery has tarnished the reputation of an industry that’s supposed to make us feel like glamorous high-achievers,” she says.

Ivory has been taboo – and mostly illegal – for decades, and fur continues to be controversial. But the environmental cost of other materials may be less obvious.

Take gold and silver. Some gold and silver mines use mercury, a highly toxic metal, in gold extraction, which can cause huge pollution problems. Plus, there is the environmental degradation that many metals mines cause to the surrounding area, caused by the waste and leftover rock. It is possible to clean up mines, but historically many companies have not bothered.

But watch and jewellery makers are reacting, says Ms Townsend – in large part because environmental groups are working hard to ensure that these issues are at the forefront of their customers’ minds.

“Unlike many industries, the high-end watch and bauble companies have shown a commendably rapid response,” she says. “Perhaps they understand that…we are looking for an unmitigated positive experience from a pound(s)4,000 watch.”

Her advice to consumers is to ask for guarantees that the environmental impact of watches and jewellery has been minimised by the manufacturer. “Chances are you’ll spend a while considering a purchase with such a high price tags – so why not add an extra five minutes to check [for these guarantees]?” she asks.

There are plenty of programmes to help manufacturers cut their adverse impacts, and follow best practice. Diamonds can be certified “conflict-free”, and from next year there will be a Fair Trade appellation for responsibly mined gold. Check that precious metals come from companies that are members of the Alliance for Responsible Mining.

The Responsible Jewellery Council is another name to look out for. Its members include Cartier, De Beers and Tiffany. CIBJO, the world jewellery confederation, also recently launched an education foundation to promote sustainable practices. CIBJO told the FT: “Consumers are still willing to pay more for ethically produced goods. When they are already spending more on a premium product, they especially don’t want to be able to be attacked over their choices.” Wal-Mart has also established a jewellery sustainability group for its suppliers.

There is an international legal framework set up to try to end the trade in rare animals: Cites, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.

No responsible retailer would sell a product that included the hide or bone of a Cites-protected animal. But if you are buying accessories in a more informal setting, it is a good idea to check that hide or bone is not from an animal listed in Cites – otherwise, the goods can be confiscated by Customs officials.

A small amount of limited trade in products from Cites animals is permitted – for instance, Greenland’s Inuits are allowed to sell some jewellery made from the tusk of the narwhal, a rare whale – but should only be sold with a special Cites exemption certificate, which you must produce at Customs.

Coral may also receive Cites protection, if the SeaWeb campaign is successful. Even without such protection, it is often illegal to take corals across borders, for fear that the trade will result in the destruction of valuable reefs. The best place for coral is undoubtedly the sea.

TIFFANY’S JEWELRY STORE AT STANFORD SHOPPING CENTER ROBBED

At 6:30 pm on July 7, 2007, the Palo Alto Police Department responded to an armed robbery at the Tiffany’s Jewelry store at Stanford Shopping Center. Two suspects entered the jewelry store armed with what appeared to be a large tool. The suspects told the approximately 15 employees and 12 customers to get down on the floor. The suspects then smashed a glass enclosed jewelry case and took an unknown amount of jewelry. The suspects quickly fled the store, ran north through the mall to a parked vehicle. They were last seen speeding away west bound on Sand Hill Road.

Suspect number one is described as a black male adult wearing a black mask, black baseball hat, black sweatshirt and black pants and shoes. This suspect was about 5’9″ tall with a thin build.

Suspect number two was last seen wearing a white baseball hat, black mask, black sweatshirt, black pants and shoes. He is described as 5’9″ tall with a heavy build. Both suspects fled the store and ran to a waiting vehicle.

The vehicle is described as a white, Hyundai Elantra with four doors, license plate number 5XYM351. This vehicle was stolen out of Fremont on July 5, 2007 at 2:30pm.

Witnesses saw a third suspect sitting in the driver’s seat of the suspect vehicle. He is described as a black male adult about 25 years of age. The driver sped away from the mall, after suspects one and two climbed into the vehicle.

None of the employees or customers in the store during the robbery was injured.

Anyone with any information concerning this robbery or the suspects involved, please call the Palo Alto Police Department’s Tip Line at (650) 329-2190.Contact: Sandra Brown, 650/704-2930.

Sandra Brown, 650/704-2930.

STATE’S 2009 CHRISTMAS TREE DELIVERY LIGHTS WAY TO CAPITOL

The California Department of General Services issued the following press release:

WHAT: Cutting & Delivery of the State’s Official Christmas tiffany jewellery Tree

WHEN: 9:30 a.m. November 16, 2009 and 10:00 a.m. November 17, 2009

WHERE: U.S. Forest Service Placerville Ranger Station Camino, California -11/16/09

California State Capitol Building West Lawn 1400 Tenth St., Sacramento, CA, 95814 11/17/09

SUMMARY: Monday November 16, 2009 at 9:30 a.m. marks the beginning of the holiday season when the states’ official Christmas tree is cut from its home on U.S. Forest Service property in Camino and prepared for transport. Adorning the west lawn of the Capital this year is a majestic, 55-foot white fir tree donated by the U.S. Forest Service Institute of Genetics.

Department of General Services’ employees will raise the frank gehry jewelry festive fir at 10:00 a.m. November 17, 2009, following its delivery by CAL FIRE.

Once set up is complete, the tree will be trimmed and bedecked with 1,500 hand-crafted ornaments donated from the Department of Developmental Services. The ornaments are created by children and adults with developmental disabilities who receive services and support from the state’s development centers and 21 nonprofit regional centers.

This richly celebrated tradition began 27 years ago and is part of the Governor and First Lady’s annual tree lighting ceremony which is expected to take place on December 10, 2009.

Continuing Gov. Schwarzenegger’s energy efficiency and conservation initiatives, 14,000 ultra-low-paloma picasso jewelry wattage, light-emitting diode bulbs will illuminate the tree, resulting in a 95 percent energy savings compared to incandescent bulbs.For more information please contact: Sarabjit Jagirdar, Email:- htsyndication@hindustantimes.com.

Eric Lamoureux, 916/376-5038.

Children line up at mall to whisper a Christmas wish

From his perch on an avocado green couch at Modesto’s Vintage Faire Mall, Santa silver jewelry Claus rattled off his most popular gift requests from children this winter: dogs, horses, and the latest gadgets and electronics.

There was a more unusual request from one little boy — a vacuum.

“At least we know someone’s going to get help around the house,” Santa said.

Santa took up residence at the mall a few days ago and will be posing for pictures and listening to wish lists through Christmas.

A line of those waiting to sit on his lap and share their Christmas Tiffany Accessories wishes didn’t take long to form.

Some children were squirmy, like 18-month-old Michael Anderson, who slid out of Santa’s lap twice. On the third try his mother, Michelle, was able to get a photo.

Others sat shyly next to Santa while they asked for Nintendo games and dolls.

Four-year-old Bryce Bramble has big dreams of what Santa should put under his Tiffany Keys Christmas tree.

What did he ask for?

“I can’t remember, there were so many things, tiffany rings ” he said.

Alma Randolph Christmas concert set for Sunday

The Alma Randolph Charitable Foundation’s annual fundraising concert is buy tiffany returning to its roots.

After taking on a patriotic theme for last year’s concert, the foundation is hosting the “Alma and Friends … For the Children Christmas Concert” on Sunday at the RiverPark Center. This is the 16th year the foundation has hosted a concert, which raises money for its annual back-to-school shopping trip.

“We agreed that it would be good to bring the Christmas bangles show” back, said Alma Randolph Patton, who created the foundation in 1993. “It looks like from how ticket sales are going (that) we made the right decision.”

This year’s performers are Deer Park and Meadowland Collaborative Choir, Foust Singers, Musick Studios, Sutton Elementary Chorus, Turning Point Mime Ministry, U.N.I.T.Y Gospel Group and Whitesville AM/ PM Preschool Choir.

Bill and Jo Barron will also be telling the Christmas rings story about the birth of Jesus.

“I just personally felt that was very important, as we kick off the holiday season, to have an opportunity to remind children and adults the real reason for the season,” Patton said.

Patton will be hosting Sunday’s concert, but she will be unable to sing due to health reasons. This is the first year she’s been unable to perform at the concert.

“I am very thankful we’re going to still be able to host the event,” she said. “It’s vitally bracelets important for us to do so in order to reach our goal for next year’s shopping event.”

Last July, 1,000 children received vouchers for $85 to spend on clothing at Walmart and Kohl’s. Many of the concert participants attend area schools. Youth performers have also been an important part of the foundation’s annual concert.

“We started out in 1993 with a great deal of youth involvement,” Patton said. “We’ve only strayed from that maybe a couple of times, last year being one. It’s really an awesome opportunity for us to give children that are more fortunate an opportunity to do something to help cufflinks others.”

Beth Wilberding, 691-7307, bwilberding@messenger-inquirer.com

RIDERS IN SKY TO DO CHRISTMAS ‘COWBOY WAY’ DEC. 3 AT LIED CENTER

The University of Nebraska issued the following news release: discount tiffany

Take a nostalgic trip back to the days of the open range with “America’s Favorite Cowboys,” the Riders in the Sky, a foursome of boot-wearing, hat-tipping musicians from Nashville, Tenn. They’ll do Christmas “the cowboy way” at the at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Lied Center for Performing Arts at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 3.

Calling themselves “the keepers of the flame passed on by Gene Autry and Roy Rogers,” reduced tiffany the Riders in the Sky are dedicated to reviving and revitalizing country-western music and putting on shows the whole family can enjoy. Band members “Ranger Doug” (Douglas B. Green), “Woody Paul” (Paul Chrisman), “Too Slim” (Fred LaBour), and “Joey the Cowpolka King” (Joey Miskulin) make up this quartet whose act consists of original songs, classic covers and lots of laughs. As winners of two Grammy awards and members of the Grand Old Opry, the Riders’ fame extends from numerous television appearances (from NPR to CMT) to singing “Woody’s Roundup” from Pixar’s popular sequel film, “Toy Story 2.” All ages will be delighted by their classic tunes and comedy yarns.

This performance is possible in part by generous support from the Friends of Lied.

Tickets for this performance are $24 and $19. Students at UNL and other participating colleges with a valid ID tiffany for sale, as well as youths age 18 and younger, may purchase tickets for half price. Call the Lied Ticket Office at (402) 472-4747 or (800) 432-3231 for availability. Regular ticket office hours are 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. weekdays. For weekday evening performances, Lied Center Ticket Office hours are 11 a.m. until 30 minutes after show time. The Lied Center is located on the UNL City Campus at 301 N. 12th St. Tickets may also be purchased online at www.liedcenter.org.

As part of the Lied Center’s ongoing education programming, a pre-performance talk by Ron Fame will be held in the Lied Center’s Steinhart Room. Seating is limited in the Steinhart, and the pre-talk will begin a half hour before curtain or when the room is full.

The Nebraska Arts Council, a state agency, has supported the programs of this organization through its matching tiffany on sale grants program funded by the Nebraska Legislature; the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency; and the Nebraska Cultural Endowment. For more information, call the Nebraska Arts Council at (402) 595-2122.

Lied Center programming is supported by Friends of Lied and grants from Association of Performing Arts Presenters, National Endowment for the Arts, Mid-America Arts Alliance, Nebraska Arts Council, New England Foundation for the Arts, Richard P. Kimmel and Laurine Kimmel Charitable Foundation Inc., Lincoln Community Foundation tiffany shopping, Cooper Foundation, Woods Charitable Fund, and Lincoln Arts Council. All events in the Lied Center are made possible entirely or in part by the Lied Performance Fund, which has been established in memory of Ernst F. Lied and his parents, Ernst M. and Ida K. Lied.

Three more members of Duluth crack ring plead guilty

Three more members of a Duluth-based crack cocaine distribution Tiffany and co pleaded guilty Thursday in federal court for their roles in the criminal operation.

Michelle Stephanie Clement, 29, and Eugenia Katrina Patterson, 40, both of Duluth, each pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute in excess of 50 grams of crack cocaine. James TorronLusbourgh, 36, of Duluth pleaded guilty to aiding and abetting the distribution of 5 grams of crack cocaine.

On Wednesday, two co-defendants in the case also entered guilty pleas before money clips U.S. District Judge Richard Kyle. William Andre Dotson, 40, of Duluth, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute in excess of 50 grams of crack cocaine. Melvin Stubblefield, 49, of Duluth, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute more than five grams of crack cocaine.

The defendants operated the drug ring in and around Duluth from May 2008 to June 2009, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Minneapolis said. The case was developed as a result of an investigation by the Duluth Police Department, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and the Lake Superior Drug and Gang Task Force.

Credit: Duluth News Tribune, pendants Minn.

Council to CERTIFY Responsible Jewelry Practices

Jewelers will now be able to be certified as ethically, socially, and environmentalIy responsible. The Council for Responsible tiffany jewellery Practices, which is changing its name to the Responsible Jewelry Council, announced a program to audit its members to make sure that they are complying with its standards. Members who have been independently verified as conforming to the code of practices will become “Certified Members of the Responsible Jewellery Council.”

“By providing a common, widely recognized set of standards that will be familiar to a large pool of competitive, accredited auditors, the system will drive continuous improvement and allow companies now operating their own social responsibility auditing programs to avoid duplication and expense,” says Robert Headley, co-chair of the standards committee of the RJC and vice president of technical services, Tiffany & Co necklaces.

The councils code of practices and guidelines on conducting self assessments are available at www.responsiblejewellery.com.

The certification system will launch in the second quarter of 2009, once independent auditors have been trained and auditing firms have been accredited. All members will be required to undergo the verification process by December 2010. New members will need to be audited within two years of joining.

The council will soon publish additional standards for its members engaged in mining. “The council has succeeded in creating a unique certification system for responsible business practices based on third party auditing that applies throughout the supply chain, from mine to retail. No other industry has achieved this,” says John Hall, chair of the communications committee frank gehry jewelry of the RJC and general manager of external relations for Rio Tinto Diamonds.

Matthew Runci, chairman of the coun- cil and president and CEO of Jewelers of America, says that despite the economy, the 80 members of the council, who in- elude retailers, manufacturers, and min- ers, remain committed to reinforcing consumer confidence in the supply chain. “Now more than ever, the industry must demonstrate responsible practices and protect its reputation,” Runci says.

Jewelry Historian ‘Dr. Joe’ Dies

Dr. Joseph Sataloff, a world-renowned expert on antique and estate tiffany jewelry, especially art nouveau jewelry, died Sept. 26. He was 89.

His Art Nouveau Jewelry: A Practical Guide to Its History and Beauty is still considered the definitive reference standard for antique and estate jewelers.

“He literally and figuratively wrote the book on art nouveau,” says Diana Singer, D&E Singer, antique, period, and estate jewelry expert in New York. “He had a deep and profound respect for it, long before it became the collectable fashion.”

Sataloff started the Maine Conference on Antique and Period bracelets Jewelry and Gemstones-now known as Jewelry Camp-in 1979. “He wanted to educate people,” says jewelry historian Joyce Jonas, who bought Jewelry Camp from Sataloff in 1992. “He relished every minute of life and had a true passion for people and jewelry. He’d personally greet everyone by name, making them feel special. He was a wonderful man. Even when he was giving you advice, he was doing so as a friend.”

Sataloff received his bachelor’s degree in 1940 from the University of Pennsylvania and earned a medical degree from Hahnemann University Hospital in 1943.

Sataloff, an otolaryngologist, made historic contributions to hearing conservation, including as scientific advisor to then-President Nixon in cufflinks developing hearing protection standards for the Occupational Safety and Health Act.

Sataloff is survived by his wife, Ruth; a daughter, Jody; a son, Robert; and five grandchildren.