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Aug 18th
A $12,458 "team-building" retreat for Lucy C. Laney Comprehensive High School staff at the Ritz-Carlton at Lake Oconee on Thursday and today is drawing sharp criticism from Richmond County school board members.
Patsy Scott summed up her reaction with one word: "Mercy."
The two-day, one-night visit is tied to a more than $1 million federal school improvement grant the school received last month through an Obama administration initiative.
The Richmond County school board agreed earlier this year to apply for the grant, but several board members said Thursday they weren’t aware a portion of the grant was being used by Laney for the Ritz retreat.
"If I had known this, I wouldn’t have approved the grant," said school board Vice President Alex Howard upon first hearing from The Augusta Chronicle about the trip.
Calling it a "poor choice," Howard said that even if the school got a good rate the Ritz trip sends the wrong message in a time of budget cuts.
He said he understands the need for a retreat, but it could have been held locally to save money.
"There’s no excuse for this," he said.
The retreat involves 85 Laney faculty and staff. The site — where country music star Carrie Underwood recently got married — was named among the World’s 500 Best Hotels in Travel + Leisure Magazine in 2008, according to the hotel’s Web site.
School system spokesman Louis Svehla was quick to note that the school got a reduced group rate and its retreat cost fell well below a budgeted amount of $35,000 that the grant had allowed.
"The grant proposal budgeted up to $35,000 for this retreat,Charm pendant, which was approved by the state," Svehla wrote in an e-mail. "In negotiation with several sites, the Ritz-Carlton at Lake Oconee in Greensboro, Georgia, offered the best hotel rates, acceptable food service costs and room meeting rates."
Board member Jimmy Atkins, who also hadn’t heard of the trip, noted that for the past several years the school board has held its retreats at its own central office.
"I’m very disappointed to hear that they would take off and go somewhere that extravagant to hold a retreat," he said.
Scott said the money should’ve been spent in Richmond County.
"If this is true, especially when we’re asking everybody to cut back, to me it’s just very, very unfortunate,money clips," she said.
Svehla said the normal room rate for this time of year at the Ritz-Carlton is $244 per person. "However, for this training session the discounted room rate will be $70 per person or $140 for a room for two people (double occupancy)," he said. "The hotel is waiving all meeting room rentals."
The retreat comes as part of a turnaround reform model Laney is having to undertake this coming school year in accepting the federal school improvement funds. The turnaround model requires the school to replace half its staff and have them reassigned to other schools. Several of those positions have been accounted for through attrition and some teachers being reassigned from an eighth-grade academy that Laney won’t have this school year.
"Now that the selection of staff is nearing completion, the staff will be required to attend the retreat," Svehla said. "At this retreat, there will be an agenda and various activities designed to enable the newly selected and returning faculty and staff members to become fully oriented with the vision and mission of the school relative to the implementation of the Turnaround Model of the School Improvement Grant at Lucy C. Laney High School."
The retreat cost, Svehla said, includes lodging, several meals and meeting rooms for the 85 faculty and staff,bangles, equaling a per-person cost of $147.
"Accordingly, while the name of the hotel carries a perception that there may be some added expense, in reality, the rates are very reasonable and discounted after thorough negotiations," he said.
Two other Richmond County schools also received more than $1 million each from the school improvement grant, but Svehla said those schools — Glenn Hills and Josey high schools — are staying locally for their retreats. Svehla said the decision about where to hold retreats was up to each school’s principal.
Glenn Hills Principal Wayne Frazier said he chose to keep his school’s retreat at his school because he’d rather use the grant money in the classroom and in professional development of teachers.
"My leadership style does not lend itself to that type of retreat, with the present economy crisis," Frazier said.
Frazier did confirm,Charm bracelet, though, that in June there was a school-system initiative where some leaders from his school and several others in Richmond County in Needs Improvement status attended training at Calloway Gardens. He said he thinks it was tied to the reform plan as well.
As for the Ritz trip, Svehla said Laney’s situation is unique because it’s the only school having half of its staff reassigned and the only one going through America’s Choice and college board training for the first time.
"It’s a way to get away with each other and really form a team," he said of the need for Laney’s retreat.
Columbia County school officials said they can’t recall ever sending a group to a Ritz-Carlton for training or a retreat, and lately have been trying to keep retreats and training local unless it’s only offered at an out-of-county location.
Richmond County board member Jack Padgett said of the Ritz retreat: "There’s a lot of other places you can have them," noting that although it seems the school got a decent per-room rate it probably shouldn’t have booked "the fanciest name in town."
"I just think the image is not good when we’re having furloughs," he said.
Board member Helen Minchew said that when broken down to individual workers the cost doesn’t seem exorbitant, but "it just would have been prudent to have stayed here."
Aug 18th
When the economy was booming, some of Miami’s higher-end restaurants didn’t see the benefit of Miami Spice’s discount dining. Others participated but didn’t readily promote the menu. They saw no need to cater to bargain-hunters.
Not anymore.
With the South Florida economy still sputtering, a record number of restaurateurs are looking at the two-month, off-season promotion that starts Sunday as a key tool for generating extra business. Last year, restaurants sold 150,000 Miami Spice meals during August and September.
"We get a whole different clientele with Miami Spice," said Nicola Siervo, partner in KNR Restaurant Group, which credits Miami Spice with boosting sales 20 percent last year at Quattro Gastronomia on Lincoln Road. That success is why Siervo is adding the program this year at Solea in the W South Beach.
"This is a perfect program for this kind of economy because people can still afford a nice dinner," Siervo said. "Hopefully, once they try it,tiffany, they’ll be back."
Already 119 restaurants have signed up for the program, offering the three-course Miami Spice meals at $35 for dinner and $22 for lunch. Restaurants participating for the first time include Miami Chart House,bracelets, Rusty Pelican, Texas de Brazil, Ruth’s Chris Steak House, D. Rodriguez Cuba, Mr Chow, STK and Charlotte Bistro.
This year, more restaurants are even offering the Miami Spice menu on prime weekend nights.
"Restaurants know that by being in Miami Spice, it puts people in seats," said Steve Haas, chairman of the Greater Miami Convention & Visitor’s Bureau and Miami Spice founder.
Broward County has a similar program, Dine Out Lauderdale, which takes place Oct. 1 — Nov. 11.
But the summer is tough for Cooper City restaurateur Aboud Kobaitri, owner of La Brochette Bistro. Although business this year is better than last, his customers are still coming less often, ordering cheaper wine and splitting more meals.
"You try to survive almost year by year to see if you can make it," said Kobaitri, who opened the restaurant in 1993.
Restaurant sales in South Florida and across the country are still struggling to rebound to the 2007 peak levels. Nationally total restaurant sales growth,Bead bracelet, adjusted for inflation, declined 1.2 percent in 2008 and another 2.9 percent in 2009, according to the National Restaurant Association. That’s the first time since the industry began keeping stats in 1970 that it has hit such a rough patch.
This year, the National Restaurant Association is predicting a decline of 0.1 percent, as consumers slowly start to return to dining out. For Florida, sales in 2009 were $27 billion and are expected to reach $27.6 billion this year.
"It’s the case of the tortoise versus the earth worm," said Dennis Lombardi, an executive with restaurant consulting firm WD Partners. "It’s going to be a slow, long drag back. Restaurants with higher check average felt the impact first and they’re going to come out slower."
While most restaurateurs in South Florida believe that they’ve seen the bottom, the road to recovery is a bumpy one.
At Pascal’s on Ponce in Coral Gables, owner Pascal Oudin says one night he’ll serve 60 people and the next night it will be 30.
"I cross my fingers and touch wood every day to thank God that I’m still around," said Oudin, whose business rebounded close to 10 percent this year, but is still down 20 percent from the peak. "Business isn’t what it used to be. I don’t know if it ever will be."
While Oudin has participated in Miami Spice since the program’s creation in 2002, he admits that he didn’t typically offer his top menu items because he didn’t want to lose money. Now he’s stepping it up, adding dishes like braised Colorado lamb shank and grouper with Mediterranean mussels.
"I was conservative," Oudin said. "This year, I’m going to let it go."
That’s the approach Red Steak used last year during Miami Spice and Marketing Director Rosemary Staltare credits it with putting the restaurant on the map.
Then a 6-month-old Miami Beach restaurant, it planned a Miami Spice menu with premium items like lobster tails and filet mignon. Staltare estimates the value of the dinner menu they were selling for $35 would normally have cost at least twice that.
"We were newbies and people were skeptical about whether we were going to survive or not," Staltare said. "Miami Spice was a great launching pad for us."
The Forge is already enjoying sales this summer about 40 percent higher than before it closed in 2009 for renovations. But owner Shareef Malnik decided that participating in Miami Spice would help attract a wider demographic to the restaurant, which reopened in March.
Malnik has tried to dispel the image of The Forge as a special occasion or expense account meal, lowering the average check about 25 percent to $85 per person.
"The dining population is out there," Malnik said. "Restaurants need to be able to adapt to what diners want."
Having an established name and reputation in the restaurant industry also pays off even more than ever these days. With consumers dining out less often,tiffany, they want to make sure the meal justifies the cost.
"There is no room in the middle anymore," said John Hart, general manager of Mr Chow in Miami Beach. "You have got to either be great, where people say yes it’s worth the money, or you have to be really cheap, where people say I’m going for the value."
Aug 17th
Though you might be able to skip the crayons and colored pencils this year, your college student has even bigger back-to-school dreams — new furniture. And whether he is moving into a dorm room or an apartment, he’ll need some basic houseware items.
Big box retailers such as Wal-Mart and Target are fine places to start, but there are some even cheaper options.
Look in the Mad Zone sales corner at Williamsburg Pottery, for example. There, we found 7-piece queen-sized comforter sets priced as low as $20. Ollies Bargain Outlet in Hampton includes a mattress section with full-size sets for as little as $239. The queen-size mattress sets cost $279. Big Lots is another discount store you shouldn’t forget, with some of the best prices on TV stands.
Thrift stores, of course, are one of the best places to look for gently used furniture.
Remember, these donation-based stores change inventory daily, so don’t be discouraged if you don’t find that treasure right away. Set aside a day about a week later to check out the new stash at your favorite stores.
Sofa — $75
Second Time Thrift,cuff Links, a new thrift store on Mercury Boulevard in Hampton, has a large inventory of furniture. At least two dozen couches take up the space on the left-hand side of the store, while the remaining space is dedicated to bedroom sets. If you head there right away, you might spot the three-piece queen-sized bedroom set complete with headboard, bed frame and dresser for $399. The set is in excellent condition, with no visible scratches. The rolling desk chairs for $20 are another must-have for college students, even in a dorm room.
Information: Open 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday-Saturday, noon to 5 p.m. Sundays. 4205 Mercury Blvd., Hampton. 816-8707.
Cedar chest — $70
The Youth Challenge Thrift Store recently found a new home on Jefferson Avenue in Newport News, and store managers have taken pains to make sure their furniture display is one of the best on the Peninsula. From a large clothes armoire in perfect condition ($100) to dressers for $50 and a host of couch options, this should be one of your first stops. The brand new cedar chest would be a great addition to a dorm room, as it can serve as both an additional seating area at the end of a bed and a storage area for extra linens and blankets.
Information: 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday and Saturday. 5100 Jefferson Ave., Newport News. 247-6377.
TV-stand and bookcase — $17
Manager Suzy Kennerly says most people don’t know that Habitat Restore on Warwick Boulevard in Newport News is open to the public. Filled with building materials and furniture, this store is like a thrift version of Lowe’s. Much of the furniture is priced well below the competitors’, with large wooden desks selling for as little as $24 and matching chairs for $10. The tall TV-stand and bookcase would make a perfect, scratch-free addition to an apartment living room. While you’re there, parents, check out the large lighting section. You might find something for your own house.
Information: Open 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday-Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. 9614 Warwick Blvd., Newport News. 246-4955.
Dishes — 59 cents per pound
There are several Goodwill locations on the Peninsula and most are good places to pop in when you’re looking for furniture. Lesser known is the Goodwill outlet location on Diamond Springs Road in Virginia Beach. All of the merchandise donated to the thrift-store chain moves through the outlet at some point during its sales life. And, if you can find it at the outlet, you’ll shave 50 percent off the Goodwill retail store price. A set of 12 dishes cost $3 at the outlet, for example. The sticker on the back of the dishes noted that it cost $6.25 for the set at a Goodwill retail store. The outlet is also unique in that clothing and houseware items are priced per pound, not per item. The music lover also would be happy with the set of Jensen speakers, complete with a subwoofer and four mini-speakers for $10.
Information: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday. 1345 Diamond Springs Road, Virginia Beach. 248-9414.
Paitsel can be reached at 247-4737 or npaitsel@dailypress.com. Find her on Facebook at Facebook.com/SavvyShopper.
Furniture consignment shops
Now that your college student is moving out, you may have some space for some extra furniture of your own. These furniture consignment shops cater to tastes too expensive for the transient lifestyle of a college student, but they’re perfect options for upscale living on a budget.
Velvet Shoestring. Set up like a retail furniture store, nearly everything in this consignment shop is in perfect condition. Stock changes daily, but a recent trip revealed an impressive display of decorative armoires and china cabinets, as well as lighting fixtures. Open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday,Atlas charm bracelet, noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. 311 Second St., Williamsburg. 220-9494.
Scavenger’s Paradise. Focused more on home decor than furniture, this upscale consignment shop only accepts items in excellent condition. Look here for decor matching a home styled in dark woods and antiques. Open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday,tiffany, noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. 7059 Richmond Road,Charm bracelet, Williamsburg. 565-4125.
Aladdin Consignment and Rugs. Much like the Velvet Shoestring, shoppers’ may never know the items were once used. Sofas and other living room items are the focus in much of the store, but you’ll want to head to the back, where there is a large collection of unusual lamps. Open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. 7131 Merrimac Trail, Williamsburg. 206-1665.
Aug 17th
The countdown is on for the 12th annual back-to-school sales tax holiday, a chance for parents to nail an automatic discount on select clothing and school supplies that starts at 12:01 Friday morning.
And keeping $8 in your pocket for every $100 you spend is nothing to sneeze at — even if the taxable items list includes handkerchiefs.
"It’s the busiest weekend of the year," said Beth Bridges,tiffany, senior marketing manager at South Plains Mall. "The stores are looking great, and there’s a lot of new merchandise."
The big style item for girls heading back to school this fall is "jeggings," which Bridges described as leggings styled to look like jeans.
But, she added, there are plenty of stores offering traditional jeans and other back-to-school clothes.
In addition, an increasing number of stores are offering uniform-style clothes for families with children in some of the Hub City’s private schools.
The mall will have extended hours for the weekend,Beads necklace, open from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Aug. 22.
Among the mall’s anchor stores, JC Penney will be open from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday,pendants, and 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday. Dillard’s will open from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Aug. 22.
The 72-hour reprieve from sales taxes will expire at midnight Aug. 22 and applies not only to brick-and-mortar retailers but to Internet and catalog sellers doing business in Texas.
Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts Susan Combs estimated that shoppers statewide will save more than $59 million on purchases over the weekend.
Clothing and footwear priced at less than $100 is eligible for the break.
And the state has several special purchasing rules to keep in mind.
– Tax-exempt items already on layaway qualify for the break if the buyer pays off the layaway balance during the weekend.
– Special order items to be delivered after the holiday ends also qualify if the customer pays the bill in full before midnight Aug. 22.
– Prepackaged combination sets or kits that are made up primarily of tax-exempt items are eligible for the break.
– Backpacks only qualify if they have straps allowing them to be carried on the user’s back. Messenger bags are also tax-exempt. Bags that could be defined as luggage, such as brief cases,Charm pendant, gym bags, purses or backpacks mounted on frames, are not eligible.
– Shoppers buying more than 10 backpacks must present a certificate stating the backpacks will be used by elementary or secondary students.
– Purchasers using a business account — business credit card or business check — to buy school supplies must also provide an exemption certificate stating the items will be used by an elementary or secondary school student.
To comment on this story:
walt.nett@lubbockonline.com –766-8744
james.ricketts@lubbockonline.com –766-8706
Source: Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
Aug 16th
Most of the structural work on Ogden High School is finished, and now workers face the long task of making the interior look like a school again.
A new roof has been put on the theater, installed in one marathon session starting last Tuesday right before midnight and ending at 2 a.m. Thursday, said Tim Sobotka, Hughes Construction project superintendent.
It is one of the many upgrades being made from a $95.3 million bond for Ogden School District, passed in 2006. In addition to the bond, the Ogden School Foundation has raised $7.2 million of its $9 million goal for historic preservation and restoration.
Construction workers are pushing hard to get as much done as possible before school starts later this month.
"We just do it,pendants," Sobotka said. "We just go. Summer is the best time for us."
Sobotka said the structural upgrades are almost complete and now it is largely the interior that needs to be finished.
In addition to seismic upgrades and other improvements, he said, access for those with disabilities will be much better.
Some windows also have been replaced, which Sobotka said makes a big difference in the temperature of the classrooms. Finding windows that looked like the old ones, while still meeting the needs of the upgrade,tiffany, was a challenge for the foundation, said Janis Vause, executive director of the Ogden School Foundation.
"They look just like the old bank of windows," Vause said after seeing them in the school.
While it has been a challenge to work in a historic school, that’s also been part of the fun, Sobotka said.
"After this project, a lot of the projects that follow will seem a little mundane," he said. "How often do you find a high school with marble in the bathrooms?"
Vause said the amount of money they’ve raised during a recession shows how much the community cares about Ogden High and education.
Donna Corby,key rings, Ogden School District spokeswoman, agrees, saying, "It’s funny that it (the school) was built in the Depression. Now we’re doing it again in a recession. It just shows this commitment.
"I don’t know what it is about this community, but that’s a commitment to education."
Vause said the preservation is an opportunity to leave a lasting legacy to the community.
She knows historic preservation is more expensive than demolishing would have been, so she is happy that private donors have stepped up to help fund it.
For Vause,bracelets, seeing the details begin to come together to create a hybrid of old and new is the most rewarding part of the project.
Aug 16th
In ancient Egypt, minerals were used to enhance features and to provide a little color, while the Romans used oil-based perfumes to scent their bath water. But cosmetics since that time have evolved with a growing list of ingredients and an increasing potential for irritation.
But who is checking into the safety of cosmetics?
One issue that has gotten attention is lead in lipstick. As a result, the Food and Drug administration created a standard test that found 0.09 ppm to 3.06 ppm of lead in the lipsticks tested. The standard test is now used when there is a question about lead levels in lipstick.
You might be surprised at the chemicals found in cosmetics and their potential dangers. The Environmental Working Group provides a safety guide to cosmetics and ranks beauty products by the potential hazards. Visitors to the group’s website can search by product or brand and learn about the chemicals used and their possible side effects.
The group’s Campaign for Safe Cosmetics co-produced a seven-minute video about the dangers of cosmetics. The video, which was released July 21, points out the lack of oversight into what chemicals are used in makeup and other beauty products.
But the video is not without its detractors.
The Personal Care Products Council released a statement by spokeswoman Kathleen Dezio, who said the "’shockumentary-genre’ video bears no relationship to the ‘real’ story of cosmetics."
"This video is an unfortunate attempt to generate fear about an alleged public health risk from cosmetics that is unwarranted. It is repugnant to suggest that cosmetic companies would manufacture, and the U.S. Food & Drug Administration would allow them to market, products that are dangerous or contain toxins that cause cancer or any other disease.
It is absurd to suggest that the men and women in our industry would market products that could cause harm to themselves and their families," Dezio’s statement read.
The same day the video was released, a bill was introduced in Congress to increase oversight on ingredients for cosmetics. Three members of Congress introduced the Safe Cosmetics Act of 2010 (HR 5786), which seeks to close loopholes in federal law that allow companies to use virtually any ingredient in cosmetic and personal care products — even chemicals that are known to damage human health and the environment.
According to a press release by Illinois congresswoman Jan Schakowsky, one of the bill’s sponsors,money clips, the $50 billion cosmetic industry uses 12,500 unique chemical ingredients. Many have never been assessed.
So what’s a plain-faced girl to do? Looking at cosmetic labels may be a good start.
At Les Champs Elysees Day Spa and Salon on North College Avenue, customers can find Aveda products. Owner Margaretet Nowak said customers come to the salon for Aveda’s more natural products.
The company has become well-known for using natural ingredients and for reformulating some of its products to remove parabens, chemicals used as preservatives in some cosmetic products.
Although the FDA has not yet raised a red flag on paraben in cosmetics, it has acknowledged that "although parabens can act similarly to estrogen,pendants, they have been shown to have much less estrogenic activity than the body’s naturally occurring estrogen," according to the FDA’s website.
Disque said she’s aware that customers are now more concerned about what is in their makeup, hair care and body products. When people have their hair shampooed, she said the stylists can sometimes smell plastic residue from what clients are using to shampoo their hair. Once customers make a switch to something organic, the difference is clear, she said, including how much product they need to use.
"We get tons of people that come in and say "I can’t believe how little I need to use of the product,’" Disque said.
Esthetician Jacqueline Simpson said she often works with clients who have acne. She said she can always tell when someone is using a harsh,Beads necklace, heavily formulated skin care line. She said many acne care systems contain more than one harsh chemical that dry out the skin.
Simpson knows the customers often will look to commercials to find a product, but she recommends people research products before buying to make sure the ingredients are safe.
"People are too trusting,rings," she said.
Aug 15th
New research, ‘Pulse pressure and coronary atherosclerosis in asymptomatic type 2 diabetes mellitus: a 64 channel cardiac computed tomography analysis,’ is the subject of a report (see also <http://www.newsrx.com/library/topics/Type-2-Diabetes.html> Type 2 Diabetes). "Identification of high risk sub-groups for early initiation of preventive medical therapy requires widespread population screening using simple,earrings, inexpensive tests. High pulse pressure has been shown to predict adverse coronary events," investigators in Haifa, Israel report.
"We examined if this correlation was related to a greater coronary plaque burden in patients with high pulse pressure using 64 channel coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. The study included 427 consecutive asymptomatic diabetic patients with no history of coronary disease, (age 55-74 years, 58% women), undergoing CCTA as part of a prospective outcomes study. Coronary atheroma was present in 76.6% of patients, multivessel coronary atheroma in 55.1% and luminal stenosis (>or=50% of diameter) in 22.9%. Pulse pressure (adjusted for age,key rings, gender, mean blood pressure and heart rate) correlated with number of coronary arteries with atheroma (p=0.005) and with multivessel coronary atheroma (odds ratio 1.24 95%CI 1.06-1.43 for each 10 mm Hg pulse pressure, p=0.009). The correlation was independent of Framingham and United Kingdom Prospective Diabetic Study risk scores (p=0.027 and p=0.036 respectively). Adjusted pulse pressure also correlated with quartiles of coronary artery calcium score (p=0.009),Charm bracelet," wrote D.A. Halon and colleagues, Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center, Department of Cardiovascular Medicine.
The researchers concluded: "Elevated pulse pressure was a useful independent marker of presence and extent of pre-clinical coronary artery disease in an asymptomatic diabetic population."
Halon and colleagues published their study in International Journal of Cardiology (Pulse pressure and coronary atherosclerosis in asymptomatic type 2 diabetes mellitus: a 64 channel cardiac computed tomography analysis. International Journal of Cardiology, 2010;143(1):63-71).
For additional information, contact D.A. Halon, Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center, Dept. of Cardiovascular Medicine, Haifa, Israel.
Keywords: City:Haifa, Country:Israel, Arterial Occlusive Diseases, Arteriosclerosis, Atherosclerosis,money clips, Cardiology, Cardiovascular Diseases, Endocrine System Diseases, Endocrinology, Glucose Metabolism Disorders, Metabolic Diseases, Non insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus, Vascular Diseases.
Aug 15th
The "Michelle Obama effect" continued to grow interest and support for efforts to curb obesity as the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation (HWCF ) announced today that The PGA of America has become the Foundation’s 100th member.
The HWCF reported that due to the First Lady’s personal leadership and her "Let’s Move!" campaign, public awareness concerning the problem of childhood obesity is at an all-time high. "Let’s Move!" has created a first-of-its-kind focus and synergy throughout the country as companies, non-profits and sports organizations join together to collaborate and expand the reach of the energy balance message.
"We are extraordinarily pleased to announce The PGA of America as the 100th partner of the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation," said David Mackay, chair of the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation and CEO of Kellogg Company. "Our commitment and dedication to reduce childhood obesity aligns well with The PGA’s many programs, such as the recently announced ‘Let’s Move On Course.’ We are delighted to team with them as we work collaboratively in the fight against obesity."
The PGA’s "ad hoc" league of junior programs, conducted by the 41 nationwide Sections and grass roots PGA Professionals throughout the country, is the sport’s largest outreach to juniors. In 2009, PGA Professionals hosted more than 38,000 junior camps nationwide with more than 550,000 kids participating. The PGA announced earlier this year it would use this network to help support the "Let’s Move!" initiative.
"Golf is a great way for families to get outside,earrings, walk a beautiful golf course and make fitness fun,Beads necklace," said PGA of America President Jim Remy. "The PGA of America wants juniors and their families to recognize the health benefits associated with walking the course when they play. We’re delighted to be joining the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation as another way to support the First Lady’s mission to reduce childhood obesity."
The PGA has demonstrated its commitment to promote physical fitness nationwide through its "Play Golf America" campaign, aimed at increasing participation among new and existing golfers and growing the number of people who play the game. The PGA’s Family Golf Month, conducted in July,tiffany, features golf courses which offer a series of programs to learn and play golf as a family. These programs, such as Family Golf Clinics, Family Golf Days and Kids Play Free aim to make golf accessible and affordable for everyone.
The PGA of America’s decision to join the HWCF is a natural extension of its commitment to health and fitness. Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh determined the total caloric expenditure for a round of golf (18-holes) is approximately 2,000 calories for walking and carrying clubs. Walking 18 holes can also meet the daily recommendation of 10,pendants,000 steps (five miles). Health and fitness experts advocate that taking 10,000 steps per day will improve overall fitness and help control weight gain.
About The PGA of America
Since 1916, The PGA of America’s mission has been twofold; to establish and elevate the standards of the profession and to grow interest and participation in the game of golf. By establishing and elevating the standards of the golf profession through world-class education, career services, marketing and research programs, the Association enables PGA Professionals to maximize their performance in their respective career paths and showcases them as experts in the game and in the multi-billion dollar golf industry.
By creating and delivering dramatic world-class championships and exciting and enjoyable golf promotions that are viewed as the best of their class in the golf industry, The PGA of America elevates the public’s interest in the game, the desire to play more golf, and ensures accessibility to the game for everyone, everywhere. The PGA of America brand represents the very best in golf.
The Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation is a first-of-its kind coalition that brings together 100 retailers, food and beverage manufacturers, sporting goods and insurance companies, restaurants, trade associations and NGOs, and now its first professional sports association. The Foundation focuses on activities in the schools, the workplace and the marketplace to promote healthy weight among Americans by balancing the energy they consume with the energy they expend through physical activity.
Aug 14th
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey issued the following news release:
Congregation B’nai Shalom could easily have been mistaken for a department store on Sunday August 1, except for one thing: There were no cash registers.
The National Council of Jewish Women (NCJW),Charm bracelet, Essex County section, transformed the West Orange temple into a Back 2 School Store, where some 500 underprivileged Essex County children shopped for free, while parents and caregivers visited the Family Resource Center. There, volunteers from UMDNJ and several social service agencies provided information on community resources,cuff Links, career and educational opportunities and adult health care. Students from the School of Nursing and nurses from University Hospital (UH) performed 155 diabetes screenings and 209 blood pressure screenings, while members of New Jersey Dental School’s Community Health faculty demonstrated proper oral hygiene, explained the importance of prevention and early detection of oral cancer, and provided information on smoking cessation. A UH resident was also on hand to offer podiatry education,watches, and Children’s RESPIRA Education provided information on asthma.
Meantime, kindergarten through fifth-graders were each being escorted through the store by one of 300 volunteer "personal shoppers," who helped the child choose a complete outfit, sneakers, a winter jacket, a hat, gloves and a scarf. In addition, each student received a backpack filled with school supplies and personal hygiene items. Local merchants, Essex County NCJW members and major clothing manufacturers donated more than $100,000 worth of brand new merchandise.
One little girl was particularly excited when she received a toothbrush. She told the volunteer it was the first time she ever owned her very own toothbrush.
Contact: Rob Forman, 973/972-7276, formanra@umdnj.edu
Rob Forman,bracelets, 973/972-7276, formanra@umdnj.edu
Aug 12th
Gorillaz, the musical project of Blur’s Damon Albarn and cartoonist Jamie Hewlett, performs Oct. 5 at Toyota Presents Oakdale Theatre in Wallingford as part of a 19-date North American tour. Although the band is ostensibly composed of cartoon characters drawn by Hewlett,Atlas charm bracelet, they’ll be augmented on stage by Albarn, Mick Jones and Paul Simonon of the Clash, Bobby Womack, Little Dragon, Pharcyde rapper Bootie Brown and UK rappers Kano and Bashy. Tickets go on sale Friday, Aug. 13, at 10 a.m. for $90,rings, $65 and $49.50.
Mary J. Blige performs Oct. 10 at MGM Grand at Foxwoods; tickets go on sale Aug. 20 for $75, $65 and $50. Smokey Robinson returns Nov. 13; tickets go on sale Aug. 27 for $60, $50 and $40.
Tony Orlando performs Sept. 11 at Mohegan Sun; tickets go on sale Friday at 10 a.m. for $20.
Circa Survive plays the Webster Theatre Oct. 15; tickets go on sale Friday for $16.50. Big D and the Kids Table performs Sept. 24 with Marlborough ska band Tip the Van at the Webster Underground; tickets are $13.
Connecticut rapper Chris Webby performs Aug. 25 at Toad’s Place in New Haven with Piff City and Tallent; tickets are $15 in advance. Boston rapper Sam Adams, former captain of the Trinity College soccer team,tiffany, performs Sept. 1; tickets are $17. Fresh off a tour opening for Kings of Leon, Built to Spill headlines Sept. 3; tickets are $20. Rapper Wiz Khalifa performs Sept. 21; tickets are $16. Mushroomhead is there Sept. 30; tickets are $15. Indigo Girls headline Oct. 28; tickets will cost $35 when they go on sale, which will be "soon," according to Toad’s. Behemoth performs Dec. 4; tickets are $18.
Manic Productions presents Defiance, Ohio, Sept. 14 in the upstairs Lilly’s Pad room at Toad’s; tickets are $8. Hallelujah the Hills is there Sept. 16; tickets are $8. Nails performs Sept. 28; tickets are $8
The Album Leaf performs Wednesday at Daniel Street in Milford; tickets are $12 in advance. The Felice Brothers are there Nov. 1 with Adam Haworth Stephens of Two Gallants; tickets are $15.
Jennifer Knapp plays Sept. 1 at Infinity Music Hall; tickets are $35 and $25. Season 5 "American Idol" champ Taylor Hicks is there Sept. 15; tickets are $75 and $55. Spin Doctors singer Chris Barron plays a solo show Sept. 26; tickets are $30 and $20. Brandi Carlile headlines Sept. 29; tickets are, for some reason, $61, $51 and $46. Veteran light-rock band Orleans is there Sept. 30; tickets are $60, $45 and $40. The Radiators are back Oct. 13; tickets are $45,necklaces, $35 and $30. Lucy Kaplansky is there Oct. 16; tickets are $40, $30 and $25. Eddie From Ohio plays Nov. 7; tickets are $50, $40 and $35. Country-rock band Poco is back Nov. 14; tickets are $70 and $50. Led Zeppelin tribute band Physical Graffiti is there Nov. 24; tickets are $35, $25 and $20. Connecticut native Jeff Pevar is there with "special guests" Nov. 26; tickets are $40, $30 and $25. A Jimmy Hendrix tribute featuring guitarist Andy Aledort is there Nov. 28; tickets are $30 and $20.