and it doesn?t pay what

July 29th, 2010

and it doesn?t pay what you deserve. You know you could do much better somewhere else.

So, why aren?t you outta there?

The most common reason is that it?s easier to put off making a decision. Shifting focus and upsetting what we?re used to contributes to our procrastination. It seems we can always find justification for putting off a decision. So we wind up staying right where we are.

The good news is there are positive steps you can take right now to break the pattern of job search procrastination.

1. Prioritize your tasks. If everything seems like a priority, you’ll feel overwhelmed and get nothing done. For example, don’t obsess about your resume. It won’t get you employed. But the action strategies outlined in The World’s Fastest Job Search System will!

2. Question your beliefs. Be prepared to dump the old-fashioned assumptions about what it takes to get employed. Explore the exciting new strategies in The World’s Fastest Job Search System!

3. Control your impulsiveness. Most searchers jump from one task to another without following a carefully thought out plan of action.

4.
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Garden is the result of 20 years' work

July 29th, 2010
Garden is the result of 20 years’ work

Comments | Scunthorpe Evening Telegraph, Jun 26, 2010

EXPLORE a private garden containing everything from exotic plants to vegetable plots next weekend.

The half-acre garden at Demeter House, Low Street, Winterton, will be open to the public on Sunday, July 4. Created over a period of more than 20 years, features include a jungle garden, pond, fruit and vegetables and much more.

The garden is opening as part of the National Gardens Scheme, which sees more than 3,000 gardens around the country open up to raise money for charity.

Tea and scones will be available throughout the day. Visits do not need to be booked, drop in at any time from 2pm to 6pm.

Admission costs Pounds 2.50 and children go free. All proceeds to charity.

For further information, visit www.ngs.org.uk

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For many, this

July 29th, 2010

For many, this represents a time of breaking free and starting their new uninhibited lives. This may be an exciting and emotional time. How does a college student with ADD face such a time?

For a person with Attention Deficit Disorder, this may prove to be a harsh time of transformation. Typically coming from families that were especially doting and accommodating to their situation, they are thrown in to a new environment to fend for themselves. One of the basic behavior modification techniques in training an ADD child is through structure, routine, and habit. At once, all of this is taken and it becomes the student?s responsibility to recreate this structured life they once had. Of course, a person with ADD is typically disorganized and unstructured. So, they may have a difficult time having the discipline to enact such stringent requirements for themselves.

Another aspect to consider is the increased difficulty in the academic load in college as compared to high school and the additional responsibility put on the students. Not only will the student be responsible for their own organization and structure, they will do so under more stress and academic pressure.
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Five-bedroom home has a refitted kitchen

July 29th, 2010

Five-bedroom home has a refitted kitchen

0 Comments | Tamworth Herald, The, Jun 10, 2010

A MODERN, five-bedroomed detached property with a refitted breakfast kitchen is on the market with agents Mark Evans & Co.

Number 27, Moat Drive, Drayton Bassett has a family room as well as a lounge and dining room, and there’s an en suite to the master bedroom.

The property has double glazing, gas central heating, and there’s a garage and block-paved driveway.

Offers around Pounds 299,950 are being invited.

To view, call agents Mark Evans & Company on 01827 311300.

In brief, the accommodation comprises hall, cloakroom, lounge, dining room, kitchen and family room top the ground floor; with five bedrooms, one with en suite, and a bathroom upstairs.

The lounge has a bay window and an Adam fireplace with marble effect inserts and hearth, gas fire inset and double doors to dining room, which has sliding patio doors to rear and through archway to kitchen.

The refitted kitchen has a range of units and work surfaces including stainless steel sink top, fitted fridge freezer in matching unit, fitted dishwasher in matching unit, space for automatic washing machine, low-level oven and hob with extractor fan, low-level breakfast bar, tiled floor and built-in under stairs cupboard The family room has double patio doors to garden.

Upstairs, the master bedroom has bay window to the front, built in double wardrobes The family bathroom has tiled vanity shelves, WC, sculptured bath with mixer tap and shower over, tiled corner shower and wash basin.

The front garden is lawned and there’s a double width block- paved driveway leading to the garage, which has an upand-over door, light and power.

To the rear is a block-paved patio, a lawn with borders, and a second circular block-paved patio beyond.

the property LOCATION: 27, Moat Drive, Drayton Bassett ROOMS: Hall, cloakroom, lounge, dining room, kitchen and family room Upstairs: Five bedrooms, one with en suite, and a bathroom PRICE: Offers around Pounds 299,950 CALL: Mark Evans & Co on 01827 311300

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SCULPTURE FROM THE SEA

July 29th, 2010

SCULPTURE FROM THE SEA

0 Comments | Evening Standard; London (UK), Jul 28, 2010 | by Nicole Swengley

EVEN in cities you can create the impression of relaxed beachside living by using driftwood furniture and shoreline-style accessories, and the look can appear surprisingly sophisticated.

Driftwood furniture ticks all the right boxes. Its weathered grain and sea-sculpted shapes can be stunning and, being recycled, it conserves resources and reduces waste — and homeowners love its evocation of a carefree summer by the beach.

Martin Scorey, a boat-builder by training, makes innovative furniture using traditional skills at his Southampton base. “I love using driftwood because it’s tactile and evokes the weathered, windswept feel of the British shoreline. To walk along a beach after a storm collecting wood is just the inspiration I need to fashion it into a unique piece of furniture.”

Scorey’s throne-like chairs are made to order (from Pounds 250) and handdecorated with shells, pebbles and rope. Tables in a variety of idiosyncratic shapes (from Pounds 280) and custom-made, decorative timber screens (from Pounds 600) are also available from his Shoreline Furniture collection.

Homeowners looking for less sculptural pieces can create the driftwood look with Scorey’s glasstopped desks (Pounds 600), bedside cabinets (Pounds 140) and coffee tables (Pounds 250), made from sand- blasted Cedar of Lebanon. Bathroom and kitchen cabinets are custom- made in a similar style (from Pounds 110).

The marine theme can also be extended, indoors or outside, with decorative accessories such as green glass fishing net floats, whelk pots, driftwood flowers, shrimp nets and vintage pond yachts, all available online from Shoreline Furniture.

Surfing enthusiast Jonty Henshall started making driftwood furniture while living at Sennen Cove in west Cornwall. “If I find an interesting, discarded piece of wood I try to use it in a sympathetic way, creating sculpture, furniture and paintings that will capture its unique form forever.” His made-to-order designs are available at Beyond the Sea in Padstow, north Cornwall, and online. Prices start from Pounds 120 for bedside tables, from Pounds 250 for coffee tables, from Pounds 350 for dressers and from Pounds 650 for beds.

One of the pleasures of living with driftwood furniture lies in knowing where the raw material washed up. David Holmes of Nautilus Design combines driftwood collected from St Peter’s Bay in Essex with driftnet corks from Petershead in Scotland to create attractive mirror frames. Meanwhile the knotted trunks of birch trees washed up on a Pembrokeshire beach are cut into stubby lamp bases (Pounds 185 a pair) and topped with shades made from layers of hand-made, recycled paper pulp.

“It’s a pretty perfect lifestyle, collecting driftwood from some of Britain’s most scenic beaches, then taking it home to my workshop in Bedfordshire to make one-off designs,” says David. “Wood can be a difficult material. Oak goes very hard in salt water and I’ve burned out many a drill bit and saw blade. And a nearly finished piece is sometimes ruined when you discover a soft spot is, in fact, a honeycomb of tunnels created by sea worms.”

Holmes’s Twig mirrors (Pounds 235) are painstakingly crafted from small, salvaged pieces carefully entwined in a wreath-like fashion, while artistic combinations of driftwood chips form the rays of his starburst mirrors (Pounds 235). He also makes cabinets (Pounds 145), lamps (from Pounds 145) and photo frames (Pounds 75)
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Amber's man is in property

July 29th, 2010

Amber’s man is in property

0 Comments | New Straits Times, Mar 31, 2010 | by Dennis Chua

KUALA LUMPUR: Popular model and actress Amber Chia has found her Mr Right, and he is a 36-year-old businessman from Kuala Lumpur who shares her love of fashion and films.

The Ipoh-born Chia married Melbourne University business graduate Adrian Wong in Bali, Indonesia last week.

The couple will soon be spending a month-long honeymoon in Australia.

Speaking at The Yogi Tree Restaurant in The Gardens, Mid Valley City here yesterday, Chia, 28, said their marriage coincided with Wong’s birthday on March 25.

The ceremony was held at the Diwangkara Holiday Villa Resort and was attended by approximately 40 family members and close friends such as television host Daphne Iking, violinist Dennis Lau, businesswoman Winnie Sin and catwalk guru Benjamin Toong.

“We’ve known each other for six years and we chose Bali because it’s one of our favourite holiday destinations,” she said, adding that she would `love to be a mum by 30′.

Wong, the eldest of three siblings, was formerly the chief executive officer of Absolute Entertainment which produced the martial arts film Kinta and organised concerts for Hong Kong superstar Andy Lau, Taiwanese pop queen Jolin Tsai and American pop group Pussycat Dolls.

He currently manages a property development business with projects in Malaysia, Australia and Hong Kong.

Wong, who first met Chia at Andy Lau’s concert, said: “Amber always inspires me. She believes in reaching for the stars.”

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Sentence for catapult attack

July 29th, 2010

Sentence for catapult attack

0 Comments | Sevenoaks Chronicle, Jul 8, 2010

A Teenager has been handed a community work order after assaulting a community warden.

The 17-year-old boy, of Westerham, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was sentenced at Sevenoaks Magistrates’ Court on June 24 for assault occasioning actual bodily harm.

The teen pleaded guilty to injuring Stephen Taylor in a catapult attack on March 24 outside The Hospice in the Weald charity shop in the High Street. A stone was fired at the warden, who was on duty at the time, injuring his hip.

He was sentenced to 120 hours’ unpaid work within the next 12 months, as specified by the Youth Offender Team, ordered to pay Pounds 185 costs and must complete an anger management course.

He has also been banned from owning or using a catapult for 12 months and must take part in a victim empathy programme.

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You may think

July 29th, 2010

You may think there is nothing to worry about in your house but you will very soon realize what a child can get into and how many dangerous things you actually do have in your home.

You all want what is best for your children and would not want any harm to come to them, right? Well, that is why you need to secure your house, top to bottom. If you haven?t seen it in your own home yet, you have probably seen it on TV, where the kid pulls out all the drawers to get up on the kitchen counter. This actually does happen.

There are so much that needs to be mentioned when it comes to what you need to be aware of in your house like; where do you keep your cleaning supplies, can your child possible get to where you keep all your knives and such, what about electrical outlets, can they get to your stove? All of these, plus many more, are all important questions you need to ask yourself as you are looking around to see what needs to be done.

It is actually quite amazing how fast a little child can be when it comes to getting into stuff like sticking something into a light socket or getting their hands stuck in a door or a drawer.
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If you have a book of,

July 28th, 2010

If you have a book of, say 30,000 words to write, that’s only 5,000 words a day for six days. That’s one chapter in the morning and one in the afternoon. Or, put it another way, you need to write around 750 words an hour – or one word every five seconds. Now that’s not many is it?

It might sound a daunting task, but with a detailed outline and all the background information already prepared, it is actually quite straightforward. I’m convinced that people who can’t find the time to write their book haven’t actually formulated their ideas fully or got their information collected. Once you have down that, the writing is relatively straightforward.

So, in short, getting your book written in record time is easy if you follow a ‘system’.
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David Sherman Wimbley

July 28th, 2010
David Sherman Wimbley

Gazette, The (Colorado Springs), Jul 14, 2010

Dave was born May 19, 1957 in Lawrenceville, Illinois to Calvin & Shirley Wimbley. The family moved to Colorado in 1967. He was a graduate of Mitchell High School class of 1976. He attended CU Boulder and is a graduate of IntelliTec for HVAC. He loved football and was a diehard fan of the Raiders.

He was also an avid Nascar fan and attended the Pikes Peak Hill Climb annually. He enjoyed jazz music, BBQing and spending time with family and friends. Dave is survived by his mother Shirley Wimbley, three brothers and a sister. Dennis Hardiman, Michael Wimbley, Doug Wimbley, Carmen Wimbley; sister-in-law, Carla Wimbley; three nieces, Erin Hardiman, Ashley Perry, Aleassa Wimbley; three nephews, Nicholas Perry, Adrian Perry; step-nephew Holden Grove; cousins, extended family and a host of good friends. Dave is preceded in death by his father, Calvin Wimbley
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