Red Cross Roll Call Drive Opens Monday Easier Way Proposed For
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Observer & Eccentric/ SUNDAY, APRIL 28, 2002 C2(CP) Crusaders Split Twinbill with Saints Two Strikeouts in Seven Innings
_miON PUBLIC LIBRARY suits Cp CP SPORTS & RECREATION WeHmhead cfc Salem stretchs win streak to 4 BY C.J. RISAK SPORTS EDITOR [email protected] Cards win till© It took awhile, but Plymouth Salem's The Canton Cardinals 12-and-under softball team found its stroke in the boys travel basketball team posted a 5- final two innings as it dispatched of 0 record en route to winning the Hart- host Livonia Stevenson 5-2 in a West- land Future Stars Basketball Tourna- ern Lakes Activities Association Lakes ment April 13 in Hartland. Division game Friday. The win, the Rocks' fourth in a row, In the championship game, the Car- boosted their record to 6-3 overall, 3-0 dinals defeated the host Hartland m the division. Stevenson is 4-5 over- team, 48-41. all, 1-2 in the division. Team members are Andrew Tidwell, Ryan Neu, Erik Wright, Lawrence Washington, Brandon Roberts, Navraj • 'It was a great vtak, Sandhu, Ross Davis, Brandt Thomas, but neat week is going to Justin Bader, Michael Wolcott, William Tidwell and Alex Hays. The be a really difficult week team is coached by Chris Tidwell and with North Famrington, George Roberts. (Walled Lake) Western and (Walled Lake) Central.' Gymnasts 6th at state Bonnie Southerland The Sports Club of Novi's Level 8 Salem coach gymnastics team placed sixth at the Level 8 Gymnastics State Meet April 20 in Bay City, scoring 110.9 points. The Spartans got three of their five Among those competing for the hits in the game in the first inning, and Sports Club were 13-year-old Alyssa it resulted in both their runs. -
26363 HON. MICHAEL E. CAPUANO HON. SCOTT Mcinnis HON
October 20, 1999 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS 26363 largely composed of what geologists call base- goal. The second extra time period saw a bat- what we have accomplished would have ever ment rocks, the oldest rocks on the earth esti- tle of ferocious intensity where the game’s been possible. mated at 1.7 billion years old. With its narrow outcome was held in the balance. So intense It is with this, Mr. Speaker, that I give my was the last five-minute period that two thanks to the people of Gunnison who played openings, sheer walls, and scenic gorges that Santa Cruz players were carried off injured. plunge 2000 feet into the clear blue majesty of Neither side backed down. The final score a leading role in making the Black Canyon of the Gunnison River, the Black Canyon is a was Boston Demons 4 goals 2 behinds, for a the Gunnison National Park a wonderful reality natural crown jewel second to none in its mag- total of 26 points, to Santa Cruz 3 goals 2 for Colorado, America, and the world to enjoy. nificent splendor. Though other canyons may behinds for a total of 20 points. MEN AND WOMEN OF HONOR have greater depth or descend on a steeper The Boston Demons is composed of expa- course, few combine these attributes as tiate Australians, Americans, Irish, and a breathtakingly as does the Black Canyon. Dane. Based in Boston, MA, the Boston De- HON. HELEN CHENOWETH-HAGE mons have recently had a large amount of OF IDAHO If ever there was a place worthy of the pres- media exposure in both the U.S. -
Executive Board Annual Report 2020
United States Australian Football League A 501(C)3 Not-For-Profit Organization UNITED STATES AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE Executive Board Annual Report 2020 UNITED STATES AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE A 501(C)3 Not-For-Profit Organization Table of Contents Year in Review ................................................................................................................................. 3 USAFL Member Clubs ...................................................................................................................... 8 Executive Board, Portfolios and Staff ............................................................................................. 9 Virtual Nationals ........................................................................................................................... 11 USAFL Foundation ......................................................................................................................... 12 Financial Management ................................................................................................................. 13 2020 USAFL Contact List ............................................................................................................... 19 2 UNITED STATES AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE A 501(C)3 Not-For-Profit Organization Year in Review 366 pages fell from the calendar in 2020. In that respect, it was like any other year, or at least the ones that fall when we play catch up to account for the earth’s rotation around the sun. But 2020 was not any ordinary year. -
Justice Center Open House Scheduled May 27-28
Business News Pages 33-34 www.fairfield-city.org What do you think? May 2006 Survey on Page 3-4 PUBLISHED QUARTERLY BY THE CITY OF FAIRFIELD, OHIO Justice Center open house scheduled May 27-28 The Police Department and the Municipal Court have begun the process of moving operations into the recently completed Fairfield Justice Center. The new 50,000 square foot structure addresses the need for larger facilities after both divisions outgrew their respective quarters on State Route 4, where they have served residents for nearly two decades in a converted restaurant. The Police Department has targeted May 8 as its official first day of operations in the new building. The Court expects to hold its first proceedings on May 10. BYENHANCED PHOTO INC. AVI, DEAN LANGEVIN, The enhanced photograph above shows the west side of the new Justice Center. The entrance for the A public open house has been scheduled Court is shown on the far left. Access to the Police Department is shown in the center of the picture. from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, May 27-28. After a brief and adequate space for visitors to view separate addresses. The Court’s address opening ceremony, guided tours will be proceedings. In addition to the main is 675 Nilles Road. The Police provided to non-restricted areas of the courtroom, a smaller courtroom will be Department is located at 5230 Pleasant new facility. A variety of exhibits and available for simultaneous proceedings, Avenue. informative services have been planned when needed. -
Anti-Trust Acts and Monopolistic Competition Julius Cohen
Cornell Law Review Volume 24 Article 4 Issue 1 December 1938 Anti-Trust Acts and Monopolistic Competition Julius Cohen Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.cornell.edu/clr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Julius Cohen, Anti-Trust Acts and Monopolistic Competition , 24 Cornell L. Rev. 80 (1938) Available at: http://scholarship.law.cornell.edu/clr/vol24/iss1/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Scholarship@Cornell Law: A Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Cornell Law Review by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Cornell Law: A Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE ANTI-TRUST ACTS AND "MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION" A Case Study JULIUS COHEN One thing is clear. The steady match towards concentrated economic power has not been stemmed by the anti-trust acts.1 Whether the Sherman Act was "intended to mean anything save a big noise to gull the gullible"2 or was a serious attempt to preserve "free competition", it has neither "disintegrated society into individual atoms' 3 nor eliminated the existence of monopolistic control. In the judicial laboratory the anti-trust laws have been distilled to represent mere limitations upon certain competitive tactics.4 The safety zone carved out by the Standard Oi15 and Tobacco cases,6 the protective cloak placed around the control manifested by the United States Shoe Machinery Co. case,7 the sanctioning of price leadership in the steel industry,8 and the approval of -
City Web Site to Get New Look & Functionality
Business News Pages 3-4 www.fairfield-city.org Parks Rec & reation November 2006 News Pag es 5-29 PUBLISHED QUARTERLY BY THE CITY OF FAIRFIELD, OHIO City web site to get new look & functionality This month, the updates and partmental staff, who spent months City of Fairfield’s new ways to evaluating the current Web site and talk- official Web site, get them, ing to people in the community about www.fairfield- including e- their needs and expectations. The city.org, will get mail news group’s primary goal was to preserve a fresh look and alerts and the award-winning depth and breadth new online tools, RSS feeds, of information, but to make it more all designed to which are accessible to the user. help you more automatical- easily interact ly updated Services available through the Web site with your local lists of our include: government. newest I announce- Payment of water, sewer and trash bills. Among the new ments and I Search of the city’s calendar of events. features you’ll features that Visitors can even submit information about see on the site are can be read a non-profit or community group event. a friendlier navi- by special I gation; tools for news reader Review Fairfield Municipal Court users with dis- programs. records. abilities; a section devoted to Fairfield’s I Download or electronically complete business community and more frequent The redesign is the work of an interde- many of the City’s forms. I Search a listing of programs and classes Community Arts Center goes Wi-Fi offered by the Parks and Recreation Department. -
JOURNAL of MILK and FOOD TECHNOLOGY Official Publication of the International Association of Milk Sanitarians (Association Organized 1911)
JOURNAL OF MILK AND FOOD TECHNOLOGY Official Publication of the International Association of Milk Sanitarians (Association Organized 1911) Office of Publication 374 Broadway, Albany, N. Y, Entered as second class mmatter atter at the Post Office at Albany, N. Y., MMarch arch 4, 1942, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Published bimonthly beginning with the January number. Subscription rate, $2.00 per volume. Single copy, SO cents. (For complete Journal Information, see page 178) CONTENTS Editorials Page No. Public Health Service Disease Outbreak Reports, 1945 ...................... 125 Biological Technology ............................................................................. 129 “Regular” Health Department ............................................................... 130 Abstracts of the Literature of Food and Sanitary Technology During 1946—Arthur S. Levine ................................................................. 131 Studies of Coliform Organisms in Dairy Products—Leon Buchbinder and Edythe C. Alff ............................................................................ 137 Effect of Stabilizers on Frozen Cream—R. W. B ell.................................... 149 Measuring Sanitary Practices in Public Eating Establishments—Robert Anderson, C. W. Anderson, and N. O. Gunderson...................... 158 Control Practices Used in Supervision of Vitamin D Milk by City and State Milk Sanitarians—K. G. Weckel, Chairman....................... 167 Clean Babcock Test Bottles—Clare W. Rink............................................ -
US Footy Ten Year Commemorative Book
US Footy Ten Year Commemorative Book The First Ten Years of Australian Rules Football in America. “For the good of the game, for the love of the game” USFOOTY United States Australian Football League A REAL USFOOTY THANKS TO President’s Report “If you dream it, you can do it.” Walt Disney Over ten years ago a group of ten Australians and Americans met in a barn in Indiana over a beer or two and dreamed about starting an Australian Rules Football League in the USA. From this gathering and the hard work of many, the USAFL celebrates its tenth year of operation. A dream became a reality and a game born in Australia is quickly establishing itself as a strong minor sport in the land of professional sport. Our tenth National Championships are being played in the city where the first game was played - Louisville, Kentucky. Our Championships have grown over the years from a small gathering of clubs to a significant number that produce economic benefits to the host club and city, but more importantly the gathering of teams is a chance to celebrate football and the league on an annual basis. If you haven’t been to the USAFL Championships you are missing a great celebration of grass roots sport. At these Championships we will celebrate those players, coaches, umpires and officials who have been integral to the success of the USAFL. We will remember past matches and past Championships. The stories will be told of those fantastic road trips and the characters that make being part of a football team one of the great experiences of life. -
Part 3. Timeline in the Development of Farmstead, Electrification, and Processing Equipment (Also See the Home and Household Items Timeline)
Part 3. Timeline in the Development of Farmstead, Electrification, and Processing Equipment (also see the Home and Household Items timeline) Note: the italic letters at the end of each entry refer to the references. 1626 First commercial flour mill built in colonies in New Amsterdam (New York). AOAA CLAA 1746 Reverse osmosis (membrane separation) reported by Frenchman Abbé Jean An- toine Nollet, 1700-1770. EAFBE GLSB 1714 Change from alcohol-filled to mercury-filled thermometer by Polish-Dutch- German Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit, 1686-1736, who introduced the Fahrenheit temperature scale in 1717 (see 1733). BDPE BEST DSB EB MWBD WOI 1730 Claimed to be first cotton mill built, Gloucester, England. STF 1731, 1732, 1734 Water-driven mechanical thresher invented (1731 in DID), using rotary flails beginning in 1734, built by Scot Michael Menzies, ?? -1766. BDPE DID STF 1733 Flying shuttle, which led to automatic weaving, patent granted to John Kay, 1705- c.1764, England. SAID STF 1733 Mercury thermometer invented by Frenchman Joseph-Nicolas Delisle, 1688- 1768, in St. Petersburg, Russia. Conflict in information in different references (see 1714). CLAA DID DSB 1742 Centigrade (100 units between freezing and boiling of water) scale for thermometer introduced by Swede Anders Celsius, 1701-1744; in 1948 became known as the Celsius temperature scale and adopted by many as the official designation. BEST WOI 1764 First modern greenhouse in the USA built in New York. STF 1768 Fanning mill for cleaning grain patented and manufactured by Scots Andrew Meikle, 1719-1811, and George Meikle, sons of James Meikle. GH HT 1769 Cast iron introduced for use in windmill construction by Englishman John Smeaton, 1724-1792, followed by other improvements in windmills. -
Sport-Scan Daily Brief
SPORT-SCAN DAILY BRIEF NHL 5/4/2021 Anaheim Ducks Colorado Avalanche 1211547 Ducks fall short against Blues 1211576 Top prospect Alex Newhook, 20, expected to make NHL 1211548 Ducks’ Ryan Getzlaf shows he still has something to offer debut during Avalanche’s road trip in loss to Blues 1211577 Colorado’s retail sportsbooks vary in stages of operation approaching Nuggets, Avalanche playoffs Arizona Coyotes 1211578 Deen’s List: Nazem Kadri’s slump buster helps Avalanche 1211549 Arizona Coyotes lose two leads, game to Kings; playoff overcome two-goal deficit hopes on the brink 1211579 Third-period rally sends Avalanche to 5-4 overtime victory 1211550 Arizona Coyotes center Nick Schmaltz injured in pregame in San Jose warmups, out vs. Kings 1211580 Ryan Graves back in Avs lineup tonight, Newhook to play 1211551 With playoffs chances slim, Coyotes taking 'Game 7' soon mentality into final week of season 1211581 Dubnyk on Covid list Boston Bruins Columbus Blue Jackets 1211552 A win, and they’re in: Bruins blank Devils to clinch spot in 1211582 Emil Bemstrom's first career hat trick not enough for Blue Stanley Cup playoffs Jackets in OT, naturally 1211553 Goaltending rotation is a high priority for Bruins heading 1211583 Elvis Merzlikins shining under spotlight again as Blue down the stretch Jackets' top goaltending option 1211554 Bruins clinch a playoff berth with a 3-0 victory over the 1211584 Blue Jackets evaluating Lehtonen, Bayreuther with eye on Devils next season's roster 1211555 Bruins Notebook: LW Brad Marchand reaches milestone 1211585 -
SPORT-SCAN DAILY BRIEF NHL 4/17/2020 Anaheim Ducks Colorado Avalanche 1182887 Column: Kings Vs
SPORT-SCAN DAILY BRIEF NHL 4/17/2020 Anaheim Ducks Colorado Avalanche 1182887 Column: Kings vs. Ducks virtual showdown will feature fan 1182916 If NHL resumes play, Jared Bednar needs “two weeks or favorites from the past less” to get Avalanche up to speed 1182888 This day in sports: Hockey great Wayne Gretzky 1182917 Potential NHL first-round pick Ty Smilanic of Elizabeth announces retirement chasing stardom 1182918 Avs’ Jared Bednar on players’ health, hope for the NHL Arizona Coyotes season and staying ready 1182889 Death threats and depression: Replaying Torres’ series- 1182919 How a powerhouse college hockey program stays on altering hit on Hossa course in this new world 1182920 Five weeks later, Avalanche coach Jared Bednar Boston Bruins discusses NHL pause, possible return 1182890 Brad Marchand thinks younger teams would have an edge if NHL resumes this season Columbus Blue Jackets 1182891 Bruins’ cooped-up Brad Marchand has thoughts 1182921 A look back: Blue Jackets coach John Tortorella still 1182892 Ray Bourque was a worthy torch-bearer for Bruins bothered by perceived disrespect 1182893 Brad Marchand cops to the one player he would never talk 1182922 The busiest Blue Jacket: How trainer Mike Vogt manages trash about a season full of injury 1182894 Another Bruins teammate takes a hilarious quarantine dig at Tuukka Rask Detroit Red Wings 1182895 Why President Trump is right to prioritize sports as 1182923 Red Wings need pair of defensemen in free agency America tries to reopen for business 1182924 Red Wings survey: Where fans stand on Steve Yzerman, 1182896 Hindsight 2020: Bruins misfired badly in first round of 2015 rising stars, the rebuild NHL Draft 1182897 Phil Esposito unplugged: Hall of Famer re-lives career and Edmonton Oilers talks today’s stars 1182925 Lowetide: Why Jan Mysak could be a value pick for the 1182898 Distant Replay: How we miss the now-dormant fireworks Oilers at the 2020 Draft between Bruins-Canadiens Los Angeles Kings Buffalo Sabres 1182926 Column: Kings vs. -
Riverview East Academy
Riverview East Academy 3555 Kellogg Ave http://rivervieweast.cps-k12.org/ Cincinnati OH 45226 With pride in ourselves and our school community, we SOAR higher! Safely practicing what we know to be right Orderly moving upward in the right direction Achieving our very best Respectful in all situations TELEPHONE DIRECTORY Riverview East Academy Main Office……….363-3400 Fax…………363-3420 Attendance Line ……….363- 3403 School Nurse 363-3421 Community Resource Coordinator 363-3489 ABC Before & After School 399-1731 Children’s Home Counselor 363-3448 Cincinnati Public Schools 363-0000 CPS Transportation 363-0330 First Student Transportation 761-6100 CPS Customer Service 363-0123 CPS Food Services (Lunch Application information) 363-0800 CPS Student Services (Special Education) 363-0293 1 A NOTE FROM THE PRINCIPAL August 2015 Dear Students: Welcome back to another school year. We expect each student to be successful at Riverview East Academy. Successful people are described as being organized and well planned. Since our goal is have every student at Riverview achieve the highest caliber of education possible, we recognize the importance of the student and family role in this goal. This year we are asking you to use a planner on a daily basis to help with organization and planning. The planner is something that you should use on a daily basis for several reasons. The first reason is that you should use this planner to record any assignments that you have to do in your classes. This will help you to be organized and keep track of current and future assignments. The second reason you will use this planner is to track any reminders that you need to have handy.