Christmas Light Letter Panels
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1Be Jolly Be Joyful; Ails Short of Goal Ponder Christmas by CATHY FERGUSON by LOLA SHERMAN 'Tis the $E•Son to Be Jolly
'Vets Must Sign Today Warmer, Light Rain The weatbennan predicts clou ore an \ fet t-rans uttendinf:" . a dy skll'!l and occasional IIKht .......,. ouoc1er PL 550 mu•t si~ n rain In the Santa Cla.ra. Valley .......,. monthly attt"nda nN~ fonn~ t oday. ThP foreca.fiter antl~i ., tl!daY If they wish to re<·~i v e patf'8 sllchtly hlcher temp<'ra. ,.,-t In January. Y• terans t ures, with the high r1Ulgtng he .moe II located In Rooru lOS or tween 51 and 80 decrees, and 1M Adiiii.W.tratloa Building. 110utherly winds of I 0 to %0 mUe. an hour. NO. 57 YES, DOROTHY, THERE IS A SANTA CLAUS .Chest Drive Ends, 1Be Jolly Be Joyful; ails Short of Goal Ponder Christmas By CATHY FERGUSON By LOLA SHERMAN 'Tis the $e•SOn to be jolly. The Campus Chest thermometer poster stuffed in an Outer Q~ad 'lliSte can symbolized the end of the student Chest Drive. Jolly over all the New Year parties you won't attend. Jolly over a" the homeworlc you win finally do. Jolly over the Christmas gifts Approximately $900 total was contributed, according to Robert you'll get, even the itchy red sweater from your maiden aunt. And activities adviser. The goal was $2500. most of all, jolly over all the "givingness" of Christmas--.>nd there Almost $1500, a record, was collected last year when a talent you are without a red or green cent to your name. thon was one of the special events presented. The "givingness" of Christmas .. -
Christmas Lights Electrical Safety for the Festive Season
Christmas lights Electrical safety for the festive season electricalsafetyfirst.org.uk Are your old Christmas lights still safe? Once a year, twinkling fairy lights and colourful Christmas illuminations are retrieved from damp, dusty storage spaces and used to decorate homes for the festive season. But, poorly stored and old electrical decorations and overloaded sockets can create unnecessary hazards at this time of year. Lights you have used for years may not be designed to contend with damp winter weather or meet rigorous new safety standards. Keep this leaflet with your Christmas lights for future reference. 3 What to consider when buying new Christmas lights If in doubt about the quality of your lights, the safest and most sensible solution is to replace them from a reputable supplier. Christmas lights operate at either mains Electrical Safety First recommends the voltage (230 volts) or extra-low voltage use of LED over traditional filament (typically 12-24 volts). Extra-low voltage Christmas lighting because: Christmas lights are often described as “low voltage” on product packaging. • They operate at extra-low voltage which significantly reduces the risk The safest Christmas lights operate of electric shock. at extra-low voltage because they are powered by a Safety Extra-Low Voltage • They use much less power, generating transformer that will significantly reduce little heat and so reducing the risk of the risk of electric shock, even if there fire and burns. This makes them safer is a fault or a lamp breaks. to use. The rated voltage of Christmas lights should • They are estimated to use 80-90% be marked on the product and is normally less electricity than filament lamps stated on its packaging or user instructions. -
Sales, Santa, and Good Fellows: Celebrating Christmas in Omaha
Nebraska History posts materials online for your personal use. Please remember that the contents of Nebraska History are copyrighted by the Nebraska State Historical Society (except for materials credited to other institutions). The NSHS retains its copyrights even to materials it posts on the web. For permission to re-use materials or for photo ordering information, please see: http://www.nebraskahistory.org/magazine/permission.htm Nebraska State Historical Society members receive four issues of Nebraska History and four issues of Nebraska History News annually. For membership information, see: http://nebraskahistory.org/admin/members/index.htm Article Title: Sales, Santa, and Good Fellows: Celebrating Christmas in Omaha Full Citation: Tommy R Thompson, “Sales, Santa, and Good Fellows: Celebrating Christmas in Omaha,” Nebraska History 68 (1987): 127-141 URL of article: http://www.nebraskahistory.org/publish/publicat/history/full-text/NH1987Santa.pdf Date: 10/31/2013 Article Summary: Many Christmas activities and unique holiday customs developed in Omaha, beginning in the 1850s. Beautiful downtown store window displays had disappeared by 1980, but a strong tradition of charitable work has endured for more than a century. Cataloging Information: Nebraska Place Names: Omaha Omaha Stores: L O Jones and Company, Hayden Brothers, J L Brandeis and Sons (Boston Store), Peoples Store, Union Outfitting Company, Bennett Company, Burgess Nash Company, The Nebraska, Tully’s Hat Store Charitable Groups and Funds: Sisters of Mercy nuns, Christian Workers -
December 2014 | Issue 12
CULLMANSENSE.COM December 1, 2014 EYES OF PROGRESS 9 Volume 45 December 2014 | Issue 12 artist, this is an opportunity to gain support needed for your pieces and let exposure within our Chamber, as us know if you will need any special well as with community members. accommodations (ex: outlet). Limit- It affords artists a chance to give ed space is available. We would like back to our local community and to thank all of our current members also to make a profit should they and invite future members to join us choose to do so. Fifty percent of pro- as we honor our local artists and cel- ceeds are donated to the local Food ebrate the beautiful works of art that Bank and 50 percent to the artists; originate from our talented commu- however, the artist may also opt nity. Please email info@cullman- to donate 100 percent of the pro- chamber.org to register and request ceeds to our local area food bank. your submission form, stop by the The deadline to submit yourChamber office or call 256-734-0454. artwork will be today, Monday, If you would like to attend please Our final Business After Hours event After Hours Silent Auction/Chamber December 1, 2014. Any medium is call the chamber to register or res- to conclude this quarterly series will for Charities event to celebrate the accepted and subject to approval by gister online. Members $15.00 be held on Tuesday, December 9, end of a fantastic year! We are seek- the Chamber. You must be 18 years and Future Members $20.00. -
Shopping for Christmas 2016: Retail Prospects
Shopping for Christmas 2016: Retail Prospects ~ A Research Report for VoucherCodes.co.uk, part of RetailMeNot Report Prepared by Centre for Retail Research Limited, Nottingham September 2016 Research Report Shopping for Christmas 2016 Shopping for Christmas 2016: Retail Prospects ~ A Research Report for VoucherCodes.co.uk, part of RetailMeNot Executive Brief Report. This independent report into the prospects for Holiday or Christmas shopping in 2016 has been commissioned by RetailMeNot, the world’s leading marketplace of digital offers, and carried out by the Centre for Retail Research based in Nottingham, England. Spending on shopping by consumers in the final weeks before Christmas is vital to most retailers’ profitability and many achieve 20% or more of their annual sales in this period. This is only so because, irrespective of background, the Holiday festivities, including celebrations and gift-giving, are an important and traditional part of social and family life. Shopping for Christmas 2016, considers the Holiday/Christmas prospects for retailers and consumers in nine important countries: Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, Spain, UK, the U.S.A. and Canada. Their combined populations are 699.2 million. We estimate that Christmas spending this year will be: £280.991 bn (€323.895 bn) in Europe; £492.246 bn ($635.96 bn) in the U.S.; and £38.470 bn ($49.84 bn) in Canada. The 2016 report has taken account of major shifts in exchange rates and both the 2015 and the 2016 figures are based on current rates of exchange. This is to ensure that changes given in the report reflect only changes in the retail sector, and not currency movements. -
Consumption, Coca-Colonisation, Cultural Resistance
CORE Metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk Provided by University of Salford Institutional Repository Consumption, ‘coca-colonisation’, cultural resistance—and Santa Claus George McKay At least four of the seven deadly sins against which Christianity once railed are now seen by some to be venerated in Christmas celebrations: avarice, gluttony, lust, and envy. The conflict is by no means uniquely American … but America has contributed the uniquely American Santa Claus and has become an arbiter of Christmas celebrations around the world, primarily because of its part import of European emigrant traditions and its present export of popular culture. (Belk 1993, 75) In what ways has the iconography and practice of Christmas been shaped, understood and consumed as an American experience? This chapter explores explains and questions the ideological valence of Christmas in part as an American socio-economic and cultural (export) practice. I do acknowledge the fact that Daniel Miller has identified a number of the international strands of influence operating transatlantically on Christmas from the mid-19th century on whereby ‘[t]his syncretic modern form extracts the Christmas tree from the German tradition, the filling of stockings from the Dutch tradition, the development of Santa Claus mainly from the United States, the British Christmas card’ (Miller 1993, 4). It is telling that the two American artists responsible for the most influential visual representations of Santa Claus had strong European backgrounds: in the 19th century, cartoonist Thomas Nast (born in Germany in 1840), and in the 20th, advertising illustrator Haddon Sundblom (Sweden). I recognise too the shifting relationship America has had with Christmas, it being historically sometimes hugely antagonistic: in early modern America Christmas was actually banned by the Puritans (Miller 1993, 3), though by the late 18th century some Americans were celebrating St Nicholas in part as an anti-British sentiment (Carrier 1993, 66). -
Blandford Forum Town Council
BLANDFORD FORUM TOWN COUNCIL To: Town & General Purposes Committee Members (Cllr H Mieville, Cllr R Holmes, Cllr L Lindsay, Cllr L Hitchings, Cllr B Quayle, Cllr C Stevens, Cllr A Cross, Cllr P Clark, Cllr P Osborne) All other members of the Town Councillors Dorset Council Councillors Members of the Public & the Press Dear Member TOWN & GENERAL PURPOSES COMMITTEE You are summoned to attend a meeting of the Town & General Purposes Committee to be held online using Microsoft Teams on Monday 12th October 2020 at 7.00pm to consider the following items. Linda Scott-Giles Town Clerk 5th October 2020 A G E N D A This meeting will be held in accordance with The Local Authorities and Police and Crime Panels (Coronavirus) (Flexibility of Local Authority and Police and Crime Panel Meetings) (England and Wales) Regulations 2020 (“the 2020 Regulations”) which came in to force on 4th April 2020. The 2020 Regulations enable local councils to hold remote meetings (including by video and telephone conferencing) for a specified period until May 2021. The 2020 Regulations apply to local council meetings, committee and sub-committee meetings in England. Members of the public are invited to join the meeting by clicking here. If, as a member of the public, you wish to speak in the Public Session, please notify the Town Clerk prior to the meeting via [email protected] or 01258 489490. Members are reminded that the Council has a general duty to consider the following matters in the exercise of any of its functions: Equal Opportunities (race, gender, sexual orientation, marital status, religion, belief or disability), Crime & Disorder, Health and Safety and Human Rights. -
In This Issue
Chamber Magazine Issue 4 2015 In this issue... Christmas shop window competition New members’ showcase Members’ networking events Wenlock Farm Shop moves to town centre Nathan named one of country’s top builders Ladder for Shropshire Apprenticeship Campaign Samaritans benefit from Alan Ward donation Barclays reveals Christmas retailers’ survey Morris Lubricants rescues XJ220 supercar Importance of lasting power of attorney Growing importance of cyber cover www.shrewsburybusiness.com follow us on Twitter: @shrewsbusiness Chairman’s foreword Christmas window competition Christmas comes to Chamber christmas shop window snowsbury Christmas is nearly upon us again, competition results announced... and the lights and tinsel are in the shop windows of Shrewsbury, The winners of the annual Shrewsbury so I have been reflecting back on Christmas Window competition have been the business year and what has revealed with judges praising the standard happened to our town in the last of entries. 12 months. Our town is more and more The competition included five categories seen as a desirable place to live and saw Deliciate, Heavenly Brides & Belles, and work. It made the top 10 in the The Sunday Times Best Places Mr David’s Hair & Beauty and Save the To Live In Britain charts. It has Children scoop the top prizes. been voted the most courteous town by the National Campaign Peter Bettis, president of Shrewsbury for Courtesy following the launch Business Chamber, which runs the of the Most Courteous Town competition in conjunction with the Award. It was second behind only Shrewsbury Chronicle, said the judges had a tough task picking the winners. -
Their Ancestors Signed the Mayflower Compact Heller Helps Political
SERVING CRANFORD, QARWOOD and KENILWORTH Vol. 94 No. 47 Published Every Thursday Wednesday, November 25, 1987 USPS 136 800 Second Class Postage Paid Cranford, N. J. 30 CENTS y?~''i Service tonight >ffS& The annual community | Thanksgiving service win take, place at 8 p m. today at the Trlni-' ty Episcopal Church, North and | Forest avenues. Clergy from, Cranford congregations will par- \ ticipato in the service. Tree lighting A traditional tree lighting | mv. ceremony will take place Friday j at 7 p.m. at the town Christmas tree hi the parking lot opposite | the municipal building. Santa will i greet children and Us helpers1 will distribute treats, the madrigal singers and brass] ensemble from Cranford High] School will perform. Garwood A Garwood beekeeper has quite a collection: 180,000 honey pit* Santa's first visit to town: C ^-^I,a>icaggy.^-^,^ZI::.' ••^..: •--^- —a roll students were announced for, c *• - ,i t« />i . r. * I1J,ws-on-de8lrod-gl+ts-to--perform^WiTrte^VVoTTrierland MedreT cording to police esTimalesT the first marking period. Page 19. -Sa^^nd-M^laus^t-Mangea oi mor Sun d a r Building event sponsored by-uajTExTravagaliza '87 Stage Show Sunday. Mayor's Park capped event. More photographs 25 ^ #™£ c? ? ?^ / , y- and received candy canes In show- In ffrehouse parking lot followed SS1 ui m? . a"d Mrs. Claus played by fernle Ragucci and musical parade and child visits with Santa that on pages 13, 18 and 21. Photo by Greg Price. Donate food Dot Mikus. Photo by Greg Price. Cranford Family Care is pro-] viding food baskets to less for- tunate residents for Thanksgiv- Their ancestors signed the Mayflower Compact ing. -
An Ethnohistorical Review of Health and Healing in Aklavik, NWT, Canada
“Never Say Die”: An Ethnohistorical Review of Health and Healing in Aklavik, NWT, Canada by Elizabeth Cooper A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies of The University of Manitoba in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of MASTER OF ARTS Department of Native Studies University of Manitoba Winnipeg Copyright © 2010 by Elizabeth Cooper Abstract The community of Aklavik, North West Territories, was known as the “Gateway to the North” throughout the first half of the Twentieth Century. In 1959, the Canadian Federal Government decided to relocate the town to a new location for a variety of economic and environmental reasons. Gwitch’in and Inuvialuit refused to move, thus claiming their current community motto “Never Say Die”. Through a series of interviews and participant observation with Elders in Aklavik and Inuvik, along with consultation of secondary literature and archival sources, this thesis examines ideas of the impact of mission hospitals, notions of health, wellness and community through an analysis of some of the events that transpired during this interesting period of history. Acknowledgements I would like to thank and honour the people in both Aklavik and Inuvik for their help and support with this project. I would like to thank my thesis committee, Dr. Christopher G Trott, Dr Emma LaRocque and Dr. Mark Rumel for their continued help and support throughout this project. I would like to thank the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Dr. S. Michelle Driedger’s Research in Science Communication CIHR-CFI Research Lab, University of Manitoba Graduate Studies, University of Manitoba Faculty of Arts, University of Manitoba, Department of Native Studies and University of Manitoba Graduate Students Association, for making both the research and dissemination of results for this project possible. -
X Sfiil W T E WISH
General Electric lighting special-Ialia- ts dow and. fasten each strand to I' i point out that following Uie floor. Secret of its i architectural lines of your house Is effect is a pair of tt pink co- u::day set root tc::ou placipg " illujtatcd one good guide to follow in lor' reflector bulbs In holders on r aPiSS-M- 4:23-i- ; 10':d Aeta W:M-8- 1. "--"' 108:8-1- ; ; Matthew 6:9 John l;trEoJ"r: ; Pwlm halah vvr indoor .Christmas lights. When the the floor beneath i the tree. Place lights are few and far between, na- the holders in the middle of each turally the effect will be leas spec half 'section of the tree and aim Cclcrcd Limits tacular. than' when they are placed the bulbs Upward. Holders are com. closer together. "''4 . v.' pletely wired and can. be plugged.' Host of us would say, on first Just as no cake lotoka festive with, into the nearest .electrical outlet thought that most houses put their out decorations,' lighted plastic out- For another, Interesting effect, en- best foot forward, during the sunv door, lamp posts extend ah twine strings of Christmas 'lights ' mer when grass Is green and flow? greeting at the; doorway. into the tinsel strands for 'a lighted era .blooming, but there's no time Ap outdoor weatherproof spotlight tree, effect' Of course, you can al- - of year 'when your house can look concealed in shrubbery .adds high- ways use your regular Christmas prettier than , when it's .lighted up lights and shadows to the doorway. -
Christmas Lights Guide
Christmas Lights Guide Have a pile of burned-out holiday lights? Replacing your old lights with new, more energy-efficient options? The following guide will help you recycle old lights, pick new ones, and offer important tips for a safe and bright holiday season! Repair before Recycle! Why replace the whole string for a few broken bulbs? Before you drop off your holiday light string, see if there are replacement bulbs available first to avoid unnecessary waste. And if You Do Need to Recycle... Christmas light strings are included in BC’s LightRecycle program and can be dropped off for free at participating light fixture recycling depots. The maximum return limit for any single visit is 5 fixtures, though some sites may accept more – call ahead to ensure the depot can accept larger volumes. Find your closest depot HERE. Options for commercial generators are located HERE. Please note that some decorative fixtures, such as light-up Christmas characters and artificial trees with em- bedded lights, are not included. Some retailers such as London Drugs also provide their own in-store recycling programs for Christmas lights. Contact your local store for details. Buying New Lights? Choose LED lights. They last 7 times longer and use 90% less energy than standard incandescent strings. They are also available for both indoor and outdoor use with many colours to choose from. Using a timer for your Christmas tree lights can help you reduce your energy consumption by 30-50%. Turn your outdoor lights on in the evening and leave them on for 4-6 hours to get the most savings.