Home » Archives for June 2014 » Page 140
Why Kris is Coco's dream co-star -
June 22, 2014 by
Mr HomeBuilder
 
      Kris Aquino and Coco Martin. Composite image    
    MANILA - Coco Martin considers his upcoming film with Kris    Aquino a dream project, calling the actress a "queen" in the    genre they will tackle.  
    The "Ikaw Lamang" actor and Aquino will co-star in a sequel to    the 2011 horror film "Feng Shui," which also starred the    actress and went on to become one of the highest grossing local    movies of all time.  
    The sequel, still under the direction of Chito Rono, has been    submitted for consideration as one of the competing entries in    this year's Metro Manila Film Festival.  
    Martin was asked about his involvement in the project Thursday    on the sidelines of a thanksgiving party for his latest film    "Maybe This Time," which has so far grossed P133 million.  
    "Ako kasi, sabi ko nga, isa sa mga pangarap ko na makatrabaho    siya (Aquino). Siyempre, pag sinabi mong horror, ang unang-una    sa akin... Siyempre, sino ba 'yung reyna diyan? Kumbaga kanino    bang forte 'yan? Sabi ko talaga, si Ms. Kris Aquino," he said.  
    Owing to a string of successful horror films she top-billed --    "Sukob," "Dalaw," and "Segunda Mano," among others -- Aquino is    dubbed local showbiz's "Queen of Horror Movies."  
    "Atsaka isa talaga ako sa mga fans ng 'Feng Shui' noon," Martin    continued. "Lalung-lalo na, naalala ko nga, hindi ko siya    mapanood mag-isa. Kaya kung makakagawa ako, sana magkaroon ng    'Feng Shui 2.'"  
    Relating how plans for a sequel came about, Martin said he    candidly mentioned the idea to Aquino, who instantly got on    board.  
    "Hindi naman totally ako nag-propose. Kumbaga, pangarap ko lang    talaga. Gusto ko gumawa ng horror movie and naisip ko lang. And    then noong nagkita kami, binanggit ko lang sa kanya," he said.  
Read more:
Why Kris is Coco's dream co-star
 
Category 
Feng Shui | Comments Off on Why Kris is Coco's dream co-star  
    Relatives and friends of slain businessman Richard King on    Tuesday evening cried for justice as they attended the last    night of his wake in Cebu City.  
    Chinese traditions including the practice of feng shui    were observed in preparing for King's burial, GMA Cebu    reported on Wednesday.  
    Exclusive footage taken by GMA Cebu showed feng shui expert    Peter Tan supervising the arrangements. King was to be buried    at the Cebu Memorial Park.  
    Tan used a compass and measuring tape to make sure King's    remains were aligned with the sun. The feng shui arrangements    sought to get rid of negative energy and bring in good luck.  
    King reportedly owns the Crown Regency Group of Hotels.  
The rest is here:
Slain trader Richard Kings kin, friends cry for justice on last night of wake in Cebu
 
Category 
Feng Shui | Comments Off on Slain trader Richard Kings kin, friends cry for justice on last night of wake in Cebu  
Generals #39; Marder clears the fences
6/15/14: Jackson #39;s Jack Marder hits a solo homer in the Generals #39; 10-4 loss to the Jacksonville Suns Check out http://www.MiLB.com/video for more! MiLB.com is the official site of Minor League...
By: minorleaguebaseball
Read this article:
Generals' Marder clears the fences - Video
 
Category 
Fences | Comments Off on Generals’ Marder clears the fences – Video  
TV9 - Himachal government fences Beas river 1 week after tragedy
By: snehatvtv9news
Read the rest here:
TV9 - Himachal government fences Beas river 1 week after tragedy - Video
 
Category 
Fences | Comments Off on TV9 – Himachal government fences Beas river 1 week after tragedy – Video  
Fences from the Pony Club Regional Junior Tetrathlon 2014
These are the fences from the Pony Club Regional Junior tetrathlon 2014 held at Milton Keynes Eventing Centre.
By: SNT1900
Originally posted here:
Fences from the Pony Club Regional Junior Tetrathlon 2014 - Video
 
Category 
Fences | Comments Off on Fences from the Pony Club Regional Junior Tetrathlon 2014 – Video  
    Franklin Lakes  Trying to find a solution to deer impalements    in the borough, officials appear to be straddling the fence    between animal protection and practicality.  
    Council members and officials at a Feb. 4 meeting favored    passing a law that would prevent property owners from erecting    spiked fences in the future, but would not require residents to    remove such fences that are already standing.  
    Some deer have attempted to leap over the fences, but instead    have fallen short and landed on the sharp spikes atop the    fences, leading to a slow death.  
    Officials said they need to consider the cost for property    owners to remove fences, which caused four deer deaths last    month and an estimated six annually in recent years, according    to Mayor Frank Bivona.  
    "You have a situation here where someone's spent an enormous    amount of money to put up some of these fences," Bivona said.    "What's our ability to go back and say, 'You can't have this    fence,' after we allowed them to put this fence in?"  
    Borough Administrator Gregory Hart said the borough currently    has no ordinance that is specific to spikes or fences.  
    However, Bivona said, the borough has attempted "to hang [its]    hat on" an existing ordinance as a means to get residents to    remove spiked fences.  
    The borough's current property maintenance ordinance prohibits    "exterior surfaces or parts of buildings or structures    containing sharp, rough or projecting surfaces or objects which    might cause injury to persons coming in contact therewith."  
    "If there's something that's egregious out there, I think that    we should go after it," Bivona said.  
    Bivona said there are many spiked fences in the borough, but    many of them have small spikes that are not a threat to deer.    He said the new ordinance would target fences that have "big    impaling-type spikes."  
Read more:
Franklin Lakes to consider law banning new spiked fences
 
Category 
Fences | Comments Off on Franklin Lakes to consider law banning new spiked fences  
    By Richard Ilgenfritz    rilgenfritz@mainlinemedianews.com  
      Citing security and recommendations by law enforcement,      district officials approved the plan in February that would      place the fences around each of the five properties.    
      Recently contractors began removing vegetation from areas      around where work is to be done. Actual construction on the      fences is expected to begin once school is out for the      summer.    
      At a Friday, June 13 afternoon Facility Committee meeting,      about two dozen residents attended the meeting with many of      them speaking up and raising concerns over the project.    
      My concern is that the fence plan is going to interfere with      our enjoyment of our property and detract from the value of      our property, said Berwyn resident Rob Adams.    
      Other speakers raised concern over the costs of the project      when the district has complained about financial constraints.    
      You really need to convince stakeholders that a 5-foot chain      link fence is worth $250,000 when we have such financial      woes, said Kathleen Johnson.    
      Several residents also brought up the idea questioning the      effectiveness of a five-foot fence in keeping out an intruder      when one resident said, Theres hardly anybody in this room      that if they wanted to get over that 5-foot fence couldnt      get over it.    
      Johnson also expressed concern over the security and the      potential for an evacuation of students.    
      We are concerned about emergency situations. While I have      been told and many of us have been told in our constant      questions over the past several weeks there is no scenario      that would require all of the children to be evacuated from a      school property. Thats just not an answer that parents want      to hear. We understand that evacuation plans cannot be      publicly divulged. We understand the details of those plans      cannot be publicly divulged. Were not asking for that. What      were asking for is confidence that when you completely      enclose a school property that you can get our children off      [school property]. It does not take a creative imagination to      envision a scenario where we need to the children off [school      property] and we need to get them off quickly, Johnson said.      Continued...    
Follow this link:
Residents voice concern over fence construction at Tredyffrin/Easttown
 
Category 
Fences | Comments Off on Residents voice concern over fence construction at Tredyffrin/Easttown  
    WYCKOFF  Property owners along Route 208 with damaged and    dilapidated fencing near the highway are going to be notified    they are expected to fix or replace those barricades, according    to Mayor Douglas Christie.  
    Some of the dilapidated and damaged fencing may be on a    homeowners property or in the state highways right of way,    Police Chief Benjamin Fox said. Regardless, homeowners are    responsible for maintenance of fences, he said.  
    Christie said the broken fencing is presenting a bad impression    of Wyckoff to travelers who use the busy 208 corridor. At the    April 1 Township Committee meeting, he described the area as a    "total ruin" in need of immediate attention. He attributed the    damaged fencing to snow plowing and long-term wear and tear.  
    Fox noted that his department received eight phone calls from    residents along Route 208 during a mid-February snowstorm    stating that the New Jersey Department of Transportation plow    operators had damaged or knocked down fencing. Prior to that    storm, Fox noted, a lot of fencing along Wyckoff s section of    the state highway already was in disrepair.  
    Fox said that he has reached out to the eight residents who    called and provided them with an NJDOT claim form to file for    damages, along with a phone number.  
    "Clearly there needs to be a cleanup and repair along that    stretch," Fox said.  
    At the committees March 21 meeting, Committeeman Kevin Rooney    said that Fox raised the issue of fence damaged by state snow    plow operators.  
    In an interview April 2, Rooney said that the committee    instructed local Code Enforcement Officer Fred Depken to "take    note of where fences have been damaged" and send an "abatement    notice" to homeowners. Rooney said that approximately 24    properties are involved. He said homeowners would be told to    "repair it, replace it, or remove it."  
    He said homeowners filing for damages with the DOT and those    making their own repairs would be given "a reasonable" time to    complete work.  
    "We have received more and more inquiries from residents about    this. It is an eyesore and people are just becoming more aware.    Now is the time to take care of it," said Rooney.  
Read more:
Officials say homeowners must mend fences
 
Category 
Fences | Comments Off on Officials say homeowners must mend fences  
    THE war of words between Federal Member for Maranoa Bruce Scott    and state Agriculture Minister John McVeigh over pest animal    funding continues, following Mr McVeigh's announcement at    Longreach last week that none of the $5.6 million allocated for    pest control in Queensland's drought declared areas could be    spent on fencing.  
    Mr Scott has strongly advocated for the state to spend its    federal allocation on hard infrastructure, saying that    conventional methods of control were failing.  
    On at least two occasions last week Mr McVeigh stated that the    guidelines of the federal-state pest management funding    agreement precluded the state putting its allocation towards    check fences.  
    "We have had distracting commentary in recent weeks," Mr    McVeigh told a gathering of proponents for the 1300km check    fence proposal.  
    "Just to clarify, the project guidelines say, thou shalt not    spend money on fences."  
    The following morning a similar comment was front and centre at    the meeting called by Mr McVeigh and attended principally by    mayors and wild dog advisory group chairmen to discuss how the    federal funding would be allocated.  
    "There is no money for fencing," he told the meeting.  
    "I imagine the federal government thinking is that in times of    drought we need to hit dogs hard while they're vulnerable."  
    In the wake of these comments Mr Scott said he had received    advice from his federal colleague Barnaby Joyce's department    that there was nothing in the agreement that prevented money    being spent on fencing.  
    "I was told that it was a matter for the Queensland government    whether they wanted to apply a portion of the $5.6m to fences.  
Read more:
State, feds divided over fencing funds
 
Category 
Fences | Comments Off on State, feds divided over fencing funds  
    Dennis Tweet spent much of Thursday trudging through messy    fields on his farm to fix a fence damaged by flooding that    followed this week's heavy rainfalls.  
     Thursday's weather:     Dayton declares emergency in 35 counties; officials warn of    flooding's health risks  
     Photo gallery:     It just keeps raining. And raining.  
    He spent a lot of time splashing and occasionally stumbling    through a ditch. In some places, the water was knee deep.  
    "Oh, golly, I hit a deep hole there," Tweet said after one    misstep.  
    Rain and hail have made a mess of thousands of acres of    Minnesota farmland, so much so that U.S. Agriculture Department    officials are out assessing the toll. They don't have a    state-wide damage estimate yet, but farmers don't need an    official assessment to know that the storms have created a lot    of extra work.  
    Since the series of storms began Saturday, some farmers in    southwest Minnesota have measured nearly a foot of rainfall.  
    The rain caused a creek running through Tweet's farm to    overflow. As he slogged through his fields on the way to the    broken fence, flood water bashed his fence with all sorts of    debris before he spotted a six-foot branch tangled in the barb    wire.  
    "I can just as well get these trees out of here so that they    won't have to do this to me again," Tweet said.  
    After he wrestled the branch free, he tossed it over the fence    into the ditch.  
Visit link:
After the rains, grueling cleanup on the farm
 
Category 
Fences | Comments Off on After the rains, grueling cleanup on the farm  
« old entrysnew entrys »