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    Project Playhouse winners receive key at Minute Maid – Chron.com

    - August 27, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Published 10:08am, Friday, August 25, 2017

    Project Playhouse winners receive key at Minute Maid

    The key to HomeAid's All American Playhouse, the 2017 Project Playhouse that was designed and constructed by Taylor Morrison and Darling Homes, was officially presented to the winner at Minute Maid Park on Aug. 16.

    The Buckner family received the key on the ball field prior to the Astros vs. the Diamondbacks game. Project Playhouse raised over $106,000 for HomeAid's mission, to build new lives for homeless families and individuals through housing and community outreach.

    This is the eleventh anniversary of HomeAid's Project Playhouse, a fundraiser that builds hope and homes for Houston's homeless community. HomeAid Houston is a 501(c)(3) charity of the Greater Houston Builders Association. It is also the 11th year that HomeAid has partnered with the Houston Astros and the Astros Foundation on this fundraiser.

    Jonathan White, Taylor Morrison, division president and Michael Pomerleau, Taylor Morrison senior superintendent who oversaw the playhouse construction, drew the winning ticket on July 19.

    Taylor Morrison/Darling Homes designed and constructed this year's playhouse, named "The All American Playhouse," with donated materials and labor from GHBA members. Its team created a star-spangled design that included the American flag incorporated onto its exterior, a front porch and Dutch-style doors.

    The playhouse was fully loaded with amenities including air conditioning, a flat screen TV and gaming console, and child-sized furniture and decor to match the theme.

    The Taylor Morrison/Darling Homes Project Playhouse team included: Michael Pomerleau, Jonathan White, Amy Haywood Rino, Bill Dalton, Franklin Gonzalez, Daniel Cogan, David Wood, Caroline Noel, Sarah Starr, Keeley Motton, Roger Hollingworth, Rainbow Hayden, Roo Popp, Tara Slusser, Katlynn Thomas, Liz Parsons, Sarah Amaya, Tim DeRouen, Noira Bolin, Danielle Woods, Lewis Walker, Joyce Anderson, Mirna Colindres and Raquel Connor.

    Prior to the on-field key presentation, several Project Playhouse sponsors and volunteer groups were honored in Union Station. They included the "Hall of Fame" sponsors, Apex Foundation, Champion Energy Services, RoofTec and Wisenbaker Builder Services; the winning ticket sales team sold 229 tickets raising $1,145. The individual with record-breaking ticket sales, Lisa Clark, HomeAid board member and vice president of Ryko Development, sold 1,757 tickets raising $8,785.

    Jonathan White, division president for Taylor Morrison, Amy Rino, division president for Darling Homes, Bo Butler, president of the Greater Houston Builders Association, Salty Thomason, president of HomeAid and Bette Moser, executive director of HomeAid presented the key in front of the fans.

    For information, visit http://www.homeaidhouston.org or call the GHBA at 281-970-8970.

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    Project Playhouse winners receive key at Minute Maid - Chron.com

    House Window Repair & Window Installation | Mr. Handyman

    - August 27, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Window sticking? Chips on its exterior? If so, it is time that you contacted our professionals. At Mr. Handyman, we provide a variety of home window repair and window installation services that can get your windows working correctly in no time at all. In cases where the window needs a full replacement, we can work with you to remove your old ones and get the new ones installed correctly and quickly.

    No project is too small for the Mr. Handyman team! Call us to learn more about the different services that we provide. We are comfortable with all kinds of sash and casement windows, and were here to help you.

    Any of the following may be a sign that it is time to replace your windows:

    If you are experiencing any of the above, we can help. While we are skilled at performing all necessary repair services, the truth is that repairs will only extend the value of worn down windows for so long. If you are constantly calling to have your windows fixed, it may be time to consider having them replaced entirely.

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    House Window Repair & Window Installation | Mr. Handyman

    Mustafi move may not be as close as you think – Daily Cannon (satire) (blog)

    - August 27, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Although the Express claims that the Italian media are reporting Arsenals openness to a Mustafi departure to Inter Milan, SportWitness point out that it doesnt actually say anywhere in the Gazzetta dello Sport article that Arsenal are open to it.

    Other than that, the strongest evidence we have that the German defender might leave the Gunners is that Arsne Wenger hasnt completely ruled it out, just saying that the final days of the window are always unpredictable. Sky Italia say that the player has agreed to a move to Inter but the clubs havent agreed a deal. Thats called tapping up.

    But taking a look at the other side, it would certainly be a strange move by Arsenal to sell the most expensive defender in their history a year after they bought him without bringing in a replacement. All in the same window that Gabriel leaves for Valencia.

    There hasnt even been anything particularly reliable confirming that Mustafi even wants to go. Hes spent years in England before, with Everton, and only left when he couldnt get into the team.

    Shkodran has also just welcomed his first child into the world, so moving to a completely new city (Milan) would be pretty disruptive.

    If he does want to go, Arsenal have less than a week to negotiate a decent fee and spend it on a replacement.

    Crazier things have happened in the transfer market and at this football club, I guess

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    Mustafi move may not be as close as you think - Daily Cannon (satire) (blog)

    Arsenal prepare for player exodus in finals days of transfer window – will Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain be one of them? – Telegraph.co.uk

    - August 27, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Arsenal are preparing for a potential exodus of players in the finals days of the transfer window, with the club finalising the 7 million departure of Kieran Gibbs to Watford and prepared to sell Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, Shkodran Mustafi and Lucas Perez.

    Major incoming signing are now unlikely but a combination of Oxlade-Chamberlains ongoing refusal to accept a huge new contract offer of 180,000-a-week and Wengers desire to reduce his squad has meant that there will still be significant transfer activity at Arsenal between now and Thursday.

    Oxlade-Chamberlains participation against Liverpool today is in doubt following his failure to agree a new contract and, unlike their stance with Alexis Sanchez, Arsenals attitude is that they are ready to sell rather than potentially lose him for nothing next year if the valuation is met. Chelsea and Liverpool are interested and preparing to bid but, as of Saturday morning, Arsenal had not received the expected 35 million offer.

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    Arsenal prepare for player exodus in finals days of transfer window - will Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain be one of them? - Telegraph.co.uk

    When an app is too much trouble: ‘Alexa, get the lawn mowed’ – The Providence Journal

    - August 27, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    By John EwoldtMinneapolis Star Tribune

    You can now mow your lawn without lifting a finger or shaming your spouse or child.

    Plowz & Mowz, the app-based service that can send a mowing service to your home with the press of a button on a smartphone, is now synced with Amazon's Alexa voice-activated assistant.

    A simple, "Alexa, send someone to mow my yard tomorrow" will get the job done, assuming you have already signed up online or by phone with your address, specifics about the size of the job and a credit card.

    Plowz co-founder Wills Mahoney launched the app service in 2014. Similar to Uber, app firms hire local contractors to do the work, but each service call is a one-time expense without a contract.

    The new Alexa-enabled service is for "people who want to get their lawn done or their driveway plowed in the easiest way possible," Mahoney said. "If you wake up at 5 a.m. and look out the window and see that it's snowing, now you don't even have to turn on your phone." Users can also ask Alexa for status updates.

    The service is expected to appeal to Plowz & Mowz power users, who are often early adopters, but it was the company itself that came up with the idea, not its consumers. Nearly 36 million Americans are expected to use voice-activated assistant devices like Amazon's Echo and Google's Home, according to eMarketer.

    One of Plowz & Mowz competitors, Eden Lawn & Snow, also started to build in voice-activated assistance with its service but later canceled it. "We actually built out the initial steps for Alexa but then we started doing focus groups and saw no actual cases of people who would use it," said Ben Zlotnick, chief executive of Toronto-based Eden.

    Zlotnick said he found Eden was losing business by being too app-focused and added services to the company's website. "We've seen an upswing in orders from seniors since we launched a web-based app," he said. "We have to look at it from a practical standpoint. How are they going to order it?"

    Both companies continue to refine and expand their services.

    Initially, the app service was limited mostly to driveway snow removal and lawn mowing, services often performed by the same landscaping company.

    Over time the number of services has expanded to sidewalk shoveling and salting, leaf raking into compostable bags, shrub trimming and removal, garden bed mulching and cleanup.

    Mahoney said his company now allows customers to keep using the same contractor for services if they rated its service with five stars. Eden still operates on a first-come, first-served basis, so whichever contractor is in the area and has availability is given the job.

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    When an app is too much trouble: 'Alexa, get the lawn mowed' - The Providence Journal

    Teen of the Week: Teen’s skill as neighborhood entrepreneur forecast future goals – CapitalGazette.com

    - August 27, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Daniel Johnson recently mowed and carefully edged his last lawn for a while. The 18-year old teen, a recent graduate of Spalding High School, began his freshman orientation at LaSalle University in Philadelphia earlier this week.

    The summer between seventh and eighth grades, Johnson and a good friend Nick Van Besien became partners in a lawn mowing service in their Epping Forest neighborhood. They started with less than a handful of properties entrusted to their care and quickly realized they were mowing a market ripe for lawn, garden and yard work services, snow removal, furniture moving and simple handyman work.

    By their sophomore year, they registered with the State of Maryland as a sole proprietorship named Epping Forest Enterprises. Like fast-growing grass, their business expanded to over 40 regular clients. Johnson quickly learned the intricacies of invoicing, managing the company bank account, plus marketing and promoting the company. The business brought in enough income to handle the two teens expenses and save a little for college.

    Now that the entrepreneurs have graduated, they turned the enterprise over to two younger neighborhood youth to continue the tradition.

    "We wanted to keep it a reliable service the community can count upon," Johnson said.

    He often scheduled his Saturdays and summer week days to mow lawns from 8 to 11 a.m. He'd then hustle over to the community clubhouse where he had a job as a short order cook from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Afterward, he'd practice music or swimming with friends. In the evenings, he'd wrestle with his business paperwork.

    One of his bosses at the clubhouse, Tommy Wylde, also a neighbor and lawncare client, said Johnson is an exceptional kid.

    "Very few kids have the knowhow to work at a young age. He gets it. He understands hard work and what it does," Wylde said. "He does whatever I ask him to do he knows what the finished product looks like and how to get there. ... He understands what it takes to be successful at a very young age."

    Another neighbor and client, Steve Vetter said Johnson is a "refreshing reminder of what is good about our country and why I remain so optimistic about our future." Vetter, executive director of The Tessemae's Foundation, said Johnson earned the respect of so many of his neighbors in Epping Forest through his hard work, entrepreneurial talent and serious approach to his education and good-neighbor policy of always being willing to help when needed.

    The experience with his own business is one of the inspirations which factored into Johnson's decision to attend LaSalle.

    "I always wanted to own my own business," Johnson said. "Majoring in Finance will give me the best set up and knowledge of business and how to run a business. I enjoy the management process."

    In recognition of his leadership experience and academic record at Spalding, Johnson is receiving an annual $16,000 scholarship from LaSalle.

    At Spalding, in addition to being a member of the National Honor Society, Johnson was vice president of the school's Stock Market Club. Advanced $100,000 in play money, the club's members play the Investipedia game, a stock market simulator. The goal is to see who makes the most money on their investments. Johnson was also one of a two students selected to attend the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholders meeting held May 6 in CenturyLink Omaha in downtown Omaha, Nebraska, as a representative of the school.

    Johnson keeps busy with myriad activities.

    He joined the swim team at the Annapolis Swim Club at age 7. Staying a member involved training 12 hours a week, year 'round. He qualified for four state championship meets, three sectional meets and one junior nationals meet.

    He continued to swim throughout high school, and was co-captain of the team his senior year. That year, one of the highlights of his Spalding experience was winning the 100 yard freestyle in 47.55 seconds for the school at a MIAA Conference this spring, a first-time win for Spalding. At LaSalle, he will be a walk-on member of its swim team. He might eventually become eligible for an athletic scholarship.

    "I was recruited by several other colleges to swim," he said, "but, I preferred LaSalle for its business program."

    In fourth grade at St. Mary's Elementary School in Annapolis, he first picked up a trumpet. His performance was so strong and continued through high school he was awarded two, four-year scholarships to attend Spalding: the Sister Lucide Pioneer Leadership Scholarship and the Archbishop Spalding High School Music Scholarship. The scholarships covered 50 percent of the $14,000 annual tuition.

    "I enjoy playing gigs," he said.

    While at Spalding, he earned the Wind Ensemble's Band Student of the Year all four years of his tenure. Senior year, he was present of the Tri-M Music Honor Society.

    Yet another neighbor and landscaping client, Sharon Boettinger, noted Johnson is an accomplished musician and swimmer.

    "He throws himself headfirst into whatever he does," she said.

    Boettinger said the teen also plays the National Anthem on his trumpet for Epping Forest's annual Independence Day Parade.

    "I can't wait to watch him go through college and grow into young adulthood," she said.

    Johnson's days at St. Mary's did not end when he completed his middle school years. He and his family are parishioners at the historic downtown church. Johnson is one of the Lectors at services. Occasionally, he'll make the commute to church aboard his family's 17-foot whaler.

    His mother Jeanne Johnson is a judicial clerk at the District Court on Rowe Boulevard. Blair Johnson, his father, is a patent examiner for the U.S. Patent Office and Trademark Office. His sister Leah Johnson, 15, is a rising sophomore at Archbishop Spalding.

    "I'm looking forward to being in a city," Johnson said. "There's always something to do. And, there are a lot more opportunities in a city."

    He added, "But, I'll miss downtown Annapolis and the community of Epping Forest and the neighbors. It's so special."

    DO YOU KNOW AN EXEMPLARY TEEN?

    Anyone may nominate a Teen of the Week. To be considered, nominated teens must reside in Anne Arundel County or Kent Island and be enrolled in a high school program. Send nominations by email to Wendi Winters at wwinters@capgaznews.com.

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    Teen of the Week: Teen's skill as neighborhood entrepreneur forecast future goals - CapitalGazette.com

    The Town Crier: Club House part two – The Daily Citizen

    - August 27, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Last week we started looking at some of the service clubs that have a local presence here. Each club has a unique history and special focus on how to pitch in and help. I believe the more we help others the better off we'll be ourselves, so as we continue to look at some more of these clubs, let's remember it's the people that make the difference.

    Lions Club: The Lions Club emblem for a time included a lion with a wooden club in his mouth and the word "international" on it, providing a visual interpretation of the club's name. I always associate the the Lions Club with eyeglasses since my earliest memories of the club is of them collecting used spectacles for distribution to those in need.

    I had to start wearing glasses in the third grade, so that really meant something to me. When they were doing a drive to collect eyewear at times that I was outgrowing mine I would contribute.

    While looking up the history of the Lions Club I discovered where their interest in fighting blindness and visual impairment stems from. In 1925 Helen Keller addressed the Lions' national convention and challenged this service organization to become "knights of the blind in the crusade against darkness." The Lions Club took up this challenge as part of their service work.

    The club was formed in 1917 by Chicago businessman Melvin Jones. Within three years the Lions had gone international, first with a club in Canada and then in Mexico. Since then they have built a presence in over 200 international areas and enlisted over 1.3 million members in more than 46,000 clubs. Their focus is on people using their talents to improve their communities. In 1990 they started "SightFirst" as part of their eyesight initiative to take on the top causes of blindness in the world, including cataracts, trachoma and glaucoma, among others, and have raised $346 million for "SightFirst." Vision isn't their only work as they also do service work in the areas of general health, youth, the elderly, the environment and disaster relief. Even when their members only do a small service you could say it's a "lion's share."

    Sertoma: Sertoma is the club name that I can always remember what it means since it stands for "Service to Man." For me the name is kind of like a clever, personalized car license plate that let's you know something about the driver. And of course the "man" part in the name is short for "mankind," meaning everybody.

    The original name was the Co-Operative Club and it was started in 1912 in Kansas City, Mo., by three businessmen. The Sertoma's first convention was in 1921 and by 1923 women were involved in an auxiliary group. The Co-Operative Club name continued in use until 1950 when the Sertoma name was adopted. Just as the Lions have focused on eyesight, Sertoma works these days on hearing health, including dealing with hearing loss and even speech problems related to hearing loss.

    Over the years they have been been involved with several astronauts, including Gus Grissom and John Glenn, as well as other well-known public figures. In a series of shows Sertoma sponsored in the 1950s to raise funds, stars such as Andy Griffith, Ferlin Husky and newcomer Elvis Presley helped bring in up to $5,000 per show.

    Kiwanis: You know how if CNN is doing a story on their parent company, Time Warner, they always make sure to state in the name of full disclosure that they are owned by that company well, in full disclosure, I'm not a Kiwanis member but I sure am crazy about Pancake Day every year! Usually held the first Saturday of November, it's been a community fundraising tradition since 1960.

    The name Kiwanis comes from a Native American language (Otchipwe, if you're following along) and means "having a good time" and "trading and talking," as best as I can figure it. The Kiwanis Club was started in January of 1915 in Detroit, Mich. Within two years there was a club in Canada. There are now Kiwanis International Clubs on six continents. The headquarters has moved several times and is now in Indianapolis, Ind. The Dalton Kiwanis club was started in 1953, and I saw where Dr. McGhee was the first vice president, so not only did he help give birth to the local Kiwanis organization, turns out years later he helped with my birth!

    The Kiwanis Club lists 19 charitable organizations that they help provide support for, including Big Brother/Big Sister, Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, the Creative Arts Guild, Friendship House, Junior Achievement, the Dalton-Whitfield County Library, the Northwest Georgia Marriage Initiative and others. The primary focus of the club is helping children. And the money raised from me stuffing myself with pancakes stays in the community, which puts a smile on my syrup-stained mouth.

    The American Legion: Dalton Post No. 112 was chartered Sept. 12, 1932. The American Legion was chartered by Congress in 1919, just after the end of the first World War, as a patriotic veterans organization. The focus was on veterans, current service members and the communities they lived in. There are around 2.4 million members today with 14,000 posts worldwide.

    The Legion clubs are organized into districts, one for each state and also Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, France, Mexico and the Philippines. At the first convention in 1919 they made two notable decisions: to have their headquarters in Indianapolis and to support the Boy Scouts of America. At this time the Legion sponsors 1,700 scout troops with about 64,000 members.

    In the 1920s the Legion worked to establish the U.S. Veterans Bureau, which is today's Veterans Affairs. In 1943 former National Commander Harry W. Colmery started work on what would become the "G.I. Bill of Rights" that contributed to the G.I. Bill. The Legion supports Little League baseball, child welfare, helps families hurt by floods, advocates (and even sues) for veterans health programs dealing with the results of exposure to Agent Orange, Desert Storm sicknesses and PTSD. The list of programs includes baseball, Boys State, Legion Riders (motorcycle riders), National Emergency Fund, Operation Comfort Warriors and their annual Oratorical Contest. With this kind of service record maybe the old epitaph "your mother wears Army boots" might just be a compliment if she's part of the American Legion.

    VFW (The Veterans of Foreign Wars): The VFW, another service organization comprised of men and women who were in the service, is made up of veterans who have served overseas, the three primary membership requirements being: 1) citizenship, 2) honorable service in the armed forces of the USA, and 3) service in a war, campaign or expedition on foreign soil or hostile waters. They started when vets from the Spanish-American War and the Philippine Insurrection starting in 1899 formed local groups on their return home. Many were sick or wounded and at that time there were no veterans services available from the federal government.

    The separate groups joined up in 1914 to start the VFW and then became a congressionally chartered organization in 1936. Membership now is at around 1.7 million. The VFW helped with the establishment of the VA and the national cemetery system and fights for women veterans' health rights. They have also been major funders for the Vietnam, Korean, World War II and Women in Military Service memorials in the nation's capital. The VFW has affiliate organizations it works closely with, like the VFW Auxiliary and the VFW Foundation. My favorite is the Military Order of the Cootie, an organization born in 1920 of VFW officers and leadership that strives to further the good works of the VFW but with their own added sense of humor.

    Plenty of opportunity

    Dalton is home to many service organizations, and these articles have only covered a few. I didn't even get into the Masons and Shriners, the Knights of Columbus, sports clubs that help youth, the historical La Leche club, the Civil War Round Table, Big Brothers Big Sisters, Boys and Girls Club, and all types of auxiliary organizations and foundations that are set up to support, well, each other when it comes down to it.

    Most of the service clubs we've looked at here are pretty much open to all, the exceptions being the American Legion and the VFW, which have perhaps the most stringent membership requirements: service in the armed forces. But whether you've served the country overseas in the military or served in the yard next door mowing the neighbors' lawn, there is probably a service organization here in our area where you would fit right in. I've only touched on some of the more well known. Almost every church and place of worship is a location where people reach out to the community to help others. There are plenty of volunteer opportunities with local schools and even government organizations. Do you love sports? The Recreation Center is always looking for coaches and team supporters, and the school systems have openings (and the need for) community coaches who don't have to work for the school to actually help with teams.

    Part of what makes a community is the service-oriented help neighbors give neighbors. By organizing in numbers to focus on specific issues and needs, the jobs too big for individual-sized resources can be accomplished by the group. And as part of a group it's always nice to share the warmth of a job well done. You know, like the warmth of a pancake on a cool November morning when you know the ticket you bought is going to the good of the community.

    Mark Hannah, a Dalton native, works in video and film production.

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    The Town Crier: Club House part two - The Daily Citizen

    Katie Hill, Dan Log first artists to exhibit paintings at monument’s Visitor Center – Grand Junction Daily Sentinel

    - August 27, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Grand Valley artist Dan Log uses a different technique for painting with oils; he holds his brush near the end instead of near the bristles. Look for Logs work to be displayed in September and October in the new exhibit space at Colorado National Monuments Visitor Center.

    Katie Hill is the first local artist to exhibit paintings at the Colorado National Monuments Visitor Center. Eight of her oil paintings, some of which can be seen behind her, are displayed on a wall that until July was blank.

    Independence Shadow by Katie Hill is part of the artists exhibit at the Colorado National Monuments Visitor Center.

    This oil painting by Katie Hill is part of her exhibit at the Colorado National Monuments Visitor Center.

    Kissing Couple by Katie Hill is part of the artists exhibit at the Colorado National Monuments Visitor Center.

    Earlier this month, Dan Log was narrowing the number of oil paintings he plans to exhibit int the Colorado National Monuments Visitor Center.

    Framed by his oil paintings, Grand Valley artist Dan Log sits in his painting chair at his studio. Some of Logs paintings will be displayed in the new exhibit space at Colorado National Monuments Visitor Center beginning Sept. 1.

    Katie Hill is the first local artist whose work is being shown in new exhibit space in the Colorado National Monuments Visitor Center.

    WATCH THE PAINT

    The first Colorado National Monument Plein Air Event is set for Oct. 37.

    More than 20 artists will paint at various spots in and around the monument beginning Oct. 3. Painting will wrap up at noon Oct. 6, when the events exhibition will be hung in the Visitor Center auditorium. John David Phillips (johndavidphillips.com), a local oil painter, will judge the show.

    Times and dates to note:

    From 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Oct. 4 there will be a paint out in the monuments Saddlerock Picnic Area parking lot.

    The event exhibition will open with a preview night for association members and sponsors from 58 p.m. Oct. 6. Non-member tickets, which will include a Chinle Level association membership, cost $30.

    The exhibition will be open to the public from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Oct. 7.

    Here are the names of participating artists: Jody Ahrens, Mark Akins, Timothy K. Brady, Maggie Cook, Mary Pat Ettinger, Diane Fechenbach, Amy Gibbs, Doug Graybeal, Debi Hedges, Katherine Heister, Nancy Hutcheson, Cedar Keshet, Nancy Lewis, Dan Log, Bob Martin, Jason McCullough, Susan McKelvy, David Mosier, Brooks Powell, Jane Sutton Seglem, Lily Shanabarger, Richard Szkutnik, Bob Tallarico and Lillian Wyant.

    By Ann WrightThursday, August 24, 2017

    Until July, the wall above the doors to the exhibits and auditorium inside Colorado National Monuments Visitor Center was blank.

    John Lintott, local painter and art coordinator for the Colorado National Monument Association, sought permission for months from the National Park Service to put up a hanging system for a small art gallery to show local artwork.

    Permission finally came in late May and now the wall is filled with vistas of the monument. Each two-month exhibit is required to be 50 percent or more related to the monument with the rest being a good representation of the featured artists work, Lintott said.

    Katie Hills oil paintings have been on display since July 1. On Thursday, Aug. 31, her paintings will come down and Dan Logs paintings will go up on Friday, Sept. 1. Logs artwork can be viewed through the end of October, at which point another local artists work will fill the space.

    All of the artwork if for sale, with a percentage going to the association and the majority to the artists.

    The whole reason were doing this is, No. 1, it would be nice to generate sales for artists and have another place for them to exhibit, Lintott said.

    Its also a way for the monuments many visitors to see original artwork of the monument and discover local artists, he said.

    Since Hills paintings were hung, theres been a lot of people who look up and they love the fact that theres artwork up, Lintott said.

    Here is a look at the first two artists to have work displayed at the Visitor Center, why they began painting and what inspires them.

    I LOVE THE COLORS

    When Lintott sent out a call for artists to show their work at the Visitor Center, Hill replied right away.

    Im always looking for places to hang my art, she said.

    He asked how soon she could be ready, and she replied, Anytime.

    Im thrilled to be the first, said Hill, whose eight oil paintings have been on display at the Visitor Center since July 1.

    Theres Independence Monument, Kissing Couple and Wedding Canyon with reds and oranges that contrast nicely with the blues and greens of two paintings of the Maroon Bells in the White River National Forest.

    The Maroon Bells are lovely, but the canyons and monoliths of the monument are some of Hills favorite scenes to paint.

    I love the colors and the dramatic landscape, the depth of the canyons, she said.

    Hill, who paints mostly landscapes and occasionally animals or people, began painting in 2004 when she retired from a career as a computer analyst.

    It wasnt that she couldnt paint before both her grandmothers were landscape artists and Hill painted a little in college. But life was busy, and art, along with golf and playing the flute, became a goal for retirement.

    To get herself started, Hill asked members of her family to send her landscape photos to use as reference. Since she grew up in Alaska and much of her family is still there, she received a lot of photos of Alaska. And so she painted Alaska for quite a while, sending the finished pieces back to family members.

    She also took some painting classes and has had both Lintott and Log as instructors.

    Along with painting with oil on canvas, Hill uses acrylic to paint scenes on pieces of shale.

    Ive sold 150 rocks, she said.

    But selling any of her art is a bonus. Hill paints because she enjoys it, not as a 9-to-5 job.

    Her easel at home is set up so that as she walks by she can do this or that with a painting until shes satisfied, then leave it and come back later.

    I dont paint eight hours a day, she said.

    She also prefers to use photo reference over painting plein air and likes that with landscape, things dont have to be exact.

    For Hill, its about capturing the beauty of landscapes she loves and wants others to love as well.

    Learn about Hill and her art at facebook.com/KatieHillArtist and katiehillart.blogspot.com.

    I FOLLOW MY INTERESTS

    Ive spent most of my life in this room, Log said, stepping into his garage, which is lined with paintings, oil paint and brushes, stacks of photos and more paintings. Its more studio than garage, by far.

    I eat, drink and sleep art, Log said.

    Hes been painting for 35 years and used to do mostly wildlife. Now he focuses more on landscape. Some of both were in the pieces Log had lined up in his studio earlier this month as he made his final selection of oil paintings to be displayed for two months at the Visitor Center beginning Friday, Sept. 1.

    Among the possibilities was a coyote in its winter coat hes pretty healthy, Log said vibrant red Indian paintbrush, Independence Monument and snow over red rock.

    The older he gets, the pickier he gets about his work, he said.

    He describes his style as painterly realism, and prefers working from photo reference in his studio. He also does photography, so Im out there a lot getting reference material, he said.

    While the landscapes featured in his paintings are a real places such as the monument, he might subtract a tree and add a rock if he likes, and I like the brush strokes to show, he said. I dont paint every hair, not these days.

    Recently, he has been painting clouds to loosen up.

    You can change a cloud and it still looks like a cloud, he said. But with an animal, say, a moose, you need to make sure its believable.

    Log grew up with art in upstate New York, as his mother was a weekend painter. When Log started for himself, he was a river rat and painted waterfalls.

    His paintings of ducks have made the cover of Ducks Unlimited magazine three times and the Long Island Duck Stamp in 1982.

    When he moved west his parents retired here and his sister also moved west, so Log and his family followed it completely changed my subject matter.

    The light is brighter, the color palette is different and the vistas are deeper.

    He paints nearly every day and I follow my interests, he said.

    Log plans to participate in the first Colorado National Monument Plein Air Event set for Oct. 37. While not what he prefers, painting plein air is something I need to do more, he said.

    He has been told that it provides a connection between eye and scenery that cant be beat. And besides, I like a challenge, Log said.

    Original post:
    Katie Hill, Dan Log first artists to exhibit paintings at monument's Visitor Center - Grand Junction Daily Sentinel

    From Horeb to Blue Hill: A History of Congregationalism and United Church of Christ – Bangor Daily News

    - August 27, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

    Location: Blue Hill Public Library, 5 Parker Point Rd, Blue Hill, Maine

    For more information: 207-374-5515; bhpl.net

    Reverend Gary Brinn, pastor at the First Congregational Church of Blue Hill, will present a talk, From Horeb to Blue Hill, at the Blue Hill Public Library on Thursday, September 7th at 7:00 PM. The presentation will be a whirlwind look at the Judeo-Christian trajectory from the ancient Hebrew faith to Jonathan Fishers Congregationalism and on to the United Church of Christ, the modern denomination that includes the Congregational tradition.

    Part history, and part constructive theology, according to Reverend Brinn, it will be sure to rattle some cages. He says that this talk will help locate this very New England tradition of Congregationalism, as well as the modern United Church of Christ in a landscape of Judaism and Christianity.

    A second career minister, Rev. Brinn double-majored in Medieval to Renaissance British Literature and Studio Art before completing his Master of Divinity degree at Harvard. The presentation is free and open to everyone. For more information contact the library at 374-5515.

    This post was contributed by a community member. Submit your news

    Read this article:
    From Horeb to Blue Hill: A History of Congregationalism and United Church of Christ - Bangor Daily News

    Walnut Street bridge demolition part of major changes for Macon’s I-75/I-16 – The Telegraph

    - August 27, 2017 by Mr HomeBuilder

    People who havent traveled through Macon on Interstates 75 or 16 lately may be in for quite a shock.

    The landscape is continually changing as contractors for the Georgia Department of Transportation are clear-cutting acres of trees through Pleasant Hill and along the Ocmulgee River.

    The project kicked off in June and is progressing at a rapid pace, said Kimberly Larson, a GDOT spokesperson.

    Lanes have closed on I-75 North from Hardeman Avenue to the I-16 East split, and only one I-75 North lane is open for motorists headed toward Pierce Avenue.

    Drivers headed south on I-75 will also find narrowing lanes to I-16 and toward Hardeman Avenue as workers rebuild the highway without having to shut it down.

    The carefully orchestrated changes typically happen in the overnight hours with Bibb County sheriffs deputies providing assistance in slowing down travelers through the work zone.

    Lower speed limits are posted through the site lined with orange barrels, concrete barriers and freshly painted lanes to mark the traffic shifts.

    Those driving along Walnut Street on the James Brown Bridge over the interstate also are shifting lanes.

    They are taking that bridge out, Larson said Friday. They started removing handrails (Thursday) night and fencing. Were starting with pieces.

    By Saturday, the formerly wide, two-lane road through Pleasant Hill was down to one corridor shared by vehicles headed in both directions.

    Heavy equipment tore up chunks of concrete and piled up the rubble in the old westbound lanes, which are blocked by concrete barriers.

    Demolition of the bridge will continue overnight Sunday through Thursday with an I-75 South lane closure from mile marker 163.5 to 164.5.

    Monday through Friday at the Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. exits, daytime workers will be paving temporary sections of the ramps and work on other temporary pavement sections for I-16 east and west.

    Also during the day, crews will be placing storm drain pipes and working on a large culvert near the Walnut Street Bridge and along the Hardeman Avenue on-ramp to I-75 North.

    A new $500 million interchange is being built to widen the highway and create safer access and exit ramps from Hardeman to Pierce avenues and I-16 to Walnut Creek.

    The project includes designated exit and access lanes to alleviate the current mess of merging traffic lanes that are often the scene of collisions near the Ocmulgee River.

    A construction bridge will be built on the western side of the river and will later become a pedestrian crossing to increase access on the Ocmulgee Heritage Trail all the way to the Amerson Water Park.

    A Georgia Department of Transportation rendering shows a new Otis Redding Bridge during an unspecified future project.

    Special to The Telegraph breaking@macon.com

    The Otis Redding Bridge on Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. will also be upgraded and widened, according to an image posted on http://www.dot.ga.gov, but it was not immediately clear when that will occur.

    The first four phases of construction are expected to be complete by 2021, including a new Jefferson Long Park in Pleasant Hill being built by the summer of 2018.

    A tunnel also will be built for Norfolk Southern Railroad during the last of seven phases of construction, which wont go out for bids until 2023, and which will also finish the I-75 corridor north of the Ocmulgee River.

    Read more from the original source:
    Walnut Street bridge demolition part of major changes for Macon's I-75/I-16 - The Telegraph

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