#Racine senior apartments
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accesselevatordotnet · 1 year ago
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5 Gains Of Home Elevators in DeKalb and Naperville, IL
Having a home makes one comfortable and satisfied. The physical abilities begin to diminish with age, causing the homeowner to experience mobility issues. Accessibility becomes limited as a result, especially when one lives in a multi-storied home. Conventional mobility aids are useless when the user wants to navigate the stairs to reach rooms on the upper floors. No worries! One may always o ahead and decide to install one of the best home elevators in DeKalb and Naperville, IL. Fortunately, an elevator is not equated to l luxury and a life of opulence anymore. On the contrary, multiple manufacturers design elevators for modern, compact homes and products for sprawling villas. There are options galore for individuals from all walks of life, with most of them being relatively affordable too. The following benefits that are assured by the installation of a home elevator have upped its demand at present:- 1. Convenience- There is nothing more convenient than accessing the upper floor at the touch of a button. There is no trudging up the stairs painstakingly or the need to ask others for favors. What’s more, a person with limited mobility can also be seated in a wheelchair and ascend upstairs at the same time. There is no access restriction, with the entire home being open for the homeowner, who happens to be a senior citizen. 2. Indoor Aesthetics- The need for sprucing up the area around the stairway becomes redundant with the installation of a home elevator. One does not have to select a drab-looking cab and elevator either. Instead, the local dealer would be able to install a modern cab with beautiful fixtures. The appearance is most elegant, with the product becoming a style statement before long. 3. Safety- Admittedly, an elevator is a safe option for reaching the upper floors with mobility problems. The user does not have to make any effort apart from depressing the right switches. There is no learning curve for ensuring its operation. The risk of slips & falls is addressed superbly, eliminating such instances. There are multiple safety features added to such an elevator that ensures 100% comfort & safety for the user. 4. Increased Property Value- The properties on sale fetch a higher price when it has an elevator installed. Indeed many individuals look for convenience as aging is a factor that cannot be avoided. The ROI for the homeowner is pleasing, with many of them contemplating moving out, finding the prospect irresistible. 5. Aging in Place- Elderly homeowners are usually reluctant to shift to an alternative accommodation due to mobility issues. Most of them hope to age in place by remaining in the house that had been their home for decades. Homes that do not have adequate space for elevator installation can be fitted with the best Savaria stairlifts in Racine and Waukesha. This serves as a great alternative to eliminate climbing up and down the stairs to access the upper floors.
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new-racine-wi-blog · 5 years ago
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Events
Have you visited Racine, WI lately? Maybe, you are planning to go there. Obviously, you can maximize your trip by becoming familiar with the pre-scheduled activities in the city. In that way, you will have a memorable trip. So if you are looking for something to do in Racine, here are suggestions for you. On November 9, 2019, the Stress, Sleep & Emotions event will take place at around 10:00 am at the Living Light Community Center, 740 College Ave, Racine, Wi 53402 United States. Lastly, this coming November 15, 2019, there will be a Dark Labyrinth: Descent | A Decopunk Horror LARP event at around 7:00 pm. The venue is DeKoven Center, 600 21st Street, Racine, WI 53403 United States. The fee starts at around $100.
Racine County 2019 Halloween Trick-Or-Treat Times By City
RACINE COUNTY, WI — Every year, children dress up as ghosts, goblins and fictional characters in search of candy on Halloween night. And residents are happy to oblige, decorating their homes and yards with scary stuff as they hand out loads of sugary snacks. Read more here.
Many people enjoy attending trick-or-treats nowadays. If it is designed for kids, then adults can participate in amazing Halloween parties. In some places, the people even decorate their homes to join the festivity. Recently, Patch has given a guide for everyone to enjoy the holiday. Accordingly, the cities and villages have different ways to celebrate Halloween this year. Aside from that, it was posted that the Village of Caledonia has postponed the 2019 Halloween trick-or-treat time. It re-scheduled the activity on Saturday from 5:30 to 7:30 in the evening. Lastly, you can read the tips in order to maximize your participation in the said activities this year.
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Racine Art Museum in Racine, WI
These days, a lot of individuals are interested to visit museums. The popularity of the Internet has caused the curiosity of many people nowadays. Luckily, the Racine Art Museum in Racine, WI area is accessible for interested individuals. Even students go there to enjoy learning and sightseeing at the same time. Basically, the museum houses the biggest and most important contemporary craft collection in North America. After all, it has more than 9,500 objects from nationally and internationally recognized artists. The mission of the Racine Art Museum is to exhibit, collect, preserve, and educate in the contemporary visual arts. Lastly, its goal is to amplify the stature of craft to fine arts by presenting contemporary crafts alongside paintings and sculptures.
Platinum Communities is one of the popular elderly care facilities in Racine, WI area nowadays. Many families want to work with them when it comes to elderly care and other related services. However, a lot of individuals are curious about the quality of their services. So what is the main thing that separates them form others? The company is considered the Eastern Wisconsin’s leading assisted living community. They are a “family-owned and family-focused” group of assisted living communities. For years, they offer memory care, senior living, and respite care in Eastern Wisconsin cities and places such as Columbus, North Milwaukee, Racine, Oak Creek, Sheboygan, Slinger, Watertown and soon to be in East Milwaukee.
Link to Map
Racine Art Museum 441 Main St, Racine, WI 53403, United States
Head north on Main St towards 4th St 0.5 mi
Continue straight onto N Main St 2.3 mi
Turn left at Saxony Dr 82 ft
Turn right Destination will be on the right 226 ft
Crystal Bay Senior Apartment Living 3900 N Main St, Racine, WI 53402, United States
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nekojitachan · 4 years ago
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Hi, I love your fic'❤️ and I wanted to know if you could write even a short one about what would happened if Riko didnt find Andrew and Neil in WDWG
Thank you! 💖 Okay, so I did my best to keep this as short as possible, just a glimpse of the boys’ life if Riko had never found them/if they were able to live on undisturbed, just the two of them.
Uhm, I think it’s pretty safe? Just the ongoing burying bodies joke....
*******
Neil had just sold the two tourists from New York a (very ugly) tea set and couple rare blends of tea (Jodi would be pleased) when Massey’s recommendation returned. Neil gave him a stern look to convey ‘not now’ while he waited on a regular, Mrs. Huang, taking the time to let her sniff the lu’an tea they had in stock to ensure that it was up to her high standards before he bagged the requested amount, chatting with her in Mandarin the entire time. It was only after she left (and he was certain that the store was empty) that Neil motioned the anxious man forward while he reached beneath the counter for the wrapped bundle he and Jodi had worked on earlier.
“It’s ready?”
“Yes.” Neil answered in French as he set the bundle on the counter, just out of reach, then slid his phone into view. “New passport, bank account, driver’s license, birth certificate, the works.”
The man, face haggard from stress and freshly bleached hair falling onto his forehead, gazed at the package as if it a holy grail of sorts. “Let me see the passport. Please,” he added, his voice hoarse with need.
Used to being asked such a question, Neil shrugged and unfolded the brown wrapping paper enough to slip free the passport (French) and flipped it open to prove to the man (no names had been exchanged, which he much preferred) that it would pass for authentic (he did excellent work). Some of the tension left the man’s stocky body upon seeing it, as did a quick glance at the other items in the wrapping paper; he pulled out his phone to transfer the agreed upon amount of money to the account number Jodi had given him last night.
Neil checked his phone to ensure the money had been deposited then slid the items across the counter. “Good luck,” he told the man, who snatched up his new life, nodded in acknowledgement, then fled the Jade Leaves tea store.
Neil dealt with a few more tourists (not his favorite thing) and a handful of regulars (which he much preferred, especially when they brought him snacks) by the time Jodi returned. “Bah, it’s raining,” she complained as she pushed back the hood of her jacket; fall in Montreal could be unpredictable, could be an extension of summer or an early taste of winter, and now it looked as if the warm spell was giving way to colder temperatures and rain.
“Be thankful it’s not snow,” he told his boss as he handed over a cup filled with oolong, which he brewed throughout the day for customers and staff (well, him and Jodi) alike.
“Hush, you,” she chided before she took a cautious sip. “Hmm, how was business?”
He held up his phone, and huffed when she gave a pleased smile in return; she’d noticed the money deposited in the account earlier, an account which would soon disappear after she transferred the funds elsewhere (some to Neil). “Steady. I managed to get rid of the awful tea set.”
“The one with the gibberish on it?” Jodi’s pale brown eyes went wide and she laughed with joy as she reached to pat Neil on the shoulder. “Ah, sending you here was the best favor Gabe ever did for me.”
“Hmm.” Neil had to agree; as Aidan’s senior year of high school had drawn to an end, they’d been uncertain as to what to do next. Stick around until Neil graduated? Have Aidan apply to university? Move on to a new set of identities? They’d made a home of sorts in Racine, but Neil worried about his father’s people catching up to them at some point and Aidan was tired of them pretending to be siblings.
It was during a check-in with Durand that the forger had brought up that his cousin in Montreal was looking for help: an assistant who could speak French and if not take part in forging documents, at least keep their mouth shut. Neil and Aidan had debated it for a few days, but in the end they trusted Durand (as much as they did anyone else), Montreal put them farther away from the remnants of Nathan’s gang, and they could start anew.
Instead of half-brothers, they were newlyweds.
(Neil barely managed to not freak out when Aidan told Durand to create a marriage license for them, saving it until they were alone in the car. Only to be stopped mid-rant when Aidan held up a ring and asked him ‘yes or no’.)
Neil kept his first name (he didn’t want to let go of it after keeping it for so long), while Aidan became Andrew once more. Neil and Andrew Keenan, two young fools in love who struck out on their own rather than be apart (or so most people assumed). Neil spent the last couple months before they left Racine learning Mandarin, and was now picking up Arabic as well. He sold tea in a small store in Chinatown, gossiped with the locals, learned from one of the best forgers in North America (Jodi Liu was every bit as good as her cousin), and very rarely had to use the gun hidden beneath the counter.
“I haven’t heard from Gabe or Massey, so we should be good for the night,” Jodi said as she checked her phone for messages. “Go home.”
She didn’t have to tell him twice. He ran back to the small breakroom in the back to fetch the container of pork dumplings Mrs. Dai had given him (she kept telling him he was too skinny) then was out the door after wishing Jodi ‘good night’. Despite the rain, he stopped at Tony’s food truck to get a couple cartons of noodles to complete dinner, laughing at the older man’s retelling of a small group of Americans trying to order with appalling French.
“I guess it was better than them trying in Mandarin,” Tony said as he handed Neil his takeaway.
“Andrew complains about the French thing all the time.”
“Yeah, I imagine he’d get it a lot, working in a pastry shop.”
Neil waved goodbye and, after making sure the food was safe in his waterproof messenger bag, jogged down the mostly deserted streets to where Andrew worked, right outside of Chinatown. The bakery was empty of customers, probably because of the rain and the time of day, but the mostly empty display cases indicated that they’d done a good business earlier.
Andrew arched an eyebrow at Neil’s arrival and popped the petit four he held in his hand into his mouth. Once it was chewed and swallowed, he stepped toward the doorway leading back into the kitchen area, covered with a cloth divider. “Naseem, some riffraff just blew into the shop. I’m going to take it home.”
“What?” Andrew’s coworker, a young man with a closely trimmed black beard and a white scarf tied over his short, curly black hair, poked his head through the curtains and smiled when he saw Neil. “Why do you put up with him?” he asked, just like he always did, while he brushed at the flour which dusted his face; he probably was working on some of the pastries for the next day.
Neil gave the same answer, as always. “He knows where the bodies are buried.”
“Ha, you kids and your jokes.” Naseem shook his head as he glanced around the empty shop. “Just lock up before you go.”
Andrew gave him a two-fingered salute then quickly set about clearing out the register and turning off the lights (it looked as if he’d already done a lot of the closing duties already), then grabbed a small box before he ushered Neil out the door, which he locked behind them.
He gave Neil a pointed look as he pulled an umbrella big enough for the both of them out of his own bag and opened it. “You trying to catch pneumonia?”
“I’m open to new experiences?” Neil smiled when he was given the ‘you’re an idiot’ look. “I got dinner.”
“I know, I can smell it.”
“Are you going to share dessert with me?”
“No.”
Neil smiled the entire way home, especially when Andrew hooked their pinkies together; they didn’t have far to go since they rented an apartment in a building which Jodi’s family owned. It had a balcony where they could sit together as they smoked cigarettes or drank something hot, a bathtub big enough for them both to soak in together, and a gas fireplace in the living room which Andrew spent half the winter in front of, along with the cats.
Aibee greeted them at the door, certain to make the deplorable state of her empty belly known, while Elbee sauntered in from their bedroom and flopped down at Andrew’s feet after he kicked off his boots. He sighed and bent down to give the orange tabby a gentle pet before he prodded him to stand up, while Aibee was quick to run into the kitchen once she realized that Neil was headed that way, her fluffy black tail straight up in the air.
Andrew caught the strap of Neil’s messenger bag, which brought him to a halt. “Go change into something dry,” he chided as he maneuvered the bag from Neil’s shoulder.
“Okay.” Neil leaned in for a lingering kiss then did as he’d been told, pulling his damp sweatshirt over his head along the way. It and his jeans were draped over the hamper, swapped out for a soft sweater (that was Andrew’s) and sweatpants. Once dressed, he went into the kitchen to find that his husband had divvied up the food onto two plates, which had been placed on the table, and was feeding the cats.
“Shut up and eat, you ingrates,” Andrew said as he set down their bowls, his deep voice mild and expression almost tender.
“I thought I was the ingrate,” Neil commented as he picked up his chopsticks.
“You’re the idiot ingrate,” Andrew clarified as he sat down, and sighed when Neil stuck out his tongue.
They concentrated on eating for a couple minutes before they (well, Neil) started talking about their day; Andrew nodded along as he went on about the tourists and the documents he’d created. As expected, Andrew complained a bit about the tourists who just had to try out their lousy French on him.
“Jodi send you your part of the job yet?”
Neil frowned as he pulled out his phone and checked the special account where the money from the forgeries went. “Yes, another twenty-five thousand.” He gave Andrew a curious look. “Do I need to route it somewhere?” They were careful with the remaining money his mother had stolen from his father, most of it still tied up in investments for another couple years but a nice amount available for use – especially after Neil had started working for Jodi.
Their biggest expense to date was Andrew’s brother Aaron; when he’d learned about his long-lost mother dying from an overdose and how she’d allowed his twin to become an addict, he and Neil had arranged it so that Aaron’s cousin, Nicky, was able to win custody of Aaron and that Tilda’s ‘life insurance’ was more than enough to support the two until Aaron graduated high school. A little bit more money, a few more pulled strings had gotten Aaron into a university in South Carolina, and Neil had thought that was that.
Or so he had thought.
Andrew got up to fetch the pastry box (along with two forks) and set it on the table, the top open to reveal that inside was some horrendous chocolate thing and a small fruit tart. “We both have vacation time leftover, I thought we could go somewhere warm toward the end of the year.”
Neil gazed at his husband for a moment before he narrowed his eyes. “You just want to get away from the snow for a while.”
Andrew shrugged as he set the tart on Neil’s plate. “You won’t have to listen to me complain about the cold for a couple weeks.”
“Hmm.” That had possibilities, Neil thought as he picked a blackberry from the tart and popped it into his mouth. “You didn’t happen to research ‘the top ten ice cream places in Bora Bora’ or something like that, did you?”
He was given a blank look in return.
“We never had a honeymoon,” or a real wedding, for that matter, “so I get some say in this.”
“No Exy,” Andrew declared as he stabbed his fork in the chocolate monstrosity.
No, no Exy, Neil thought with a wince. He’d soured a bit on the sport after the whole Edgar Allan scandal. “No burying bodies.”
“Again with that? It happened twice.”
“And twice is more than enough, considering the second time, someone was all ‘oh look, I’m bleeding sooo much, you have to do all the digging this time,” Neil said in a mocking voice.
For a moment, he thought he’d be the one bleeding (Andrew had only grown more impressive with those flat stares of his), until his husband clicked his tongue. “Fine, we’ll go somewhere with plenty of water so we can sink the bodies.”
“Huh.” Neil considered that as he had a bite of the fruit tart. “That’ll work.” Not that he wanted to have to sink bodies into the ocean, but… well, it was him and Andrew. Things just happened.
There was a very slight curl to Andrew’s full lips, which meant he was smug as hell at the moment. Neil narrowed his eyes, uncertain about what he’d just agreed to, then figured ‘what the hell’. It would work out in the end, it always did with Andrew.
*******
Forgive me for any liberties taken with Montreal.
The cats’ full names are Anklebiter and Lazybones. If you can’t guess, Andrew named them, and Neil shortened them.
I figured this is set a year or two after Andrew would have graduated. He may be taking online university classes (more as something to do), but Neil’s happy with being a forger (and damn good at it).
It’s like... trying to figure out what to write next. I’ve one or two prompts I want to get done, the next chapter of Casts a Shadow, wrap up the soulmate fic, and another part of Not in the Stars. Decisions, decisions....
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racineseniorapartments · 3 years ago
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Wisconsin Senior Living and Assisted Care Housing
Platinum Communities is Eastern Wisconsin's senior housing and assisted living provider. Operating assisted living, memory care, physical rehabilitation, respite care, senior apartments, and RCAC. They have communities in Sheboygan, Columbus, Watertown, Oak Creek, Milwaukee, Slinger, and Racine, Wisconsin. https://platinum-communities.com YouTube Facebook Twitter Tumblr Allmylinks
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dpinoycosmonaut · 7 years ago
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Cinmeon Bowers: Troubled Past and Inspiring Rebound On and Off the Court
The latest announcement by the Purefoods Star Hotshots Management on Cinmeon Bowers as the team’s import for the upcoming PBA Governors’ Cup has created a lot of stir among the loyal fans of the famed franchise.  This after rumors broke out in several fan pages a few weeks ago of the impending return of former Best Import Marqus Blakely for a possible fifth stint with the Hotshots.
So who is Cinmeon Bowers?
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(Photo used with permission from Hael Pinat from https://web.facebook.com/HaeLGRfX2/ please support his page)
College Basketball Years
Born in Racine, Wisconsin in the United States on May 1, 1993, Cinmeon Bowers played the first two years of his college basketball years with Chipola College and the last two with Auburn University.  
In his freshman year, he played in 26 games (12 starts) where he averaged 11.0 points and 6.9 rebounds per game and shot 45.7% from the field. In that season, Chipola went 26-5.  
During his sophomore years, Bowers was named the top-ranked JUCO player by 247sports. He played in 22 games (15 starts) and averaged 12.4 points, 8.9 rebounds per game, and shot 47.2% from the field.  His performance helped Chipola to a 26-6 record, good enough for a spot in the quarterfinals of the NJCAA National Championships. 
Playing for the Auburn Tigers in his junior year, Bowers nearly averaged a double-double with 12.1 ppg and 9.6 rpg in 30.1 minutes per game.  He ranked second in the NCAA Southeastern Conference (SEC) and 24th nationally in rebounding.  Bowers started in all the 34 games he played and shot 41.6% from the field.  He ranks second in the SEC in offensive rebounds (3.6) and third in defensive rebounds (6.0).  
In his final year with the Tigers, Bowers played center, power forward and point guard, averaging an almost double-double with 10.5 points and 9.6 rebounds to go with 1.6 assists and 1.0 steal.   In the 30 games he played, Bowers started in 20 averaging 28.5 minutes per game, shooting 36.9% from the field, 24.6% from 3-point range and 53.8% from the foul line.   For the second consecutive season, Bowers ranked second in rebounding in the SEC with 9.6 rebounds per game and was second with 7.5 defensive rebounds per game (17th in NCAA).  
In terms of double-double games, Bowers ranked third in the SEC with 14 double-doubles and has 28 career double-doubles in two seasons, the fifth-most by an Auburn Tiger.
In May 2016, Cinmeon Bowers graduated with a degree in Public Administration from Auburn University.
Near Death Experience
Before Cinmeon Bowers became one of the best players in the SEC, he was a prep star at Milwaukee’s Rufus King International School in 2011.  It was during this period when he almost died with his friend, Elgin Cook.  
Bowers and Cook decided to drive around town on the night of February 01, 2011.  Sitting in Cook’s car outside another friend’s apartment, two gun men approached the vehicle trying to rob them.  One knocked on Bowers’ passenger-side window and flashed his firearm. In a panic, Cook thrust the Blazer into drive while Bowers frantically climbed into the backseat. As the car sped away, the men outside peppered the truck with bullets. 
While Bowers and Cook escaped with their lives, only one emerged unharmed. Five bullets hit Bowers in the right leg. Four bullets went clear through his limb, with the fifth lodged in his shin. For a high-school junior with major college aspirations, the eventual prognosis from Bowers’ doctors wasn’t good and many thought he will not be able to play again.  
But with intense physical therapy, Bowers did return to play and became one of the most talented rebounders in college basketball.
Bowers the Troublemaker?
Bowers made a name for himself on the court for his “versatility, brash style of play, muscle flexes, and double-doubles.”  However, he also became famous for his off court acts where he had some major troubles.
In 2013, after two years with Chipola, Bowers was signed by the Florida State Seminoles but was eventually dropped. This after he and two Chipola teammates were arrested in January 2014 for allegedly eating marijuana to conceal it from police during a traffic stop. Felony charges were later dropped, and Bowers got a second chance at Auburn.  However, the incident has labeled Bowers as a troublemaker.  But to this day, Bowers denies any wrongdoing saying he never had weed in his car; never had an issue with weed and was just falsely accused.
In his senior year at Auburn, Bowers was suspended by head coach Bruce Pearl during the SEC Tournament semifinal game against Kentucky due to a possible rules violation.
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Source: Sports Illustrated Twitter Post on 15 March 2015; https://twitter.com/SInow/status/576788539179970560)
The Great Rebounder
Though listed as 6’7”, Bowers is most likely 6’5” or 6”6” and must fight off criticism as an “undersized” post player according to his assistant coach at Auburn, Chuck Person.  Bowers’ height, however, did not hold him back, as he led the SEC in offensive rebounds and got much of his production on second-chance points.
As a spark for his own career, Bowers used the advice of another great Auburn rebounder and NBA legend Charles Barkley who as a 6’4” forward became the SEC Player of the Year in 1984.  Barkley has spoken to the Tigers on a number of occasions.  He even offered advice to Bowers on how to become a top-tier rebounder. “You’ve got to have the heart to go grab a rebound. Height doesn’t matter.” Something that Bowers always remember each time he takes the floor.
Person, who played alongside Barkley at Auburn and is the school’s all-time leading scorer, had this to say on Bowers: “Everything that Charles has in the game, Cinmeon possesses some of the same qualities. Will he continue to work as hard as Barkley did to become the great player Barkley became? That’s up to Cinmeon. If he wants to put in the time, he can be anything he wants to be.”
Making Sacrifices
Despite his near-death experience and off-court struggles, 24-year old Cinmeon Bowers is making the most of the second chances given to him by continuing to work hard for his pro dream to play in the NBA. This he wants to achieve for his mother, Edna J. Young, his 22 brothers and sisters, and most especially for his daughter, Dani Simmone, who Bowers barely sees but knows that in time all of his sacrifices will eventually pay off. --YRMunsayac
 This article used some information, statistics, and quotations from the following online sources:
Sports Illustrated article entitled “Auburn's Cinmeon Bowers knows how to rebound—on and off the court” written by Zac Ellis on 18 February 2015 and retrieved from http://sportsillustrated.com.ph/US/college-basketball/2015/02/17/cinmeon-bowers-auburn-tigers-bruce-pearl
Flywar Eagle article entitled “Auburn Basketball: Where Are They Now? Cinmeon Bowers shines in Israel” written by Chris Rousch in February 2017 and retrieved from http://flywareagle.com/2017/01/20/auburn-basketball-where-are-they-now-cinmeon-bowers-shines-israel/
Bleacher Report article entitled “Cinmeon Bowers Suspended by Auburn: Latest Details and Reaction” written by Mike Chiari on 15 March 2015 and retrieved from http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2396786-cinmeon-bowers-suspended-by-auburn-latest-details-and-reaction
Auburn University Men’s Basketball Stats of Cinmeon Bowers retrieved from http://www.auburntigers.com/sports/m-baskbl/mtt/cinmeon_bowers_915628.html
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theampreviews · 8 years ago
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The Untouchables
​#28 - Days of Thunder (1990) / Dir. Tony Scott / Paramount
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Few films are as unjustly maligned as “Top Gun on Wheels”. The similarities between the two are beyond count, but whilst the former enjoys an iconic status and more enduring praise (though often a little too patronising in tone for my liking), there’s a strong argument to be made for Thunder being the better film.
First things first, this is no hit job on Top Gun. I adore it. It’s one of my all time favourite movies. That film is rightly considered a Classic and the birthplace of “Tom Cruise: Earth’s Greatest Movie Star”. It’s far more quotable, it has the awesome call signs, the more memorable score and music cues and, well, pilots are just much cooler than race car drivers, so it wins there too.
The deck was stacked pretty definitively against Thunder living up to its swisher older brother, and critics and audiences have both shamed it as a derivative wannabe, but I believe the margin between the two is fag-paper thin.
For starters, Days of Thunder has a much better screenplay. Top Gun may have the memorable lines, the likes of “I feel the need, the need for speed”, “Your ego is writing checks your body can’t cash” and “You can be my wing-man any time” to adorn t-shirts the world over, but aside from a handful of zingers, Cash & Epps Jr. (who would go on to be the brain-trust behind The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas!) have no real feel for dialogue or how to let a scene breath beyond the perfunctory. On the other hand, Oscar winning screenwriter Robert Towne finds far more engaging things for his characters to say when they’re not shouting into each other’s earpieces on race day (and even there he strikes gold his own with gems like “rubbin, son, is racin’”, “I’m dropping the hammer” and the triumphant “this one’s for you, Harry!”).
Towne also fashions a story that lives perfectly within the world he’s writing about. The character arcs, conflicts and motivations all ring true to the Sports Movie, whereas Top Gun makes for an awkward War Movie, in that there is no war. A film about the competition of flight academy would have sufficed, but the final reel showdown has always felt tacked on; called to action during their graduation ceremony, it’s there out of cinematic necessity only and stretches credulity way beyond breaking point.
Of greater importance than any of this, one thing really sets these two apart; Cruise is far more likeable as Cole Trickle (awesome Movie Name) than he is Pete “Maverick” “Mav” Mitchell, who is, let’s be honest, a bit of a bell-end. Both are young prodigious talents with father issues and masked insecurities, but Cole is far less abrasively arrogant and marginally less creepy when pursuing authoritative women than Maverick is (he also knows well enough to wear a belt with jeans. Unforgivable sin, Mitchell).
There are other areas that Thunder inches forward too. Nicole Kidman acts circles round Kelly McGillis as the put upon love interest, Michael Rooker gets a far meatier assignment as rival and real love interest (though Kilmer’s Ice Man is a preening home run for Top Gun) and, with a gun to my head, I’d take “Show Me Heaven” over “Take My Breath Away” in the power ballad stakes. 
Elsewhere, Top Gun takes Best Friend Role with Anthony Edwards over John C. Riley as well as James Tolkan’s Irritable Senior besting Randy “You look like a monkey fucking a football” Quaid, overall soundtrack and Cruise Grins. It’s a tie on Score. Yes, the Faltermeyer music is beyond iconic, but the Hans Zimmer/Jeff Beck collaboration is one of action cinemas most underrated gems. Oh, and Thunder wins Best Cruise Hair (a glorious mullet/mop hybrid) and gets bonus points for a Rocky III worthy freeze-frame ending.
Perhaps the biggest plus Thunder has going for it is in Robert Duvall. Even the mighty combination of Tom Skerritt and Michael Ironside can’t compete with a Great like him. You might think that someone of his stature could be tempted to phone it in for a dumb studio move like this, but Duvall gives it both barrels start to finish, he’s genuinely great here.
Comparing these two movies shouldn’t be the point, but Top Gun’s shadow has consumed Days of Thunder from its opening night (which for me was at The Empire Leicester Square, pre-show lazer display and all) to this very day. It has consigned Thunder to a footnote in the Cruise/Kidman relationship more than it is a film in its own right.
It’s not by accident that Top Gun resonates the way it does decades later, being first isn’t why it’s loved more. There’s something intangible about that film that audiences respond to. It’s Movie Magic in its purest form, but that shouldn’t deny this film the love it deserves.
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silvertipmountaincenter · 6 years ago
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The Year 2018 in Housing
A major homeless shelter closed, several government agency heads departed, and the D.C. Auditor’s reports criticized the city’s efforts to create affordable housing.
Darrow Montgomery
Everywhere across D.C., from Trinidad to Anacostia and Michigan Park, it’s getting more expensive to live. For the first time, the Washington Business Journal reported in October, the median sales price of a single-family home in the District topped $700,000. (It’s now north of $730,000.) Renters aren’t exactly having better luck: Though median rental prices are down slightly since 2017, it’s still about $2,160 a month to rent a one-bedroom apartment.
In the shadow of a ballooning housing market, there was a slew of high-level departures this year. Chiefs of the Office of Planning, Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs, and Department of General Services—all of whom have a hand in where (and how well) people live—were asked to step down shortly after Mayor Muriel Bowser’s re-election.
Budget cuts threatened some of the District’s most vulnerable people, as well as lauded non-profit housing organizations, and Attorney General Karl Racine announced lawsuits against some of the District’s worst slumlords.
City Paper also reported on a little-known program within DCRA that helps big developers pay more to fast-track large construction projects, like an Apple store in Mount Vernon Square’s Carnegie Library, as well as the start-to-finish mess that was the construction of a luxury hotel in Adams Morgan.
Below, some of the most significant pieces of news from this chaotic year. The biggest takeaway? It is very, very expensive to live in D.C.
DC General
At the beginning of the year, Mayor Bowser doubled down on her commitment to close DC General, the city’s largest family homeless shelter, by the end of 2018.
Smaller replacement shelters in wards 4, 7, and 8 opened a month apart from each other this fall, though the latter two were delayed after the company hired to build them bungled the job. (And residents of the Ward 4 shelter are already complaining about its quality.) Neighbors of planned homeless shelters in wards 3 and 5 continued to mount legal challenges against each of them, though construction is now underway on both. A court recently gave approval to the shelter in Ward 3, allowing the final phases of its construction to move forward. Construction is also ongoing on Ward 6’s shelter, and District officials plan on opening the three of them between the summer of 2019 and spring of 2020.
In October, Bowser finally shuttered DC General on what would have been Relisha Rudd’s 13th birthday. (Rudd was a resident of DC General when she went missing in 2014. Law enforcement officials have not located her in the intervening years, and she was last seen at a Holiday Inn Express with a janitor who worked at the shelter.) Advocates for the homeless loudly protested Bowser’s decision to fast-track the shelter’s closure, arguing that she did so to offer valuable District land to Jeff Bezos for Amazon’s East Coast headquarters. (The company eventually announced that it would split HQ2 between Long Island City, New York, and Crystal City, Virginia.)
DC Housing Authority
The DC Court of Appeals struck down a redevelopment plan this spring for Barry Farm, the beleaguered public housing complex in Ward 8, where District officials later found traces of lead. The discovery, made during a structural audit of DCHA’s housing portfolio, was representative of more pervasive issues across the authority’s housing stock. Almost one-third of its units are nearly uninhabitable, the audit found. DCHA will need an estimated $343 million next fiscal year to make interim repairs, and is preparing a commensurate financial ask from the city come budget season in the spring. Also this year, a member of DCHA’s board of commissioners stepped down after he organized a “unity” rally where an attendee referred to Jews as “termites.”
A seniors-only apartment complex in Ward 6, the Arthur Capper senior center, endured a mammoth fire this summer that displaced dozens of residents. Many of those seniors are living in hotels around the city until Capper is restored.
The American Civil Liberties Union of D.C. filed a lawsuit against DCHA this year after security guards of a DCHA property allegedly violated the Americans with Disabilities Act. Filed in U.S. District Court on Aug. 30, the lawsuit alleges that a “profoundly deaf” tenant of Ward 2’s Claridge Towers, who experienced difficulty breathing, was unable to access health services in a timely fashion.
Affordable housing developments
Ward 8 Councilmember Trayon White held demonstrations against the construction of two housing developments in his ward—Maple View Flats and Reunion Square. White protested the construction of Maple View Flats, alleging that the developer, Tim Chapman, lied about how many Ward 8 residents he hired to work on the project. Reunion Square was a proposed tax increment financing project in Anacostia that would have boasted tens of thousands of square feet of retail and office space, as well as some affordable housing. White sunk that deal in November, arguing that it was too generous to the developer.
Another tax increment financed project, the redevelopment of Rhode Island Avenue NE’s Brookland Manor, passed the D.C. Council this winter. Dozens of residents and their advocates lobbied against the project, believing that it will lead to the displacement of low-income families and those with large households.
DCHA broke ground this year on Parkway Overlook, an apartment complex on Robinson Place SE long-planned for redevelopment. Once home to 1,000 low-income residents, the property fell into disrepair, with $5 million in vacant property taxes owed at one point on the complex.
And hitting back against landlords they say violated the city’s housing code, tenant associations across the city organized actions against them this year, launching rent control strikes in Brightwood Park and legal action in Deanwood, among others. Dozens of these tenants live in apartments without heat or clean water, and where mold, pests, and crumbling infrastructure are the norm.
Legislative news
A controversial move to limit how frequently homeowners list their spaces on Airbnb passed the D.C. Council, even after the District’s chief financial officer estimated that the city could lose $21 million annually in hotel tax revenue. The Council also introduced a bill to seal eviction records, and passed separate measures to make ownership of limited liability companies more transparent, make the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act more restrictive, and help curb rent concessions scams. The Bowser administration finally published regulations to implement the District Opportunity to Purchase Act, which will allow the city to buy apartment buildings, ostensibly providing another opportunity to keep rental units affordable.
The D.C. Council also weighed how to legislate around eviction reforms, after the U.S. Marshals Service told City Paper in April that it would change its enforcement of evictions. USMS no longer mandates that landlords move former tenants’ belongings onto the street, making evictions in D.C. more like those in other major metropolitan areas.
Former Councilmember Kathy Patterson, now D.C.’s auditor, released multiple reports this year criticizing the District’s efforts to preserve and create affordable housing. Those include audits skeptical of the efficacy of an affordable housing “trust fund” within the Department of Housing and Community Development, as well as an audit criticizing DCRA’s ability to effectively oversee the abatement of housing code violations.
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polzindvc2 · 6 years ago
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Melon Team - Updated
Meghan Polzin - Team Lead
Meghan Polzin is a lifelong equestrian bringing unbridled enthusiasm to art and design. A multidisciplinary artist with a passion for design, photography, and lettering. Meghan studies Design and Visual Communications at the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, with an emphasis in photography. Outside of the arts, Meghan is active within the United States Pony Club, and spends her time with her horse, Meatball, and her hedgehog, Fish Nugget.
Anne Ross - Professional Mentor
Anne Ross is the manager at the Libertyville, IL, Dover Saddlery location. Anne Ross is very knowledgable in equestrian helmets, and selecting the right helmet for a rider.
Adam Hawk - Product Mentor
Adam Hawk is a studio artist and lecturer at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Hawk earned his MFA in metalsmithing/blacksmithing from Southern Illinois University Carbondale and BFA in sculpture and computer fine arts from Memphis College of Art. Previously, Hawk has served as an assistant professor at Memphis College of Art and worked as a Lead Blacksmith at the National Ornamental Metal Museum. His work has been exhibited at the National Ornamental Metal Museum, Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum, the HOW art museum in Shanghai, China, The Villa Braghieri in Italy, Walter Anderson Museum, and the Fuller Craft Museum. 
Reilly Flynn - Engineering Lead
Reilly Flynn, a native of Racine, Wisconsin, is currently a senior at the Milwaukee School of Engineering. He will graduate with a BS in Mechanical Engineering in May. Reilly was a proud member of MSOE’s Supermileage Vehicle team whose gasoline-powered vehicle set a fuel economy record of 1,112 mpg at the 2018 Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) competition in Marshall, Michigan. When not building machines - or taking them apart - he can be found at his computer playing video games, on the ice at the Racing Curling Club, or enjoying a ride on his motorcycle...while wearing a helmet, of course.
Leslie Flynn - Production Mentor
Leslie Flynn in the Communication Coordinator for the City of Oak Creek, Wisconsin. In that role, she is in charge of the City’s brand management, internal, and external written communication, social media, and graphic design. She’s a graduate of UW-Parkside with a BA in Geography, and spent the first 20 years of her career with Oak Creek managing the City’s Geographic Information System. In 2013, her interest in graphic design and photography, plus some solid writing skills and an interest in lifelong learning allowed her to blossom into a new position in the same organization.
Users
Katie Bartlet - User
Paul Scheidt - User
Paul Scheidt is currently a junior attending Gonzaga University studying electrical engineering. Paul grew up around and has spent most of his life riding horses. During his summer of his freshman year in high school, Paul suffered a horrible fall and a severe concussion. He fortunately was wearing a relatively new helmet, which saved him from any brain damage. In college, Paul is an outdoors trip leader for the university and continues to pursue hobbies that require the use of helmets (rock climbing, white water sports, biking, etc). Paul believes there is a need for a device to help indicate when a helmet is no longer safe and useful.
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Wonder Tree “Growing” in the Long lasting Care Center in Europe
Wonder Tree “Growing” in the Long lasting Care Center in Europe
Elisabeth Picard, an musician from Montreal, the second greatest city of Europe, created a entire series of ar2rks for the brand new East Angus CHSLD within Quebec. This particular centre was developed for extensive care about seniors. But apart from housing the residents, the particular facility requires care about their particular health enhancement, leisure routines and even spiritual aspects of their own lives. This is why it does not seem amazing that this location needed the welcoming set up in the reception, which would ease and comfort its website visitors and convey the concept of security – the main element mission from the centre.
The number of ar2rks developed by Elisabeth includes a mysterious title – “Sous le great arbre: racine, feuille ainsi que fleur”, which usually stands for “Under a big shrub: roots, simply leaves and flowers”. Though the installation’s elements are available on 4 floors from the building, the major component is located in the particular lobby. This stems from the particular fireplace in the center of the space plus gradually ways to the roof.
What do a person suppose it really is made from? Through plastic artists, aluminum plus LED lamps. Amazingly, these types of non-natural components look therefore naturalistic that will it’s difficult to resist the desire to possess a rest within the shade of the tree.
But the huge tree offers one more which means: it’s the metaphor for your life’s trip. It’s targeted at reminding the particular personnel from the centre regarding their accountable and great mission.
And lastly, the shrub has an additional symbolic which means – it is a homage to authentic trees, which usually gave increase to the progress pulp plus paper sector that means a lot for this municipality.
An additional 3 areas of this distinct “sculpture” – a underlying, a leaf and a floral – discovered their areas on various other 3 flooring of the developing. As well as the greatest part of the shrub in the reception, these components are made from multicolor bands, extremely competently mixed and organized to form gentle gradients. Gorgeous hues associated with Indian summertime and the deeply sense from the ar2rk by itself became the particular centerpiece from the centre as well as the pride associated with Quebec.
Source:
http://www.interiordesign2014.com/architecture/wonder-tree-growing-in-the-long-lasting-care-center-in-europe/
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celestemessina · 3 years ago
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Crystal Bay senior apartment living in Racine is a beautiful community that has been named by many as the best home to reside. You might even desire to call it your new home too! Please feel free to come by and check things out for yourself. …
source https://search.google.com/local/posts?q=Crystal+Bay+Senior+Apartment+Community&ludocid=9661077333265364153&lpsid=8891820389645437146&source=sh/x/localposts&lsig=AB86z5V_e8Hs4Iq3m2E9Em5QNTm_
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celestemessina · 3 years ago
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Racine Senior Apartment Benefits One big benefit of Racine senior apartments is the ability to live close to other seniors. This provides the opportunity to connect with new friends by taking part in community activities. Many complexes put together…
source https://search.google.com/local/posts?q=Crystal+Bay+Senior+Apartment+Community&ludocid=9661077333265364153&lpsid=CIHM0ogKEICAgIDm6LmW9QE&source=sh/x/localposts&lsig=AB86z5V_e8Hs4Iq3m2E9Em5QNTm_
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