Ero sivun ”Käyttäjä:Kunkelx12” versioiden välillä

PenaPedia
Siirry navigaatioonSiirry hakuun
Rivi 8: Rivi 8:
<html><head><title>html模版</title></head><body>Bennett celebrates life at tree planting ceremony</br>Submitted photoPatricia Bennett of Jamestown (center), a five-year cancer survivor, celebrates life on June 7 at the Celebrate Life Tree planting ceremony with Christopher McCord Stephenson,[http://gameweb.retesokolov.cz/forum/index.php?topic=264576.msg413025#msg413025 Mike Scinto Conservative American_3],[http://www.jerseys-ns.net/2011-2012-national-team-Brazil-7-Pato-away-blue-Jerseys-8019/ 2011-2012 national team Brazil 7 Pato away blue Jerseys], DO, Hospitalist and Director of the Quality of Life Clinic (left), and Jamie Stephenson, Board of Directors (right), at Cancer Treatment Centers of America at Midwestern Regional Medical Center. A tree will be planted in Patricia Bennett s honor. This year, nearly 300 trees will be planted in honor of all five-year cancer survivor celebrants.
<html><head><title>html模版</title></head><body>Bennett celebrates life at tree planting ceremony</br>Submitted photoPatricia Bennett of Jamestown (center), a five-year cancer survivor, celebrates life on June 7 at the Celebrate Life Tree planting ceremony with Christopher McCord Stephenson,[http://gameweb.retesokolov.cz/forum/index.php?topic=264576.msg413025#msg413025 Mike Scinto Conservative American_3],[http://www.jerseys-ns.net/2011-2012-national-team-Brazil-7-Pato-away-blue-Jerseys-8019/ 2011-2012 national team Brazil 7 Pato away blue Jerseys], DO, Hospitalist and Director of the Quality of Life Clinic (left), and Jamie Stephenson, Board of Directors (right), at Cancer Treatment Centers of America at Midwestern Regional Medical Center. A tree will be planted in Patricia Bennett s honor. This year, nearly 300 trees will be planted in honor of all five-year cancer survivor celebrants.
ZION,[http://www.jerseys-ns.net/2012-NIKE-Ravens-5-FLACCO-white-Elite-Jerseys-15182/ 2012 NIKE Ravens 5 FLACCO white Elite Jerseys], Ill. Patricia Bennett, a breast cancer survivor from Jamestown, joined more than 100 other five-year cancer survivors for an emotional and momentous tree planting ceremony at Cancer Treatment Centers of America (CTCA) at Midwestern Regional Medical Center (Midwestern) on June 7. The annual Celebrate Life event is an inspirational and extraordinary celebration of cancer survivorship. Bennett and survivors representing 44 states gathered for the memorable event to celebrate the milestone and to support one another as they continue their cancer survivorship journey.The annual commemorative tree planting ceremony symbolizes the wonder of life and growth. The 2013 Celebrate Life event marks the 25th year that a tree has been planted in honor of each five-year survivor, providing a thriving forest of life giving trees representing cancer survivorship. Participants were joined by doctors, hospital administrators, clinical team members, caregivers, family members and members of the local community who attended in a show of support. During the ceremony, celebrants also released five white doves collectively representing each year of cancer-fighting survival while receiving treatment at CTCA.Bennett sought treatment at CTCA at Midwestern after being diagnosed with breast cancer in 2008. As I was driving to another doctor s appointment, my son called and said he found the place that sounded right for me. Mom you need to go to Cancer Treatment Centers of America, he said. These are your kind of people . Bennett goes on to say, My medical oncologist, Dennis Citrin, MD, PhD, listened to me and designed a treatment plan around my needs. He also respected my desire to use natural solutions and nutrition when appropriate. The 2013 Celebrate Life event at CTCA at Midwestern also included a red carpet reception and luncheon with delicious gourmet offerings of natural and organic foods prepared by the culinary team from the Wholesome Bistro,[http://www.sportssmack.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=21&t=21608 Phoenix Coyotes reach arena deal in Glendale], the CTCA in-hospital restaurant.Before the day concluded, many of the five-year survivors took time to walk through the hospital to offer comfort and support to other patients and family members, inspiring all. Each celebrant was also honored with an engraved gold leaf, which is proudly displayed on the ever-growing tree of life located at the entrance of the hospital. Each and every day is a celebration of life and survivorship,[http://wiki.easyelectronics.ru/index.php/%D0%A3%D1%87%D0%B0%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BD%D0%B8%D0%BA:Kunkelx41#Rise_in_illegal_crossing_roils_immigration_debate_0 Rise in illegal crossing roils immigration debate 0], said Scott Jones, president and CEO at CTCA at Midwestern. At Cancer Treatment Centers of America everything, from our patient centered personalized treatment to our integrated therapies and supportive services, is orchestrated around the patient and their family. Patients and their families that are facing cancer choose us, and we stand side-by-side, hand-in-hand with them throughout their journey.</body></html>
ZION,[http://www.jerseys-ns.net/2012-NIKE-Ravens-5-FLACCO-white-Elite-Jerseys-15182/ 2012 NIKE Ravens 5 FLACCO white Elite Jerseys], Ill. Patricia Bennett, a breast cancer survivor from Jamestown, joined more than 100 other five-year cancer survivors for an emotional and momentous tree planting ceremony at Cancer Treatment Centers of America (CTCA) at Midwestern Regional Medical Center (Midwestern) on June 7. The annual Celebrate Life event is an inspirational and extraordinary celebration of cancer survivorship. Bennett and survivors representing 44 states gathered for the memorable event to celebrate the milestone and to support one another as they continue their cancer survivorship journey.The annual commemorative tree planting ceremony symbolizes the wonder of life and growth. The 2013 Celebrate Life event marks the 25th year that a tree has been planted in honor of each five-year survivor, providing a thriving forest of life giving trees representing cancer survivorship. Participants were joined by doctors, hospital administrators, clinical team members, caregivers, family members and members of the local community who attended in a show of support. During the ceremony, celebrants also released five white doves collectively representing each year of cancer-fighting survival while receiving treatment at CTCA.Bennett sought treatment at CTCA at Midwestern after being diagnosed with breast cancer in 2008. As I was driving to another doctor s appointment, my son called and said he found the place that sounded right for me. Mom you need to go to Cancer Treatment Centers of America, he said. These are your kind of people . Bennett goes on to say, My medical oncologist, Dennis Citrin, MD, PhD, listened to me and designed a treatment plan around my needs. He also respected my desire to use natural solutions and nutrition when appropriate. The 2013 Celebrate Life event at CTCA at Midwestern also included a red carpet reception and luncheon with delicious gourmet offerings of natural and organic foods prepared by the culinary team from the Wholesome Bistro,[http://www.sportssmack.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=21&t=21608 Phoenix Coyotes reach arena deal in Glendale], the CTCA in-hospital restaurant.Before the day concluded, many of the five-year survivors took time to walk through the hospital to offer comfort and support to other patients and family members, inspiring all. Each celebrant was also honored with an engraved gold leaf, which is proudly displayed on the ever-growing tree of life located at the entrance of the hospital. Each and every day is a celebration of life and survivorship,[http://wiki.easyelectronics.ru/index.php/%D0%A3%D1%87%D0%B0%D1%81%D1%82%D0%BD%D0%B8%D0%BA:Kunkelx41#Rise_in_illegal_crossing_roils_immigration_debate_0 Rise in illegal crossing roils immigration debate 0], said Scott Jones, president and CEO at CTCA at Midwestern. At Cancer Treatment Centers of America everything, from our patient centered personalized treatment to our integrated therapies and supportive services, is orchestrated around the patient and their family. Patients and their families that are facing cancer choose us, and we stand side-by-side, hand-in-hand with them throughout their journey.</body></html>
== 5 things to know about Tour de France 1 ==
<html><head><title>html模版</title></head><body>5 things to know about Tour de France</br>7/4/2013 7:05:00 PM5 things to know about Tour de France
MONTPELLIER, France (AP) Here are five things to know as the Tour de France enters its seventh stage on Friday:
___
1. LOTTO'S LOTTERY: Thursday provided mixed fortunes and emotions for the Lotto-Belisol squad. The morning mood was despondent after team leader Jurgen Van den Broeck, fourth overall last year,[http://www.jerseys-ns.net/Youth-Nike-Panthers-28-Stewart-Black-Portrait-Fashion-Game-Jersey-17006/ Youth Nike Panthers 28 Stewart Black Portrait Fashion Game Jersey], pulled out because of a crash injury to his knee a day earlier. Tough luck for the Belgian: He had also dropped out in 2011 after a brutal downhill spill that left him with broken ribs and a fractured shoulder. But after a bus pep talk by team manager Marc Sargeant and a skillful ride, Lotto shared hugs of joy at the Stage 6 finish after burly German rider Andre Greipel bulldozed his way to a sprint victory at the end of a flat 110-mile ride from Aix-en-Provence to Montpellier. Mused Greipel: "Sometimes happiness and sadness can be so close together."
___
2. MORE MISERY: Flat stages often elicit tense, high-speed racing as riders jostle for position in the pack. Thursday's hot, windy conditions didn't help and a lack of luck bore down on the Astana team. Its Slovenian team leader Janez Brajkovic, who won the Criterium du Dauphine in 2010,[http://bbs.shangdumall.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=280434 ], dropped out after injuring his chin,[http://www.57398.com/thread-3784477-1-1.html Monday morning kickoff — Supplemental Draft this week, and Sherman game wr], breaking a bone in his left hand and opening a deep gash in his knee after crashing into a traffic island during the stage. The spill left him dazed and seated on the road asphalt before he got up to finish but the damage was done. His teammate Fredrik Kessiakoff of Sweden also abandoned the race; he couldn't keep up amid pain from injuries to his elbows, right forearm, chest and left knee in a crash a day earlier. The team from Kazakhstan is down to six of its original nine riders: Andrey Kashechkin dropped out earlier in the race.
___
3. HISTORICAL REVISIONISM: With its revisions, and names and feats crossed out, the Tour's official history guide is starting to look like a kid's homework book: a complete mess. The reason? Doping. Organizers have gone through the tome with a pen and ruler. Lance Armstrong's name and all seven of his wins from 1999-2005 have lines through them. So do 20 of his stage wins. Lines have also been drawn through the names of George Hincapie, Levi Leipheimer and David Zabriskie, who testified to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency that they were involved in doping while riding with Armstrong. Authors of the "historical guide" had already been forced to rewrite history even before Armstrong was exposed last year as a serial doper. There's an asterisk next to the name of Bjarne Riis. More than a decade after Riis won the 1996 Tour past the statute of limitations for penalties the Dane admitted to doping. Tour historians' erasers may soon be busy again: A French Senate panel later this month is expected to name other riders who doped in the 1998 Tour.
___
4. PEANUTS FOR PRIZE MONEY? The Tour can pay out more in glory than in bank notes. Take the Orica GreenEdge team. The payout they will get for all nine riders and support staffers for winning Tuesday's team time trial is $12,[http://www.jerseys-ns.net/Mavericks-31-Terry-Light-Blue-2011-Finals-Jerseys-2704/ Mavericks 31 Terry Light Blue 2011 Finals Jerseys],900. Individual stage victories bring just over $10,000 to the winner, $5,000 to the second-place rider, etc. And riders do also cash in on individual sprints and mountain climbs. The biggest prize of all goes to the Tour winner. The man who takes home the leader's yellow jersey gets $581,000 along with it. Daryl Impey of South Africa, who seized the yellow jersey on Thursday, said he didn't even know how much he was owed for the Orica GreenEdge time-trial victory. "Money? I don't know how much it was, but we don't do it for the money,[http://unitedplanninggroup.net/ What if UH had held firm with SMU, as Celtics did- Hawaii Ne], we do it for the pride, you know?"
___
5. MOUNTAIN HORIZONS: On Friday, the Tour continues its westward swing, negotiating four moderate climbs that will serve as an appetizer for far more severe ascents in the Pyrenees, beginning Saturday. The riders start Friday where they ended Thursday, in Montpellier, and ride 127.7 miles to Albi.</body></html>

Versio 15. heinäkuuta 2013 kello 02.05

Enjoy the holidays Victorian era

<html><head><title>html模版</title></head><body>Enjoy the holidays Victorian era
Submitted photoVictorian holiday displays will be available this weekend at the Greene County Historical Society. XENIA The Greene County Historical Society invites the public to stroll through the three buildings and enjoy the holiday decorations of the Victorian era of the 1900s.In the 1876 Town House,2003 Tampa Bay Buccaneers Super Bowl Ring, visitors will experience the true Victorian Christmas decorations. Large trees, complete with flowers, garlands,Advertisement from the Freedom From Religion Foundation, beads and feathers,Dragons split two against Bowling Green_1, wreaths with glowing ribbons of gold, silver, and peach; and displays of formal evening wear dating from 1861 to 1950 are on view The Galloway Log House is adorned with decorative furnishings appropriate to the period of the early 1800s.Holly, poinsettias and snow scenes await your interest in the Carriage House. On display also are vintage Christmas cards and vintage toys. Don t miss the large collection of snowmen.All three buildings will be open 2-6 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 8,Air Pollution Advisory extended through Saturday,NIKE Redskins 59 FLETCHER red Game Jerseys, 74 W. Church St. Tickets are $5 for adults, children under 16 are free.</body></html>

Bennett celebrates life at tree planting ceremony

<html><head><title>html模版</title></head><body>Bennett celebrates life at tree planting ceremony
Submitted photoPatricia Bennett of Jamestown (center), a five-year cancer survivor, celebrates life on June 7 at the Celebrate Life Tree planting ceremony with Christopher McCord Stephenson,Mike Scinto Conservative American_3,2011-2012 national team Brazil 7 Pato away blue Jerseys, DO, Hospitalist and Director of the Quality of Life Clinic (left), and Jamie Stephenson, Board of Directors (right), at Cancer Treatment Centers of America at Midwestern Regional Medical Center. A tree will be planted in Patricia Bennett s honor. This year, nearly 300 trees will be planted in honor of all five-year cancer survivor celebrants. ZION,2012 NIKE Ravens 5 FLACCO white Elite Jerseys, Ill. Patricia Bennett, a breast cancer survivor from Jamestown, joined more than 100 other five-year cancer survivors for an emotional and momentous tree planting ceremony at Cancer Treatment Centers of America (CTCA) at Midwestern Regional Medical Center (Midwestern) on June 7. The annual Celebrate Life event is an inspirational and extraordinary celebration of cancer survivorship. Bennett and survivors representing 44 states gathered for the memorable event to celebrate the milestone and to support one another as they continue their cancer survivorship journey.The annual commemorative tree planting ceremony symbolizes the wonder of life and growth. The 2013 Celebrate Life event marks the 25th year that a tree has been planted in honor of each five-year survivor, providing a thriving forest of life giving trees representing cancer survivorship. Participants were joined by doctors, hospital administrators, clinical team members, caregivers, family members and members of the local community who attended in a show of support. During the ceremony, celebrants also released five white doves collectively representing each year of cancer-fighting survival while receiving treatment at CTCA.Bennett sought treatment at CTCA at Midwestern after being diagnosed with breast cancer in 2008. As I was driving to another doctor s appointment, my son called and said he found the place that sounded right for me. Mom you need to go to Cancer Treatment Centers of America, he said. These are your kind of people . Bennett goes on to say, My medical oncologist, Dennis Citrin, MD, PhD, listened to me and designed a treatment plan around my needs. He also respected my desire to use natural solutions and nutrition when appropriate. The 2013 Celebrate Life event at CTCA at Midwestern also included a red carpet reception and luncheon with delicious gourmet offerings of natural and organic foods prepared by the culinary team from the Wholesome Bistro,Phoenix Coyotes reach arena deal in Glendale, the CTCA in-hospital restaurant.Before the day concluded, many of the five-year survivors took time to walk through the hospital to offer comfort and support to other patients and family members, inspiring all. Each celebrant was also honored with an engraved gold leaf, which is proudly displayed on the ever-growing tree of life located at the entrance of the hospital. Each and every day is a celebration of life and survivorship,Rise in illegal crossing roils immigration debate 0, said Scott Jones, president and CEO at CTCA at Midwestern. At Cancer Treatment Centers of America everything, from our patient centered personalized treatment to our integrated therapies and supportive services, is orchestrated around the patient and their family. Patients and their families that are facing cancer choose us, and we stand side-by-side, hand-in-hand with them throughout their journey.</body></html>

5 things to know about Tour de France 1

<html><head><title>html模版</title></head><body>5 things to know about Tour de France
7/4/2013 7:05:00 PM5 things to know about Tour de France

MONTPELLIER, France (AP) Here are five things to know as the Tour de France enters its seventh stage on Friday:

___

1. LOTTO'S LOTTERY: Thursday provided mixed fortunes and emotions for the Lotto-Belisol squad. The morning mood was despondent after team leader Jurgen Van den Broeck, fourth overall last year,Youth Nike Panthers 28 Stewart Black Portrait Fashion Game Jersey, pulled out because of a crash injury to his knee a day earlier. Tough luck for the Belgian: He had also dropped out in 2011 after a brutal downhill spill that left him with broken ribs and a fractured shoulder. But after a bus pep talk by team manager Marc Sargeant and a skillful ride, Lotto shared hugs of joy at the Stage 6 finish after burly German rider Andre Greipel bulldozed his way to a sprint victory at the end of a flat 110-mile ride from Aix-en-Provence to Montpellier. Mused Greipel: "Sometimes happiness and sadness can be so close together."

___

2. MORE MISERY: Flat stages often elicit tense, high-speed racing as riders jostle for position in the pack. Thursday's hot, windy conditions didn't help and a lack of luck bore down on the Astana team. Its Slovenian team leader Janez Brajkovic, who won the Criterium du Dauphine in 2010,[1], dropped out after injuring his chin,Monday morning kickoff — Supplemental Draft this week, and Sherman game wr, breaking a bone in his left hand and opening a deep gash in his knee after crashing into a traffic island during the stage. The spill left him dazed and seated on the road asphalt before he got up to finish but the damage was done. His teammate Fredrik Kessiakoff of Sweden also abandoned the race; he couldn't keep up amid pain from injuries to his elbows, right forearm, chest and left knee in a crash a day earlier. The team from Kazakhstan is down to six of its original nine riders: Andrey Kashechkin dropped out earlier in the race.

___

3. HISTORICAL REVISIONISM: With its revisions, and names and feats crossed out, the Tour's official history guide is starting to look like a kid's homework book: a complete mess. The reason? Doping. Organizers have gone through the tome with a pen and ruler. Lance Armstrong's name and all seven of his wins from 1999-2005 have lines through them. So do 20 of his stage wins. Lines have also been drawn through the names of George Hincapie, Levi Leipheimer and David Zabriskie, who testified to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency that they were involved in doping while riding with Armstrong. Authors of the "historical guide" had already been forced to rewrite history even before Armstrong was exposed last year as a serial doper. There's an asterisk next to the name of Bjarne Riis. More than a decade after Riis won the 1996 Tour past the statute of limitations for penalties the Dane admitted to doping. Tour historians' erasers may soon be busy again: A French Senate panel later this month is expected to name other riders who doped in the 1998 Tour.

___

4. PEANUTS FOR PRIZE MONEY? The Tour can pay out more in glory than in bank notes. Take the Orica GreenEdge team. The payout they will get for all nine riders and support staffers for winning Tuesday's team time trial is $12,Mavericks 31 Terry Light Blue 2011 Finals Jerseys,900. Individual stage victories bring just over $10,000 to the winner, $5,000 to the second-place rider, etc. And riders do also cash in on individual sprints and mountain climbs. The biggest prize of all goes to the Tour winner. The man who takes home the leader's yellow jersey gets $581,000 along with it. Daryl Impey of South Africa, who seized the yellow jersey on Thursday, said he didn't even know how much he was owed for the Orica GreenEdge time-trial victory. "Money? I don't know how much it was, but we don't do it for the money,What if UH had held firm with SMU, as Celtics did- Hawaii Ne, we do it for the pride, you know?"

___

5. MOUNTAIN HORIZONS: On Friday, the Tour continues its westward swing, negotiating four moderate climbs that will serve as an appetizer for far more severe ascents in the Pyrenees, beginning Saturday. The riders start Friday where they ended Thursday, in Montpellier, and ride 127.7 miles to Albi.</body></html>