Sunday, September 21, 2008

Wheat Ridge 2008 Business Awards

The Vision Award recognizes a business that has demonstrated a visionary attitude within its industry and among other businesses. This includes:

* Implementing "best practices" in management * Implementing "best practices" in the business process * Providing a standard for other businesses to follow

We are very proud to present this year's Vision Award to The Digital Frontier.

Established in 1994, The Digital Frontier is dedicated to providing the best technology, service, and value to their clientele. The Digital Frontier is committed to respect for client relationships, ethics in business, a productive and healthy work environment, and on making a positive impact in the world. In addition the their commitment to the clients The Digital Frontier, believes that printing green and being green is a process, not a political statement or a quick way to capitalize on a trend.

Friday, September 19, 2008

Variety of characters in Wilson's 'Century Cycle'

The primary character whose influence dominates the entire cycle, Aunt Esther, is a towering figure whose combination of folk wisdom and mystical insight becomes the guiding light for many characters. She reaches biblical and mythological status as the plays unfold, finally dying at the age of 366.

A brief summary of the plays in the second half of the cycle introduces characters who are young and impatient, old and wise, steeped in Biblical tradition and skeptical of the white man's God, committed to spouse and children and unfaithful and self-centered, first generation entrepreneurs and third-generation con men, principled preachers and ex-cons. All of these characters carry their burdens into our lives and breathe intense life into each play.

"Fences," set in the 1950s, chronicles the frustrations of a great baseball player, Troy Maxon, who never played an inning in the major leagues because of the color line.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Local teen to represent Canada

“My motivation is myself," he said. “I want to be the best, so it keeps me training all the time. I'm not where I want to be and I still have a lot of work to do. I'm happy with the progress."

Lanteinge isn't just committed to himself. He wants others at the club to taste success, as well, and will do whatever it takes to help them out.

“We made him an assistant coach at the club because he goes above and beyond his own training to help others train," Boyne said.

Lanteigne is no stranger to international success. Over the past three years, he has won four world titles, in traditional kata and weapons, with the World Karate Association and National Blackbelt League.

“I've learned a lot about myself through this sport," he said. “It forces me to work hard, set goals and keeps me in shape.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Changed lives

This emerging story inverts the popular belief that there's something permanently wrong with manufacturing or, perhaps, with the entire economy, so wrong that great numbers of people simply can't ever expect decent work. Such a belief leads either to schemes to rewrite economic rules or to a despair that, without massive intervention by the state, the future is hopeless.

The future is not hopeless either at the macro level or for individuals. People who want better work can adapt, which is a lot more likely and feasible than changing everything else to accommodate them.

Not that this means they're on their own. Gateway's success shows that if public policy has a role, it is to create opportunities for people to change.

"We firmly believe there are lots of good programs out there," said McNelly, who before working for the Manufacturing Institute oversaw job training innovation for the U.S.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Cheers and Jeers: Customer displeased with paint job

The attitude of all the employees is wonderful.

From management on down, you receive top treatment. I’m walking proof of that.

— William O’Brien, Fayetteville

Cheers to a wonderful person by the name of Beverly Green! She basically took care of me when I had surgery and helped me in so many ways, going above and beyond, and I am greatly appreciative of that.

I would also like to say cheers to Phillip Smith, William “Bill” Cordero, Dirie Patterson, Cecelia Manchion, Cheri Mendez, Arrie Cole, Merlene McKinnon and Jeffery Williams for your kindness, thoughtfulness and generosity!

— Sonia Dunbar, Fayetteville

Jeers to a home-improvement store.

After I received horrible customer service at this store, an off-duty employee helped me locate the items I needed.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Save Buriganga, save Dhaka

But, unfortunately, our experience is that motivation seldom works. We are more habituated to act under compulsion. So, to save and restore the Buriganga to its original bliss, there would be required a master plan of actions. The actions against the accumulated odds may have to be rude, but then that would be for the sake of the liveability of the city, for its 15 million citizens.

There might have been small encroachments on the river also earlier than 1972 before Dhaka assumed its present status of capital of sovereign Bangladesh. But that is just not noticeable in the glare of the scale the practice has assumed after 1972. Nowhere in the world perhaps people have been so indifferent to their past and so oblivious of their future in pursuit of their present. What a "present" -- devoid of the past glory and future sustainability! So what, has been our attitude.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

No monkey business

The Origin`85 undermined to some extent the belief that in His infinite wisdom God created the universe and placed man at the centre of His creation � "like a king in a palace stored with all to please him," to quote theologian F.B. Meyer.

The creationists condemned Darwin as the wickedest, the most contrived and the most fraudulent. "If the book be true, the labours of sober induction are in vain; religion is a lie; human law is a mass of folly, and a base injustice; morality is moonshine; our labours for the black people of Africa were works of madness; and man and woman are only better beasts", lamented one.

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