![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
“Outstanding service. They were extremely careful delivering the extra large container into our driveway.” -- A. L. GARNER
Trump's world to be targeted with public harassment while browsing books in Richmond, Virginia, on Saturday afternoon. While at bookstore Black Swan Books, Bannon was confronted by a woman who began "verbally accosting" him and calling him "a piece of trash," according to a report by the Richmond Times-Dispatch. Nick Cooke, the owner of Black Swan Books, asked the woman to leave the store and, when she refused, he called the police. "Steve Bannon was simply standing, looking at books, minding his own business. I asked her to leave, and she wouldn't. And I said, 'I'm going to call the police if you don't,' and I went to call the police and she left," Cooke told the Richmond Times-Dispatch in an interview. "And that's the end of the story."Cooke called 911, but the unnamed woman left before the police arrived."We are a bookshop. Bookshops are all about ideas and tolerating different opinions and not about verbally assaulting somebody, which is what was happening," Cooke said.Bannon could not immediately be reached for comment. This incident is one of the latest in a string of public confrontations of current and former administration officials. In June, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen was confronted by protesters in a Mexican... (eve Bannon called 'piece of trash' by heckler at bookstore)
Soup said the Maxton facility opened in 1978 and employs more than 800 people to produce several brands of Campbell’s soups and Swanson broth products. Mark Price: 704-358-5245, @markprice_obs ... (mpster kills NC man in freak accident at Campbell's Soup plant, officials say)
Long Beach. The beach cleanup initiative was coordinated by the City of Long Beach, Fabien Cousteau Ocean Learning Center and art teacher Laura Swan's "Stewards of the Sea," assisted by Long Beach High School student Harry Murphy. It brought members of the community together to make an environmental study of the debris found on our shoreline. Litter in various forms was removed and registered carefully to help preserve the beach's natural beauty and cleanliness.The middle school art students were requested by Cousteau to take the efforts a step further and make a "trash sculpture" from the debris that was collected. Thanks to the efforts of the beach maintenance crew, they assembled sanitized pieces of trash to form the image of a "sea person" that illustrates nature's magnificence while spreading awareness about protection of the waters. They appropriately titled the piece, "Salvaged Riva," as Riva means "from the shore" in French.Materials such as bottle caps, beach toys, plastic lids, balloons and more were thoroughly washed and separated into categories. The students used these, as well as natural elements like shells and driftwood, to create their design over a paper mache foundation. Even the backdrop, a painting featuring colors of the ocean, was a discarded item repurposed for the project."After almost three decades of creating art with my students, this piece was extra special," said Ms. Swan. "The artwork makes a strong statement of love for and destruction of our waters and how items that comfort us and make our lives 'easier' are sadly found in our seas.
You can also visit their website at www.njclean.org.Don’t forget to visit the Patch Newark Facebook page here.Photo: Flickr CommonsWant to post your next neighborhood event on the Patch? We do too! No matter how big or small it may be, if it's local, it has a place on the Patch calendar.Posting an event is as simple as 1, 2, 3. Here's how to do it:Create a Patch account and sign up to post your own local content on Patch, totally free. It's probably the easiest thing you'll do all day.Make a Calendar Event and fill it with all the awesome info that people need to add it to their list of things to do in their neighborhood. Choose a fun image to upload and most importantly - have fun with it! It's your event, and the possibilities are endless.Post it on Patch! That's it. Get ready for RSVPs. You can share your event for free to three Patches, or if you really want to get the community's attention, you can pay $20 to feature your event. When an event is featured, it receives priority placement on the local calendar as well as on the homepage, article pages and in the daily newsletter (if available) the week before the event.Get free real-time news alerts from the Newark Patch.Thanks for your feedback.Originally published Oct 4, 2017.
New Delhi's three landfills are already overflowing, says the group's founder, Nakul, who like many in India goes by only one name.Even the swankiest neighborhoods often have garbage tucked into the corners between buildings or beneath park benches.Some Delhi students volunteer regularly to help pick it up, but most of New Delhi Rising's engagement has come from social media 'likes' and follows. Nakul hopes more residents will come out to help."It only takes two hours, it doesn't take money," he said.Sharma reported from New Delhi.#ndn-video-player-3.ndn_embedded .ndn_floatContainer { margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 20px; }... (Omaha World-Herald)