Spring And Landscaping In Bloom

t’s finally getting warm outside, and now it’s time to get some yard work done. And according to some business owners, most people have a good idea of what they want their yards to look like. To help with those projects, customers seem very much in the know about what products they need to accomplish their goal.

Melissa Skorik, owner of Faery’s Nursery and Landscaping in Ransomville, said there are customers who are shopping for certain landscaping products.

“People are looking for privacy screens, shade trees and anything with color,” she said.

Like several other landscaping businesses, Faery’s offers a designing service that helps customers plan out any project. The project can be planned out on site, if the customers want to do the work, themselves. Many have already taken advantage of the service, Skorik said.

“We’ve seen a lot of people come in with measurements,” she said. “It could be something like someone building a deck and they want something around it. Or something just to spruce up the yard.”

Although costs are increasing, like every other business and industry, Skorik said Faery’s has been able to manage those costs well. Fuel for transportation is a big one, as well as labor costs and materials. However, being able to grow most of what they sell, Faery’s is able to handle the rising costs.

Mark Van Buren, owner of Zehr’s Farm Market and Nursery in Burt, said with the Internet and the rise of gardening shows on television, customers usually know what they’re looking for. They have an idea of what they want and what they need.

“What we’re finding out is that customers are more knowledgeable,” he said. “They’re more savvy, more sophisticated.”

Van Buren said Zehr’s grows all of the plants it sells, and it usually draws the type of customer who is looking for something unusual. Because of its customer base, Zehr’s can grow what it wants to, instead of growing more mainstream plants. He added the larger stores, such as Home Depot, help by drawing customers looking for mainstream items while Zehr’s can concentrate on people looking for that unusual product.

Van Buren said Zehr’s Web site, www.zehrsonthelake.com, offers a lineup of what kinds of different flowers and plants are available. It also contains articles about different trends in gardening and landscaping. According to Zehr’s site, the color purple and red were pretty popular. Earth tones are pretty popular choices, too, for flowers.

Customers can also create a shopping list online and bring it to Zehr’s. They can have their projects designed on a computer to see how they look, or even see pictures of the yard or the plants they want.

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Monday, May 12th, 2008

New Landscape Plan To Make History Bloom

The Town of Windsor Museum area in Boardwalk Park is coming together, but the town wanted a better landscaping design around it Landscaping Contractor.

“We wanted a historical landscaping design for the area, with plants common to the area in the 1920s,” said Windsor Director of Parks and Recreation Melissa Chew.

The Town of Windsor Museum area in Boardwalk Park is coming together, but the town wanted a better landscaping design around it.

“We wanted a historical landscaping design for the area, with plants common to the area in the 1920s,” said Windsor Director of Parks and Recreation Melissa Chew.

The town contacted Colorado State University’s Design and Horticulture Program and offered a competition for the landscape design. A plan designed by two students, CSU seniors Celsey Svenson and Lydia Young, was selected by town staff.

“We were given a concept of what this area is and did research to find out what sort of plant life would have existed here,” Svenson said. “We designed a plan with natural grass seeding, such as buffalo grass.”

In the design, poppies and an orchard of peach, cherry and apple trees will be planted. A vegetable garden will be located near the school house, featuring cabbage and carrots. Other plant life will include yucca plants and goldenrod.

“We’re also going to incorporate lots of wildflower patches,” Young said.

Windsor Town Manager Kelly Arnold asked about irrigation.

“Because the plant life is native to the area, we’ve designed it to be almost xeriscaped,” Young said. “Of course, there will need to be some watering with the initial planting.”

Chew explained that less intense watering would help keep the historical buildings in good shape by eliminating water spray on the buildings.

“This design will need to be approved by the landscape architect we have on retainer,” Chew said. “Then we can look at the cost of implementing the plan and decide when we can get to work.”

Windsor Mayor John Vazquez asked about the hard surface being planned for the trails through the village.

“We’re looking at using a fine crusher gravel, which is pretty low maintenance,” Svenson said.

The museum is coming along well, and the train depot Landscaping Contractor, schoolhouse, church and beet shanty will be open to receive visitors this summer.

“The house and kitchen area are not finished, and the church hasn’t been given much renovation since we accepted it from the Historical Society,” Chew said. “We also don’t have much of a plan for the Eaton House yet, but we’ll get there.”

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Friday, May 9th, 2008

Learning How to Tie My Shoes a Lesson in Childhood Self Reliance

Teaching children how to tie their own shoes is one way to help them learn self reliance. When they learn self reliance through shoe-tying, they may be apt to try other things on their own and develop into more independent, capable, and competent children, teens and adults.

Since the invention of Velcro, most children’s shoes feature these easy closures. Still, there are benefits of teaching children how to tie their own shoes. On the physical side, it helps children work on their fine motor skills, hand-eye coordination, and dexterity. On the social side, it helps children employ self reliance and can lead to increased confidence in one’s own abilities. Besides, it’s still an important childhood milestone!

Here’s a few tips to help children learn how to tie their shoes all by themselves:

(1) Different colored laces: You will likely find that it’s easier to help your child learn how to tie his own shoes if the laces are not the same colors. Instead of saying “the right one” or “the one in that hand” you can say, “put the red one over the blue one.” Different colored laces can make any shoe-tying technique easier.

(2) Bunny ears:

a. Tell your child, “let’s make some bunny ears with your laces!”

b. Then, teach him how to make a tight knot that can become the top of the bunny’s head. Take one lace in each hand and make an X. Then pull one lace through the bottom of the X (like a train going through a tunnel) and pull tight.

c. Tell your child, “Now let’s give our bunny some ears.” Loop the laces to make 2 ears.

d. Tell your child, let’s make the ears nice and tight so they don’t fall off the bunny’s head!” Make an X using the 2 ears, slide one ear under the X (like a train going through a tunnel) and pull tight.

(3) Use a giant shoe cut-out: You can buy one or make one yourself. Cut out a big shoe-shape. Get your child involved by allowing him to decorate it with his favorite colored markers or stickers. Then string an extra long lace through the shoe cut-out (a shoe lace that’s 2 different colors on each side can be helpful heresew a red and green lace together or dip each side of a white lace in dye for the same effect). Allow your child to work on the “giant’s shoe” using any teaching method you like.

(4) The scaredy cat and the tree: This method uses a fun story to help children tie their shoes. This method is also known as the squirrel going ’round the tree. It can be helpful to tell your child stories because they can make it easier for him to remember the steps. Not only does this method help your child develop self reliance but it also exercises your child’s fine motor skills and dexterity since he needs to switch hands.

a. Tell the child, “make tree roots by making a knot.”

b. Then say, “make a long loop to make a very tall tree. Hold that loop in your right hand.” (A sticker on your child’s right hand can help him remember right from left).

c. Tell your child, “with the left hand, hold onto the other lace. This is the scaredy cat! The cat runs around the tree and jumps into the hole under the tree and out the other side.”

(5) Try some shoe-tying books or toys: There are wooden shoe-tying models and shoe-tying books that allow your children to practice! Books or games like “Tie Your Shoes Rocket Style” or “The Wooden Lacing Shoe (Melissa and Doug) are some good options.

Dr. Robyn’s PowerNote: If your child’s a lefty and you’re not, ask another lefty to help you teach your child how to tie his or her shoes. Ormirror them! Sit across from your children and tie a shoe along with them. This way, your shoe tying will match what they’re doing.

Again, while Velcro and bungee cord laces are available, learning to tie ones own shoes helps with self reliance and development. And, as you know, your youngster will grow to be an adult one day…and when is the last time you used Velcro to fasten your shoes? You might as well teach them now as they will need to learn the skill eventually!

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Monday, March 10th, 2008

Two planes almost crash midair near Pittsburgh because of controller’s mistake

Two U.S. airplanes carrying more than 120 passengers narrowly averted a collision after an air traffic control trainee told a Delta Air Lines pilot to turn into the path of an oncoming plane, officials said.

One pilot flew up and the other went down, and the planes never came closer than about 400 feet in altitude and 3 miles in lateral, or horizontal, separation, Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Elizabeth Isham Cory said Thursday.

Standard separation is 1,000 feet vertical and 5 miles lateral, Cory said.

A cockpit collision avoidance system alerted the pilots to the danger, in the skies east of Pittsburgh.

Delta Flight 1654 was en route from Cincinnati to LaGuardia Airport in New York on Tuesday morning and was carrying 57 passengers. The other plane, PSA Flight 2273, was flying from Wilkes-Barre, Pa., to Charlotte, N.C. It had 70 people on board. (PSA is a subsidiary of US Airways.)

The controller only had about a year on the job, said Melissa Ott, National Air Traffic Controllers spokeswoman at the Cleveland Air Route Traffic Control Center in Oberlin, Ohio.

“We watched the recording of the incident three times and each time I said, ‘Oh my God,”‘ Ott said. “It was the closest call I have ever seen in my 18 years of air traffic control.”

Cory called the encounter an operational error. She said a second controller was working with the trainee at the time.

“This ended with the aircraft taking the appropriate action,” Cory said. “The controllers will be retrained.”

A Delta spokeswoman said the passengers “were never in danger.”

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Saturday, March 8th, 2008

Starbucks cutting 600 positions many in Seattle

Starbucks said today it is cutting about 600 positions, some through attrition and about 220 through layoffs. No in-store employees were laid off, and the cuts are separate from Starbucks’ plan to close about 100 underperforming U.S. stores this year.

Many of the lost jobs, including about a third of the layoffs, are at Starbucks’ Seattle headquarters.

The moves are part of Howard Schultz’s effort to turn around the company, whose U.S. operations and stock price have suffered over the past year. Starbucks’ board ousted former chief executive Jim Donald last month and reinstated Schultz as the company’s top boss.

Since then, he has decided to retrain in-store employees, offer free Wi-Fi to certain customers and stop selling warmed breakfast sandwiches.

In a memo to Starbucks’ 170,000-plus employees today, Schultz wrote that an organizational analysis over the past several weeks was at times emotional and stressful.

“I know that I am responsible for ensuring the success of the company for the long term, which means that difficult decisions must be made,” he wrote.

He also announced a restructuring of Starbucks’ U.S. business, including expanding from two to four geographic regions to improve support for employees. Functions like finance, human resources and marketing are being reorganized or consolidated.

More changes will be announced at the company’s annual meeting on March 19.

Starbucks shares fell 43 cents to $17.83 today. Over the past year, the stock has traded between $17.66 and $33.14.

“I like to see action taking place, but it will be a year before we decide if these changes are significant enough to be positive for the business,” said James Walsh, an analyst with Coldstream Capital Management in Bellevue, which owns Starbucks shares as part of $1.1 billion it manages for wealthy individuals.

Melissa Allison: 206-464-3312 or %26#109;%26#97;%26#108;%26#108;%26#105;%26#115;%26#111;%26#110;%26#64;%26#115;%26#101;%26#97;%26#116;%26#116;%26#108;%26#101;%26#116;%26#105;%26#109;%26#101;%26#115;%26#46;%26#99;%26#111;%26#109;

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Friday, February 22nd, 2008

Starbucks cutting 600 jobs many in Seattle

Starbucks said Thursday it is cutting about 600 positions, some through attrition and about 220 through layoffs. No in-store employees were laid off, and the cuts are separate from Starbucks’ plan to close about 100 underperforming U.S. stores this year.

Many of the lost jobs, including about a third of the layoffs, are at Starbucks’ Seattle headquarters.

The moves are part of Howard Schultz’s effort to turn around the company, whose U.S. operations and stock price have suffered the past year. Starbucks’ board ousted former Chief Executive Jim Donald last month and reinstated Schultz as the company’s top boss.

Since then, he has decided to retrain in-store employees, offer free Wi-Fi to certain customers and stop selling warmed breakfast sandwiches.

In a memo to Starbucks’ 170,000-plus employees Thursday, Schultz wrote that an organizational analysis over the past several weeks was at times emotional and stressful.

“I know that I am responsible for ensuring the success of the company for the long term, which means that difficult decisions must be made,” he wrote.

He also announced a restructuring of Starbucks’ U.S. business, including expanding from two to four geographic regions to improve support for employees. Functions like finance, human resources and marketing are being reorganized or consolidated.

More changes will be announced at the company’s annual meeting March 19.

Starbucks shares fell 43 cents to $17.83 Thursday. Over the past year, the stock has traded between $17.66 and $33.14.

“I like to see action taking place, but it will be a year before we decide if these changes are significant enough to be positive for the business,” said James Walsh, an analyst with Coldstream Capital Management in Bellevue, which owns Starbucks shares as part of $1.1 billion it manages.

Melissa Allison: 206-464-3312 or %26#109;%26#97;%26#108;%26#108;%26#105;%26#115;%26#111;%26#110;%26#64;%26#115;%26#101;%26#97;%26#116;%26#116;%26#108;%26#101;%26#116;%26#105;%26#109;%26#101;%26#115;%26#46;%26#99;%26#111;%26#109;

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Friday, February 22nd, 2008

What’s New in Tucson, Arizona February 2008

2008 Field of Champions: Three recent champions of Major League Baseball return to Tucson for Cactus League Spring Training, February 27-March 27. The teams-Arizona Diamondbacks, Chicago White Sox, and Colorado Rockies-play home games every week at Tucson Electric Park (TEP) and Hi Corbett Field. One of the season’s hottest matches-between Chicago rivals, the White Sox and the Cubs-is already a sell‑out, Saturday, March 15 at TEP. Another big game, between the Diamondbacks and the Los Angeles Dodgers, takes place Friday, March 21 at TEP as the Dodgers prepare for their 2009 move to the Cactus League.

A two-nation competition is scheduled for Hi Corbett Field when the Colorado Rockies host the Mexican National All-Star team on Friday, Feb. 29 and Sunday, March 2. For more information, check the Spring Training page under Events at www.visitTucson.org; or call the ticket offices of Tucson Electric Park at (520) 434-1367 and Hi Corbett Field at (520) 327-9467.

Mariachis in the Making: Tucson is a laboratory for students of traditional Mexican music and dance. Every year, at least 900 students from across North America travel here for the La Frontera Tucson International Mariachi Conference. Budding mariachi musicians and folklorico dancers participate in the conference’s workshops and concerts, which are taught by some of the most popular performers of our time. Many of these teachers were at one time conference students themselves; now they are passing along their knowledge to future generations. The workshops are capped with public concerts featuring big-name bands. The next conference, April 23-26, 2008, is headlined by Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlan (called the best band in Mexico) and other national and local acts. For details, go to www.tucsonmariachi.org When the conference is not in town, fans of the genre can hear the lively music year round at Tucson restaurants, festivals, and even churches.

Tucson Going Hog Wild: Downtown Tucson is going hog wild for 2008 Arizona State H.O.G. Rally, May 1-3. Downtown Tucson business partners have planned a weekend of motorcycle-themed public events to coincide with the annual rally, which is open only to national members of the H.O.G. (Harley Owners Group) club. A sampling of the public events: a motorcycle ride from Tucson to a Southern Arizona city, an “hog-related” exhibit at Tucson Museum of Art; a classic movie screening at the Fox Tucson Theatre; and a parade of chrome horses on Saturday. For a complete schedule of public events, go to the website of the Downtown Tucson Partnership, www.downtowntucson.org

Wearable Tucson Icons: Shirts imprinted with beautiful and whimsical images of the Tucson area are showing up around the country. Shops in 19 states, other than Arizona, are selling original t-shirts and button-downs by Tucson artist Nancy E. Lenches. Her detailed drawings and muted colors capture the essence of the Sonoran Desert region of the American Southwest. The artful designs feature Southwestern themes, including many Tucson icons: saguaros, quail, doves, roses, horses, horned toads, hummingbirds, petroglyphs, San Xavier Mission, and more. Sizes include ladies, unisex, and youth; adult sizes are priced from $23. Lenches’ company name, Sabaku Artwear, means “desert” in Japanese. Her shirts can be viewed online at www.sabakuart.com

Local Travel Review: Globetrotters and local residents alike can find man-in-the-street reviews of Tucson resorts, hot spots, and more at the new website, GoSeeArizona.com. Tucson is one of 250 Arizona destinations featured on this new social networking website and community-driven travel resource. Each destination has its own page that offers member-generated reviews of local hotels, restaurants, attractions, shops, and more; and like-minded travelers can go online and share information about experiences. Recently, the Tucson page featured suggestions for a real dude ranch, one-of-a-kind pizza, the best margarita, and an authentic Mexican restaurant.

Backyard <a href=Landscaping” align=”right” height=”107″ hspace=”3″ vspace=”3″ width=”143″ /> Suggestions like these are ranked by the website’s unique “Trustiness” system, which calculates the trustworthiness of every review and displays top “Trusted Members” on each landing page. The free online registration includes a simple user profile that outlines travel interests; members may choose to remain anonymous. Check it out at www.GoSeeArizona.com

Tucson Resort Rates World’s Best: Three years after opening, JW Marriott Starr Pass Resort %26 Spa has been rated one of the 500 world’s best hotels by Travel + Leisure. This rating, reported in the magazine’s January 2008 issue, draws on the beauty of resort’s location. Starr Pass offers direct access to Tucson Mountain Park and trails for hiking, horseback riding, and mountain biking. Guest rooms overlook both golf course and city skyline, offering spectacular views of desert terrain, brilliant sunsets, and twinkling lights. Starr Pass is the largest resort hotel in the Tucson region, with 575 rooms; a 27-hole Arnold Palmer Golf Course; 20,000-square-foot spa; seven restaurants, including Chef Melissa Kelly’s renowned Primo; and 88,000 square feet of meeting space. This month the resort opens in its pool area a “lazy river” and “winding waterslide.” For details, visit www.travelandleisure.com/tl500/2008/region/us

New Upscale Shops: La Encantada has added five new shops to its roster of ritzy retailers. The new shops include bluemercury, a national chain offering hard-to-find, high-end cosmetics and skin- and body-care products as well as luxurious candles and fragrances and onsite spa services; J. Crew, the iconic American brand known worldwide for its sophisticated, fun clothing and accessories; Milagros, a high-end import and gift shop specializing in items from around the world; Mildred %26 Dildred, a specialty toy store that promotes imaginative play in a relaxed, interactive atmosphere; and Solstice Sunglass Boutique, headquarters for designer-brand sunwear, with more than 1,000 sunglasses on display. La Encantada shopping center’s pedestrian-friendly, open-air setting now houses 59 tenants at Skyline Drive and Campbell Avenue, minutes from several resorts. For more information, visit www.laencantadashoppingcenter.com

New Service at Tucson Airport: The number of nonstop flights at Tucson International Airport (TIA) continues to grow. Delta Air Lines recently began twice daily, nonstop service between Tucson and Los Angeles. Delta’s new service increases to 13 the total number of daily departures available between Tucson (TUS) and Los Angeles (LAX). The two new Delta flights depart Tucson at 7 a.m. and 3:55 p.m. respectively, adding convenience and choice for customers traveling to Los Angeles, which is the most-popular destination for Tucson travelers. Another carrier, Sun Country Airlines recently introduced seasonal twice-weekly nonstop service between Tucson and Minneapolis/St. Paul (MSP), which will continue through April 7. Including this service, Tucson International Airport is served by 12 airlines offering 88 daily nonstop departures to 28 destinations. A current list of arrival and departure schedules at Tucson International Airport is available through AirTucson.com, www.airtucson.com/service.htm

Wish You Were Here: Send a free e-postcard from the city of purple mountains and prickly-pear cacti. Images of Tucson scenery, hiking, golf and more are available-at no charge-at the website of the Metropolitan Tucson Convention %26 Visitors Bureau, www.visitTucson.org/visitor/gallery

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Thursday, February 21st, 2008

Kentucky town to bask in limelight of Lincoln bicentennial celebrations

HODGENVILLE, Ky. — Never mind that young Abe left in obscurity after his family’s frontier land squabbles. Or that years later voters from his old Kentucky home didn’t support his run for the presidency.

This town now proudly embraces Abraham Lincoln as a native son, though its status as his birthplace hasn’t kept it from being overshadowed by other places more famously associated with the Great Emancipator.

But locals are hoping that changes with a two-year national celebration commemorating the 200th anniversary of Lincoln’s 1809 birth in a small cabin at Sinking Spring farm near what became Hodgenville.

“We hope the world will know that Hodgenville exists. This is where Lincoln came from, and this is our heritage,” said Janice Bowen, among the area residents preparing to serve as volunteer ambassadors to greet out-of-towners and answer questions.

Volunteers even took hospitality lessons, though residents take pride in their small-town manners.

Hodgenville — a central Kentucky town of about 3,000, established a couple of years after Lincoln’s family left for Indiana — has been spruced up in preparation for the hoped-for tourists.

The smell of fresh paint recently wafted through the quaint Lincoln Museum, where visitors can gaze upon a life-size portrait of the famous native Kentuckian, dioramas tracing his life and a three-drawer chest crafted by a man who as a childhood friend of Lincoln saved the future president from drowning. Outside, a new roundabout leads traffic past a striking Lincoln statue that serves as the centerpiece of town square.

“Most people are looking at it as company’s coming,” said Iris LaRue, the Lincoln Museum director.

Lincoln seems omnipresent. His name is attached to a bank, an elementary school and even a consignment shop. A new sculpture portraying a youthful Lincoln will be unveiled downtown on May 31. But in the 1860 election that catupulted Lincoln to the White House as the 16th president, he received only a handful of votes from LaRue County — where the Lincoln birthplace is located, an indication that locals didn’t realize he was a native son, said Tommy Turner, the county judge-executive.

The Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site features an imposing neoclassical structure made of granite and marble that enshrines a tiny cabin symbolic of the rustic homestead where Lincoln was born.

Two years after his birth, the Lincolns moved a few miles away to Knob Creek farm, where young Abe formed his earliest memories. But through the years, the Lincoln birthplace has received visits from several Lincoln successors — Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson and Dwight Eisenhower.

Carolyn Mather was a schoolgirl when Eisenhower shook her hand during his visit in 1954. “I didn’t want to wash my hand for a week,” she said.

The birthplace site draws about 200,000 people each year, and officials are expecting “a noticeable bump” in visitations this year amid Lincoln hoopla, said Keith Pruitt, the site’s superintendent.

Townsfolk also are expecting a surge in visitors, not only in the days leading up to a kickoff celebration that was scheduled for Feb. 12, but long after as interest in Lincoln remains strong amid the bicentennial. LaRue predicts twice as many visitors this year to the Lincoln Museum, which usually draws about 30,000 a year.

Nearby, Pat Davis has stocked up on Lincoln merchandise at her downtown gift shop. Visitors searching for Lincoln mementos can choose from artwork, music boxes, books, magnets, collectible coins, candles and ornaments. She used to carry talking Lincoln dolls as part of a presidential series, but the Lincoln dolls were retired last year — which Davis considers an untimely decision.

“I’ve been trying to get in touch with them to let them know you need to get this guy back in,” Davis said.

Jim Erskine, who lives about 20 miles away, opened his family’s gallery and gift store last year in Hodgenville, betting it’s the right spot amid the Lincoln celebrations.

“We realized this would be a hub of a lot of unusual activity in the next couple of years,” he said.

Locals say Lincoln’s Kentucky roots are a history lesson not everyone has learned.

Turner recalls telling someone at an out-of-state convention that he was from Lincoln’s hometown. The man replied, “Where at in Illinois?” Turner told him Lincoln was born in Kentucky.

“I’m not sure he actually believed me because it’s so ingrained in everyone’s mind that Lincoln is from Illinois,” said Turner, co-chairman of the Kentucky Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission.

Lincoln tributes are planned around the country in the next couple of years, but it’s appropriate to start where Lincoln’s life began, said Harold Holzer, a noted Lincoln scholar and co-chairman of the national Lincoln Bicentennial Commission.

“You’re standing in the spot where the greatest American life started,” he said, adding that Lincoln remains “the quintessential symbol of the American dream.”

In Spencer County, Ind., the kickoff event will be a Mother’s Day celebration this spring at the Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial, site of the farm where Lincoln lived from age 7 to 21.

Other events include a Civil War-era ball and a pioneer Thanksgiving-style dinner — an acknowledgment that Lincoln issued a presidential proclamation setting aside a day in November as a day of Thanksgiving.

In September, a group will leave from Rockport, Ind., and head down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers on a replica flatboat to retrace Lincoln’s 1828 trip to New Orleans. The group will incorporate some modern conveniences — the replica boat will be powered by motors. The travelers plan to stop in about 18 cities in eight states to spread the word about Spencer County’s connection to Lincoln.

Local officials hope the bicentennial will boost interest in Lincoln’s formative years in Indiana. The Lincoln boyood site features a wooded trail, a living history farm, a memorial at the site where the Lincoln family’s cabin stood and a cemetery where Lincoln’s mother is buried.

“You can walk through the same woods that Lincoln walked through,” said Melissa Miller, executive director of the Spencer County Visitors Bureau.

Illinois — the state most synonymous with Lincoln — also is planning a full array of activities as part of the extended celebration. Kay Smith, coordinator of the state’s Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission, predicted a surge in interest in the many Lincoln historic sites in Springfield, where Lincoln called home for nearly a quarter century, and other places in the state.

Turner, the LaRue County judge-executive, hopes for renewed interest in Lincoln and his Kentucky roots. Turner, who has a Lincoln bust in his office, said the birthplace should be a pilgrimage for any president.

“Every president that served since Lincoln wants to be Lincoln, in terms of gaining the stature and for doing the right thing,” he said. “I can’t imagine why anyone who wants to emulate the man would not want to be here to pay respect at his birth site.”

If You Go…

LINCOLN BIRTHPLACE: 2995 Lincoln Farm Road. Hodgenville, Ky., http://www.nps.gov/abli or 270-358-3137. Open Labor Day through Memorial Day, 8 a.m.-4:45 p.m.. Open Memorial Day through Labor Day, 8 a.m.-6:45 p.m. Free admission. Located about 45 minutes from Louisville airport.

GETTING THERE: Driving from the North: Take Interstate 65 South to Exit 91 (Elizabethtown). Follow KY 61 (Lincoln Parkway) 13 miles south to US 31E. Take US 31E south 1.3 miles to the park, picnic entrance on left and main entrance on right.

From the South: Take Interstate 65 North to Exit 81 (Sonora). Proceed east on KY 84 to KY 61. Turn right on KY 61, then turn right onto US 31E 1.3 miles to park; picnic entrance on left and main entrance on right.

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Thursday, February 21st, 2008

Business travelers families can pick own line at airport

Business travelers no longer have to wait behind vacationing families with their line-clogging strollers and kids climbing on stanchions at the Salt Lake City International Airport.

And those family types won’t have to listen to the uptight guys in suits grumbling in line behind them.

The Transportation Security Administration has selected the Salt Lake airport to test a new security-checkpoint procedure that separates travelers into three lines based on their airport experience.

The Black Diamond program creates a fast lane for expert travelers, allowing them to zip through security measures %26#151; taking off their shoes, removing laptop computers from bags, etc. %26#151; without instruction from TSA employees or the delay of rookie passengers.

The express lane, designated by a black diamond surrounding a solo, small-bag-toting traveler, made its debut Thursday at the airport, along with a frequent traveler line for those somewhat familiar with TSA procedures and a line for families and those needing special assistance.

TSA administrator and U.S. Department of Homeland Security assistant secretary Kip Hawley visited the airport Friday to tout the program %26#151; one of several efforts under way to make the security process more effective and easier for travelers, he said.
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“We’ve gotten feedback from parents of children with special needs who’ve said they really don’t like to be crowded into the business traveler who’s anxious to get going,” Hawley said. “And we heard the same thing from a lot of business travelers who’ve said, ‘We know the rules. … We know what to do and we can do it really fast.’ This is a chance to try that out.”

Hawley said Salt Lake City was chosen as the site for the Black Diamond experiment because the airport and its executive director, Maureen Riley, are willing to try new things in hopes of improving the travel experience and quality of service at the airport.

“Innovation happens in Salt Lake City,” he said. “There’s a willingness and eagerness to lead.”

Airport officials expect the change to be felt most in Terminal 1, which previously didn’t have any kind of frequent-traveler program or first-class lines for travelers, said Earl Morris, Utah federal security director for TSA.

“Every passenger who comes here will be able to designate what level of passenger they are,” Morris said. “Those who have families, we can give them more assistance as they come through.”

TSA officials plan to introduce the divided lanes next week at the Denver International Airport. The program will be evaluated over several months and then likely expanded throughout the nation.

“We’ll be evaluating to see how we can tweak it,” Morris said. “But it’s here to stay (in Salt Lake City) for a while, if not indefinitely.”

The pick-a-line process begins at the ticket counter with signs that read, “What is your line?” From there, passengers can follow the color and shape that correspond with their level of travel experience throughout the check-in process %26#151; black diamond, blue square (frequent travelers) or green circle (families or those needing special assistance).

“The theory is you’ll have a calmer business traveler and calmer family travelers,” Hawley said. “It just makes the process go more smoothly.”

And calm travelers make it easier for TSA officials to pay attention to their top priority %26#151; identifying those who pose a potential threat to the safety of an airport or the aviation system, he said. “If the whole crowd coming at us is frustrated and upset, it’s easier for someone who wants to do harm to mix into that,” Hawley said.

Jeff Simpler of Austin, Texas, said he thinks the separate lines conceptually are a good idea.

“As a business traveler, I’d like to get the families and kids away from me,” Simpler said.

On Friday, however, Simpler was in the family line, following the green circles with his wife, Melissa, and their two children. The family was returning to Austin after vacationing in Utah.

The Black Diamond program is expected to reduce wait times for most passengers.

The flow through security checkpoints likely will increase again in late 2009, when more sophisticated x-ray machines are expected to be installed at the airport. The new technology will better assess what’s in passengers’ bags, Hawley said.

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Sunday, February 17th, 2008

3 Ga. Southern students killed in wreck

A third Georgia Southern University student has died from injuries sustained in a Sunday afternoon wreck.
Melissa Eustice, 20, and 21-year-old Jessica Fulmer were initially killed in the wreck, which occurred about 3:40 p.m. on I-16 near Metter in southeast Georgia. Both women were 2005 graduates of Lakeside High School in Evans.

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Thursday, February 14th, 2008