Urban Landscaping

On the , however, a wide range of soil and can add levels of challenge not experienced elsewhere. We went to the experts to get the lowdown on how to get more out of your yard and have fun doing it.

Martin of local landscaping firm Home and Property Services sees some common errors when people set about planning their gardens. Martin and partner Glenn have built a solid with both residential and and have seen a lot of gardens in their career.

“People forget to check to see if the plant or shrub can be grown in their area,” says . “When buying , make sure you find out what zone you are in and when selecting plants make sure they are acceptable for growing in your zone. People also tend to buy shrubs without checking to see how big they get and eventually their garden becomes overcrowded. Make sure you check the full size it will be at by checking the tag or asking questions at your local garden centre. When selecting annual bedding make sure you check the tags again and plant them where recommended (). So many people plant bedding where they don’t belong and end up with a disappointing garden.”

Enhancing and growing conditions also requires more than a little digging.

“People tend to over water or over fertilize their garden,” says . “Just because the on top is dry it does not mean your or need water. Dig down a few inches with your to check for proper . Too much water will eventually rot the root system and the plant will not grow fully or bloom properly. People also tend to over fertilize. and only require feeding every 10 to 14 days.”

If you’re thinking of minimizing maintenance by planting a large lawn, think again.

“Homeowners plant more grass than garden thinking that is . requires cutting weekly and can become a chore or a large if you have to have it cut by a local lawn cutting service. People wait too long to remove the weeds from the garden, making it a long and unwanted task. It is recommended that you cultivate your garden weekly because if you keep knocking down the young they eventually will be unable to reproduce and will not return.”

As with most aspects of home decorating, trends change and design ideas evolve over time. Here are some of the latest looks and fashions,

“Rock walls, interlocking walls, stamped concrete, paving stone driveways are all very popular in today’s landscapes. They offer a very rich look to your property and blend in well with your garden . Low voltage garden lighting has become popular in all gardens and new landscapes. It offers a wonderful look to your garden and when illuminated in the evening. The lighting requires a small amount of electricity to operate, so they are very cost effective and easy to install. Perennial gardens have also become popular.

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Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Zero Interest Offers A Great Deal For Kubota Minis

A limited per cent finance offer* on two of Kubota’s most popular, class-leading, ultra compact , from the world’s best selling range, is currently available through their official until the end of June 2008.

The K008-3 and -3 are super compact, sub 1 tonne, go anywhere models, with an unrivalled for quality, performance, reliability, versatility and excellent .

With their both models can pass through a standard doorway and the -3 also provides full zero tail swing capability.

Kubota Sales &; , Richard Harrison, said: “This special deal provides a limited period opportunity for customers to obtain two of our most popular world leading machines at a highly . So I would urge them to contact their local now to avoid missing out on this great offer.”

Kubota is the European and world leader in and offers the widest range of machines available from a single manufacturer. Customers can select from 18 spanning the weight range from 850 kg to 8 tonnes and including the largest selection of increasingly popular zero tail swing machines.

All Kubota minis, from 1.5 tonne upwards, feature their unique ‘ANTI-THEFT’ system. This complete, easy-to-use was the first and is still the only one of its kind fitted as standard equipment by a manufacturer.

Their outstanding productivity and durability make them the ideal tool for many different applications and end-users, from civil engineering to landscaping and plant hire companies to owner operators.

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Saturday, May 17th, 2008

Lovely Rita - A New Biography Of A Famous New Zealand Painter

was always conscious of painting for the future. Largely indifferent to her in her lifetime (though fierce in defence of her work when criticised), she frequently turned down chances for sales, exhibitions and even books, but was confident of her recognition and status in the future.

“I paint for the next two generations,” she once said, and of her great painting Central Otago (1953-56), which took years to complete, she told her friend, composer Douglas Lilburn, who commissioned it, “I hope the painting has the chance of survival for a long time.”

The lauded future she envisaged for herself has finally been fully realised in 2008, nearly 40 years after Angus’s death. Of course, her as one of the greatest New Zealand painters has been secure since a major retrospective of her work in 1982 but this year, the centenary of her birth, there are a number of important events that will swell her to even greater heights.

First was a fine film documentary by Gaylene Preston, Lovely Rita A Painter’s Life, and now comes this splendid biography by Jill Trevelyan, and later in the year (again with Trevelyan’s editorial and curatorial involvement) will be a major touring originated at Te Papa, Rita Angus: Life and Vision, accompanied by a large multi-author catalogue. It all amounts to the apotheosis of Rita Angus.

The broad outlines of Angus’s career are well enough known: daughter of a prosperous business man (contract builder) who provided crucial financial support throughout her life; education in Palmerston North and the Canterbury School of Art (an academic training she never repudiated despite its conservatism); an early and short-lived marriage to fellow painter Alfred Cook (she painted under the name Rita Cook until the mid-1940s); involvement with the independent-minded Christchurch Group and friendships with painters such as Louise Henderson, Olivia Spencer Bower, Betty Curnow, Leo Bensemann and Doris Lusk; the creation of early masterpieces in landscape (Cass, 1936), portraiture (Self-Portrait, 1936-37, Betty Curnow, 1942), and numerous exquisite watercolour studies of flowers, trees and landscapes; her solitary residence in (successively) Christchurch, Mangonui (briefly) and Wellington; and her lifelong and unflinching pursuit of her vocation, despite illness and other setbacks.

In 1945 she wrote to Lilburn, “I have been able to devote my energies to what I really am, a woman painter. It is my life.” This remained true for the next 25 years, until her death from cancer at the peak of her powers, aged 62 in 1970.

Trevelyan has amply fleshed out the bare bones of this story at every point, through access to family papers (especially those of Angus’s younger sister Jean), by trawling the painted and published record, and above all through her discovery of Angus’s remarkable 30-year correspondence with Lilburn around 400 letters which was deposited after his death in the Turnbull Library. Not much given to public statements about her life or work, Angus left in these letters a record of her inner life to parallel that of her remarkable self-portraits that record changes in her physical appearance.

The unprecedented sequence extends from 1928 to 1968 (ages 20 to 60), 14 of which are reproduced in full-page colour in the book, often preceding each . The letters to Lilburn provide continual commentary on her inner life and most intimate thoughts and fantasies. Philip Norman has already made use of the letters in Douglas Lilburn: His Life and Music (2006), but Trevelyan has mined them further. The most remarkable revelation is of Angus’s brief love affair with Lilburn in 1942 resulting in her pregnancy and subsequent miscarriage. Trevelyan raises the question as to whether Angus realised Lilburn (deeply in the closet) was gay. She may not have. The physical aspect of their relationship was short-lived but the emotional consequences were lifelong, most directly in the series of so-called “goddess” paintings, A Goddess of Mercy (1945-47), Sun Goddess (1949), and Rutu (1951), which she saw quite sincerely as incarnating her dead child as well as embodying the key aspects of her philosophy her nature mysticism, her feminism, her pacifism, her East/West blend of spirituality. Lilburn emerges (by implication his side of the correspondence has not survived) as heroically sensitive, empathetic and forebearing of what one friend (the painter Douglas McDiarmid) called her “nutty intensity”. McDiarmid also remarked how Angus’s obsessional nature resulted in “dangers to health and balance which must attend any self-immolating hermit”. During the years when she lived alone at Clifton (near Sumner in Christchurch) in a tiny house bought by her father (and which more than any other single factor enabled her to sustain her high-minded focus on her vocation as “a woman painter”), Angus became increasingly withdrawn and malnourished until in 1949 she had a sudden breakdown. This resulted in her admission to Sunnyside Hospital and her exposure to at least a dozen treatments of ECT (just a few months after Janet Frame had been similarly treated in the same institution). In time, Angus fully recovered and even saw her hospitalisation as a positive experience.

Although the Lilburn relationship is at the centre of this book, Trevelyan also illuminates many other phases of Angus’s life. Her early marriage to Alf Cook is something of a mystery. It is even possible, Trevelyan suggests, that the union was never consummated. Retrospectively Angus claimed she ended the marriage because she was dominated and suppressed by her painter husband, though Cook seems to have been the mildest and most reserved of men, so Angus’s account needs to be treated with caution. After her marriage ended (to choose another key episode) she spent a couple of years flatting in Cambridge Terrace, Christchurch, with Bensemann and Lawrence Baigent, an artistically and socially gregarious period marked by many portraits, when she became imbued with the pacifism and socialism common in her circle and which she bravely maintained throughout the war, by refusing to submit to official efforts to force her to work in war-supporting industries.

Although in many ways an admirable person, warm and witty, and a “golden person to be with” (as Bensemann described her), Angus could also be somewhat paranoid and easily slighted, often reacting furiously when even her closest friends and family upset her. She was forever cancelling subscriptions and memberships on the slightest of grounds, sorely testing the patience of those who knew and loved her.

Trevelyan strikes a careful balance in this impeccably researched book. She is always sympathetic and admiring but does not suppress information that shows Angus in a less favourable light, thus steering a judicious path between the extremes of hagiography and hatchet job.

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Sunday, April 20th, 2008

Law Firm Committed To The Principles Of Workplace Diversity

When Shashu Clacken, a recent recruit at Blake, Cassels &; Graydon LLP, talks about how it felt to be asked to join a top law firm known for promoting diversity Landscaping Services, she is quick to point out the was the reason she chose it.

When Clacken was evaluating potential employers in Toronto, she questioned how committed they were to promoting and providing support for women of all backgrounds.

“Blakes provided the most satisfactory answer,” says the 25-year-old native of Jamaica. “On a personal level, it’s really important to feel comfortable and valued in your skin.”

Clacken came to Toronto in 2000 to attend York University on a student visa. Following that, she studied law at Osgoode Hall.

Impressed with Toronto’s rich diversity, she decided to settle here and became a permanent resident of Canada in January.

Over the years, Blakes has become known for promoting the interests of its women associates and partners. It is a founding partner of The Judy Project, a leadership forum for rising women executives, hosted by the University of Toronto’s Joseph L. Rotman School of Management. The firm also partners with Rotman and U of T to develop programs to advance the careers of its senior women associates.

Clacken joined the firm as a summer student in 2004, articled there in 2006 and 2007 and became an associate later that year.

“I think the important thing is, from the get-go, you are treated as a lawyer,” she says.

Clacken works in commercial litigation. The legal and business landscape is constantly changing and she wanted a firm that could help her maintain competitive momentum, she says. “I think we are entering a new time … I think that as the culture changes, expectations change.”

When it comes to promoting diversity, she would like to see a more active engagement from the entire legal community, not just groups with a vested interest. “I think we would make faster gains if everybody spearheaded the initiatives.”

Andrea York, co-chair of Blakes’ equity and diversity committee and a partner, emphasizes that focusing on diversity is a strategic move.

“We have a motto that Blakes draws strength from diversity,” says York, who practises employment law and, like every other woman at the firm, seems to wear about 14 other hats. “Diversity right now is a business imperative.”

Clients will ask straightforward questions about the backgrounds and genders of the people representing them, she says. “In that respect, in putting a face to the clients, we need to put forward a diverse team.”

She notes there are challenges when it comes to finding ways for women, as well as men, to balance the heavy demands of the legal world with family life.

Another issue: not all women are created equal.

“The reality is, women as a population are very diverse,” says Mary Jackson, Landscaping Services chief officer of legal personnel and professional development with Blakes, who takes an active role in the evaluation and development of students and associates. “I think one of the big challenges is generational – women at different times face different challenges.”

Her department watches for potential roadblocks, such as confidence or communication issues, which are quickly addressed through training.

Jackson would also like to see better integration of diversity initiatives at Blakes. Landscaping Services “It’s very important to link together all of the things that you are doing.”

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Saturday, April 5th, 2008

Kids are seeing the world and often without parents

NEW YORK When Ann Kahn was growing up, her family took the same summer vacation every year a trip to Yosemite. But things are different for her daughter, Ashley.

At 19, Ashley has already set foot on every continent including Antarctica. And all but one of her journeys abroad was taken without her parents, on trips with other teenagers. She started when she was just 13, visiting Europe with a youth-travel organization called People to People Student Ambassadors (www.studentambassadors.org).

“It’s definitely changed my life,” said Ashley, who is from Green Valley, Calif., and is now a freshman at Sonoma State University. When she was younger, she thought she’d like to be a nurse someday. But now, “I’m a French major. I’d like to work in an embassy. Living and working abroad is definitely something I would like to do.”

Thousands of teenagers like Ashley are seeing more far-flung corners of the world, and at younger ages, than any previous generation of Americans. Middle-schoolers hike the rain forest in Costa Rica instead of attending lakeside summer camps with color wars and marshmallow roasts. And older teenagers use the community service they did in Africa as fodder for college essays.

A recent survey of 75 tour operators that belong to the Student Youth Travel Association www.syta.org found that the top 10 international destinations for youth travel include China, Peru, Brazil and Australia along with the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, Germany and Greece. More than half the survey respondents identified middle school as the biggest segment for growth.

“We still have the traditional tours an eighth-grade trip to Washington or a high-school trip to New York,” said SYTA spokeswoman Debbie Gibb. “But we’re seeing growth in places like China that you never would have thought of 10 or 15 years ago.”

Typically these trips cost thousands of dollars. Often parents write checks for the trips, but some students raise money especially with school-sponsored trips where kids work together on community fundraising events. (Teachers who agree to chaperone typically travel free.) Sometimes travel organizations offer scholarships for low-income students; others provide advice on finding sponsors everything from asking local merchants for donations to sending a form letter to everyone you know with a request for $25.

When schools sponsor trips, they tend to have a major educational component, whether it’s practicing French in Paris or studying evolution in the Galapagos. Summer programs “have more of the fun components rafting, snorkeling and hiking” in addition to cultural experiences, Gibb said.

Westcoast Connection (www.westcoastconnection.com) sends 1,500 teenagers each summer on a variety of tours, from language immersion to adventure and specialty sports such as golf or snowboarding. But company spokesman Ira Solomon said, “There’s definitely been a trend of more substantial summer programming. With colleges becoming so competitive, kids are trying to build their r%26#233;sum%26#233;s.” So Westcoast also offers community service, sending kids to work in day-care centers in shantytowns in Costa Rica, building houses with Habitat for Humanity in Hawaii and doing conservation work in an Alaskan rain forest.

High-school students have been taking summer courses on college campuses for decades. But Summer Discovery Pre-College Programs www.summerfun.com offers some of those classes for American teenagers abroad, in Britain, Spain and Italy, in addition to programs at seven U.S. campuses The programs include language immersion and SAT prep as well as specialized subjects ranging from robotics to cooking.

How do you find the right program for your teenager? Some groups have long track records and work with thousands of kids. People to People, founded in 1956, sends more than 30,000 students and teachers abroad annually. It is one of SYTA’s four largest member organizations. But many smaller, less well-known organizations offer specialized programming that may be a perfect fit. If you’re trying to judge a program “beyond all the fun things your kid is going to see and do,” Gibb said, check the company’s with the Better Business Bureau, ask about the ratio of adults to students (8 to 1 is typical for eighth grade, 10 to 1 for older kids) and find out how the program helps kids get to know each other.

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Sunday, March 30th, 2008

Heathrow terminal has bumpy debut

LONDON Opening day at Heathrow Airport’s grand new Terminal 5 turned sour Thursday as severe baggage-handling delays led to numerous flight cancellations, stranding many irate passengers.

What was supposed to be a day of glory for British Airways, sole occupant of the mammoth new terminal, turned into a shambles as problems worsened. The airline was finally forced to restrict passengers at the terminal to hand luggage only, leaving many with the choice of rebooking their flights or seeking refunds.

Problems developed in the first hours of the new terminal’s operation when many passengers had to wait more than one hour to receive their bags and deepened in the afternoon, when many flights were canceled.

At one point, a British Airways flight left for Paris without any of its checked baggage in the hold, embarrassed airline officials conceded, making a mockery of the earlier claim that the new baggage system would work well from day one.

“I’m not a happy bunny,” said Sarah Lowdon, whose flight to Newcastle was canceled Thursday after she arrived at the new terminal. “They said they’d refund my money, but the time I’ve lost is mine. They said it was because of baggage problems, but all I have is a carry-on. I’m being penalized for their mistakes.”

She said she started her journey with high hopes because of all the hype about the $8.6 billion terminal, the of a plan to revive Heathrow Airport’s flagging only to have them dashed.

Other disgruntled passengers tried in vain to check in for flights.

“The terminal looks nice but it would be better if it worked,” said Vincent Groccia as he killed time waiting to see if his flight for Paris would depart late or be canceled. “I tried to check my bags but they told me the conveyor system is not working. I’m hoping to get out of here tonight.”

There were other, lesser problems as well: a few broken escalators, some hand dryers that didn’t work, a nonfunctioning gate at the new Underground station, and inexperienced ticket sellers who didn’t know the fares between Heathrow and various stations on the Piccadilly line.

Britain’s Department of Transportation released a statement Thursday evening calling for British Airways and BAA, the airport operator, to “work hard to resolve these issues and limit disruption to passengers.”

Despite the troubles, in some other ways it was a successful first day of operations for the terminal.

The weather cooperated, flooding the building’s oversize atrium with brilliant sunshine, and travelers were able to admire the wide-open views of the greening countryside.

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Sunday, March 30th, 2008

Taking Caribbean tourism to the American capital

NEW YORK, USA: This June’s Annual Caribbean Tourism Summit (ACTS) in Washington DC from June 21 to 24 is not only the first such meeting, it also represents the new spirit of collaboration between the Caribbean’s public and private sectors. To convene the meeting, the Caribbean Tourism Organisation (CTO), representing regional governments, and the Caribbean Hotel Association (CHA), the umbrella body for the private sector, are combining resources in their new marketing and business development entity, the Caribbean Tourism Development Company (CTDC) whose mission is to own, promote, protect, advance and enhance the Caribbean brand, while making a profit. In previous years, each June, the CTO had organized Caribbean Week in New York activities, billed as a celebration of the sights, sounds, colours, cultural and unique vacation attributes of the Caribbean; while the CHA had hosted the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Conference, formerly known as CHIC, and held in recent years at the Hyatt Regency in Miami. These separate activities will not happen this year as energies are concentrated on combining conferences and transferring the travel and tourism debate from the shores of the region to the beltway of the American capital. Following the Summit, key policy makers head to Antigua %26amp; Barbuda for another landmark day-long meeting focusing on Tourism during the 29th Meeting of CARICOM Heads of Government set for July 3 to 5. Organizers say this Washington Summit is an opportunity for influential policy makers, financial leaders, marketing professionals, and tourism industry officials from more than 30 Caribbean countries to interact with each other as well as with US Government officials and leaders of tourism and investment communities. In fact, plans are afoot to invite US Presidential candidates Senator John McCain (R) and either of the Democratic Senators Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton depending on who emerges from the primary battle by June. As delegates look to the economic future of the Caribbean region, former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan is confirmed to address the conference on Monday, June 23. While some commentators argue that the authority on American domestic economic and monetary policy might not be a relevant candidate to speak about Caribbean tourism, others believe Dr. Greenspan’s presence will help to sensitise Caribbean policy makers about the important economic impact of the services sector. Organizers want the %26quot;learning conference%26quot; to help educate Caribbean stakeholders in general about the critical importance of tourism. Ministers of Finance and Governors of Central Banks, who oversee foreign exchange but have not played a central role in shaping tourism policy, have been invited to be part of the inner circle of players in taking a serious look at the challenges facing the region. The conference also offers an opportunity for the Caribbean to present compelling arguments to the Bretton Woods institutions and multilateral agencies about the debilitating impact trade liberalization has had on agricultural industries like sugar and bananas, and the need for a hand-up to boost the sector in which small vulnerable economies have a competitive advantage. The new requirement which stipulates that Americans use a passport when traveling by air from the Caribbean is also expected to dominate the conference, given its current and potential negative impact on Caribbean air arrivals just when the region must aggressively compete with other destinations (which have long required passports for entry into their ports) for today’s paltry percentage of Americans who will travel internationally. The other keynote speaker is Bahamian Dr. Myles Munroe, Founder and Senior Pastor of Bahamas Faith Ministries International, who will no doubt set an energetic and inspirational tone. Dr Munroe, scheduled to lead an inspirational brunch on Sunday, June 22, was chosen to speak based on his ability to energize a diverse audience as he did at a recent Caribbean Tourism Conference in his native Bahamas. With a for %26quot;Transforming Followers into Leaders,%26quot; Dr. Munroe will inspire investors, politicians, tourism industry executives, the Caribbean Diaspora and Friends of the Caribbean to meaningfully contribute to the growth and prosperity of the Caribbean region. %26quot;ACTS will be held a time when all investors, political and tourism decision-makers, as well as the powerful Caribbean-American community will be called upon to help the Caribbean get on the path to realizing its full economic potential,%26quot; said St. Lucia’s Minister of Tourism Senator Allen Chastanet, co-chairman of the CTDC, and chairman of the CTO. %26quot;And we’re very excited to have one of our region’s most celebrated motivational and spiritual speakers add his influence to this important effort.%26quot; Also planned for the Summit will be the holding of CTO and CHA’s Board of Directors meetings; a meeting of the new CTO Council of Ministers and Commissioners of Tourism; a %26quot;Capital Caribbean%26quot; Wedding; Town Hall Meetings ostensibly targeting Diaspora communities; interactive conference sessions and a gala dinner at which lifetime achievement and special recognition awards will be presented. %26quot;This conference is a rare opportunity to take a close look at the key issues and solutions that will (stimulate) tourism and investment revenue in the region,%26quot; said Peter Odle, co-chairman of the CTDC and President of the CHA. Held to coincide with June’s Caribbean American Heritage Month, the first Summit marks the dawn of a new day in Caribbean tourism. As delegates gear up for networking opportunities, food, rum and entertainment, and unique Caribbean vacation offers, they should also get ready for change - a change in the way tourism is managed in the Caribbean.

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Saturday, March 29th, 2008

Phoenix New Homes

Phoenix is the capital of Arizona and is recognized as one of the largest cities in the United States. The Phoenix-metro area attracts many new residents due to the year round sunshine and mild winter conditions. Phoenix is home to an abundant amount of resources from multiple job sectors to entertainment activities.

Home builders in Phoenix are currently offering buyers plenty of home investment opportunities to buyers in the form of single-family homes, condo units, luxury homes, custom built homes, townhouse homes, move-in ready homes, active-adult communities, master-planned communities and much more. There is a home in the metro-Phoenix for every interest.

Now-a-days buyers are interested in purchasing new homes that come equipped with energy efficiency features, especially in sunny climates such as in Arizona. This is an important factor that new home builders in Arizona will sometimes offer. Because energy efficiency attracts a particular kind of buyer, the homebuyer gains by getting a home property in which their utility bills do not cost so much.

Buyers are also seeking homes with good features, upgrades, latest appliances and fixtures that consequently home builders are also coming up with homes that cater to specific buyer needs, so that buyer doesn’t have to do all of their changes into the property after a purchase. Earlier homes had basic requirements, but in today’s home the emphasis is on aesthetic interiors and upscale features are at very affordable rates.

Before a buyer decides to take up a home builder’s offer, buyers must check out on the builder’s . The builder must be someone who is experienced and who has successfully completed past projects in a timely manner. Builder rates must be compared by current market conditions and buyers should also ask their builder questions on which upgrades they are capable of providing with the new home purchase.

When buying a new home always be sure to talk to your family and friends to see if they can refer a reputable real estate agent to you. Shopping for home builders in the Phoenix area can be done with some ease, but be sure that the builder of your choice is within your price range.

If you don’t already have a real estate agent in mind, may we suggest that you ask family, friends, or possibly neighbors to refer a good agent to you. Be sure that their experiences were good when dealing with this agent and that the agent met all wants, needs, and desires. After being referred an agent from a reliable source, make sure that you do your own investigation into the real estate company that they represent. You can search Google to make sure that there haven’t been any complaint about the agent you have been referred; Be sure to check with third party business reporting agencies such as the Better Business Bureau.

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Thursday, March 27th, 2008

First match set to draw Swifts fans

Southland has built a for having supportive netball crowds unrivalled by any other team in the National Bank Cup, but with the ANZ Championship set to start early next month franchises across the Tasman are trying to get in on the act.
The Sydney-based Swifts franchise has put the call out for 8000 fans to turn up to its April 7 game against the Steel — which would be almost double the capacity of Stadium Southland.
The target is a far cry from the 2500 crowd average Australias Commonwealth Bank Trophy games in Sydney and Newcastle traditionally attracted, but Swifts communications manager Kath Tetley was confident the first game would set the standard for the rest of the competition.
%26quot;This is the first time a single, stand-alone game has been held at Acer Arena,%26quot; she said.
%26quot;When we looked at the draw we knew that we … wanted to be able to showcase the game to as many people as possible. Having the opportunity to host the Southern Steel, which is such a strong franchise with such fantastic crowd support they have incredible Invercargill crowds (we thought) we should do the same thing and show that we take the game seriously.%26quot; The popularity of the season pass was yet to make its presence felt in Sydney, though the franchise was %26quot;well on its way%26quot; to selling its of 500 passes for this season, Tetley said.
Even so, with the combined fan base of the Hunter Jaegers, a side which boasted the highest crowd averages of any team in the Commonwealth Bank Trophy for the last three years, and Sydney Swifts from which New South Wales Swifts was born Tetley was confident the opening game against Southern Steel would be a popular one.
%26quot;I do believe this is the evolution of the game. The last 11 years has been a starting point, the next 11 years will be the middle ground and the next 11 years it will be just as big … if we dont aim for the stars, then were underselling ourselves.%26quot; The Acer Arena is the largest netball venue in Australia and can host up to 18,000 people.

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Thursday, March 27th, 2008

Home is the Place From Where We Get Booster for Living and That is the Base of our Life Therefore We Should Maintain This Home

Home be maintained.

We should be thankful to those who had established this concept of ‘ home ‘ for us and we could join this home through the concept of marriage. We are surprised to note as to how the people had been living on this earth when there was no concept of marriage and no concept of this home. The people who established these two concepts must be congratulated because they had been suffering and these two concepts took their birth out those sufferings.

Since these two concepts are gifts from those forefathers, therefore, it is our duty to maintain these two concepts and carry them forward. There is now no alternative with us. The people who could not remain one in the family are the sufferers and they are not now full persons. The men who are not with a family is a dangerous person and the people like in India are not allowing such a person to visit their houses often and similarly the women who are widow or could not marry are not accepted by the people and they are having fears that such woman shall be destroying the future of their daughters.

Therefore, each one should try to choose a life partner and then they should have children. After having children in the family they should try to bring them up and try to maintain this family because this is the first unit of society. The couple and other members in this house must ensure that they all are taking complete interest in the affairs of the house and none should feel that he or she is a stranger in the family. They all should make it sure that peace is maintained in the house. They should take the father of the house as the keeper of the house and all should obey him and the keeper should take help of his wife. They must see that desires and demands of each member in the house are met properly and on the other hand each member must see that he is contributing towards this house one way or the other.

We are to run this house and for that purpose we need money and if the earnings are on the lower side, we should try to increase the earning and each member should take interest and what he or she can do, he or she must do that so that they too are bringing some to the house. They must be a unit and they should be united and they should jointly work for the betterment of the house. They must be having freedom, but at the same time they should ensure that they have got common enemies and common friends. They may be having some differences in the house, but they should see that they are solving these differences and disputes amicably in the house itself and they should try that their disputes and differences do not go out in the public. The keeper or the head of the house must keep peace in the house and he or she must ensure that all are treated equally and there is no complaint of discrimination from any member.

The wife is the house mistress and therefore, she must have a look on each member in the house and she must make it sure that none is feeling isolated and singled out. each one may be looked after properly and must be allowed to go ahead with his life and see that he is getting proper education, proper training and proper adjustment at work so that one day he should be able to establish his own family and then he should be able to run the family. The parents must be proud of the fact that they could prepare their children in such a manner that they would be able to establish and run the house. They should take special care of the girl child because one day this child shall leave the paternal house and shall be establishing with others. She must be trained like this so that when she goes to the house of her in laws, she must be able to adjust herself with these strangers where she shall have to spend whole part of her remaining life.

If the house is with common interests, then they shall be getting good . And they are not at peace with each other, they shall not be getting good and there shall be chances that others shall not be liking have relations with such a family. Then the people of this house shall be facing difficulties, because they shall not be able to find out suitable matches for their sons and daughters.

So the concept of house and of family must be understood in a right manner and only then the members shall be able to maintain this unit of the society.

And the couple should learn this art and only then they shall be in a position to maintain this house and shall be able to keep the people together.

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Wednesday, March 19th, 2008