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August 31, 2010

Pregnant Women in Peru Will Improve Their Health v

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The Inter-American Development Bank issued the following news release:

In a ground-breaking effort to use cell phone technology to improve access to healthcare, the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), Cayetano Heredia University of Peru (UPCH) and Movistar have launched a pilot project that will benefit 5,000 low-income pregnant women in Callao,tiffany, Peru.

The project, known as "Wawanet," will use text messaging via mobile telephones to enhance the health of mothers and infants by enabling them to receive customized advice on nutrition and potential problems during pregnancy. In addition, the project, with support from the IDB’s Division of Science and Technology, aspires to integrate a system of clinical histories through mobile technology, seeking to improve information systems that serve mothers and infants.

The pilot program will take place in the province of Callao,rings, initially benefiting 5,000 pregnant mothers in a community where UPCH has been working on maternal health projects since the beginning of 2009.

The project is headed by Dr. Walter H. Curioso, a physician and investigative professor at UPCH, and Dr. Patricia Garcia, a physician and professor at the Faculty for Public Health in UPCH.

Curioso said that this project seeks to develop a solution to the problems of maternal mortality in Peru, emphasizing that an improvement in the health of mothers and infants would also contribute to Peru’s attainment of the Millennium Development Goals.

Likewise,Charm pendant, Garcia pointed out that this is a valuable opportunity to create a strategic alliance between the IDB, and the health sector of Callao,Bead bracelet, the local government of Callao, and UPCH in order to promote health, education, science and technology.

"To deliver health services using cellular phones in a systematic manner is one of the challenges of the development of digital technology at the start of the twenty first century," said Rafael Anta, specialist in the IDB’s Division of Science and Technology. Therefore, the project will include an impact study and a review of possible business models that could enable it to be scaled-up to the national level.

"Wawanet" is part of IDB’s program "Mobile Citizen" program of non-reimbursable technical assistance financed with resources from Government of Italy,Atlas charm bracelet, with the objective of accelerating the development and implementation of services based on the use of mobile phones to foster social and economic access for the most marginalized individuals.

August 26, 2010

SOLAR PANEL RETAILERS AMEND CLAIMS ON DISCOUNTS, E

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The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission issued the following news release:,key rings

wo retailers of solar panel systems have amended their marketing campaigns after the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission raised concerns that representations in their advertisements were likely to mislead or deceive consumers.

In court enforceable undertakings provided to the ACCC, Queensland Solar Systems and State Solar Services acknowledged that it was likely that they had contravened the Trade Practices Act 1974, because they had claimed:

* That consumers could ‘wipe out’ household electricity bills by installing a 1.5kw solar panel system, when a system of that size is not likely to generate sufficient electricity to eliminate an average household’s electricity costs

* That the solar systems were available at heavily discounted prices,tiffany, when they had never sold the systems at the higher prices or recommended retail prices (RRP) advertised, and

* That the discounts were only available during limited sale periods, when the systems were always available at discount prices.

QSS and SSS also did not make it clear in the advertisements that the discounts were only available to customers who were eligible for Federal Government financial incentives in the form of Renewable Energy Certificates.

ACCC chairman Graeme Samuel said that in cases such as these, the ACCC may in future use its new enforcement power to issue substantiation notices, which require businesses to substantiate their claims and to produce supporting documentation.

"Before businesses claim their products have environmental or financial benefits they should carefully consider whether those claims are accurate and ensure that they are able to be substantiated,necklaces," Mr Samuel said.

"Businesses that advertise ‘special’ or markdown prices by comparing their prices with a higher price or a RRP must also be able to prove that the comparisons are accurate and represent genuine savings to consumers that they would not get outside advertised ‘sale’ periods."

The court enforceable undertakings require QSS and SSS to publish corrective notices in newspapers in Queensland and Victoria, in an industry magazine and on their websites.

Each trader is also required to contact past customers directly to inform them about the conduct and to set up a trade practices law compliance program.

Information about the ACCC powers to issue infringement, substantiation and public warning notices is available at www.accc.gov.au/notices.

The ACCC has a number of publications to assist businesses get their advertising right, including brochures on comparative advertising,rings, the new Australian Consumer Law and general advice for small businesses on how to comply with the Act. These are available through the ACCC’s website, www.accc.gov.au or in hard copy from the small business helpline, 1300 302 021. For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

Graeme Samuel,cuff Links, (03) 9290 1812, 0408 335 555; Lin Enright, (02) 6243 1108, 0414 613 520.

August 21, 2010

Third Party Testing for Certain Children’s Product

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SUMMARY: The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC or Commission) is issuing a notice of requirements that provides the criteria and process for Commission acceptance of accreditation of third party conformity assessment bodies for testing pursuant to CPSC regulations under the Flammable Fabrics Act relating to clothing textiles. The Commission is issuing this notice of requirements pursuant to the Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA).

   DATES: Effective Date: The requirements for accreditation of third party conformity assessment bodies to assess conformity with 16 CFR part 1610 are effective upon publication of this notice in the Federal Register . /1/

   FOOTNOTE 1 The Commission voted 3-2 to publish this notice of requirements. Chairman Inez M. Tenenbaum, Commissioner Nancy A. Nord, and Commissioner Anne Meagher Northup each issued a statement, and the statements can be found at http://www.cpsc.gov/pr/statements.html. END FOOTNOTE

   Comments in response to this notice of requirements should be submitted by September 17, 2010. Comments on this notice should be captioned "Third Party Testing for Certain Children’s Products; Clothing Textiles: Requirements for Accreditation of Third Party Conformity Assessment Bodies."

   ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. CPSC-2010-0086 by any of the following methods:

   Electronic Submissions: Submit electronic comments in the following way:

   Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. Follow the instructions for submitting comments. To ensure timely processing of comments, the Commission is no longer accepting comments submitted by electronic mail (e-mail) except through http://www.regulations.gov.

   Written Submissions: Submit written submissions in the following way:

   Mail/Hand delivery/Courier (for paper, disk, or CD-ROM submissions) preferably in five copies, to: Office of the Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, Room 820, 4330 East West Highway, Bethesda, Maryland 20814; telephone (301) 504-7923.

   Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name and docket number for this notice. All comments received may be posted without change to http://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information provided. Do not submit confidential business information, trade secret information, or other sensitive or protected information (such as a Social Security Number) electronically; if furnished at all, such information should be submitted in writing.

   Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or comments received, go to http://www.regulations.gov.

   FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert "Jay" Howell, Assistant Executive Director for The Office of Hazard Identification and Reduction, U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, 4330 East West Highway, Bethesda, Maryland 20814; e-mail rhowell@cpsc.gov.

   SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Introduction

   Section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the CPSA, as added by section 102(a)(2) of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA), Public Law 110-314, directs the CPSC to publish a notice of requirements for accreditation of third party conformity assessment bodies to assess children’s products for conformity with "other children’s product safety rules." Section 14(f)(1) of the CPSA defines "children’s product safety rule" as "a consumer product safety rule under [the CPSA] or similar rule, regulation, standard, or ban under any other Act enforced by the Commission, including a rule declaring a consumer product to be a banned hazardous product or substance." Under section 14(a)(3)(A) of the CPSA, each manufacturer (including the importer) or private labeler of products subject to those regulations must have products that are manufactured more than 90 days after the Federal Register publication date of a notice of the requirements for accreditation, tested by a third party conformity assessment body accredited to do so, and must issue a certificate of compliance with the applicable regulations based on that testing. Section 14(a)(2) of the CPSA, as added by section 102(a)(2) of the CPSIA, requires that certification be based on testing of sufficient samples of the product, or samples that are identical in all material respects to the product. The Commission also emphasizes that, irrespective of certification, the product in question must comply with applicable CPSC requirements (see, e.g., section 14(h) of the CPSA, as added by section 102(b) of the CPSIA).

   The Commission also is recognizing limited circumstances in which it will accept certifications based on product testing conducted before the third party conformity assessment body is accepted as accredited by the CPSC. The details regarding those limited circumstances can be found in part IV of this document below.

   This notice provides the criteria and process for Commission acceptance of accreditation of third party conformity assessment bodies for testing pursuant to 16 CFR part 1610, Standard for the Flammability of Clothing Textiles, which sets a minimum standard for flammability of clothing textiles under the Flammable Fabrics Act (15 U.S.C. 1191 et seq.) (FFA).

   Section 3(a)(2) of the CPSA defines a children’s product as "a consumer product designed or intended primarily for children 12 years of age or younger." Although clothing textiles are often used in nonchildren’s wearing apparel, some clothing textiles are "designed or intended primarily for children 12 years of age or younger." Clothing textiles designed or intended primarily for children 12 years of age or younger are subject to the third party testing and certification requirements in section 14(a)(2) of the CPSA. Accordingly, this notice of requirements addresses the accreditation of conformity assessment bodies to test such clothing textiles for conformity with 16 CFR part 1610.

   Some clothing textiles are exempt from part 1610 testing. See 16 CFR 1610.1(d). Manufacturers do not need to submit exempt clothing textiles designed or intended primarily for children 12 years of age or younger to a third party conformity assessment body to confirm that the exemption applies. For clothing textiles designed or intended primarily for children 12 years of age or younger that are subject to 16 CFR part 1610, manufacturers may submit a product for third party testing at either the pre- or post-garment stage of production.

   Although section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the CPSA directs the CPSC to publish a notice of requirements for accreditation of third party conformity assessment bodies to assess conformity with "all other children’s product safety rules," this notice of requirements is limited to the regulations identified immediately above.

   The CPSC also recognizes that section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the CPSA is captioned as "All Other Children’s Product Safety Rules," but the body of the statutory requirement refers only to "other children’s product safety rules." Nevertheless, section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the CPSA could be construed as requiring a notice of requirements for "all" other children’s product safety rules, rather than a notice of requirements for "some" or "certain" children’s product safety rules. However, whether a particular rule represents a "children’s product safety rule" may be subject to interpretation, and the Commission staff is continuing to evaluate which rules, regulations, standards, or bans are "children’s product safety rules." The CPSC intends to issue additional notices of requirements for other rules which the Commission determines to be "children’s product safety rules."

   This notice of requirements applies to all third party conformity assessment bodies as described in section 14(f)(2) of the CPSA. Generally speaking, such third party conformity assessment bodies are: (1) Third party conformity assessment bodies that are not owned,rings, managed, or controlled by a manufacturer or private labeler of a children’s product to be tested by the third party conformity assessment body for certification purposes; (2) "firewalled" conformity assessment bodies (those that are owned, managed, or controlled by a manufacturer or private labeler of a children’s product to be tested by the third party conformity assessment body for certification purposes and that seek accreditation under the additional statutory criteria for "firewalled" conformity assessment bodies); and (3) third party conformity assessment bodies owned or controlled,watches, in whole or in part, by a government.

   The Commission requires baseline accreditation of each category of third party conformity assessment body to the International Organization for Standardization (ISO)/International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) Standard 17025:2005, "General Requirements for the Competence of Testing and Calibration Laboratories." The accreditation must be by an accreditation body that is a signatory to the International Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation-Mutual Recognition Arrangement (ILAC-MRA), and the scope of the accreditation must include testing in accordance with the regulations identified earlier in part I of this document for which the third party conformity assessment body seeks to be accredited.

   (A description of the history and content of the ILAC-MRA approach and of the requirements of the ISO/IEC 17025:2005 laboratory accreditation standard is provided in the CPSC staff briefing memorandum "Third Party Conformity Assessment Body Accreditation Requirements for Testing Compliance with 16 CFR Part 1501 (Small Parts Regulations)," dated November 2008 and available on the CPSC’s Web site at http://www.cpsc.gov/library/foia/foia09/brief/smallparts.pdf.)

   The Commission has established an electronic accreditation registration and listing system that can be accessed via its Web site at http://www.cpsc.gov/ABOUT/Cpsia/labaccred.html.

   The Commission stayed the enforcement of certain provisions of section 14(a) of the CPSA in a notice published in the Federal Register on February 9, 2009 (74 FR 6396); the stay applied to testing and certification of various products, including clothing textiles. On December 28, 2009, the Commission published a notice in the Federal Register (74 FR 68588) revising the terms of the stay. One section of the December 28, 2009, notice addressed "Consumer Products or Children’s Products Where the Commission Is Continuing the Stay of Enforcement Until Further Notice," due to factors such as pending rulemaking proceedings affecting the product or the absence of a notice of requirements. The clothing textile testing and certification requirements were included in that section of the December 28, 2009, notice. As the factor preventing the stay from being lifted in the December 28, 2009, notice with regard to testing and certifications of clothing textiles was the absence of a notice of requirements, publication of this notice has the effect of lifting the stay with regard to 16 CFR part 1610.

   The Commission noted in the December 28, 2009, notice that the stay of enforcement did not extend to guaranties under the FFA. The manufacturer or supplier of clothing textiles may issue a guaranty, based on reasonable and representative testing, that the clothing textile complies with FFA standards. The holder of a valid guaranty is not subject to criminal prosecution under section 7 of the FFA (penalties) for a violation of section 3 of the FFA (prohibited transactions).

   The reasonable and representative tests sufficient for the issuance of an FFA guaranty are generally performed by the manufacturer; those tests are sufficient for the issuance of a general conformity certification for nonchildren’s products under section 14(a)(1) of the CPSA. However, because section 14(a)(2) of the CPSA requires children’s products subject to a children’s product safety rule to be tested by an accredited third party conformity assessment body, reasonable and representative tests performed by a manufacturer sufficient for the issuance of an FFA guaranty are not sufficient for the issuance of a certification of compliance with 16 CFR part 1610 for clothing textiles designed or intended primarily for children 12 years of age or younger (unless the manufacturer’s facility is a CPSC-accepted firewalled conformity assessment body). The textiles may be tested by a CPSC-accepted third party laboratory or the final garment may be tested to ensure that the textiles used meet the standard’s flammability requirements.

   This notice of requirements is effective on August 18, 2010. Further, as the publication of this notice of requirements effectively lifts the stay of enforcement with regard to testing and certifications related to 16 CFR part 1610, each manufacturer of a children’s product subject to 16 CFR part 1610 must have any such product manufactured after November 16, 2010 tested by a third party conformity assessment body accredited to do so and must issue a certificate of compliance with 16 CFR part 1610 based on that testing. (Under the CPSA, the term "manufacturer" includes anyone who manufactures or imports a product.)

   This notice of requirements is exempt from the notice and comment rulemaking requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553 (See section 14(a)(3)(G) of the CPSA, as added by section 102(a)(2) of the CPSIA (15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(3)(G)).

II. Accreditation Requirements

A. Baseline Third Party Conformity Assessment Body Accreditation Requirements

   For a third party conformity assessment body to be accredited to test children’s products for conformity with the test methods in the regulations identified earlier in part I of this document, it must be accredited by an ILAC-MRA signatory accrediting body, and the accreditation must be registered with, and accepted by, the Commission. A listing of ILAC-MRA signatory accrediting bodies is available on the Internet at http://ilac.org/membersbycategory.html. The accreditation must be to ISO Standard ISO/IEC 17025:2005, "General Requirements for the Competence of Testing and Calibration Laboratories," and the scope of the accreditation must expressly include testing to the regulations in 16 CFR part 1610, Standard for the Flammability of Clothing Textiles. A true copy, in English, of the accreditation and scope documents demonstrating compliance with the requirements of this notice must be registered with the Commission electronically. The additional requirements for accreditation of firewalled and governmental conformity assessment bodies are described in parts II.B and II.C of this document below.

   The Commission will maintain on its Web site an up-to-date listing of third party conformity assessment bodies whose accreditations it has accepted and the scope of each accreditation. Subject to the limited provisions for acceptance of "retrospective" testing noted in part IV below, once the Commission adds a third party conformity assessment body to that list, the third party conformity assessment body may commence testing of children’s products to support the manufacturer’s certification that the product complies with the regulations identified earlier in part I of this document.

B. Additional Accreditation Requirements for Firewalled Conformity Assessment Bodies

   In addition to the baseline accreditation requirements in part II.A of this document above, firewalled conformity assessment bodies seeking accredited status must submit to the Commission copies, in English, of their training documents showing how employees are trained to notify the Commission immediately and confidentially of any attempt by the manufacturer, private labeler, or other interested party to hide or exert undue influence over the third party conformity assessment body’s test results. This additional requirement applies to any third party conformity assessment body in which a manufacturer or private labeler of a children’s product to be tested by the third party conformity assessment body owns an interest of ten percent or more. While the Commission is not addressing common parentage of a third party conformity assessment body and a children’s product manufacturer at this time, it will be vigilant to see if this issue needs to be addressed in the future.

   As required by section 14(f)(2)(D) of the CPSA, the Commission must formally accept, by order, the accreditation application of a third party conformity assessment body before the third party conformity assessment body can become an accredited firewalled conformity assessment body.

C. Additional Accreditation Requirements for Governmental Conformity Assessment Bodies

   In addition to the baseline accreditation requirements of part II.A of this document above, the CPSIA permits accreditation of a third party conformity assessment body owned or controlled, in whole or in part,Beads necklace, by a government if:

    * To the extent practicable, manufacturers or private labelers located in any nation are permitted to choose conformity assessment bodies that are not owned or controlled by the government of that nation;

    * The third party conformity assessment body’s testing results are not subject to undue influence by any other person, including another governmental entity;

    * The third party conformity assessment body is not accorded more favorable treatment than other third party conformity assessment bodies that have been accredited in the same nation;

    * The third party conformity assessment body’s testing results are accorded no greater weight by other governmental authorities than those of other accredited third party conformity assessment bodies; and

    * The third party conformity assessment body does not exercise undue influence over other governmental authorities on matters affecting its operations or on decisions by other governmental authorities controlling distribution of products based on outcomes of the third party conformity assessment body’s conformity assessments.

   The Commission will accept the accreditation of a governmental third party conformity assessment body if it meets the baseline accreditation requirements of part II.A of this document above and meets the additional conditions stated here. To obtain this assurance, CPSC staff will engage the governmental entities relevant to the accreditation request.

III. How Does a Third Party Conformity Assessment Body Apply for Acceptance of Its Accreditation?

   The Commission has established an electronic accreditation acceptance and registration system accessed via the Commission’s Internet site at http://www.cpsc.gov/about/cpsia/labaccred.html. The applicant provides, in English, basic identifying information concerning its location, the type of accreditation it is seeking, electronic copies of its ILAC-MRA accreditation certificate and scope statement,bracelets, and firewalled third party conformity assessment body training document(s), if relevant.

   Commission staff will review the submission for accuracy and completeness. In the case of baseline third party conformity assessment bodies and government-owned or government-operated conformity assessment bodies, when that review and any necessary discussions with the applicant are satisfactorily completed, the third party conformity assessment body in question is added to the CPSC’s list of accredited third party conformity assessment bodies at http://www.cpsc.gov/about/cpsia/labaccred.html. In the case of a firewalled conformity assessment body seeking accredited status, when the staff’s review is complete, the staff transmits its recommendation on accreditation to the Commission for consideration. (A third party conformity assessment body that may ultimately seek acceptance as a firewalled third party conformity assessment body also can initially request acceptance as a third party conformity assessment body accredited for testing of children’s products other than those of its owners.) If the Commission accepts a staff recommendation to accredit a firewalled conformity assessment body, the firewalled conformity assessment body will then be added to the CPSC’s list of accredited third party conformity assessment bodies. In each case, the Commission will notify the third party conformity assessment body electronically of acceptance of its accreditation. All information to support an accreditation acceptance request must be provided in the English language.

   Subject to the limited provisions for acceptance of "retrospective" testing noted in part IV of this document below, once the Commission adds a third party conformity assessment body to the list, the third party conformity assessment body may then begin testing of children’s products to support certification of compliance with the regulations identified earlier in part I of this document for which it has been accredited.

IV. Limited Acceptance of Children’s Product Certifications Based on Third Party Conformity Assessment Body Testing Prior to the Commission’s Acceptance of Accreditation

   The Commission will accept a certificate of compliance with the standard for clothing textiles included in 16 CFR part 1610, Standard for the Flammability of Clothing Textiles, based on testing performed by an accredited third party conformity assessment body (including a government-owned or -controlled conformity assessment body, and a firewalled conformity assessment body) prior to the Commission’s acceptance of its accreditation if:

    * At the time of product testing, the product was tested by a third party conformity assessment body that was ISO/IEC 17025 accredited by an ILAC-MRA member at the time of the test. For firewalled conformity assessment bodies, the firewalled conformity assessment body must be one that the Commission accredited by order at or before the time the product was tested, even though the order will not have included the test methods in the regulations specified in this notice. If the third party conformity assessment body has not been accredited by a Commission order as a firewalled conformity assessment body, the Commission will not accept a certificate of compliance based on testing performed by the third party conformity assessment body before it is accredited, by Commission order, as a firewalled conformity assessment body;

    * The third party conformity assessment body’s application for testing using the test methods in the regulations identified in this notice is accepted by the CPSC on or before October 18, 2010;

    * The product was tested on or after August 18, 2010 with respect to the regulations identified in this notice;

    * The accreditation scope in effect for the third party conformity assessment body at the time of testing expressly included testing to the regulations identified earlier in part I of this document;

    * The test results show compliance with the applicable current standards and/or regulations; and

    * The third party conformity assessment body’s accreditation, including inclusion in its scope the standards described in part I of this notice, remains in effect through the effective date for mandatory third party testing and manufacturer certification for conformity with 16 CFR part 1610.

August 12, 2010

Tickets on sale for Performing Arts Series with fi

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World-class performers at down-the-street prices — is it any wonder the Clover School District Auditorium Performing Arts Series is growing?

The annual performance series is now taking subscriptions and selling single-event tickets for its ninth season, which begins Sept. 9. Featured this year are everything from military jazz and ventriloquism to family magic, tribute artists and show tunes.

"It’s good," program director David Yandle said of the series, "and it’s been really good for the area."

In its first year, the series drew about 125 subscriptions, or season tickets to the shows. Last year that number grew to more than 700.

"We’re getting people from Gastonia, Lake Wylie, Tega Cay, Rock Hill," Yandle said. "We’re getting people from everywhere now."

The list of international, national and regional artists includes new and returning acts. The most expensive ticket is $15, ranging all the way down to the U.S. Army Jazz Ambassadors and child tickets for the Tarradiddle Players — both free.

For series technical director Rick Hamrick, choosing a favorite act from the lineup may be difficult.

"Kathy Mattea’s concerts are always great," he said of the Oct. 2 show. "We look forward to having her return this year. Alex Depue and Miguel De Hoyos will be outstanding."

Annual staples should be a big draw,cuff Links, Yandle said, like the tradition of bringing in a top flight military band. The Jazz Ambassadors play Oct. 16.

"We have all the military bands," Yandle said. "We’re batting a thousand on that. You can’t beat the military bands."

On March 29, a Patsy Cline tribute comes from Katie Deal. On Feb. 8, the "Iron Man of the Mask," Franc D’Ambrosio, will perform from his extensive career, which included a decade as the lead in "Phantom of the Opera." For Yandle and Hamrick, the success of past series help bring in such stellar artists.

"We have continued to increase our subscriber base since our first season," Hamrick said. "The artists have commented on the size and enthusiastic response from our audiences."

The series also benefits from grants from the Southern Arts Federation and South Carolina Arts Commission, which help with artist fees, and provide Arts in Education opportunities involving artists and students. Those grants help keep the subscription cost in the 1,500-seat auditorium to $40 for nine shows.

"David and I feel that the arts series is an asset to the community, and we are fortunate to be able to present these shows with the support of the Clover School District and the community," Hamrick said.

For more information about the series or for tickets, call 803-222-8018 or visit clover2.k12.sc.us.

The shows

Lynn Trefzger, 7 p.m. Sept. 9, $15

Trefzger is a ventriloquist/comedienne with a trunk full of zany characters that have accompanied her to stages throughout the country. Her vocal illusions were first brought to national audiences on TV’s popular "Star Search." Since then she has shared the stage with artists including Jeff Foxworthy, Ray Romano,bracelets, the Smothers Brothers and Drew Carey. She has appeared on ABC, TNN, A&E, VH1 and Lifetime television, along with the 2009 feature film "I’m No Dummy" with Jeff Dunham and Jay Johnson.

Kathy Mattea, 8 p.m. Oct. 2, $15

Mattea, the beloved Grammy-winning singer of such classics as "18 Wheels And A Dozen Roses" and "Where Have You Been" says her new album offered her a "re-education" in singing. That album, "COAL," is one of those rare records that is a re-education for the listener, too, a record that reshapes the way we think about music, reminding us of why we love it in the first place.

United States Army Jazz Ambassadors, 8 p.m. Oct. 16, free (ticket required)

The Jazz Ambassadors is the United States Army’s premier big band. This 19-member ensemble, formed in 1969, has received great acclaim both at home and abroad performing America’s original art form, jazz. Concerts by the Ambassadors are designed to entertain all types of audiences. Custom compositions and arrangements highlight the group’s creative talent and gifted soloists. Their diverse repertoire includes big band swing, bebop, Latin, contemporary jazz,rings, standards, popular tunes, Dixieland, vocals and patriotic selections.

DePue & De Hoyos, 8 p.m. Nov. 16, $15

Alex Depue began taking classical violin lessons at age 5. He won his first major competition at age 10, and at 16, he won a competition that allowed him to play at Carnegie Hall. Miguel De Hoyos performed his first solo concert when he was 16. He has performed with La Guitarra Por El Mundo traveling throughout Mexico and Europe on a cultural exchange program. This duo’s music is a jaw-dropping tour de force of Latin, classic rock and show tunes.

Their new CD, "Underground Whispers." is rock ‘n’ roll on fiddle and guitar featuring "Dust In The Wind" by Kansas, "Stairway To Heaven" by Led Zeppelin, and "All I Ask Of You" from "The Phantom Of The Opera."

April Verch Band, 8 p.m. Jan. 11, $15

Ontario’s Ottawa Valley is steeped in cultural history, including a musical style and step dancing heritage influenced by the French, Irish, Scottish, Polish and German settlers of this region in Canada. Verch, a modern pioneer of this tradition, is emerging as one of the top female artists in the roots music genre. She has built a repertoire rich in original tunes influenced deeply by the treasure chest of musical jewels passed down through the generations.

Tarradiddle Players: "The Commedia Princess and the Pea," 7 p.m. Jan. 27, $5 (children 12 and younger free)

In this funny, fast-paced show, the Tarradiddle Players put a slapstick spin on Hans Christian Andersen’s classic fairy tale. The lonely prince wants to find someone to marry, but potential princesses must first get past his mother, the Queen, and her long list of tests. Will any of them be royal enough to turn a cartwheel, sing "Happy Birthday" while hopping up and down on one leg, and feel a teeny, tiny pea under a big stack of mattresses?

Franc D’Ambrosio, 8 p.m. Feb. 8, $15

Affectionately known as "Phantom Of The Opera’s" Iron Man Of The Mask, D’Ambrosio was awarded the distinction as the "World’s Longest Running Phantom." This accomplishment was immortalized in a cemented hand ceremony and he retained this title for more than a decade. He was discovered by talent scouts from Paramount Pictures in the chorus of his first Broadway show. Francis Ford Coppola immediately cast him as Anthony Corleone, the singing son of Al Pacino in the film "Godfather III." Not only did D’Ambosio have the honor of starring in the film, he also sang the Academy Award-winning theme song, "Speak Softly Love" (Brucia la Terra).

Family Night XII: "The Magic of John Tudor," 7 p.m. March 15, $3 ($8 for whole family)

"The Magic of John Tudor" has been enjoyed across North America by theater audiences, Fortune 500 companies, conference attendees and thousands of school students since 1987. Tudor’s shows are a "magical journey," an energetic mix of imaginative stories and state-of-the-art magic. His original magical pieces are theatrical; from fairy tale romance to struggles with cosmic forces, pulling the heart strings and touching the funny bone.

A Closer Walk With Patsy Cline, 8 p.m. March 29,earrings, $15

America’s favorite Patsy Cline tribute star, Katie Deal, is backed by a band of singers and musicians. She interacts throughout the show with Little Big Man, a disc jockey from her hometown in Winchester, Va., as well as outrageous standup comics who do warm-up acts for her concerts and radio shows. This happy, loving tribute to country music’s most endearing superstar features 21 of Cline’s greatest hits including "Sweet Dreams," "Walkin’ After Midnight," "I Fall To Pieces," "Crazy," "She’s Got You," "Seven Lonely Days," and the title song, "A Closer Walk With Thee."

August 11, 2010

Fit for a First Lady

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 7:40 pm

Sometimes I think it’s a mistake to leave home. It would be awful, for example, to find somewhere on your travels that is more agreeable than where you live. So I fear for Michelle Obama, currently summering briefly in cumbersome opulence at a luxury resort between Marbella and Estepona in Andalucia, southern Spain. Not that I think that the Costa del Sol will turn her head – when it comes to lousing up a beautiful coastline, the Spanish do it even better than the Americans. But if she were to look up towards the sierra, she might wonder what lies beyond those forest-cloaked ramparts.

I know what it’s like in those hills: I came down from them this very morning. And, I thought I’d take the liberty of telling the First Lady what she might find up there in back-country Spain.

As you leave the coast at Estepona, the air gets cooler and cleaner, and soon you enter a forest that cloaks the southern slopes of the mountains. For miles there is nothing but Mediterranean pine, ringing with the shrieking of cicadas, and filling the air with its heady scent. Looking back along the coast, you no longer see the ugliness, just range after range of misty mountains and capes, made more magical by the heat haze. On and on climbs the road, twisting like a sheep’s gut, until, after half an hour’s drive, it brings you to the high pass of Penas Blancas.

To the north, you can see the green depths of the Serrania de Ronda, presided over in the distance by the bare rock pinnacles of the Sierra de las Nieves. Here and there are scattered tiny villages, impossibly remote, like spills of white beans on the plunging backs of the hills.

At this point you could do worse than take the road signposted for Genalguacil. As you plunge down the hill, the forest, that thinned at the pass, closes over you again, only now it has changed. The pines give way to bright chestnuts, huge ilexes and, everywhere, the fabulous cork oak, their peeled trunks like the limbs of dancers in stockings.

You’re on your own down here; driving for an hour on this road I passed just one other car. Occasionally there is a little white stone house in a clearing, with a tree-trunk bridge to cross the stream, and a fence to keep boars out of the vegetable patch. Finally the Tarmac gives out, and you continue on a dirt track. It may not be to everybody’s taste but to me it gives the impression that you are going somewhere just a little unconventional, somewhere to which there might still cling the faintest vestige of the mystery that tends to forsake a place with the arrival of a Tarmac road.

Suddenly,Atlas charm bracelet, through a gap in the trees, you see it: Genalguacil, a village plumb in the middle of nowhere. Who lives here, you wonder, what do they do out here? Why would anyone bother to come all this way?

Well, it’s worth the journey because,watches, among other things, it’s beautiful – and there are not so many places of which you can say that these days. The village clings to the edge of a ridge, looking over forested mountains down to the sea, 30 miles away. At the bottom is the simple church dedicated to San Pedro de Verona, a saint spectacularly depicted with an axe lodged in his head, and by way of a labyrinth of stone-flagged alleys the village rises to the big white shed of the chestnut co-operative at the top. And as you amble up,Charm bracelet, contented in the way that good vernacular architecture makes you, you become aware of a most singular phenomenon: art.

In the angles of the alleys and in the nooks and corners, are sculptures and murals of every conceivable stamp. There are some that are gorgeous, a few that are magnificent, here and there a touch of wry humour, and one or two that are hilarious. Some, too, are poignant, and all of them are good for stroking, which is what sculptors like you to do to their creations. As I wandered, I wondered, and to satisfy my curiosity, I sought out the village’s mayor, Beatriz. (This is not as peculiar as it may seem: in small Spanish villages and towns, the mayor is often pleased to see you.)

Beatriz was drinking in the bar of the Posada del Recovero, where I was staying. Attractive and petite, and bursting with nervous energy, she is one of the few mayors in the land who has actually lost weight since entering office. (Most go in thin and come out fat.)

"It’s like this," she says . . . life was hard throughout rural Spain in the 20th century: if it wasn’t the dead hand of the church, or the dismal strictures of the dictatorship, it was the iniquities of earlier rural political structures that kept the country people wretched. And so they left in droves, just as today the people flee North Africa and South America, driven by poverty, desperation and corruption. They went to Madrid and Barcelona, or Argentina and France, and the population of the villages dwindled to nothing. Genalguacil, like so many others, was left with a just handful of old people, longing for the day when their children would return and swell the choir of village voices, reduced now to the feeble croak of the aged. (This is beautifully evoked in "The Emigrant", a sculpture at the top of the village.)

The dictator died; the church, monstrously discredited, was no longer taken seriously, and little by little, Spain joined the ranks of modern European democracies. Things got better, and the countryside began to take on a little more life. But it was still hard to keep the young people in the crumbling villages; there’s only so much you can do with chestnuts and cork.

And then, 14 years ago, the previous mayor came up with a plan to bring in new life. They would invite artists, house and feed them and give them a good time. In return, the artists would conduct workshops to teach and inspire locals, and leave their works to embellish the village.

The plan was a resounding success – artists love this sort of thing – and soon an annual festival grew out of it. Quite by chance, when I visited last weekend, Genalguacil was getting ready to celebrate its 10th festival of art (it takes place over the first fortnight of August every other year). Even now artists from all over the country, and indeed the world, were pouring into the village. Beatriz told me that there would be thousands of visitors over the next couple of weeks, and every night in the plaza there would be theatre, music, and dancing beneath the summer stars.

The success of the scheme reverberated in other ways, too. Some of the artists settled in Genalguacil, and with them and their families and the visitors, the breath of economic life wafted through the village, and young people either returned or stayed on. From all over Spain, too, mayors waddled up to Genalguacil to learn about rural regeneration from this simple little miracle.

If only you could see it, Michelle, I know it would be just your thing. I read about the run-in you had with the conventional farmers’ lobby when you stuck your neck out for organic producers and what you people so charmingly call "locavorism", and I’m with you all the way.

But anyway, Beatriz was fired up with the village’s history, and it was taking time to get it told, so we moved on to the Vizier’s Garden, a restaurant run by Miguel, who typifies the whole story.

Miguel was born in Genalguacil, but at 13 had to go down to the coast to continue his education. "I hated it," he says. "As often as I could I would get on my motorbike and come home for my mother’s coffee and cakes."

Later he studied science but, flying in the face of the vortex of the coast and its easy money, he decided to make his stand in the village. The food served in the restaurant is sourced locally and is organic, encouraging and supporting small local producers. His chef, by some curious glitch in the time/space continuum, makes a superb apple strudel. The place is heaving; it’s a job to get a seat (although I’m sure that in your case, Michelle, it could be fixed.)

One of the other pleasures of Genalguacil is civic pride. This manifests itself in a hundred small ways: from a man picking up a dog mess with a plastic bag – a thing I’ve never seen before in Spain – to the striking lack of moronic graffiti (and I am a man who admires good graffiti), but most of all to the vent that is given to the popular love of beauty: patios, pots of plants, and the simple adornment of windows and doorways. Call me a fuddy-duddy, but these simple things are what give the passer-by a frisson of the profoundest pleasure, and make him feel that God’s in his heaven and everything may be all right in its way.

How wonderful it would be if Michelle Obama could give her heavies the slip and get up into the hills to see this simple and glorious little miracle. She’d love it, I know, but then again, perhaps it’s safer that she stays in her luxury hotel down on the coast. That way,key rings, when she brushes the dust from her travelling boots back in Washington and looks up at the cobwebs that have gathered in the corners of the White House, she’ll probably think to herself, in the way that we all do, "Well, it may not be much, but it’s home, and home is where I like it best."

Chris Stewart has written three bestselling books about his life in Andalucia including ‘Driving over Lemons’. His latest book is ‘Three Ways to Capsize a Boat’ (Sort Of Books)

January 2, 2010

Emma Jacobs ponders the outlook after Valentine’s day

Filed under: rings — Tags: , — admin @ 6:43 pm

At new year, Mike Parker, a graphic designer from London, made a resolution: to join an internet dating site. “My best mate met his girlfriend on Mysinglefriend.com and, as everyone seems to be doing, I thought why not?” His decision was far from rare. Sam Yagan, chief executive and founder of OKCupid.com, says: “The period between new year and Valentine’s day is our busiest time. Next to making more money and getting fit, finding a partner is everyone’s new year’s resolution.”

While the build-up to February 14 may be a busy time for the on– line dating industry, the “crunch time” this year, says Mark Brooks, president of the Internet Dating Executive Alliance , will be when the red roses have wilted. “It’s then, when subscriptions typically tail off, that we’ll see if the industry will be able to withstand the recession.”

As the downturn deepens, the search for romance among professionals is undergoing subtle changes. Dating tiffany jewellery agencies are re-appraising their business models to attract clients, while signs are emerging that customers are beginning to economise on the costs of a “special night out”.

The recession has prompted 29-year-old Sophie Shaw, a City of London lawyer to rethink: “I’ve always strongly resisted the ‘boys-pay’ thing but recently have been thinking why not?”

Hugo Christopher, a 34-year-old designer from west London, has a new late-date policy in order to avoid restaurant bills: “I generally say, ‘I’m working late, shall we meet at 9.00? I’ll grab a sandwich in the office, you might want to eat beforehand too?’” If a meal is unavoidable, he says, he is becoming well-practised in trotting out lines like: “I’ve heard the best test of a restaurant is the house wine, shall we order it?” Efforts to cut back have not so far led Mr Christopher to end his membership of Mysinglefriend, whose online blog recently advised users to go on snack dates rather than dinner dates.

Greg Waldorf, of US site Eharmony, is cautious about making long-term predictions but he hopes the downturn may be good for business. “My impression is that consumers are prioritising this area of their lives. We’ve seen more site traffic when the stock market has gone down.”

Mary Balfour, founder of 25-year-old offline dating agency Drawing Down the Moon, which charges for introductions as well as some fee-paying sites and two that offer free membership, smartdating.co.uk and grownupdating.co.uk, agrees: “A lot of City high-flyers are saying things to us like they are going to concentrate on the more important things in life like relationships rather than pay cheques and bonuses.”

She has observed some emerging spending differences between the genders: “We do find that quite a lot of men start their search for a partner on the internet now [because] it’s a cheaper option, whereas women are still heading for personal agencies.”

Some are tempted by free online dating sites. Subscription sites may worry they will lose money-conscious members,bangles needing to cut back on typical monthly charges of $25 (pound(s)18), to the free sites such as Plentyof-fish.com and OKCupid.com, as well as social networking sites. In 2006, 8 per cent of traffic to online dating services went to free sites. By 2008 this had reached 24 per cent, according to Hitwise, the market research company that tracks how people use the web. Mr Yagan believes the recession will accelerate this trend: “We are seeing over-35s [the demographic that pays for dating services] joining our site. When you are trying to be frugal, a dating site might well be one of the things you cut back on if there are free sites on offer.”

Mr Brooks disagrees: “At the end of the day 20 bucks a month isn’t that much to spend. People can rationalise it by saying that it’s cheaper than going out for a night out and wasting much more and not meeting anyone.”

Ross Williams, CEO of Global Personals, which owns hundreds of niche subscription sites, believes members will not cut back. He is undaunted by the challeng-e from free sites. In fact, he says they help by of-fering a way for users to try out such services. Such logic persuaded Match.com to launch a free site, DownToEarth.com, last month.

“You get what you pay for,” says Mr Williams. “Users don’t want a free-for-all. They want to know that their potential dates are serious about relationships.” A free site cannot give the same customer service as a subscription version, he says: “Free sites are more likely to have spammers trying to con people out of money and married timewasters on their books because there is no one gatekeeping.”

Ms Balfour says: “There have been a lot of challenges over the years from the internet and free sites. I’ve seen some go to rings the wall. But some people will al-ways pay – they hope it signals ser-ious intent about a relationship.”

Hillie Marshall, founder-owner of 20-year-old social events and dinner dates agency Dinner Dates, says the recession is making her clients demand more of the service: “Our clientele are from their late twenties, professionals, with a lot from the City. Because they have less time and are more money-conscious, they are more demanding.”

December 8, 2009

PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS CHRISTMAS IN 1940S

Filed under: christmas,rings — Tags: — admin @ 7:01 pm

The North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources issued the buy tiffany following news release:

On Christmas morning in 1946, thousands of scampering feet raced through hallways to discover new toys as shiny as tinsel on the trees. Bicycles, trains and wagons once again appeared under the tree. World War II had ended, metal was available, and the holidays were getting back to normal.

However, from 1941 to 1945, holiday celebrations were a different story. Families did their best to continue their Christmas traditions in the midst of difficult times and personal sacrifices. Like everyone else, North Carolinians adapted during the war years. Curator Sandy Webbere will explain how during History a la Carte: Christmas in the 1940s on Wednesday, Dec. 9, at 12:10 p.m. at the N.C. Museum of History. Bring your lunch to this informal lunchtime program, and step back to this memorable decade. Beverages are provided.

During the war, the holidays brought dreams of peace and wishes for normalcy. bangles Bing Crosby’s “White Christmas” reflected what families wanted most – to see their loved ones at home. To bring soldiers on the European war front a little comfort from home, many Tar Heels sent holiday packages filled with Christmas cards, wool scarves, magazines, cigarettes and other items.

On the home front, shortages and rationing called for creativity during the holidays. Gone were the metal bicycles and doll carriages, which were substituted with wooden or paper toys. Rations on butter, sugar and other foods meant traditional recipes were adapted or put aside. Billowing holiday fashions were streamlined to save fabric.

Drop by the museum to hear more about the holidays and the resilience of North Carolinians during the 1940s.

For more information, call 919-807-7900 or access ncmuseumofhistory.org or Facebook.

The N.C. Museum of History’s hours are Monday through Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,rings and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. Admission is free. The museum is part of the Division of State History Museums, Office of Archives and History, an agency of the N.C. Department of Cultural Resources. The department’s Web site is www.ncculture.com.For more information please contact: Sarabjit Jagirdar, Email:- htsyndication@hindustantimes.com.

December 7, 2009

BRITISH PUBLIC URGED TO HELP FORCES BY REFRAINING FROM SENDING CHRISTMAS PARCELS TO TROOPS IN AFGHANISTAN

Filed under: bracelets,christmas,cufflinks,rings — Tags: , , — admin @ 6:31 pm

The Office of Ministry of Defence issued the following press release:

As the season of good will is nearly upon us, the British public are being tiffany jewellery urged to help the forces as much as possible by refraining from sending Christmas parcels to troops in Afghanistan.

Soldiers serving in theatre are literally being overwhelmed by support from the British public who generously post unsolicited parcels, putting a massive strain on the Forces Post Office in Camp Bastion, resulting in packages from friends and family taking longer to reach the intended recipients.

Many of the parcels are addressed to chaplains who have long left theatre, but whose legacy continues. The intention is that the current generation of padres will distribute the parcels to troops on the front line.

Padre Richard Downes, who is the British chaplain at Camp Bastion, said:

“The Enduring Families Free Mail Service enables families and close friends of Service personnel to send packages out to theatre. While such unsolicited parcels are without doubt popular with recipients, the all-important personal mail from soldiers’ families becomes significantly delayed.

“Occasionally the perceived needs of recipients have become somewhat confused, as one rings chaplain discovered to his dismay when he opened a welfare parcel addressed to him personally, but which contained amongst other things a glossy pin-up calendar!”

Padre Richard Downes

Only a small fraction of the unsolicited parcels make it to the front line, the rest are processed by staff in Camp Bastion and the contents held in storage in welfare rest areas and churches until they can be sent on.

Some of the contents, including toiletry items, lie untouched for months at a time and one chaplain reported that he had 70 brand new toothbrushes in the back of his church in a Forward Operating Base (FOB).

In response to the growing problem, the Ministry of Defence is working with the forces charity SSAFA to enable generous members of the public to donate money to the charity as an alternative to sending parcels.

The Operational Welfare Fund is focused on providing support direct to the front line and enables bracelets commanders on the ground to bid for those items which they know will boost the troops’ morale.

Padre Downes said:

“The postal service puts on a massive extra push at Christmas and put extra flights on to get the stuff here. But getting the mail out to the FOBs also takes longer, as mail must fit in around operational transport priorities.

“I thank the British public for their support but I would ask that they keep the pressure off the postal system over the Christmas period. The British military are a generous bunch and the troops will always share with those whose parcels may have been held up.”For more information please contact: Sarabjit Jagirdar, cufflinks Email:- htsyndication@hindustantimes.com.

December 3, 2009

La Crosse to try lighted Christmas parade

Filed under: bracelets,cufflinks,rings — Tags: , , — admin @ 6:39 pm

The Rush County Chamber of Commerce is trying something new this tiffany and co year with its annual Christmas Kickoff.

Santa Claus will arrive as usual Nov. 27 in downtown, but he will be following what chamber president Linda Kenyon hopes will be a long procession of floats and other entries for the first lighted Christmas parade in town.

“We’re going to try it this year and see if it adds something to our Christmas Kickoff,” Kenyon said.

La Crosse is borrowing the lighted parade idea from many communities in rings the area and specifically modeling it after the long-running Otis parade.

Kenyon said there is no registration deadline for the parade.

“All they have to do is show up,” she said.

She said she hopes each entry will be lighted but discouraged the use of Santa since he will be arriving at the end of the parade.

A parade route hasn’t been determined, but she knows it will run some length of Main Street and end in Pride Park, where Santa arrives on a fire truck each year.

The parade begins at 6:30 p.m. Nov. 27 and follows the traditional free hot dogs and hot chocolate available during the Christmas Kickoff.

Also, some downtown businesses will be open late to encourage hometown bracelets shopping, Kenyon said.

“We just want people to realize what we have to offer in Rush County,” she said. “You don’t have to drive out of county to find some really neat Christmas presents.”

Kenyon said the parade is open to anyone and any type of entry.

“If you go to the trouble of making an entry, maybe take it the cufflinks 15 miles and enter it in the Otis parade,” Kenyon said.

Otis’ lighted Christmas parade begins at 6 p.m. Dec. 6.

November 6, 2009

Byrnes championship ring somehow finds way home

Filed under: rings — Tags: — admin @ 6:44 pm

Byrnes High School senior defensive lineman Kevin Slusser Jr. was crushed in tiffany jewellery March when he lost his 2007 state championship ring in a Michigan mall during spring break.

Slusser said he looked everywhere for the ring to no avail and assumed it was gone forever.

“It was pretty heartbreaking,” he said. “To lose something that I had worked so hard for was upsetting. I turned my hotel room upside-down and was about ready to report it stolen, but I just figured it was gone and there was nothing I could do. We ordered another ring, but it wasn’t the same as having the original.”

On Saturday, Slusser, the fourth man on Byrnes’ three-man defensive front, was headed home from a recruiting trip to Newberry College when he received a very odd phone call from a former teammate.

“He asked Kevin why he was selling his state championship ring on eBay. Then Kevin started getting more calls, too,” said his father, Kevin Slusser Sr. “We were like, what? Why would he sell it, and who would want it? So we checked when we got home and there was his ring up for sale with his name on it.”

“I would never sell something like that,” the younger Slusser said.

The family tried to contact the seller without success, and lodged a request with eBay officials to have the ring pulled off the Web site. The family eventually made contact with the seller, who turned out to be a North Carolina woman. They explained the situation.

She said she had bought the ring out of a grab bag of jewelry while she bangles was on vacation in Michigan and agreed to return the ring to Slusser.

The truth about where and how the ring was lost remains a mystery.

Slusser said he finally got the ring back in the mail on Wednesday.

“It’s a pretty big relief,” he said. “What are the chances? I’m glad to have it back. It’s something that I hope to pass on to my kids someday to show them what we accomplished.”

“It’s pretty rare for something like this to happen,” said Slusser’s uncle, Darrell Slusser, rings owner of Sonny’s Camp-N-Travel in Duncan. “I guess there was a little divine intervention on Kevin’s part.”

As for the ring the family reordered: “We’ll always have a spare. Kevin told me he would keep the original, and I could keep the one that we reordered. I was like, ‘gee, thanks.’ In all seriousness, though, we are glad to get it back. He’s a good kid, and he definitely deserves it,” the senior Slusser said.

Slusser is active in his church. He has a 4.0 grade point average and scored an 1,100 on his SAT.

He plans to continue his football career at an NCAA Division II school next fall.

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