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Missouri City Residents: Be Prepared
For Severe Weather Awareness Week
Emergency management officials have designated the week of Feb. 20 through Feb. 26 as Severe Weather Awareness Week in Texas.
Each year, thunderstorms, floods, tornadoes and hurricanes damage homes and businesses in communities across the state. As a precaution, Missouri City residents should review and update their emergency plans, inspect supply kits and stock up on necessary items such as non-perishable food, water, flashlights and batteries, radios, first-aid kits, cell phones and chargers, maps and important family documents.
In coordination with the Governor's Division of Emergency Management and the Fort Bend County Office of Emergency Management, Missouri City's Emergency Operations Center is prepared to handle all weather emergencies and to service City roadways that may be affected.
"The safety of our citizens is paramount," said Curtis Campbell, Chief of Missouri City's Division of Emergency Preparedness. "Part of planning for weather emergencies is educating residents about the types of severe weather we may experience in our area and providing them tips to protect their families."
In the event of a weather emergency next week, Staff will post information and updates on the City's main and emergency websites: missouricitytx.gov and missouricityready.com. Additionally, residents can tune into Missouri City Television (Ch. 16 on Comcast and Ch. 99 on AT&T U-verse) and the City's radio station, 1690 AM.
Experts advise residents to seek secure shelter in a home, large building or automobile when severe weather strikes. Officials advise against sheltering in sheds and small buildings in open areas. Citizens should follow the safety tips below when these types of severe weather strike:
*Lightning: Avoid high objects, stay away from isolated trees, telephone poles or communications antennas. Avoid contact with metal surfaces and do not bathe, swim or boat. Only use the telephone for emergency purposes.
*Flash Floods: Never drive through flooded roadways, do not cross flooded roads or waterways on foot, avoid ditches and storm drains and stay tuned to local media for road reports and updates.
*Tornadoes: Texas is struck by more tornadoes than any other state. The safest places to seek shelter in homes, schools or workplaces are interior rooms, such as bathrooms, closets, rooms without windows, hallways, auditoriums and gyms. If driving when a tornado strikes, leave the vehicle and lie flat in a ditch or ravine, if possible. Residents should also know the difference between a Tornado Watch and a Tornado Warning. A watch is an alert to monitor the skies and a warning signals that a tornado has struck the ground and shelter must be sought immediately.
For more information, please visit these websites:
www.txdps.state.tx.us/dem/pages/lightningSafetyTips.htm
www.txdps.state.tx.us/dem/pages/flashFloodSafetyTips.htm
Vacation Bible School students collect non-perishable goods, pictured in the Main Post Chapel, for the Chaplain's Food Locker. The program accepts year-round donations which include other household items like diapers, papers towels and toilet paper.
Donations of non perishable food items, baby diapers, baby formulas, baby wipes, personal hygiene kits and household cleaners to four homeless shelters in the Greater Lansing area on October 2, 2021. Thanks very to Walmart Lansing and Walmart Fenton, VanAtta Greenhouse and Flower Shop and Massage and Wellness Store for their support.
#kindness #love #giving #helptheneedy #charity #lansing #michigan #usa #ishiodamttenfoundation #nonprofit
MIT Visiting Artist Anicka Yi teamed up with Postdoctoral Fellow Tal Danino to present their current work to engineer a collectively scented bacteria, created from the DNA of 100 women. Participants learned about the art and the science behind the project.
Anicka Yi’s work explores scent and decay, creating a sensorial experience that disrupts our predominantly visual culture.
At MIT, Ancika Yi is working with researchers to create new scents based on bacteria, new materials for creating installations, and is exploring the nature of collaboration between individuals and disciplines. Anicka’s work will be on view at the List Visual Art Center May 22 through July 26, 2015.
Tal Danino is postdoctoral fellow at MIT’s Laboratory for Multiscale Regenerative Technologies, whose research explores the emerging frontier of combining biology and engineering. He is actively involved in developing science-based art and outreach programs that promote interest in science and cancer research to a general audience.
Learn more at arts.mit.edu
All photos ©L. Barry Hetherington
lbarryhetherington.com/
Please ask before use
Elementary students brought over 2000 non-perishable items during a contest to see which homeroom could bring the most items. Today some of the food items were moved by truck to the food bank. A total of 3, 159 items were brought.
Photo Credit: Cindy Kurman, Kurman Photography
Photos available for purchase on KurmanPhotography.com
There is not much commentary for this picture and the ones which follow, so I will keep the text to the minimum and let you enjoy the pictures. After a long-ish drive down the hill after viewing the sunset point at Promthep Cape, (see previous pictures), my guide brought me to the head of a small lane running out from the parking lot at Rawai Beach in Phuket, Thailand. Go there, see fish market, he said. And so here I am, and this is the last selfie in the fish market. A local gentleman made a big fuss before he took these shots of me, saying he is no good, his photos don't turn out well, he is notorious for shaking the camera etc. But in the end, he did take my iPhone from me and fired of several shots, some of which are indeed reasonably passable. (Phuket, Thailand, Oct/ Nov. 2019)
Sororities and fraternities at California State University, Chico teamed up to help their fellow students and raise money, benefiting the University’s Chico Cares campaign.The Greek community hosted its annual CANstruction event, during which Greek teams competed to create large, artistic displays built out of canned and non-perishable foods on Wednesday, October 10, 2018 in Chico, Calif.
(Eddie Aldrete/Student Photographer/CSU Chico)
Thank you to all 150+ of you who joined us for our 10th Annual Casino Night!
We gave away some amazing prizes to our members, sponsors, and guests. We filled an entire table with non-perishables to donate to Second Harvest, and our Chapter made donations to both Mecklenburg County Teen Court and the Council for Children’s Rights.
Congratulations to all our high rollers… and a huge thank you to our event sponsors - LegalPeople, Onit and TCDI!
With the temperature reaching 100 degrees, a developing thunderstorm updraft creates a Pileus cloud. This "cap" like cloud forms as an updraft causes horizontially flowing air to rise over the rising updraft, creating an almost lenticular shaped cloud. This lasted only a few moments, as the updraft powered up throught the Pileus and developed into a full-blown thunderstorm. This developing storm, seen from O'Hare Airport, was actually along the Lake Michigan shore near Zion!
Alumni in Action - Several Auburn clubs partnered with the Student Alumni Association to assemble Tiger Tubs. At their individual game watch events, the clubs collected toiletries, non-perishable food, games and other items for Tiger Troops stationed overseas.
The 26th annual Community Christmas program for the Riverbend community in Illinois collected 19,252 items for those in need during the holiday season. The program, sponsored by United Way's Southwest Illinois Division and The Telegraph, wrapped up on Thursday, December 10, when more than 100 boxes were picked up from local businesses, dropped off at a central location, and then were sorted for distribution to the 17 recipient agencies. Items donated included non-perishable food, clothes, winter weather necessities like gloves, hats and scarves, blankets, towels, baby care items, hygiene items, and new toys. Community Christmas helps more than 6,000 people in need every year.
A start has been made on fitting the newly fabricated steel components of the brake system to the underside of the van.
Sundry shop in Papar town. They supply most of the things you will need in the villages, perishable, non-perishable and small hardware.
#201009-16 ~Lightbox~
Donations of non perishable food items, baby diapers, baby formulas, baby wipes, personal hygiene kits and household cleaners to four homeless shelters in the Greater Lansing area on October 2, 2021. Thanks very to Walmart Lansing and Walmart Fenton, VanAtta Greenhouse and Flower Shop and Massage and Wellness Store for their support.
#kindness #love #giving #helptheneedy #charity #lansing #michigan #usa #ishiodamttenfoundation #nonprofit
Photo Credit: Cindy Kurman, Kurman Photography
Photos available for purchase on KurmanPhotography.com
The Clock Tower was built in 1868 to mark the positioning of the original Mere Market House, a two storey building with a covered open ground floor for perishable market goods.
The Mere market ended in the 18th century but the upper floor, the ‘Croos Loft’, continued to be used as a school and it was here that the poet William Barnes had his first school in Mere. The market house was pulled down in 1863 and was replaced by the present Clock Tower which was opened by the Prince of Wales (later Edward VII) in 1868.
Listing Text
ST 8032-8132 MERE THE SQUARE
(west side)
6/76 Clock Tower
GV II
Clock tower. Dated 1868. Rock faced limestone, ashlar dressings, Welsh slate
roof, wooden turret and ventilating louvre. Square plan with one offset
diagonal buttress, pyramidal roof broached to octagonal stage with clock on two
faces, further small slated pyramid to louvred crowning feature with weather-
cock. Plain plank doors to moulded arch in east front with drip to leaf stops
under panel 'Albert Edward 1868' and the Prince of Wales feathers. Blind lancet
north and south, leaded glazed to west; corbel table cornice to main roof.
Small gabled lucarne each face of roof slope. Holds an important position in
centre of former market place, on the site occupied by the Market House until
1863. The present clock tower was given to the town by H.R.H. the Prince of
Wales.
Listing NGR: ST8124732362
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Rural Development (RD) South Dakota State office collects 300 pounds of non-perishable food for the Feds Feed Families event in Rapid City, SD on Friday, July 13, 2012.
"A food sample is a model of a dish displayed in or in a restaurant. Made from plastic, non-perishable materials (such as wax and synthetic resins) as the main raw material, it visually explains the details of the product and plays the role of part or all of the menu by presenting the product name and price at the same time. It is an expression method devised in the Japan from the Taisho era to the early Showa era."-from WIKIPEDIA
Descent of the Ganges is a monument at Mahabalipuram, on the Coromandel Coast of the Bay of Bengal, in the Kancheepuram district of the state of Tamil Nadu, India. Measuring 29 m × 13 m, it is a giant open-air relief carved of two monolithic rock boulders. The legend depicted in the bas-relief is the story of the descent of the sacred river Ganges to earth from the heavens led by Bhagiratha. The waters of the Ganges are believed to possess supernatural powers. The descent of the Ganges and Arjuna's Penance are portrayed in stone at the Pallava heritage site. The bas-relief is more of a canvas of Indian rock cut sculpture at its best not seen anywhere in India. It is one of the Group of Monuments at Mahabalipuram that were designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1984.
GEOGRAPHY
The Arjuna bas-relief is in the centre of Mahabalipuram, facing the sea at a short distance from the shores of the Coramandel Coast of the Bay of Bengal where the Shore Temple is situated. It is accessible from Chennai city over a 58 km paved road to its west and 32 km from Chengalpet.
HISTORY
The Mamallapuram art, as it is known among archaeologists, is a creation on the occasion of a celebration of the victory of Hinduism over Buddhism. The place, now known as Mahabalipuram, was earlier known by the epithet given to the king Narasimhavarman I (630–668 AD) of the Pallava Dynasty (who ruled from 4th to 9th centuries),) as Mamallan, the "great wrestler" or "great warrior". His father was king Mahendravarman I who converted from Jainism to Hinduism. The architectural creations at Mamallapuram, mostly attributed to Mamalla in the 7th century, adopted stone as the medium for sculpting in situ rock faces, which till then was done with some perishable material like wood or loose stones. It is part of 16 World Heritage Cultural Sites in India, and as a protected monument, the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), Chennai Circle is entrusted with its upkeep in all aspects. The open air bas-reliefs (including the Descent of the Ganges (Mahabalipuram) are one of the four categories under which UNESCO identified the site as a World Heritage Site and inscribed it in 1984 under the title Group of Monuments at Mahabalipuram. This bas-relief in rock is reported as a "sublime" early sculpture of the 7th century; even in the subsequent dynasty of the Chola's adopted the shrine-sculpting technique in the temples they built in the late 9th century. This architectural legacy of the Pallava dynasty is continued by the descendants of sculptors of that period, who are now integrated into the present town’s culture.
LAYOUT
The unique bas-relief faces east. It was created with great skill and imagination on two large boulders of pink granite in the open air giving the whole a natural effect. The boulders measure 15 by 30 metres. Many of the figures carved are in life size. The natural cleft, a very large perpendicular fissure, is skilfully sculptured. It is in between the two boulders and is integral to the mythical narratives carved on the entire relief. A water tank was once located at the top of the rock to release water denoting the Ganges River. It cascaded over the cleft and the relief to give the impression of the Ganga descending from the head tied matts of Shiva. This scene was created during festive occasions and the presence of a brick masonry cistern at the top of the cleft to release water attests to its location at site. The bas-relief is an ensemble of over a hundred figures (146 is also mentioned) of gods, people, half-humans and animals and is best explained by an expert at site.
ARCHITECTURE
The sculptures carved in the natural fissure that divides the cliff not only depict a cosmic event of Ganges descending to earth (a popular narration and depiction in the iconography of Shiva) at the command of Shiva but also shows the event being watched by scores of gods, goddesses, mythical figurines of Kinnara, Gandharva, Apsara, Gana, Nagas, and also wild and domestic animals, all admiringly looking up at the scene. This relief is often given the hyperbole adjectives as "world renowned" and “unique artistic achievement”. The total number of carvings are probably about 146. The carvings of elephants on the open air bas-relief is almost of life size and is reported as the best animal carving in India. Another humorous scene is the carvings of monkeys copying the yogic scenes of the sages. Shiva is shown next to the Kinnaras who are depicted in large numbers in the upper portion of the bas-relief; they are anthropomorphic forms of half human half bird, a popular Indian art form in ancient times representing the Indic ethos of the world as one creation. The male Kinnara is holding a musical instrument (type unknown) while the female Kinnara is holding a cymbal. Shiva is carved in front of the river (to the right of the cleft) in a standing posture with Bhagiratha, the sage, standing on one leg offering him prayers to check the force of the Ganga as she descends to earth. Shiva is also shown with a weapon which is interpreted as Pashupati, which he gave to Arjuna. The ganas shown in the carvings represent the people who have spent their entire lives in dedication to Shiva, and are blessed with the boon to remain close to Shiva for all time to come. Carvings of the divine nagas shown swimming in the river, as Ganga descends from the heavens, are also in anthropomorphic form of a serpent and human, which has been a traditional style from ancient times in Indic art. They are believed to denote fertility and protective forces of nature. They are seen not only in the middle of the panel facing the cleft, which represents the river, but also at the top of the panel at the entry of water over the channel, marking the prevalence of naga worship in Hindu religious beliefs.
Detailing of sculptures showing the Vishni temple to the right of the cleft
It is also said that the bas-relief in one unity is the early Indic artist's concept of "sublime continuity in all living things." The elephants shown in reliefs are unique in the fact that the detailing includes the baby elephants behind the life size elephants. Another interesting depiction is of a deer scratching its nose. The elephants represent a herd moving towards the river to drink water. The male elephant carving precedes that of its female partner. Three baby elephants with the male elephant and two babies with the female elephant are also carved in the panel.
Sun, on the left and Moon on the right side are also depicted on top part of the panel. A kim-purusha, meaning dwarf with elongated ears and wearing a cap on his head and beating a drum is also seen in the panel.
In the upper part of the panel, Himalayas are shown which corroborates the theory of the panel representing the descent of the Ganges. Wild lions are also shown with large mane and also rams which are interpreted as representing the Himalayan habitat. On the left side of the upper panel, carvings of divinities and celestial couples moving towards the river are seen. A few animals, lions and monkeys are also carved in this part. Two pairs of kinnaras and three pairs of celestial couples are shown flying in the air approaching the river (cleft). Hunters and hunting scenes are part of this part of the panel; a hunter with a bow, two hunters hiding under trees to hunt, a lion about to attack two hunters are some of the parts of forest scenes carved on the panel. Another scene below is of few monkeys, and carving of a lion in his den with few deer in front of it. Carvings of hunters carrying a pitcher and another carrying the hunted animals are also seen.
Another prominent scene is that of a temple to the right of the cleft at the lower end of the panel. This temple is simple and small and has Vishnu as the deity carved within it. The temple roof is patterned on the style of Draupadi Ratha with a square curvilinear dome type of tower. However, the top is flat and is fitted with a stupi, with a kudu in the centre. Corners are decorated with flower designs. The cornices are also seen with kudus carved with human faces inside. In the floor above the cornice, lion motifs are carved. A square supports the domed roof. A sage is seen sitting in front of the temple giving sermons to his students. In the seat below this scene, a lion in his den and below this a pair of deer are carved. A tortoise is shown next to the temple indicative of water in the near vicinity.
INTERPRETATIONS
In one interpretation, a figure in the bas-relief, who is standing on one leg, is said to be Arjuna performing an austerity Tapas to receive a boon from Shiva as an aid in fighting the Mahabharata war. The story of the penance is narrated in the epic Mahabharata under the subtitle the Kiratarjuniya. The boon, which Arjuna is said to have received, was called Pasupata, Shiva's most powerful weapon. According to the myth narrated on this event, asuras (demons) sent a boar to kill Arjuna. Then Shiva appeared on the scene to protect Arjuna assuming the form of kirata (hunter). Both Arjuna and Shiva shot arrows at the boar and the boar was killed; both claimed credit for killing it and a fight ensued between the two in which Shiva won. He then revealed his true self to Arjuna and blessed him and gave him the weapon for which Arjuna is shown performing the penance.
The bas-relief is carved on two large boulders with a cleft. Above the cleft was a collecting pool, and at one time, water may have flowed along the cleft. Figures in the cleft in the rock are covered with nagas (serpent deities), in anjali posture. The river is said to represent Ganga or the River Ganges emerging from Shiva's head. This provides the basis for an alternative interpretation of the mural. Rather than Arjuna, the figure performing austerities is said to be Bhagiratha. Bhagiratha is said to have performed austerities so that Ganga might descend to earth and wash over the ashes of his relatives, releasing them from their sins. To break Ganga's fall from heaven to earth, she falls onto Shiva's hair, and is divided into many streams by his tresses; this miraculous event is shown in the form of sculptures on the boulders being watched by the animals and human beings.
Another interpretation for the yogi doing penance on one leg is that it is a depiction of Bhagiratha doing severe penance to bring down Ganges to earth to usher prosperity and happiness to the people. The nagas carved in the cleft represent fecundity and wealth. Shiva and other gods are shown blessing the saint. The scene is further accentuated with carvings of kings, sages, artists and animals.
One more interpretation of the myth seen in another part of the panel is that of a cat standing on one leg (apparently as an austerity), and perhaps an iconic figure in the bas-relief. It is interpreted as relating to the Panchatantra story of an ascetic. It denotes the hare luring a bird to come close so that she could she catch and devour it. The artist has brought out the expression on cat’s face, its motives clearly.
WIKIPEDIA
Photo Credit: Cindy Kurman, Kurman Photography
Photos available for purchase on KurmanPhotography.com
Thank you to all 150+ of you who joined us for our 10th Annual Casino Night!
We gave away some amazing prizes to our members, sponsors, and guests. We filled an entire table with non-perishables to donate to Second Harvest, and our Chapter made donations to both Mecklenburg County Teen Court and the Council for Children’s Rights.
Congratulations to all our high rollers… and a huge thank you to our event sponsors - LegalPeople, Onit and TCDI!
Drink milk, dairy, and other perishable foods before their expiration date. Expired food can contain salmonella or bacteria. Consuming expired food can cause food poisoning.
There is not much commentary for this picture and the ones which follow, so I will keep the text to the minimum and let you enjoy the pictures. After a long-ish drive down the hill after viewing the sunset point at Promthep Cape, (see previous pictures), my guide brought me to the head of a small lane running out from the parking lot at Rawai Beach in Phuket, Thailand. Go there, see fish market, he said. I had no intention of buying any fresh fish, and the couple of sales persons who were urging me to buy backed off fairly quickly when I pointed to my large Nikon and told them with a smile- no, tourist! But upon reflection, it was probably just as well that I wandered into this market, for unlike Bangkok or Koh Samui, which are on Thailand's east coast, Phuket is located on the Andaman sea, on the west coast, so the types of fish and crustaceans one can see here is much different from what you see in the above mentioned places. (Phuket, Thailand, Oct/ Nov. 2019)
Photo Credit: Cindy Kurman, Kurman Photography
Photos available for purchase on KurmanPhotography.com
Army Reserve Pvt. Quiana Gomez, from Orlando, Fla., keeps track of supplies being loaded at the Fort Pierce, Fla. airport on Sunday, Jan. 24, 2010 in support of Operation Unified Response. The supplies included bottled water, non-perishable food and other comfort items for Haiti earthquake relief. Gomez is a member of the 196th Transportation Company, an Army Reserve unit based in Orlando, Fla. (Timothy L. Hale/Army Reserve Public Affairs)
Army Reserve Staff Sgt. Francisco Pinzon, prepares a convoy to move out from the Fort Pierce, Fla. airport on Monday, Jan. 25, 2010 in support of Operation Unified Response. The supplies included bottled water, non-perishable food and other comfort items for Haiti earthquake relief. The supplies were moved from Fort Pierce to the Opa-Locka airport. Pinzon, from Orlando, Fla., is a member of the 196th Transportation Company, an Army Reserve unit based in Orlando, Fla. (Timothy L. Hale/Army Reserve Public Affairs)
Photo Credit: Cindy Kurman, Kurman Photography
Photos available for purchase on KurmanPhotography.com
The sweet treats and souvenirs available in the retail space. All the perishables are shipped daily from NY.
Donations of non perishable food items, baby diapers, baby formulas, baby wipes, personal hygiene kits and household cleaners to four homeless shelters in the Greater Lansing area on October 2, 2021. Thanks very to Walmart Lansing and Walmart Fenton, VanAtta Greenhouse and Flower Shop and Massage and Wellness Store for their support.
#kindness #love #giving #helptheneedy #charity #lansing #michigan #usa #ishiodamttenfoundation #nonprofit
U.S. Air Force doctor Vanessa Wideman, from the 169th Medical Group, loads donated food items collected from her unit. The 169th Fighter Wing at McEntire Joint National Guard Base, South Carolina Air National Guard, S.C. collected 471 pounds of dontated non-perishable food items for delivery to a local food bank in Columbia, S.C., Nov. 20, 2020. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Edward Snyder, 169th Fighter Wing Public Affairs)
UP SD70AH #8835 leads the eastbound "Salad Shooter" through Hammond with a load of perishables to be taken east to New York.
The 26th annual Community Christmas program for the Riverbend community in Illinois collected 19,252 items for those in need during the holiday season. The program, sponsored by United Way's Southwest Illinois Division and The Telegraph, wrapped up on Thursday, December 10, when more than 100 boxes were picked up from local businesses, dropped off at a central location, and then were sorted for distribution to the 17 recipient agencies. Items donated included non-perishable food, clothes, winter weather necessities like gloves, hats and scarves, blankets, towels, baby care items, hygiene items, and new toys. Community Christmas helps more than 6,000 people in need every year.
Donations of non perishable food items, baby diapers, baby formulas, baby wipes, personal hygiene kits and household cleaners to four homeless shelters in the Greater Lansing area on October 2, 2021. Thanks very to Walmart Lansing and Walmart Fenton, VanAtta Greenhouse and Flower Shop and Massage and Wellness Store for their support.
#kindness #love #giving #helptheneedy #charity #lansing #michigan #usa #ishiodamttenfoundation #nonprofit
Carl Sandburg College volleyball held a preseason intra-squad "Navy & Red" scrimmage on Tuesday, Aug. 19 in the John M. Lewis Gymnasium. Attendees brought an item to be donated to the Carl Sandburg College Resource Room, a location in Building B that supports the College’s student body and sustained by donations of non-perishable food items, toiletries, school supplies and other items that can be used by Sandburg students in need.
MIT Visiting Artist Anicka Yi teamed up with Postdoctoral Fellow Tal Danino to present their current work to engineer a collectively scented bacteria, created from the DNA of 100 women. Participants learned about the art and the science behind the project.
Anicka Yi’s work explores scent and decay, creating a sensorial experience that disrupts our predominantly visual culture.
At MIT, Ancika Yi is working with researchers to create new scents based on bacteria, new materials for creating installations, and is exploring the nature of collaboration between individuals and disciplines. Anicka’s work will be on view at the List Visual Art Center May 22 through July 26, 2015.
Tal Danino is postdoctoral fellow at MIT’s Laboratory for Multiscale Regenerative Technologies, whose research explores the emerging frontier of combining biology and engineering. He is actively involved in developing science-based art and outreach programs that promote interest in science and cancer research to a general audience.
Learn more at arts.mit.edu
All photos ©L. Barry Hetherington
lbarryhetherington.com/
Please ask before use
The 26th annual Community Christmas program for the Riverbend community in Illinois collected 19,252 items for those in need during the holiday season. The program, sponsored by United Way's Southwest Illinois Division and The Telegraph, wrapped up on Thursday, December 10, when more than 100 boxes were picked up from local businesses, dropped off at a central location, and then were sorted for distribution to the 17 recipient agencies. Items donated included non-perishable food, clothes, winter weather necessities like gloves, hats and scarves, blankets, towels, baby care items, hygiene items, and new toys. Community Christmas helps more than 6,000 people in need every year.
Central wholesale markets, established by local governments under the Wholesale Market Law, sell fresh foods indispensable to out daily life such as fish, vegetables, fruit, meat and flowers. It is difficult to store perishable foods for a long period as the spoil easily. In addition, the production of perishables is greatly affected by natural conditions such as the weather, so the price is subject to greater fluctuation than other goods. So the wholesale market, standing between producers and consumers, promotes the smooth distribution of perishables and contributes to stabilization of diet through the fair and speedy transactions between wholesalers and jobbers in the clean and functional facilities.
Role The Central Wholesale Market Law of 1923 has laid the foundation of the wholesale market system in Japan. The Law was revised in 1971 and the present Wholesale Market Law was newly promulgated to cope with the succeeding social changes.
The present system of wholesale market in Japan has two features: (1) Local governments found and manage their central wholesale markets. (2) Prices are fixed on the basis of auction regardless of volume of transaction. This is an unique system around the world; the law restricts transactions in the markets to maintain impartiality.
Before central wholesale markets were established, although auction had been held partially in vegetable markets, most prices had been negotiated in secret between sellers and buyers. It sometimes caused unfair transactions and placed producers and consumers under disadvantages.
The principle of public auction established by the Central Wholesale Market Law had a marked effect on distribution of perishable foods: fair prices and proper transactions are ensured. Thus, thanks to the central wholesale market, producers and consumers have become able to supply or consume perishable foods without anxiety.
Photo Credit: Cindy Kurman, Kurman Photography
Photos available for purchase on KurmanPhotography.com
Balinese offerings are generally fashioned of perishable, organic materials. Not only the materials, but also the function of these objects is transitory. Once presented to the gods, an offering may not be used again and similar ones have to be produced again and again each day.
Palm leaves are meticulously cut and plaited according to prescribed patterns.