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Even though Value City proper is no more, Value City Furniture is still open and, inexplicably, uses the old logo.
Jacob Street at the 250 Freeway, Benwood.
This excellent book’s many examples remind me that much can be understood about others by reading and hearing the stories that matter to them. This page is from my Kindle edition (c2010).
Blue Value
Dave Bärtsch / Guitar & Vocal
Peter Oberholzer / Guitar
Paddy Nobs / Bass
Chris Glarner / Drums
Live Concert: 07.10.2022 Bogenkeller, Bluesclub Bühler
Foto / Video by Fredi Schefer
Foto by Fredi Schefer
Aufnahme mit Nikon Z7 II
Bearbeitung mit Camera RAW
Participants celebrate at the finish in Cambridge after completing 90 miles in the Oxford to Cambridge Bike Ride in aid of The British Heart Foundation on 28 September 2013. Photo by Sarah Ansell. (Multiple values)
Have You Ever Realize This Interesting Fact? LIFE & LOVE Both Starts From L, Both Ends At E & Both Are 4 Lettered. Well, There May Be Thousands Of Other Words Which May Rhymes Similarly. But You Know, ‘LIFE & LOVE’ - The Connection In Between Them Are Just Unexplainable – I Mean The More You Keep Explaining Them, The More You Will Drown. Probably You Will Reach The NIRVANA!! :p
The Pic Was Shot Somewhere From The Chautara Of The Chobaar Land. It Was Captured All In A Hurry – 15 Sec Span (Stopped My Bike, Opened The Bag, Opened The Camera Bag, Put ON The IXUS & Finally Pointed & Clicked). It Was Also The Second Day (24-April-2010) After I Bought A New Bike - Hunk. That Day, My New Bike Had A Scratch On Its Right Leg Guard, Handle & Mirror Plate As It Slipped Off While Taking A Slanted Right U Turn. Having Even The Slightest Scratch On New Assets, I Just HATE it. I Really Felt S/Bad, Exactly The Way I Felt When My 2 Days Old Mobile Was All Covered With Dust As I Had An Accident *.
- My New Mobile Set Was ‘All Covered’ With Dust During An Accident On 23-Jan-2010.
- My New Bike Slipped Off & Had Scratches On 24-Apr-2010.
I Find, Both Have A Unique Connection As Both Were New & Both Happened On The Second Day Of Owning Them & Interestingly, Latter One Happened 4 Months Later (Count January As 1, February As 2 …. & April As 4).
Haha … LIFE Is Like This, The Way It Is…. When Something Is Owned With The Hardships & Ultimate Desire, You Just Fall In LOVE For Them Not Because Of The Price Tag, Brand, Color, etc.. etc. You Have To Understand This - It’s Because Of The VALUE.
What is the value of our society as we still allow the human suffering of all races to live in squalor on the street?
Are the wealthy and entitled worth more?
I came close to being on the street but it was the love and generosity of friends who were not rich that helped me procure my wonderful small home.
I find now that it is for me to continue to help my daughters with their college educations and to still actively support The Salvation Army and Am Vets.
Our Daily Challenge
'DUSTY or DUST'
1) The different shades in this photo represents value.
2) The subject of matter would be the mirage on the side of Jimmy's Coffee.
3) The level of contrast given and the sharpness.
4) I would shoot at a closer angle of just the mirages.
In Dialogue and Peacebuilding, participants discusses values and learn how we share many values. At GYV, we call them "Universal Values"
This is the introduction to using charcoal and chalk. Next, we'll draw a classical still life that includes at least one personal item.
Blue Value
Dave Bärtsch / Guitar & Vocal
Peter Oberholzer / Guitar
Paddy Nobs / Bass
Chris Glarner / Drums
Live Concert: 07.10.2022 Bogenkeller, Bluesclub Bühler
Foto / Video by Fredi Schefer
Foto by Fredi Schefer
Aufnahme mit Nikon Z7 II
Bearbeitung mit Camera RAW
John Rother National Coalition on Health Care asks a question after Editor in Chief of The Hill Bob Cusack interviewed Reps. Fred Upton (R-Mich.) and Diana DeGette (D-Col.) during a policy briefing entitled "The Value of a Cure: Ensuring Access and Encouraging Innovation" sponsored by USC Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics and The Hill at the Newseum in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, February 28, 2016.
"All fine architectural values are human values, else not valuable."
Frank Lloyd Wright
Have a great weekend!
5 @powershifter_agency core values hand illustrated with super black India ink, scanned and vectorized using @photoshop and @adobe #illustrator
Jürgen Hagmann of PICOTEAM professionally facilitated the DrylandCereals Implementation Workshop. Here he invites participants to agree on some basic values and ground rules to be upheld during the Workshop, such as informality - leaving titles, ranks and protocols outside the door, so that all participants discuss ideas as equals.
In advance of the Dec. 15 deadline to sign up on Delaware’s Health Insurance Marketplace for coverage to begin Jan. 1, Secretary Landgraf was joined by Westside Family Healthcare CEO Lolita Lopez, Department of Insurance Chief of Staff Paul Reynolds, navigators and enrollees to talk about the value of coverage. More than 25,000 Delawareans signed up for coverage in 2016 and, so far for 2017, sign-ups are up more than 7% over the comparable period last year. “The public is pretty protective of their health insurance,” Secretary Landgraf said Dec. 12 at a press conference at Westside’s location in Bear. About 85% of those enrolled on Delaware’s Marketplace receive tax credits to help pay their monthly premiums. Financial help is available to individuals with an annual household income up to $47,520 and up to $97,200 for a family of four.
Enrollees Dr. Donald Morton, Linda Miller and Pam Howe said the Marketplace offered affordable coverage when they needed it. Dr. Morton, pastor, executive director of Complexities of Color, husband and father of five, signed up the first year and his doctor discovered he had prostate cancer. He now has been cancer-free for two years. “I thank God, I thank my Mama, and I thank President Obama,” he said. “If the law goes away, not only is it financial, but I have a pre-existing condition.”
Linda Miller signed up for marketplace coverage the day her treatment for lung cancer ended through DHSS’ Delaware Cancer Treatment Program. “Somebody is watching over me,” she said. Pam Howe, who lost employer-based coverage and whose husband has high blood pressure, had sleepless nights about how she would access health insurance. “The Health Care Act is very important,” she said, thanking navigator Kristen Isaac at Westside for helping her understand her coverage options. “If (the law) goes away, I don’t know what we will do. It made a big difference for us.”
Rachel Linstead Goldsmith of Enroll America said the Marketplace has helped reduce Delaware’s uninsured population to about 54,000. “The law is still in place and effectively nothing has changed for 2017,” she said. Westside’s President and CEO Lolita Lopez said the Affordable Care Act “has given families a real source of financial security and peace of mind.”
Open enrollment continues through Jan. 31. Those who choose not to get health insurance and are not exempt for coverage will pay a penalty for lacking insurance. For 2017, the penalty will be $695 per adult and $347.50 per child, or 2.5% of their annual household income, whichever is higher.
To learn more or to find a free in-person assister in Delaware, go to www.ChooseHealthDE.com. To shop for plans and to enroll, go to www.HealthCare.gov.