Tag Archives: Mother Day
Judges announced for Honorary Bat Girl contest
By Mark Newman Alex Gordon of the Royals, Matt Kemp of the Dodgers, Andrew McCutchen of the Pirates and CC Sabathia of the Yankees are among guest judges announced for the ongoing Honorary Bat Girl Contest, which encourages fans to share “Going to Bat Against Breast Cancer” stories for a chance to be honored on the field during Mother’s Day celebrations around Major League Baseball.
From: http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20130418&content_id=45125820&vkey=news_mlb&c_id=mlb
Sales of Martha Stewart Products at J.C. Penney Blocked
Filed under: Retail, Industry News
A judge of the New York state appeals court has issued a temporary order that prevents J.C. Penney Co. Inc. (NYSE: JCP) from selling certain home products designed by Martha Stewart Omnimedia Inc. (NYSE: MSO) but sold under J.C. Penney’s “Everyday” brand. J.C. Penney has held the items in its warehouses voluntarily, but based on a ruling from the state Supreme Court last week had planned to get the Everyday-branded items on its shelves by Mother’s Day.
The judge in the case expects to issue a decision tomorrow on the request from Macy’s Inc. (NYSE: M) for a temporary restraining order that would prevent J.C. Penney from selling the disputed items until the court case is decided.
Based on his previous rulings, it seems likely that the judge will deny the temporary restraining order and lift the ban he imposed last night on the sale of the Everyday-branded items. The judge has also chided both parties, telling them that this is a business dispute that should not have been brought to court. From his statements and previous rulings, he is reluctant to restrain J.C. Penney from selling the goods, seeming to prefer to let the Macy’s suit wend its way through the courts and then making J.C. Penney pay up if it turns out that Macy’s suffered injury from the sale of the Martha Stewart items.
J.C. Penney shares are down about 1.8% in the first half-hour of trading this morning, at $14.92 in a 52-week range of $13.55 to $36.89.
Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Law, Retail, Services Tagged: JCP, M, MSO
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From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/17/sales-of-martha-stewart-products-at-j-c-penney-blocked/
Create Edible Art at Home with <em>Modern Art Desserts</em>
By Esther Sung If I had to name one cookbook I was most looking forward to this year, it would be Caitlin Freeman’s Modern Art Desserts: Recipes for Cakes, Cookies, Confections, and Frozen Treats Based on Iconic Works of Art (Ten Speed Press). My excitement goes back to last summer when I beelined it to the Blue Bottle Cafe inside SFMOMA and ordered a slice of Mondrian Cake. After having read about it for awhile, my expectations were high. Let’s just say, I became a fan with one bite. And while Regina Schrambling may never get around to making desserts inspired by Rosana Castrillo Díaz, Richard Avedon, or Jeff Koons, Modern Art Desserts is undoubtedly a magical cookbook, for what Freeman and her pastry team have managed to create are miniature masterpieces. Perhaps the best part of the book is gaining insight into the process, care, and thought–from conceptualization to execution–that Freeman and her dedicated colleagues all bring. I had the opportunity to speak with Freeman about the book and her background. Here are two highlights from our conversation. Epicurious: Is there another book, other than Rose Levy Berenbaum’s The Cake Bible, that you reference the most? Caitlin Freeman: A book that I actually go to most often is Chez Panisse Desserts. It’s such a lovely book. It’s definitely of a style, but I do think [pastry chef Lindsey R. Shere’s] infusions and ice creams, and using flowers and herbs is so inspiring and interesting. And still so relevent. Epi: With the juxtaposition of art and food, is there any particular piece of art that you’d like to work with one day? CF: I have this sentimental attachment to a local painter, Robert Bechtle. His works are very photorealistic paintings of California, especially of Alameda. I just love California painters and I know the term “Californai painters” is not beloved amongst them but there’s something I love about the oil paintings of California in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s. Bechtle had a big retrospective at SFMOMA a few years before we started the museum project. I fell apart in that show. For so long as an art student, I would love some piece of art so much that I didn’t know what to do with myself. I would get an anxiousness in my chest and would want to eat it or something, to kind of want to make it mine somehow. And I definitely had that feeling throughout that show. I recently realized that, well, I kind of ended up doing that. This project was about looking at art, feeling that feeling, and doing something about it. —— Freeman generously offers tips on how to make four desserts from Modern Art Desserts for our Mother’s Day story on edible art: Thiebaud Pink Cake, Kelly Fudge Pops, Laskey Lemon Soda with Bay Ice Cubes, and Woodman Cheese and Crackers. And while we don’t feature the famed Mondrian Cake in our story, you can find the recipe in the cookbook.
Giselle Blondet, Host of Univision's Nuestra Belleza Latina, Joins Charmin At Hispanicize To Launch
By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool
Filed under: Investing
Giselle Blondet, Host of Univision’s Nuestra Belleza Latina, Joins Charmin At Hispanicize To Launch Mama Bear Campaign
Mama Bear Campaign Celebrates Hard-Working Moms, Giving Them an Opportunity to Win a Minivan
MIAMI–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Charmin®, the country’s most popular toilet paper, teams up with Giselle Blondet, host of Univision’s Nuestra Belleza Latina show, and Hispanicize, the nation’s largest conference of Latina mommy bloggers, to launch a new, interactive sweepstakes that celebrates the invaluable, everyday wisdom of Latina “Mama Bears.” Moms are invited to visit the Mama Bear tab on Charmin’s Facebook page and leave a 15-second voice recording about what makes them proud to be a Mama Bear for a chance to win a 2013 Chrysler Town & Country Minivan and an opportunity to be featured in a national Charmin radio commercial. The sweepstakes runs through Mother’s Day, closing on June 30, 2013.
Giselle Blondet, host of Univision’s Nuestra Belleza Latina, joins Charmin at Hispanicize to launch the Mama Bear campaign, which celebrates hard-working moms, giving them an opportunity to win a Minivan. (Photo: Business Wire)
Proud Mama Bear to three kids, Giselle Blondet was on-hand at Hispanicize to greet attendees and swap stories about the joys of motherhood. Hot topics included how Mama Bears are hard-working and take pride in being able to juggle everything that keeps their family intact. “Being a Mama Bear means something unique and different to everyone,” explained Blondet. “I am excited to team up with Charmin to share what it means to me and celebrate Mama Bears across the country.” During Hispanicize, bloggers gave a knowing nod to Charmin’s softness, durability and great everyday price, while surrounded by “sampling” opportunities in the ladies restroom that was stocked exclusively with Charmin toilet paper!
About Sweepstakes
No purchase necessary. Open to legal residents of the 50 United States (D.C.) 18 and older. Void where prohibited. For more information about the sweepstakes, visit the Mama Bear tab at www.Facebook.com/Charmin.
About Charmin
Charmin has been America’s most popular toilet paper for more than 25 years. In the U.S., P&G offers Charmin Ultra Soft and Charmin Ultra Strong – super premium two-ply tissues; Charmin Basic – a
From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/11/giselle-blondet-host-of-univisions-nuestra-belleza/
Discover Cardmembers Earn 5% Cashback Bonus at Home Improvement Stores
By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool
Filed under: Investing
Discover Cardmembers Earn 5% Cashback Bonus at Home Improvement Stores
Spring 5% Category Lets Cardmembers Quickly Build Up Their Rewards
RIVERWOODS, Ill.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– As warmer weather springs into action, Discover is providing even more opportunities to earn rewards. Now through June 30, Discover cardmembers can earn 5% Cashback Bonus on up to $1,500 in purchases at home improvement stores.
“Spring is the perfect time to start a home improvement project such as reinvigorating your kitchen or finishing a new stone patio in time for summer,” said Dana Traci, vice president of rewards at Discover. “This quarter, cardmembers can quickly build their Cashback Bonus rewards while they spruce up their homes for the warmer months ahead.”
Cardmembers can start earning 5% Cashback Bonus at home improvement stores now through June 30, 2013 by simply signing up for 5% online at discover.com, or by calling 1-800-DISCOVER (347-2683). After making $1,500 in home improvement purchases, Discover cardmembers still automatically receive their standard cash back on all other purchases.
And don’t forget about Mom this Mother’s Day. Discover is offering its cardmembers exclusive ways to earn between 5%-20% on purchases made through ShopDiscover, the online shopping portal featuring more than 200 top online retailers. Starting April 11 through May 12, cardmembers can take advantage of over 20 merchant partners that will increase Cashback Bonus amounts, such as:
- Macy’s: 10% Cashback Bonus, up from 5%
- Bloomingdale’s: 10% Cashback Bonus, up from 5%
- Fannie May: 20% Cashback Bonus, up from 15%
- 1-800-Flowers: 20% Cashback Bonus, up from 15%
“Discover is shifting the way customers think about earning and redeeming rewards at places they shop every day,” added Traci. “We have taken the rewards experience even further by offering compelling Cashback Bonus categories, instant eCertificates at popular merchant partners that can be redeemed on-the-go, and a simple online and mobile experience.”
For more information about Discover’s Cashback Bonus program, please visit www.discover.com. Signing up each time is free and easy, and cardmembers earn 5% on up to the amount specified in each quarterly program. Cardmembers earn …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance
Why Vedanta Resources, Quindell Portfolio, and Thorntons Should Beat the FTSE 100 Today
By Alan Oscroft, The Motley Fool
Filed under: Investing
LONDON — The FTSE 100 has lost some of yesterday’s gains, slipping 0.45% to 6,462 points by early afternoon after falls hit the mining and telecom sectors — with Vodafone shares down 2% after speculation that Verizon Communications and AT&T were preparing a bid was refuted.
But there are companies doing well today. Here are three constituents of the various indexes whose prices are rising.
Vedanta Resources
Shareholders in Vedanta Resources got a bit of relief this morning after the decision to order the closure of the company’s Tuticorin copper smelter was reversed by the Indian Supreme Court. The closure order, originally made by the Madras High Court, has been replaced by a fine of 1 billion rupees ($18.4 million) for pollution in the state of Tamil Nadu.
Vedanta shares responded by climbing 3.6% to 1,028 pence, but that only recovers a small amount of the 24% the price had lost since the middle of February.
Quindell
Software and technology consultant Quindell Portfolio saw its shares climb 9.1% to 13 pence this morning on the announcement of a new five-year contract with the RAC. The deal will see Quindell taking on services for addressing auto claims costs of up to 500 million pounds a year and was described by the company as having “the potential to be the largest contract that the Group has entered into to date.”
The Quindell share price more than doubled over the second half of 2012 but has since fallen back. But after a recent rally, it’s up about 75% over the past 12 months. City expectations currently put the shares on a P/E for December 2012 of only nine. We could be looking at a good growth opportunity here — but be sure to do your own research.
Thorntons
“Chocolate-maker sells chocolate over Easter” hardly sounds like a surprise announcement, but it was enough to send shares in Thorntons up 5.9% to 73 pence today. Trading over the Easter period was only described as “satisfactory,” but the company says that with sales for Valentine’s Day and Mother’s Day added in, the result should be pre-exceptional pre-tax profit “ahead of the current market expectation of 3.1 million pounds.”
After a two-year slump took Thorntons shares to a low of just 9.5 pence by January 2012, the price has since risen more than sevenfold.
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The article Why Vedanta Resources, Quindell Portfolio, and Thorntons Should Beat the FTSE 100 Today originally …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance
Sweet Deals: Save on Post-Easter Chocolate — and Make It Last
By Bruce Watson
Filed under: How to Save Money, Saving
In some ways, America seems to operate on a chocolate calendar, a holiday schedule that ensures that candy junkies are never more than a few months away from their next big fix — and the next big excuse for novelty confections. From late September to late October, Halloween dominates the shelves, ultimately giving its real estate up for Christmas chocolates, which themselves give way to Valentine’s Day treats. Then, of course, there’s Easter and, to a lesser extent, Mother’s Day, after which the holiday cycle takes a short break for bathing suit season.
We’re about to enter the down cycle in the chocolate calendar, the long, empty space between spring’s chocolate bunnies and fall’s chocolate pumpkins. But the post-Easter lull also carries a bright side: starting today, all the leftover Easter candy is on a sharp markdown. And if you can resist the siren song of stale Peeps and jelly beans, it’s a great time to stock up on discount chocolate.
To help you on your quest for provisions to get you through the summer, we’ve come up with a few tips for your post-Easter chocolate frenzy. From picking your candy, to storing it, to rehabilitating it, here is everything you need to know to keep yourself knee-deep in cacao from now till October!
Picking the Best Chocolate
When people are trying to pick the best chocolate, they stick with premium brands — after all, it’s hard to go wrong with Godiva, Perugina, or Green & Black. The trouble is that the best chocolates are also the first ones off the shelf — and the last ones to be discounted.
Another reliable method is looking at the label. Good chocolate should only have a handful of ingredients: cocoa liquor (also known as cocoa mass, chocolate liquor, cocoa, or chocolate), sugar, cocoa butter, vanilla and soy lecithin (or some other emulsifier). In general, these ingredients should be as natural as possible: If your chocolate has a fat other than cocoa butter, for example, the flavor will suffer. Similarly, artificial vanilla, artificial sugars, and other additives will bring down the quality.
Storage Tips
Picking the best chocolate is only worthwhile if you’re also going to store it well. Chocolate should be kept in a warm (65 – 70 degrees F) area, out of direct sunlight and away from moisture. Generally speaking, it’s not a great idea to keep chocolate in the fridge or freezer, as it can suffer from humidity and pick up bad flavors.
Restoring Your Chocolate
If chocolate is subjected to extremes of heat and cold, it may develop a grayish or whitish patina. This is called fat bloom or chocolate bloom, and is caused by fat or sugar migrating to the surface of the chocolate. Storing chocolate in a place with a consistent, moderate temperature should help keep chocolate bloom …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance
Bat girl contest to help fight breast cancer under way
By Mark Newman The fifth annual Honorary Bat Girl Contest is under way, encouraging fans to share “Going to Bat Against Breast Cancer” stories for a chance to be honored on-field during Mother’s Day celebrations around Major League Baseball. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at MLB
Honduras can't pay its bills, neglects services
Street surveillance cameras in one of the world’s most dangerous cities were turned off last week because Honduras‘ government hasn’t paid millions of dollars it owes. The operator that operates them is now threatening to suspend the police radio service as well.
Teachers have been demonstrating almost every day because they haven’t been paid in six months, while doctors complain about the shortage of essential medicines, gauze, needles and latex gloves.
This Central American country has been on the brink of bankruptcy for months, as lawmakers put off passing a government budget necessary to pay for basic government services. The country is also grappling with $5 billion in foreign debt, a figure equivalent to last year’s entire government budget.
The financial crisis adds to a general sense that Honduras is a country in meltdown, as homicides soar and drug trafficking overruns its cities and coasts.
“There are definitely patients who haven’t been able to get better because of this problem,” said Dr. Lilian Discua, a pediatrician. “An epileptic who doesn’t take his medicine will have a crisis. This is happening.”
Many streets are riddled with potholes, and cities aren’t replacing stolen manhole covers. Soldiers aren’t receiving their regular salaries, while the country’s education secretary says 96 percent of schools close several days every week or month because of teacher strikes.
Some government offices must close because they don’t have ink to take fingerprints. The country’s national registration agency has been shuttered for 10 days because of unpaid salaries.
“In many ways, the state is no longer functioning,” said Robert Naiman, policy director of Just Foreign Policy, a Washington D.C.-based organization aimed at reforming U.S. foreign policy. “If they keep not paying their soldiers, those soldiers are probably going to stop being soldiers and maybe take some other action.”
Experts say a mix of government corruption, election-year politics and a struggling economy has fueled the crisis.
The local chapter of the international watchdog group Transparency International issued a study in December that alleged some lawmakers had spent money on plane tickets to a tennis tournament in Spain, Mother’s Day gifts and other personal expenses, the report found.
The study’s author, Ludin Ayala, said the country’s Congress is the most expensive in Central America, although Honduras is known as the second-poorest country in Latin America.
“The Congress doesn’t have rules for making these expenses, which are at the discretion of the (legislative) president,” Ayala said. “I don’t know if it’s shameful, sad or disgusting that in the National Congress, there doesn’t exist any type of transparency.”
Former presidential candidate and legislator Olban Valladares said much of the public money has indeed gone into campaigns ahead of November’s elections, in which the president, mayors and 128 congressional representatives will be elected.
“Sadly, we have a great number of candidates who are state officials and their tendency is to abuse state resources that they control to fund their campaigns,” Valladares said.
Congress President Juan Orlando Hernandez said that ousted former President Manuel Zelaya and his allies created much of the current mess.
“They are the ones who have left us today with an enormous debt … leaving us a country that’s unsafe, indebted and isolated in the world,” Hernandez said in a news release.
Although Congress goes on recess Friday, lawmakers have only partially passed a budget so that the government can pay some of its employees and contractors. That leaves undecided the budgets of autonomous institutions such as utilities and the port authority.
Instead, lawmakers are discussing proposals already declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court and don’t deal with the immediate financial problems. On Tuesday, for example, Congress approved a law that would allow any elected official to be impeached.
Hugo Noe Pino, an economist at Honduras‘ Central American Institute for Fiscal Studies, noted that Congress approved the sale of an additional $750 million in bonds last November without resolving any of the core budget issues.
“In this political year, the state resources can be used for political campaigns,” Pino said. “If they haven’t discussed the budget, why are they approving the financing (through bonds) of a budget that doesn’t exist?”
Financial fraud isn’t limited to the government. Tax evasion, for example, is widespread, with the government missing out on an estimated 43 percent of revenue due, said Mario Lopez Steiner, Honduras‘s tax director.
“The culture of tax evasion is incredible in Honduras,” he said.
The institutional paralysis has also spread to the justice system. The Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court has not met for a month and a half because President Porfirio Lobo accused the magistrates of being part of a conspiracy to overthrow him.
Congress, whose majority belongs to Lobo’s party, dismissed several judges without an impeachment trial. Meanwhile, the fired judges continue to enjoy the use of their offices and cars with drivers, even as other government employees go unpaid.
Because Congress hasn’t replaced the dismissed judges, no one can rule on their appeal to be reinstated because the court’s other justices have recused themselves from the case.
“Public power has been turned upside down in a brazen way,” said Oscar Cruz, a former prosecutor in charge of defending the constitution.
The government and the ruling bloc have at least one idea to solve the fiscal crunch: They’ve introduced a bill that would create the country’s first sales tax while eliminating tax breaks for companies that import goods. Such firms make up about 70 sectors of the economy, among them fast food franchises, airlines, power generation companies, agribusinesses and companies that sell spare parts for machinery and heavy vehicles.
The bill’s supporters predict it will generate an additional $1.2 billion in revenue, which would double the government‘s yearly tax intake.
Businesses such as fast food franchises have long been exempt from taxes because they supposedly promote tourism even though many of them “are neither in tourist zones nor do they attract tourism,” said Lopez Steiner.
Such tax breaks have been “approved as payments for political favors and as a result of the financing of election campaigns, which are always linked to tax favors,” he said.
Legislators have so far suspended all tax exemptions for 60 days while a commission reviews whether to reinstate them.
Some families have survived the government vacuum with remittances sent by some of the 1 million Hondurans living in the United States. Their money equals 19 percent of the country’s gross domestic product, according to the World Bank.
Yet it isn’t enough for government workers such as teacher Daniel Espunda, who have lost paychecks to the political crisis.
“Now they owe me five months of salary. January will be the sixth I haven’t been paid,” Espunda said. “No one says anything about when the payday will come.”
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
