May 29, 2009

The best deals on restaurant furniture

While traveling all around the world, one of the things that I love is to try the new food that you are able to find on each city and the amazing restaurants that are symbols of those cities. Do you also run a restaurant in your town or something similar? If that’s the case, then you definitely need to have a look at these restaurant stools which you can get for the best prices ever!

Furthermore, the quality of all the restaurant furniture that you are able to buy on the website above is very high, meaning that you don’t have anything to worry about and that your costumers will be really impressed with that furniture when they come to your restaurant.
Furthermore, on the link above you will be presented to the affordableseating.net company which also offers amazing prices on restaurant chairs, booths, table bases, amongst much other restaurant furniture. Personally, I find the website above extremely user-friendly and easy to navigate. Moreover, the graphical concept is extremely well created, making it possible to find what we are looking for in a matter of seconds. What else could we really ask for? Just take some of your time to visit the website and see with your own eyes how you can easily improve the quality of the furniture that you have in your restaurant.

Big Ben's 150th anniversary


Are you going to travel to the UK in the upcoming days? If that's the case,then you may be lucky enough to be a witness of the 150th Big Ben anniversary that is gong to be ringed by the Big Ben itself! Below is another msnbc.com article telling you the whole story:

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LONDON - Defiantly low-tech yet accurate to the second, Big Ben is having its 150th birthday Sunday, its Victorian chimes carrying the sound of Britain into the 21st century.

It's a birthday the world can share in. The peals of London's favorite clock are carried globally by BBC radio, and its 315-foot tower, roughly 16 stories, is the city's most famous landmark.

But getting inside and seeing Big Ben, the sonorous main bell that gives its name to the whole contraption, isn't easy. Security measures mean few are granted admission, and there's no elevator, so those who are escorted in must climb 334 winding limestone stairs.

Catherine Moss, who took journalists on a pre-anniversary tour, said that in one year as a Big Ben guide, she had climbed the height of Everest three times over.

"It's my own private step machine," the trim-looking 51-year-old called down from the top of the tower.

No special events are planned, aside from an exhibition opening Sept. 19 in the nearby parliamentary offices.

Although the tan-colored tower above the Houses of Parliament is covered in a riot of gilt crowns, sculpted masonry and coats of arms, the interior looks functional. The 14 foot-long minute hand casts a faint shadow over the pale white glass of the dial. The 5.6 ton clock mechanism, like a giant wristwatch, is wound three times a week. In the age of atomic clocks, its near-perfect time is regulated by heavy old pennies laid on or removed from the pendulum.

The chimes, supposedly based on four notes from Handel's "Messiah," ring out every quarter hour from the intricately ornamented belfry. The bongs of Big Ben itself are heard every hour.

Silence at nine
It is rare — and a matter of citywide consternation — for the clock to go mute. But wars and accidents happen. Initial construction was one disaster after another, and in 1916 the chimes were stopped for two years lest they guide German bomber zeppelins to the parliament building.

Carried on BBC radio since 1924, the chimes took on added significance in World War II. Every night Britons observed a minute's silence as the clock struck nine. It was called the Big Ben Minute. Even as German bombs fell and air raid sirens howled, Big Ben's voice was heard.

The solemn chimes were a metaphor for Britons unflappable under fire, says Tam Dalyell, 76, a former lawmaker.

"It's defiant," Dalyell said in a telephone interview from his home in Scotland. "It's a sign of confidence and undaunted spirit."

On the night of May 10, 1941, an air raid wrecked the parliament building, sending up flames as high as the belfry. A small explosive shattered the clock's south dial and damaged stonework, but the clock didn't skip a second.

Its durability was "as great a boost to the morale of the British people as the speeches of Winston Churchill," according to Peter MacDonald, the author of "Big Ben: The Bell, the Clock and the Tower."

Moss, the tour guide, said she sees it in the faces of Blitz survivors who visit the tower.

"

Finding the best car dealers in Utah

All businesswoman and businessman tend to travel all around the country in order to take part in important meetings for their companies. In fact, I am no exception and I often have to travel to Utah, New York, Chicago and many other places that are far away from my home.

Keeping this in mind, it is extremely important that I always find the best car dealers in utah county because I often have to buy a car in Utah as I tend to spend some months of the year there, working on the marketing component of my company. Moreover, as I am always reviewing services and products that we may find in the cities where I spend some months, I was really impressed with the amazing car dealers that we are able to find on the website above, making it absolutely mandatory that I recommend them to all of you living in Utah!

Have you ever been to Cleveland before?


Even knowing that Cleveland is the city of LeBron James and people just seem to respect it for that fact, it is normal that many Youtube videos make fun of the city and show its current social trends in a sarcastic way! Still, Cleveland society is already fighting back. Below you may find the msnbc.com article telling you the whole story with further detail:

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CLEVELAND - Come to Cleveland, where the economy is based on LeBron James, the streets are filled with drifters and broken-down homes can be had for the price of a VCR.

A comedian's sarcastic YouTube music videos trashing Cleveland have so unnerved tourism officials that they asked residents to fire back with videos of their own showing the city is not really the "Mistake on the Lake."

But take it easy, Cleveland. Mike Polk, 31, a hometown comic and video producer, said his two videos — which also maligned the city for such things as its abandoned buildings and polluted waters — were all in fun.

"I don't really believe all of the fish in Lake Erie have AIDS," said Polk, whose YouTube contribution to Cleveland's inferiority complex landed him a job judging the mostly feel-good contest videos.

The winner of the contest sponsored by the city's travel promotion agency, Positively Cleveland, will be announced Thursday.

Entries had to cost $2 or less to produce; be 2 minutes long, tops; and highlight favorite spots and the "unexpected side of the area about which tourists may not be aware."

The winner gets a Cleveland travel package, including a stay in a downtown hotel, dinner and passes to attractions.

Polk's favorite spots? The Playhouse Square theater district and corner music clubs.

But there's another inescapable part of Cleveland, including a dwindling population, shrinking manufacturing base, a high poverty rate and rampant foreclosures. Polk hits on many of the anti-highlights in the bare-knuckle video:

  • Its manufacturing might? "Here's the place were there used to be industry," the song says against a backdrop of urban desolation.
  • The resilient blue-collar population? "Cleveland leads the nation in drifters," the video warns.
  • The city's economy? It's based on the Cavaliers' James, Most Valuable Player in the NBA.

Positively Cleveland played off Polk's "Hastily Made" video title with a "Hastily Made Cleveland Tourism Video Contest" and paid homage to Polk and "this video making the rounds out there. ... You know who you are, funny guys."

Samantha Fryberger, who promotes the city as director of communications for Positively Cleveland, said there were no hard feelings about Polk's video ribbing.

"We thought we would not get defensive about it," she said Wednesday. "We're not mad about it; we're just going to have a little fun with it."

Clevelanders unhappy that Polk knocked the city are silly to suggest he shouldn't point out shortcomings, he said.

"I love the city and or else I would have left a long time ago," he said. "But I'm also realistic and I'm not going to pretend like there aren't a lot of negatives around here."

Still, Polk offered Cleveland a glimmer of hope, ending one video with the chant: "We're not Detroit."

"

Home accessories

Today is renewal day...

As a traveler who has already been to an amazing number of American cities, the truth is that I am quite aware of the differences between the buildings and its concepts in every city. As a matter of fact, I use to spend some days in the summer to get new home accessories so that I can renew the concept of my own house!

"Top secret" beaches in the USA


Even if you have never heard about them or dreamed with them, the true is that many islands in the USA offer some of the most amazing beaches in the whole world! In fact, there are some that don't require a plane or a boat to be reached! Below is another msnbc.com article givin your further details:

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By Joe Yogerst

You come across three humpback whales on the ferry to Santa Cruz Island from the California mainland. Not the least bit troubled by our presence, they let you glide almost within touching distance before thrusting their tails out of the water and diving.

And so it goes on an isle that conjures California’s distant past, an American version of the Galapagos that harbors more than 700 species of plant and animal life. Pods of dolphins, sea lions basking on the stony shore; bright orange garibaldi and colonies of starfish inside half-submerged caves that can only be reached by kayak. The only thing missing are the Chumash Indians who lived here until well into the Spanish period.

Secluded, exotic, remote islands ... in the U.S.? You may not realize it, but America is full of gorgeous islands, some of them reachable only by plane or boat and others surprisingly close at hand. Some have never been settled and others support thriving little communities. But all are places where you can chill out for a long weekend or maybe even the rest of your life.

Like Santa Cruz, some islands are nature havens. The ancient boreal forest on Michigan’s Isle Royale supports the sort of creatures that once roamed the entire Great Lakes region—moose, beaver, lynx and wolves. Hiking trails and water routes link primitive campgrounds that seem more like the Yukon then somewhere within a few hundred miles of Chicago.

Alaska’s Kodiak may be the second largest island in the U.S. (after Hawaii’s Big Island), but the vast chunk of wilderness is virtually uninhabited. More than half the isle falls within the giant Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge, home to the indigenous Kodiak brown bear who fish for salmon along more than a hundred streams.

At the opposite end of the spectrum are posh private island resorts of the sort you expect in the South Pacific or Caribbean rather than right off the American mainland. Florida’s Little Palm Island is like a Jimmy Buffett song come to life, cheeseburgers in paradise and margaritas all day long — although Kobe beef and Veuve Clicquot are also on the menu.

Developers tried turning South Carolina’s Daufuskie into a private island resort, but were largely rebuffed by island residents, who have fought a long and often contentious battle to save their palmetto paradise. The one exclusive gated community that did get built shares the rustic landfall with around 200 ordinary islanders, a mixed bag of artists and writers, fishermen and misfits who spurn the outside world. Singer John Mellencamp owns land on Daufuskie and is reportedly building a home.

Bygone island lifestyles are also making a stand on Sapelo off the Georgia coast. All of the island’s longtime residents trace their roots to African slaves who were brought to the island after the American Revolution to work the rice, indigo and cotton plantations. After the Civil War, they lived in seclusion for more than a century, blending African and American customs into a unique “Geechee” culture that still exists. Even today, the people of Sapelo live largely off the natural bounty of the island and surrounding waterways, allowing them to remain totally off the radar.

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