-
BANGOR - , 88, died Nov. 27, 2011, at a Bangor hospital. She was born Oct. 1, 1923, in Webster, Mass., daughter of John D. and Violet R. (White) Tripp.
Clover met James R. Chiarell at Dow Air Force Base, Bangor, and they were married in 1941. They traveled to many locations while James was in the Air Force to include bases in Illinois, Maine, Texas and Utah. Clover was a certified nursing technician at Eastern Maine Medical Center for more than 20 years. She was an avid reader, enjoyed knitting and liked to travel to warmer climates. Clover was a member of Hampden and Bangor Senior Citizens, Veterans of Foreign Wars Ladies Auxiliary, and Italian American Club. She was a very loving and caring wife and mother.
-
U.S. Supreme Court MINNESOTA v. CLOVER LEAF CREAMERY CO., 449 U.S. 456 (1981) 449 U.S. 456
MINNESOTA v. CLOVER LEAF CREAMERY CO. ET AL. CERTIORAR...
-
On December 6, 2007, FEMA published in the Federal Register a proposed rule that contained an erroneous table. This document provides corrections to that table, to be used in lieu of the information published December 6, 2007. The table provided in this document represents the flooding sources, location of referenced elevations, effective and modified elevations, and communities affected for Pierce County, Washington, and Incorporated Areas. Specifically, it addresses the following flooding sources: Artondale Creek (main stem), Artondale Creek--East Branch, Artondale Creek--West Branch, Canyon Creek, Carbon River (left overbank areas, without consideration of left levees), Carbon River Overflow, Clarks Creek, Clear Creek, Clover Creek, Clover Creek (overflow at 134th Street South), Clov...
-
AUBURN -- As Clover Health Care prepares to embrace a completely smoke-free campus in July, the company recently kicked off its first Employee Health and Wellness Fair designed to introduce its staff to the wide range of services, resources and opportunities for healthier living within the community.
Clover would like to thank all the area businesses and organizations that contributed to the success of the fair, including Androscoggin Humane Society, The Bread Shack, Healthy Androscoggin, Chill Yoga, Wei-Li Chinese Restaurant, Rainbow Bikes, Lynn Poor and Margie Hatch, certified Reflexologists, YMCA, Ann's Flower Shop, Tyson Sharlow, Chiropractor, ZUMBA instructor, Heather Hill, Planet Fitness, Beltone, Wellspring, The Dempsey Center, Medicine Shoppe, Herbal Life, MEMIC, Axis and Bangor...
-
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF 112 Clover Avenue NE, Roanoke, VA 24012
In execution of a certain deed of trust dated July 29, 2005, in the original principal amount of $66,400.00 recorded in the Clerk's Office, Circuit Court for Roanoke City, Virginia, in Instrument No. 050012054, default having occurred in the payment of the Note thereby secured and at the request of the holder, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction in the front of the Circuit Court building for the City of Roanoke, 315 Church Avenue, SW, Roanoke, Virginia, on November 10, 2011, at 2:00 PM, the property described in said deed of trust, located at the above address, and more particularly described as follows:
-
Well, two islands, really. One is Ireland, whose national self-image figures in so many [Martin McDonagh] plays, but also Inishmore, the largest of the Aran Islands off Ireland's west coast. Joseph Whelan's helpful notes in the program explain, as the text of the play does not, the importance of the setting. The islands, breathtakingly beautiful but poor, were idealized in a travel book (1898) by John Millington Synge, the playwright who's been McMahon's quarry much of his career. Americans first knew of the islands from Robert Flaherty's classic documentary, Man of Aran (1934), inspired by Synge.
When we encounter [Padraic] (Christian Conn) in the next scene, he appears to be a cool, even suave character, but one who deserves [Davey] and [Donny]'s trepidation. At some unspecified local...
-
In other words, beyond the superficial affirmations of the ego, there lies a condition of radical openness to intersubjective life - a condition in which the sensory apprehension of objects seems to reveal the ways in which cultural forces define the very contours of perceptual activity. Reflecting on the extent to which the centuries get their character from their philosophers and poets (52), Stevens turns to the seventeenth century and writes, What we are remembering is the rather haggard background of the incredible, the imagination without intelligence, from which a younger figure is stepping forward in the company of a muse of its own . . . the clear intelligence of the young man still bearing the burden of the obscurities of the intelligence of the old.\n They make things inter-d...
-
Every year, I resolve to redo the grassy areas in my yard.
I don't want to be a slave to the mower - it takes a lot of time, uses a lot of gas and is just downright noisy.
-
Ultimately, Roses & Clover is a great-sounding album, as it should be. It was mixed and mastered by knob-fiddler and fader-tweaker extraordinaire Robert Carranza, better known for his work with Beck and Los Lobos. Tragically, not even Paul Moore, credited with "additional inspiration" on the ninth track, "Lady Loop," can save this record from the clumsy writing that litters it. And, no, I don't know who Paul Moore is. Perhaps he'll be at the Higher Ground Ballroom this Wednesday, May 9, with ALO: I hope so. After listening to this album, I could use a little inspiration.
-
Journalist Tom Wolfe wasn't completely correct when he wrote "You Can't Go Home Again." Just ask Richard and Brenda Hopkins.
After 30 years of traveling around the world on military assignments, the Hopkinses are back where it all started in the Clover Hill area of West Pike Run Township.