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The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (2005 Original Broadway Cast)
List Price: $18.98
Sale Price: $13.17
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When was the last time you heard a musical with a truly hilarious book? Rachel Sheinkin has concocted such a thing for The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, one of the most unexpected hits of 2005. Unfortunately, Sheinkin's wit is mostly lost on a cast album; fortunately, the show's songs are by the great William Finn. Set at the titular event, the musical never looks down on the competiting kids (played by adult actors), instead portraying them as endearingly nerdy but also smart, and endowing them with real personalities rather than predictably spelling-bee tics. The cast is uniformly superb, although personal faves include Sarah Saltzberg, playing Logainne Schwartzandgrubenierre with a delicious lisp ("Woe Is Me"); Jesse Tyler Ferguson, bringing sweet innocence to Leaf Coneybear ("I'm Not That Smart"); and Dan Fogler, in a breakout comic performance as William Barfee ("Magic Foot," sounding like a sly tribute to Kander & Ebb). This show may be small in scale, but it's a huge winner. --Elisabeth Vincentelli Other Great Musicals of the Season Spamalot Dirty Rotten Scoundrels The Light in the Piazza Little Women All Shook Up Altar Boyz
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Little Honey
List Price: $9.98
Sale Price: $3.97
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Lucinda Williams does anguish so well it’s easy to forget that Happy Woman Blues is not just the title of her 1980 album, but also the way she thinks of herself. That identity comes across full force in Little Honey, the follow-up to 2007’s heavily brooding West, where her melancholy voice seemed to creak with sadness. Here, a full-throated Williams revels in the rejuvenation of her engagement to her manager/co-producer Tom Overby, over whom she’s positively giddy on "Real Love." Her newfound bliss opens the floodgates to a musical revival, as well, since Little Honey, her ninth studio album, ranks as one of her most diverse, ranging from pounding rock ân’ roll (the raw sex of the title track) to the Hank Williams-ish country blues of "Well, Well, Well," to "Knowing"'s â60s soul. But some of the finest writing appears on "Plan to Marry," as thoughtful a meditation on love as any time-honored sonnet. Just when Williams seems to have run the gamut, she pulls out a Stones-y (via Louisiana) cover of AC/DC’s "It’s a Long Way to the Top" as the punctuation mark. It all makes for a rollicking ride with one of roots-rock's most unpredictable and passionate artists. -– Alanna Nash
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![Cement Garden [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/719ZZ2ESBWL._SL160_.gif) |
Cement Garden [VHS]
List Price: $14.95
Sale Price: $39.99
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A bizarre and compelling story of family secrets based on the novel by Ian McEwan (who also wrote the novel upon which The Comfort of Strangers is based), this British film tells the complex tale of four children who conspire to hide their dead mother's body to avoid being split apart and sent to an orphanage. Their deception works for a while, as they become a self-sufficient family unit. Soon, however, mistrust and a deeply antagonistic relationship between the older siblings rife with sexual overtones, as well as a snooping suitor with designs on the older sister, threaten to destroy their well-constructed facade. Adapted and directed by Andrew Birkin, this offbeat film is disturbing but a riveting find for anyone interested in new discoveries from the world of international film. --Robert Lane
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![Queen Bee [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5161KTA8PYL._SL160_.jpg) |
Queen Bee [VHS]
List Price: $19.98
Sale Price: $6.88
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"Any man's my man if I want it that way." The speaker could only be Joan Crawford, as a wicked man-eater terrorizing her Deep South household in Queen Bee. Crawford's the whole show in this campy 1955 melodrama, which aspires to be second-rate Lillian Hellman but doesn't even reach that level. Having trapped a wealthy Southerner (Barry Sullivan) into marriage, Crawford takes her main pleasure in making life miserable for the other women of the mansion. This is fun to watch for a while, but director Ranald MacDougall (he wrote Mildred Pierce for Crawford) can't get the pace moving, and the final comeuppance is all too predictable. Crawford was going into her final high-diva phase at this point in her career, all chalky makeup and yard-long eyebrows, and Queen Bee clearly points the way toward What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? Star power prevails, however, and at least the picture summons up its share of unintentional laughs. --Robert Horton
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![Until the End of the World [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51S2NTFV08L._SL160_.jpg) |
Until the End of the World [VHS]
List Price: $19.98
Sale Price: $59.99
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Shot on location in numerous countries, this ambitious Wim Wenders fantasy takes Sam Neill, Solveig Dommartin, William Hurt, and a ragtag group in pursuit around the world and back again. Though set in 1999 under the shadow of impending disaster as a wobbly nuclear satellite threatens to Chernobyl the planet, the leisurely gait of their worldwide escapades has a distinctly '40s-era decadence. The ultimate object of their quest is a machine that records visual information from one person and reconstructs it in the brains of others--granting the miraculous power of sight to the blind for one thing, but even more mystically, enabling a person's dreams to be recorded. When the film seeks resolutions on the most intimate questions of the human soul which dovetail with the possibility of a destroyed world, the film is hampered by the VHS running time, which subtracts several hours from the laser disc version. But numerous joys, not least among them Jeanne Moreau and Max von Sydow as Hurt's parents, inhabit this thought-provoking film. --Alan E. Rapp
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Drive Angry
List Price: $26.99
Sale Price: $4.99
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In this violent sci-fi thriller, Nicolas Cage stars as an undead soul who escapes from Hell bent on rescuing his granddaughter from the savage occultists who killed his daughter. Teaming with a sexy mortal (Amber Heard) who has her own agenda, the pair seeks out vengeance, but their goal is hindered when Satan sends one of his agents known as "the Accountant" (William Fichtner) to hunt down Cage and bring him back. Billy Burke and David Morse co-star. Not in 3-D. AKA: "Drive Angry 3-D. " 105 min. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtracks: English Dolby Digital 5.1, Spanish Dolby Digital 5.1; Subtitles: English (SDH), Spanish; deleted scenes; audio commentary; featurettes.
Take lurid 1970s B movies about fast cars and loose women, add a dash of Nicolas Cage at his most deadpan, and sprinkle CGI and 3D technology on top, and you've got Drive Angry 3D. Damned badass Milton (Cage) literally busts out of hell to rescue his infant granddaughter from a Satan-worshiping cult leader named Jonah King (Billy Burke from the Twilight movies). On his way Milton picks up Piper (Amber Heard), a blond waitress with a bad attitude and a worse boyfriend. But hot on their trail is the Accountant (William Fichtner), a demonic emissary of ambiguous intentions but unstoppable power. From there it's a series of car chases, shootouts, and sex scenes, and sometimes sex scenes that are also shootouts (a bit that was done better, it must be said, in the underrated Shoot 'Em Up). Don't ask for coherence or common sense; this is a movie where pretty much any character's main motivation can be summed up as sheer cussedness. Drive Angry 3D maintains a general sleazy good humor, and Fichtner at least is enjoying himself--he's giving exactly the kind of unexpected, offbeat performance that Cage used to specialize in. (Cage himself is pretty lackluster here, sadly, and wearing one of his worst hairpieces to boot.) This is self-conscious trash; think of it as a companion piece, both in intention and quality, to Quentin Tarentino and Robert Rodriguez's Grindhouse compilation. --Bret Fetzer
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The Fighting Seabees
List Price: $14.98
Sale Price: $13.99
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Sprawling, action-packed saga with John Wayne as the head of a construction company working at building military sites for the Navy in the Pacific during World War II. After suffering the loss of many men after a Japanese attack, Wayne heads to Washington and helps establish the "C.B.s" (Construction Battalions), units of armed builders. With Susan Hayward, Dennis O'Keefe, William Frawley. 100 min. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital mono.
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The Patty Duke Show: Season One
List Price: $44.99
Sale Price: $21.44
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As The Patty Duke Show demonstrates, from its very first episode in 1963, there's no teenager, then or now, who more personified early-'60s American Teen than Patty Duke. And the hit sitcom is still as funny and endearing as ever--and lots of fun to watch as a whole season. Plus there's something else that can be appreciated a few decades after the fact: as the double star of The Patty Duke Show, playing trendy wisenheimer American Patty Lane, and her "identical cousin," the cultivated Cathy, who grew up in Scotland, Duke pulled double acting duty throughout the show, and her performances as each teen are enthusiastic and impressive. Duke's smiling, open persona, and her ease with her costars, is one reason for the show's appeal. When playing Patty, she's given the '60s standard-issue role of Young Alien in a Teenage Human Body--speaking an unfamiliar language (Patty: "Would you swing an X here?" Dad: "I assume in some unknown language that means you want my signature") and following peculiar tribal customs (Younger brother Ross: "So what happens at a slumber party, anyway?" Mom: ""Everything but slumbering!"). Yet Patty is lovable, and the audience is always rooting for her, even though it's always hoped that Cathy, the cultured, well-behaved cousin, will "rub off" on Patty. Duke was already a Broadway veteran and an Oscar® winner for The Miracle Worker when she starred in the show at age 16. As the fantastic documentary included here informs, the show's producers chose to shoot in New York, whose child-labor laws were more lax than California's, so that young Duke could work 12 hours on set instead of 5. And the doc shows just how much acting Duke really had to do. As the present-day Duke recalls, "They had to bring in 'real' teenagers to teach me how to do the dances, the latest craze," she says. "I was too busy working to know about any of that stuff." Also standouts are the veteran character actor William Schallert, who played Patty's bemused dad, and Paul O'Keefe as the bespectacled pesky younger brother, Ross. The show was the brainchild of TV powerhouse Sidney Sheldon, who went on to create I Dream of Jeannie and Hart to Hart. Sheldon wrote nearly every episode in the first season himself, honing his craft in the still relatively new TV format of sitcom. This boxed set is a treasure trove for any fans of '60s TV, or of Patty Duke--and that should include pretty much everyone. --A.T. Hurley
All 36 episodes from the debut season--including "The French Teacher," "The Birds and the Bees Bit," "Double Date," "Horoscope," nd "The Cousins"--are featured in a six-disc set. 15 hrs. total. Standard; Soundtrack: English; featurette. **36 episodes on 6 discs. 15 hrs.**
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Howard BBC012 Butcher Block Conditioner Food Grade Mineral Oil and Natural Waxes, 12-Ounces
List Price: $8.99
Sale Price: $5.33
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Specialized wood care for butcher blocks, cutting boards, wooden bowls, and utensils. The penetrating quality of food grade mineral oil along with the water resistant traits of beeswax and carnauba wax rejuvenates the wood and prevents drying and cracking. The naturall antibacterial waxes help repair knife marks and protect the wood by keeping the mineral oil in and the moisture out. Exceeds U.S. FDA regulations for direct and indirect contact with food. 12 oz.
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Birthday party invitation for William - Colorful frogs bee dragonfly bugs Card
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5 x 7 inch premium quality folded paper greeting card. Birthday Party invitations to celebrate any upcoming event are available at Greeting Card Universe. Do something special this year with a custom invitation. Send a Birthday Party invitation from Greeting Card Universe this year. This paper card includes the following themes: birthday party invitation for William, boy name specific party invitation, and hope you can join us. Greeting Card Universe offers custom W invitations so that everyone on your list gets a special Birthday Party invitation this year.
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Mudlark Kyoto Almond Soap & Milk Bath Gift Set
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This gift box assortment includes two classic bars of Savon d'Amande, quadruple milled French almond soap 2 X 6.6 Oz.and a silver organza bag of Milk Bath 8oz. The soap is made in the classic tradition from the Provencial countryside, with fresh goat's milk, natural honey, almond and oats, to gently cleanse the skin while providing nourishment as well. It has a fantasticly pleasing almond aroma, creamy texture and is embossed with a tiny bee in the center of the soap - making it almost too pretty to use. The soap has a wonderful lather, contains no artificial ingredients and is long lasting. This beautiful gift is packaged in a reusable memento box in an Asian style. On the inside of the box there is a quote from William Blake. He who kisses joy as it flies by, will live in eternity's sunrise.
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Photo Jigsaw Puzzle of Shakespeares Bees by Pauline Baynes from Mary Evans
Sale Price: $29.99
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Photo Puzzle, Shakespeares Bees by Pauline Baynes. William Shakespeare, lost in thought, and inspired by a swarm of honey bees as he writes Henry V. . Chosen by Mary Evans. 10x14 Photo Puzzle with 252 pieces. Packed in black cardboard box of dimensions 5 5/8 x 7 5/8 x 1 1/5. Puzzle image 5x7 affixed to box top. Puzzle pieces printed on RA4 paper at 300 dpi. This item is shipped from our American lab.
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Amazon.Com
Here are some more information for Bee William:

"I'm extremely optimistic about the future of this industry," says Paul Ekon, an emerging talent and fresh voice in the newly revitalized world of the diamond business. For an industry that has been hit harder than many during the global downturn, these are encouraging words indeed. While all businesses can be portrayed as political pawns, it's hard to imagine one more highly charged than that of the South African diamond community.
What started as frontier prospecting in the 1870's has grown into a multi-billion dollar industry helping to form the economic and political backbone of many South African communities. Diamonds, once so concentrated and monopolized, are now host to a much more diverse network of entrepreneurs and local governments, trying, especially in the last decade, to help communities better benefit from a still tightly controlled marketplace. "Although several companies still essentially control the majority of the business, things are beginning to evolve socially, beyond just profit margins - but it takes time. Since Sierra Leone and the illegal trade and traffic of precious stones have been exposed globally, there has been a new sense of social responsibility emerging in this industry." What Ekon is referring to is the illegal 'blood diamond' trade which warring guerilla factions have used to terrorize and decimate local communities for decades. But, since the Kimberley Process was established to certify fair-trade diamonds in 2003, things have been changing for the better, although many in the industry feel that much more needs to be done.
The BEE, or the Black Economic Empowerment initiative has been trying to redress the inequality issues inherent in the mining industry for the last decade. Since 2001, black representation in management positions of the industry has more than doubled, and according to Mining Weekly is close to 30%. Of course the recession has slowed the initiatives for both women and blacks down, but now things are starting to rebound. Sandra Burmeister, CEO of Landelahni, in speaking to Mining Weekly, recently suggested that "training and development should start at the graduate level" and "skills development and employment equity are both fundamental to corporate success."
But, recently it was also disclosed that black ownership in the mining industry is still far below targets set out five years ago, leading some to speculate that the diamond industry, along with others might be nationalized. The balance of business, community and social responsibility is still difficult to achieve, especially in such a lucrative and tightly controlled sector.
Paul Ekon, having himself set up charities to help the poor communities of Soweto, believes more companies need to be held accountable for helping their local environment; this sentiment was also echoed by an undisclosed industry insider, commenting on a leaked document (about industry inequality) in a recent Miningmx news piece, "Companies are required to prove their own efforts in improving a mining community. This has led to many companies doing the same things instead of pooling resources and addressing a wider variety of community needs."
What this means is that, despite the recession, the diamond industry must get back to the growth it's seen in the last six months, and at the same time, continue working towards its equality initiatives which began several years ago. There must be a way to positively impact on the immediate environment and continue to prosper in this evolving industry, but like all businesses, it's a balancing act that takes commitment from companies, to both profit and social responsibility in equal measure.
William Feins is a freelance journalist currently living in London and Managing the Euro Cheddar Blog; he received his B.A. degree in Economics and his Masters in Sociology. William has always been interested in the mechanics of business and the inspiration of original thinkers, and firmly believes that the former can't succeed without the latter. In his spare time, he enjoys the ridiculous spectacle of watching table tennis on a big screen (preferably at a pub) and reading weighty tomes about World War II.
Visit the Euro Cheddar Blog Post!
Research Key in Unraveling Mystery of Disappearing Bees
It is amazing how fast a huge government bureaucracy can respond when it wants to. Indeed, in a space of two short weeks, the United State government just recently proposed, composed, and passed a financial services bailout bill. The bill provides 750 billion dollars to bail out Wall Street.
Of course, the government had to react quickly because a lack of regulation and government oversight allowed a problem to escalate for many years into a financial crisis. I thought of the bailout bill and I wondered about the government's response to the current mystery of the disappearing honey bee, called Colony Collapse Disorder, or CCD.
CCD is unique since it leaves bee hives with a queen bee, a few newly-hatched adults, and plenty of food, while all of the worker bees responsible for crop pollination simply disappear. In response to this agricultural crisis, This Year’s Farm Bill authorized several programs focused on pollinator-related issues. The Farm Bill included the development and protection of pollinator habitats in conservation programs.
In addition, the Bill identified pollinator protection as high priority research and covered bees and honey production in agriculture disaster assistance programs. It also required the USDA to report annually on the progress made in addressing colony losses.
Indeed, the problem of CCD continues to escalate. A few months ago, a panel of experts told a House Agriculture subcommittee that the U.S commercial honey bee industry lost a record 36 percent of its colonies in 2008. In 2007, the industry lost 31% of its colonies due to the mysterious illness that threatens the future of beekeeping and the health of a variety of important crops.
Almonds bloom in California in February each calendar year. Several months before the first bloom, beekeepers move their bees to California to feed and prepare for almond pollination. In the last two years, as early as December, the problem of Colony Collapse Disorder in California has begun to appear. Soon, we will see if Colony Collapse Disorder continues to be a problem for American agriculture next year.
The American honey bee industry is valued at more than $15 billion, with over 90 different crops dependent on honey bee pollination to grow. So, much of this country’s diet, the affordability of basic food staples, and our national health is at risk.
Unfortunately, it is a risk that lacked a sense of government urgency in June in the Hearing To Investigate Progress On CCD, held by the Subcommittee on Horticulture And Organic Agriculture in Washington, D.C..
Consider the oral testimony of David Mendes, Vice President of the American Beekeeping Federation, from his appearance at that June meeting (as reported in the American Beekeeping Federation Newsletter). “I spoke to the need for more sampling inside our hives of pollen, bees, and honey to identify what pathogens our bees are exposed to.”
Mendes continued: “ I shared my experience of collecting samples from my hives as part of a project organized by Penn State and the CCD Working Group. I specifically voiced my frustration that the efforts put into collecting samples (18 hives sampled 7 times from March 2007 to January 2008) have produced very little useful information because the majority of the samples still have not been analyzed in the lab. They sit in storage due to a lack of funding.”
The reason for CCD may be systemic pesticides or simply a bee virus, but a cause still remains unclear. The key to solving the mystery of the disappearing honey bee is money. Government funding is necessary to provide the research to determine the cause of CCD before beekeepers are ruined and flowering crops in need of pollination just disappear.
Certainly, Colony Collapse Disorder is a crisis that, if left unresolved, will eventually require a huge agricultural and beekeeper industry bailout by the United States Congress. However, unlike the recent Wall Street bailout that used taxpayer dollars, a compromise of our diet and health will add human suffering to the high monetary cost.
About the Author
James William Smith has worked in Senior management positions for some of the largest Financial Services firms in the United States for the last twenty five years. He has also provided business consulting support for insurance organizations and start up businesses. Visit his website at http://www.eWorldvu.com or his daily blog at http://www.eworldvublog.blogspot.com
november by william cullen bryant... 10 pointsssss!?
November
Yet one smile more, departing, distant sun!
One mellow smile through the soft vapory air,
Ere, o'er the frozen earth, the loud winds run,
Or snows are sifted o'er the meadows bare.
One smile on the brown hills and naked trees,
And the dark rocks whose summer wreaths are cast,
And the blue gentian-flower, that, in the breeze,
Nods lonely, of her beauteous race the last.
Yet a few sunny days, in which the bee
Shall murmur by the hedge that skirts the way,
The cricket chirp upon the russet lea,
And man delight to linger in thy ray.
Yet one rich smile, and we will try to bear
The piercing winter frost, and winds, and darkened air.
i need help with finding the figurative and literal meaning!!! also who is being adressed? thank you!!
The sun is being addressed. Bryant is lamenting the coming of winter and asking the sun to shine a little longer.
I hope this is helpful. It's late and my brain is fried so I can't come up with much more. It's sad how English teachers manage to suck all of the life out of beautiful writing, isn't it?
`Make Me a Song: The Music of William Finn' at Mosaic
Mosaic Theatre does something it hardly ever does -- a musical -- with this weekend's opening of Make Me a Song: The Music of William Finn. Pianist-musical director David Nagy provides the accompaniment as Joey Zangardi, Stephen G. Anthony, Julie Kleiner and Patti Gardner sing numbers from such Finn shows as March of the Falsettos and The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee.
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