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Hamilton Beach 59770 Turbo-Twister 2-Speed Hand Blender
List Price: $29.99
Sale Price: $18.05
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Hamilton Beach® Hand Blenders quickly whip, blend, mix, chop and puree directly in your glass, bowl or cooking pan, so you don't have to clean a separate bowl. How's that for Good Thinkingâ"¢? In addition to the blending wand, select models are equipped with a stainless steel whisk for added versatility and convenience. Hamilton Beach® Hand Blenders are easy to use and clean. Easy-grip designs provide nonslip speed control and attachments can be easily removed and washed by hand. The extra-long five-foot cord on these popular hand blenders ensures that you have plenty of room to maneuver.
With the 200-watt Hamilton Beach hand-held blender, there's no need to get out a heavy mixer and bowl. Drinks can be blended right in the glass, soups pureed in the pot, and cream whipped in a portable bowl. Great for quickly blending small amounts and perfect for vacation-home use, the blender comes with two attachments: an 8-1/2-inch sharp-bladed blending wand with a protective plastic sleeve, and a 7-1/4-inch stainless-steel whisk. Both attachments twist securely onto the power handle and easily remove for hand washing. On the end of the power handle a two-speed button gives the option of low or high speed, and a five-foot cord provides good reach. A one-year warranty covers the hand blender against defects. --Ann Bieri
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Under Milk Wood
List Price: $39.99
Sale Price: $10.75
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
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GoBabies Alphabet Road - "F" is for Farm-Do you know where milk comes from? [VHS]
List Price: $2.99
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"F is for Farm do you know where milk comes from?" promotes natural learning by exploring the real world as the GoBabies puppets visit a real dairy farm to see where milk really comes from. The unique 5-in-1 multi-sensory format promotes learning through seeing, singing, signing, interactive play and telling the story back . A Parents Choice and Dr Toy award winner, "Farm" is fun for the whole family to watch and children keep asking to see it again and again. An activities guide suggests simple games which are fun to play while they reinforce the learning.
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![Under Milk Wood [VHS]]() |
Under Milk Wood [VHS]
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Under Milk Wood is an imaginative, cinematic rendering of Dylan Thomas's famous "play for voices," typically read on stage by a handful of actors expressing the dialogue of more than 50 characters living in a small, Welsh fishing village. Filmmaker Andrew Sinclair sets the story in a real seaside community and visually complements the text's lengthy, opening narration by enlisting Richard Burton both for his brooding voiceover and a mysterious, on-screen role as a drunken gadabout soaking in the very soul of the town Thomas' words describe. Once the narration ends, the film breathes freely with a succession of lively vignettes, some funny, some dramatic, but all rooted in the peculiar circumstances of characters who either feel trapped by or ensconced in their home. Peter O'Toole plays the wizened, blind Captain Cat, haunted by memories of drowned sailors but so attuned to the sounds of village life outside his window he can identify the children screaming in a park. Elizabeth Taylor (Burton's wife at the time) makes a brief appearance as Rosie Probert, and the other players include Glynis Johns, Vivien Merchant, and Victor Spinetti. --Tom Keogh
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SOY-Gel Paint and Urethane Remover, Quart
Sale Price: $17.99
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Easily remove multiple layers of paint, urethane, acrylic, epoxy or enamel without the back-breaking work of sanding and chiseling and without the odor of other furniture strippers! Made with 100% American-grown soybeans, SOY-Gel starts to lift the coatings in minutes. One quart gives you up to 50 square feet of coverage three times the coverage of most traditional strippers. Indoors or outdoors, you can be guaranteed a safe and easy restoration. Ideal for lead-based paint removal. The lead becomes encapsulated in the gel, preventing airborne particles and allowing for safe disposal. Does not contain methylene chloride. Cleans up easily with water. Safe to use on wood, brick, stone, metal, plaster, concrete, and many other surfaces. Do not use on plastic, PVC, rubber or dry wall. May be used indoors or outdoors.
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Tuscan Red Milk Paint Pint
Sale Price: $13.99
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Milk Paints are the star of the furniture fashion market. General Finishes Milk Paints are premixed water based acrylic paints suitable for a variety of interior or exterior applications from furniture to crafts. They can be applied directly from the can or mixed with any other General Finishes water based product to create any number of special effects including but not limited to distressing, marbling, antiquing and rag rolling.
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Antique White Milk Paint, Pint
Sale Price: $13.67
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Milk Paints are the star of the furniture fashion market. General Finishes Milk Paints are premixed water based acrylic paints suitable for a variety of interior or exterior applications from furniture to crafts. They can be applied directly from the can or mixed with any other General Finishes water based product to create any number of special effects including but not limited to distressing, marbling, antiquing and rag rolling.
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Dylan Thomas' Under Milk Wood (Special Collector's Edition)
List Price: $14.98
Sale Price: $8.11
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Under Milk Wood is an imaginative, cinematic rendering of Dylan Thomas's famous "play for voices," typically read on stage by a handful of actors expressing the dialogue of more than 50 characters living in a small, Welsh fishing village. Filmmaker Andrew Sinclair sets the story in a real seaside community and visually complements the text's lengthy, opening narration by enlisting Richard Burton both for his brooding voiceover and a mysterious, on-screen role as a drunken gadabout soaking in the very soul of the town Thomas' words describe. Once the narration ends, the film breathes freely with a succession of lively vignettes, some funny, some dramatic, but all rooted in the peculiar circumstances of characters who either feel trapped by or ensconced in their home. Peter O'Toole plays the wizened, blind Captain Cat, haunted by memories of drowned sailors but so attuned to the sounds of village life outside his window he can identify the children screaming in a park. Elizabeth Taylor (Burton's wife at the time) makes a brief appearance as Rosie Probert, and the other players include Glynis Johns, Vivien Merchant, and Victor Spinetti. --Tom Keogh
Richard Burton narrates this beautiful adaptation of Dylan Thomas' stage play about the people who inhabit a coastal Welsh village. The film delivers an insightful, in-depth look into the hopes and dreams of a blind old sea captain (Peter O'Toole), his lost love (Elizabeth Taylor), a schoolmaster (Talfryn Thomas) who fantasizes about murdering his wife (Vivien Merchant), and a lovestruck candy shop owner (Glynis Johns). Victor Spinetti, Sian Phillips, Ryan Davies also star. 88 min. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital stereo; Subtitles: English, Spanish; audio commentary; documentary; interviews; photo gallery; theatrical trailers; more.
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![The Harvey Milk 4-Pack Box Set (Times of Harvey Milk / Common Threads / Where Are We / Paragraph 175)]() |
The Harvey Milk 4-Pack Box Set (Times of Harvey Milk / Common Threads / Where Are We / Paragraph 175)
List Price: $89.80
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The Times of Harvey Milk A devastatingly skillful and emotionally compelling documentary, The Times of Harvey Milk charts the political rise and brutal slaying of the first openly gay city official in the United State, Harvey Milk. Ironically, the same election that brought Milk to the board of city supervisors of San Francisco also elected the man who killed him, a former police officer and fireman named Dan White. After White shot both Mayor George Moscone and Milk, his defense lawyers convinced the jury that White's judgment was impaired by depression and junk food, resulting in a conviction for manslaughter instead of murder--a verdict that prompted riots. With care and conviction, The Times of Harvey Milk captures not only Milk himself, but also the political and social landscape in which these events took place. The interviews--with friends, politicians, and journalists--are articulate and heartfelt, expressing the impact that Milk had upon this historical moment. --Bret Fetzer Where Are We? (Our Trip Through America) Accomplished documentarians Rob Epstein and Jeff Friedman (Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt, The Celluloid Closet) take a trip across the American South and Southwest, asking people about their hopes and fears. Along the way they interview a mobile-home salesman, gay and lesbian soldiers (including Gulf War veterans), a woman whose husband built her miniature version of Graceland, a recovering drug addict who aspires to movie stardom, a 15-year-old mother-to-be, and a casino owner whose role models include Nelson Mandela and Mother Theresa. Where Are We? (Our Trip Through America) is simple; none of the interviewees says anything profound or complex--yet the movie captures an intriguing and contradictory cross-section of the U.S., observing how people forge ahead regardless of their circumstances, seeking happiness as best they can. It's a striking portrait of resilience, illustrated with some amazing hairstyles. --Bret Fetzer Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt As of 2004, a variety of drugs have been developed to resist, if not cure, AIDS--yet Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt remains as emotionally powerful as it was during the height of the crisis, when people were dying by the thousands every year. With a combination of photo-montages, interviews with friends and family members, home movies, and news footage, this 1989 documentary captures the grief of those who have survived victims of AIDS. It's wrenching to hear the mother of a hemophiliac boy describing giving him blood transfusions in the middle of the night, or seeing pictures of a former Olympic athlete with the daughter he fathered with a lesbian mother, or hearing a Naval officer describe his relief when he learned that he, like his dead lover, had the virus--that the stress of waiting was over. A moving combination of art and politics. --Bret Fetzer Paragraph 175 Rupert Everett narrates this sensitive documentary about the Nazi persecution of homosexuals during World War II. "Paragraph 175" refers to the old German penal code concerning homosexuality, which was used to justify the prosecution of gay men during the war (the code ignored lesbians, still considered viable baby-making vessels). As mere rumor became enough to justify imprisonment, over 100,000 were arrested and between 10,000 and 15,000 were sent to concentration camps. In Paragraph 175, Klaus Müller, a historian from the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, sets out to interview the fewer than 10 who are known to remain alive. The film covers the astonishingly quick rise of Hitler (one interviewee points out how ridiculous a figure he seemed at first) and the shock that more liberal Germans felt as it became clear that he was a force to be reckoned with. Some of the film's most touching moments come when the participants reminisce about their first loves and the "homosexual Eden" that was Berlin in the 1930s. This is a beautifully well made documentary that poignantly captures a piece of nearly forgotten history. --Ali Davis
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Dylan Thomas: Ballads And Binge Drinking
Danger, debauchery, drinking and Dylan Thomas seem to all the world like natural bedfellows and, one might add, what a rather adroit menage they would make. Despite the fact that he is unilaterally hailed as Wales's artistic hero, he is less the literary father of the nation than its roguish, prodigal son. With Matthew Rhys, Keira Knightly and Sienna Miller all starring in The Edge of Love, a new film that explores the poet's colourful love life, a shot of glamour and cool is bound to be injected into the growing Thomas phenomenon. He is now, if he wasn't before, untouchably cool.
In fact, of late, people are practically tripping over each another to make public their reverence for the Welsh poet. Mick Jagger, for instance, owns the rights to his 1939 collection, The Map of Love. Pierce Brosnan had his son christened "Dylan Thomas Brosnan" and Neil Morrissey owns a handful of properties in Thomas's spiritual hometown of Laugharne. Musician Ben Taylor named his recent album Famous Among the Barns as a tribute to the man and, if one decides to look for him, his work can be found in a smattering films, albums and television programmes from the likes of Chumbawumba to George Clooney.
So why Dylan Thomas and why now? Is his work just the new flavour of the month? Are people attracted to his rebellious persona or has this modern age discovered something truly remarkable and artistic in his body of work?
Well, not according to Nicholas Lezard from the Guardian. His attitude to the "rockstar poet" pivots on the fact that he takes Dylan Thomas to be the "poet for people who don't really like poetry"
Quite an indictment I think you'll agree. But then, he might have a point.
Thomas is certainly famous enough to be a touchstone for those with only a passing interest in poetry. It would be difficult to find a chap of a certain age alive that couldn't recite one or two phrases from Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night or have an idea about what Under Milk Wood was all about. But is that enough? Is he, dare I say it, easy?
The answer, naturally, is: no, of course that's not enough.
Thomas's poetry is often striking and immediate, but it is never easy. The skill that Thomas constructs his verse is seemingly in its aural quality, which it has to be said, it holds above all other qualities. For example, digging out an old copy of Richard Burton's reading of the play Under Milk Wood, we come across this description of the trees that lead to the sea in the opening monologue:
"limping invisible down to the slowblack, slow, black, crowblack, fishingboat-bobbing sea"
Sounds fantastic doesn't it? The lilting, lolling tones roll beautifully. But does it make sense? Well, you could ague that: no it doesn't, not in a strict or methodical way. But, if we look closer at what Thomas is doing we may be able to piece something together. The 'limping' of the trees for example mirrors their uneven line down to the sea whilst the 'slowblack, slow, black, crowblack" echoes the limping. Hear it?
Then this part about 'fishing boat bobbing sea', well, Thomas here creates a striking image at the expense of standard grammatical laws; the word order is all of a pickle so to speak. But then therein lies the power. Thomas's intensity comes from dislocating the image from that which surrounds it. It is an example of what, in Russia, they might call Ostrananie or "making strange". A formalist idea that says that once we make something seem strange or new, it takes on a new freshness and vibrancy that we were not expecting. Its result is to make that which is normal seem bright and immediate.
It seems to me that that is why Thomas is going through somewhat of a boom of late, because his work is so lyrical and intensely visual. People are making films about him now because, largely, his work has such scope for cinema and theatre. One could argue that The Edge of Love is not so much about the poetry but the man, but then can we really separate the two?
Dylan Thomas is clearly someone that lived his profession; he would have been a poet if no one else had ever read a single couplet of his writing. What is attractive about Thomas though is that he lived his profession so intensely. He created a persona that, like his poetry, is clear and bright and a perfect (dislocated) image of his work.
About the Author
Samantha is a London theatre fanatic and regular West End theatregoer. She writes and researches some of the biggest London shows you can view examples of her work here Oliver
Ok, so i have a ( i think its wood or alpine) desk and i have a plastic cup with milk in it and it left ring ?
how do i get it off
My husband does this often, unfortunately. He will leave a cup of juice or water and it leaves the dreaded white ring on his teak desk. When this happens, I use my Minwax Wood Finish Stain Marker. Go to the stain area of a hardware store, and they have various colors of pens to choose from. Pick the closest one to the color of the desk and use as directed on the white ring. With the right color match it works perfectly. I usually wipe off any extra stain carefully with a paper towel to blend. It has always worked for me (and no, I don't work for Minwax) Good luck!
School drink deal cuts sugar
A deal to sell healthier drinks in U.S. schools has slashed the amount of fattening beverages offered to students, former President Bill Clinton said on Monday as New York leaders pushed for a soda tax to tackle obesity and budget shortfalls.
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