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18:12:40 12/23/11
Safe Driving Tips For The Holiday Season
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 18:12:40 12/23/11
Safe Driving Tips For The Holiday Season
With the holiday season upon us it's more important than ever to remember to drive safe and sober. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports, more than 400 drunken driving fatalities happened during the second half of December. Carol McNamee, the founder of MADD Hawaii, and Vern and Carole Thompson, whose daughter died in a drunk driving crash on Christmas Day in the early 1980s joined us this morning. From: kitvtv Views: 6 0 ratings Time: 04:31 More in News & Politics
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18:12:40 12/23/11
Safe Driving Tips For The Holiday Season
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 18:12:40 12/23/11
Safe Driving Tips For The Holiday Season
With the holiday season upon us it's more important than ever to remember to drive safe and sober. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports, more than 400 drunken driving fatalities happened during the second half of December. Carol McNamee, the founder of MADD Hawaii, and Vern and Carole Thompson, whose daughter died in a drunk driving crash on Christmas Day in the early 1980s joined us this morning. From: kitvtv Views: 6 0 ratings Time: 04:31 More in News & Politics
4 Views
07:33:00 08/09/11
Facebook is the DEVIL, 4 Day Old Baby Gets Called 'Ugly' On Facebook So Somebody Had To Get
[LESS INFO] 4 VIEWS | ADDED 07:33:00 08/09/11
"http://lukescorner.net/profiles/blogs/4-day-old-baby-gets-called Consider it a modern version of the Hatfields versus McCoys, courtesy of Facebook. A Wheaton woman and her teenage daughter are charged with attacking another local mom and daughter with steak knives in a dispute fueled by disparaging comments posted on the popular social networking site. Judith E. Scott-Booker, 41, has spent more than two weeks locked in the DuPage County jail, charged with felony aggravated battery. A judge last week declined to lower the woman's $75,000 bond. Her daughter, Brianna Smith, 18, is accused of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and battery, both misdemeanors. She posted $100 cash bail, and is due in court Oct. 13. At 11:21 p.m. Sept. 3, police rushed to a cul-de-sac on the 1600 block of Groton Court in Wheaton. Scott-Booker is accused of stabbing 39-year-old Tiffany Scott nearly a half dozen times, including once in the back on her neck near a major artery. Brianna Smith is charged with repeatedly punching and hitting Scott's daughter, Natia Robinson, also 18, as well as placing a knife against the teen's wrist. Robinson was not stabbed. She said the dispute began after another girl called Brianna Smith's newborn baby daughter ""ugly"" in a Facebook post. Smith accused Robinson of being behind the critical post. The teens' mothers became involved, and Tiffany Scott said she invited the defendants over to her townhouse that night to check Robinson's laptop to prove her innocence. Instead of ending the dispute, Tiffany Scott said it escalated when Brianna Smith became physically violent. Tiffany Scott said she ordered the mother and daughter out of her home, but 15 minutes later, Scott-Booker is accused of attacking the other mother as she walked outside toward her car. The two 18-year-old daughters also became involved. ""I didn't even know I had been stabbed until I was back inside my house. There was blood everywhere,"" Tiffany Scott said Monday. The families both live in the Briarcliff townhouse subdivision but knew each other for years after the two girls became friends in the fourth grade in Carol Stream. Tiffany Scott said she moved into the Wheaton cul-de-sac about six years ago, while Scott-Booker moved there just two days before the stabbing. ""I could have died. I keep playing it back in my head. This is someone who has followed me around and for years tried to befriend me,"" Scott said. ""I still don't understand why she did this. She's toxic."" Brianna Smith could not be reached Monday for comment. In Facebook postings hours after the Sept. 3 knife attack, she accused a cane-toting Tiffany Scott and her daughter of instigating the confrontation when appearing at her doorstep. Smith apologized that someone was hurt but said ""that's the price we all pay when we play silly games,"" according to her Facebook page. Scott-Booker is due back in court Sept. 27. She needs $7,500 to be released from jail. As for Tiffany Scott, the Wheaton woman said she is preparing to move to avoid future confrontations. She also isn't encouraging her daughter to make any more online ""friends."" ""I hate Facebook,"" she said."
1 Views
09:29:09 04/07/11
Mother-daughter Mystery Writers Strike Again!
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 09:29:09 04/07/11
Mary Higgins Clark and Carol Higgins Clark talk about their newest thrillers, called
13 Views
16:34:03 12/15/09
Youngsters Learn Recycling Nmu Earth Keeper Student Team Eco Christmas
[LESS INFO] 13 VIEWS | ADDED 16:34:03 12/15/09
Teaching youth: Northern Michigan University EarthKeeper Student Team Eco-Christmas(Marquette, MI) - Dozens of youngsters from across Michigan created recycled holiday cards and homemade tea bags for gifts this weekend during the Northern Michigan University EarthKeeper's Eco-Christmas Workshop at the Peter White Public Library in Marquette.The Northern Michigan University EarthKeeper (NMU EK) Student Team hosted the workshop from 1-4 p.m. across from the children's library attracting several mothers from the Lower Peninsula and a teacher from Paradise in the eastern Upper Peninsula who plans to bring the idea into her classroom.While finding ways to entertain and educate her children while her husband checked out job offers in Marquette, Tara Strong of downstate Grand Blanc brought her young daughter and baby son to the Upper Peninsula Children's Museum and then the Peter White children's library.“My husband is here interviewing for a residency position for after med school,” said Strong. “We just found out about the project from the librarian.”“I love it. I love the recycling idea. We're also on a very limited budget and so I really like the idea of recycling and hand making things. I think it's great.”Strong said she and her daughter “are having great fun.”“I've been making crafts,” said four-year-old Anja Strong. “I made a tea bag and I have a honey bear stick”Joined by her brother and a friend, 18-year-old NMU EK Student Team member Ellen Lindblom said the end of the semester meant lots of scrap paper lying around the university.“School just ended and people have lost of papers left over” that was cut into tiny pieces by NMU EK team members, said Lindblom, an NMU freshman “You put it in the blender with a little bit of water and you blend it until it looks a little bit chunky like this.”“You put it in a screen flatten it out - pat the water out,” said Lindblom, while using a towel and iron to dry and flatten the multicolored wet paper as 21 year-old NMU EK Student Team Director Ben Scheelk of downstate Charlevoix used a small hair dryer to speed up the process.“We took a towel and pressed the water out to speed up the drying process a little bit,” she said. “Then flattened it out a little harder with an iron. I think it looks nice.”His hand atop the lid on a blender that whirred with red, blue, purple and white bits of paper, Mike Robinson, a 21-year-old NMU senior geography major, from downstate Grosse Pointe, said the project is a “good holiday craft.”“We are taking some scrap paper from various places and construction paper and making it into some pulp in a blender with some water,” said Robinson, a member of the NMU EK Student team.Pressing the bits of soggy paper into a screen with borders, 16-year-old Negaunee High School junior Phil Lindblom said “this is what they call extreme pulp.”“I am taking this wet paper and putting it on these screens and pushing water out of it,” said Lindbloom, whose sister is a member of the NMU EarthKeepers. “I am making new paper which is pretty exciting.”Escanaba native Carole Beck, who teaches in third through fifth grade at the White Fish Township Community School in Paradise, said she'll take the NMU EarthKeeper's idea into her classrooms and maybe make Valentines Day cards.“We're trying to figure out how we could create the screen there that would be the only thing that we would need extra,” Beck said. “We should be able to do that.”The student put out bowls with spearmint, raspberry leaves, juniper berries and rose hips that the youngsters used to “make a green tea - a detoxifying beautiful beverage,” said 21-year-old NMU EK Student Team Event Coordinator Amanda Emerson of Cary, Ill. “We also have honey sticks to go along with the tea.”The herbs were donated by Catholic EarthKeeper Kyra Fillmore and the Marquette Food Co-op.“You just wrap those up herbs in an eco-friendly coffee filter and tie it with a string in a nice little bow and there you go,” said Emerson, an NMU Senior Majoring in International Studies (emphasis on Latin America) and Earth Science (emphasis on rocks and minerals). “There's your gift - a homemade card and homemade tea bags.”Protecting the earth and teaching the young to respect the planet are major goals of the EarthKeepers, said 21-year-old NMU EarthKeeper Leandra Dziesinski of Alpena, MI.“It's very important to care care of your things and the earth is absolutely our thing - it's where we're at - so we have to take care of it we only have one earth, said Dziesinski, an NMU senior graduating in May with a bachelor's degree in marketing. I think if we have a happy, safe and a clean place to live that just makes our population that much more happy.”In September, the NMU EarthKeepers cleaned up hundreds of pounds of litter at the Upper Dead River Falls, a popular studnet hangout, Scheelk said.The NMU EKStudent Team is the youth wing of the Upper Peninsula EarthKeepers, an interfaith environment group involving over 150 churches and temples across northern Michigan.The EarthKeeper Initiative is co-sponsored by the nonprofit Cedar Tree Institute, the nonprofit Superior Watershed Partnership, the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community and 10 faith communities: Catholic, Episcopal, Lutheran, Presbyterian, United Methodist Church, Unitarian Universalist, Baha'i, Jewish, Quakers (Religious Society of Friends) and Zen Buddhist.For more information on the Michigan EarthKeepers email or call the following contacts:Ben Scheelk, Director of NMU EK Student Teambscheelk@nmu.edu231-675-0121Rev. Jon Magnuson, Co-Founder of EarthKeeper Initiativemagnusonx2@charter.net906-228-5494Greg Peterson, news reporter and volunteer media advisor for the EarthKeepers and other projectsearthkeeper@charter.net906-401-0109U.P. EarthKeeper Team:http://www.upearthkeepers.orgNonprofit Superior Watershed Partnership in Marquette, MIhttp://www.superiorwatersheds.orgNonprofit Cedar Tree Institute in Marquette, MIhttp://www.cedartreeinstitute.org
17 Views
03:10:29 09/16/08
Growing Pains: Carol's Article
[LESS INFO] 17 VIEWS | ADDED 03:10:29 09/16/08
Maggie and Jason face the challenge of parenthood when daughter Carol tries to follow her mother's career as a reporter and sons Mike and Ben start gambling.
5 Views
13:00:00 04/07/08
Tagged! on April 7, 2008
[LESS INFO] 5 VIEWS | ADDED 13:00:00 04/07/08
Molly Pesce brings us new books by Mary Higgins Clark, her daughter Carol, Alexander McCall Smith, and the eagerly anticipated next books by Stephenie Meyer and Christopher Paolini.


