Rechercher dans ce blog

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Peninsula Spring Home and Garden Guide - Easy Reader

easy.indah.link

Acme 5 Lifestyle Furniture

Explore the bohemian modern-mid century inspired showroom and store of Acme 5 Lifestyle,  located in the heart of San Pedro. They carry a full range of furniture, both interior and exterior, hand crafted by local and international artisans. Joshua Tree candles and ceramics, Moroccan cactus silk pillows, blankets from Mexico, baskets from Mali and Tunisian lampshades.

Acme 5 Lifestyle

624 S Pacific Ave., San Pedro

(424) 287-2177

Custom Design & Construction makes home remodeling stress-free

Is your kitchen or bathroom outdated? Has your family outgrown your home? Trusted by thousands of homeowners over the past 34 years, Custom Design & Construction is the one stop shop for your remodeling needs. Whether it’s a whole house remodel, addition, kitchen, bath, or other remodeling project, we provide both design and construction services with one fixed-price contract. Project consultations are free, so stop waiting and create the home of your dreams with Custom Design & Construction. Ask about their easy, in-home finances and if you aren’t sure where to start, join a free remodeling workshops. Lic. #524561.

Custom Design & Construction

2001 E. Mariposa Ave., El Segundo

(310) 815-4815

VisitCustomDesign.com

Need a Driveway?

Lindahl Concrete is the leading concrete and masonry company in the South Bay. They value good relationships with their customers and produce the highest quality work. View examples of their driveways, pool decks, patios, walkways, barbecues, city work, stone work, and more at their website. They are specialists in sand/washed, paving stone and concrete stamping. Visit their garden showroom to see samples of colors and finishes. Workman’s Comp & General Liability Insured. Call Casey Lindahl, founder and president of Lindahl Concrete Construction. Lic. #531387.

Lindahl Concrete Construction

(310) 326-6626

lindahlconcrete@aol.com

Lindahlconcrete.com

Mattucci Plumbing

available 24/7

At Mattucci Plumbing, the highest level of service a guarantee. For plumbing repairs and installations in the South Bay and Greater Los Angeles, Mattucci’s professional technicians are all about making services and equipment work as great as possible. Customer satisfaction is their #1 priority. Call today or book an appointment online. Their professional team is available whenever you need them and a live person will gladly assist you 24 hours a day. Call today for your free estimate. 

Mattucci Plumbing

(310) 543-2001 

Mattucciplumbing.com

Peveler’s Custom Interiors

Peveler’s Custom Interiors has been serving the South Bay and beyond for over 35 years. A full service design-build construction company, their scope of work includes additions, second floors, complete house renovations, new construction, kitchen and bath remodeling. They manufacture their own custom cabinetry. Fully insured, licensed and bonded, as are all of their subcontractors, Peveler’s is not going to be the lowest price nor will it be the highest price in town. They will be the company that provides high value for your investment. Please visit their showroom, by appointment only during COVID.

4203 Spencer Street, Torrance

(310) 214-5049

www.pevelers.com

Pete Fer Plumbing & Air does it all

Pete Fer Plumbing Heating & Air Conditioning is a complete mechanical contracting company, providing plumbing, heating and air conditioning for new construction, remodeling, service and repairs to commercial and residential customers. They provide 24 hour service, seven days a week through an automated emergency dispatch paging system. Mention Peninsula magazine to one of their service technicians and receive $20 off your first service call.

Pete Fer Plumbing

2020 S. Mesa St., San Pedro

(310) 831-0737

Earthquake insurance from State Farm Agent

Suzy Zimmerman

Though California has one of the highest earthquake risks in the country, only 10 percent of the state’s homeowners have earthquake insurance, according to the California Department of Insurance. To help encourage more Californians to purchase earthquake coverage, the California Earthquake Authority (CEA) was created in 1996. The CEA is a nonprofit, privately funded insurer created by the state’s government to help make earthquake insurance more affordable. Call for more information or to get a quote. 

Suzy ZImmerman, State Farm Agent

(310) 377-9531

zimziminsurance.com

The Link Lonk


April 01, 2021 at 09:36AM
https://easyreadernews.com/peninsula-spring-home-and-garden-guide/

Peninsula Spring Home and Garden Guide - Easy Reader

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Prolitec Ambient Scenting Introduces AQ880 – An Easy-To-Install Free-Standing Diffuser - Club Industry

easy.indah.link

Club Industry was not involved in the creation of this content.

With employees and visitors alike slowly returning to work, Prolitec (www.prolitec.com) is introducing AQ880, the perfect choice for lobbies (hotels, banks, office buildings), retail, restaurants, fitness centers… anywhere that desires an refreshing atmosphere from an aesthetic appliance without having to mount anything onto their walls.  A certified Prolitec technician will simply place it near an existing electrical outlet, plug it in, and program its range of 50 intensity levels to cater to business’s peak/open hours and traffic needs. 

The patented ScenXus technology enables the appliance to be remote controlled by our US-based Customer Care team, which is becoming ever more important in the touchless pandemic times as it minimizes in-person service visits during COVID19.

With an extra-large fragrance cartridge, the AQ880 can provide a long-lasting, perfectly uniform scent effect for up to 30,000 cubic feet.  The low center of gravity gives it safe stability and the sleek black design complements any décor.  Its patented diffusion pump technology controls the quantity of fragrance ingredients in the air so that no ingredient exceeds 10 parts per million at any given time, leading to a safer scenting option. This results in successfully creating a scent effect with only a “trace” amount of fragrance materials in the air, minimizing the possibility of an allergic response and can therefore be considered “hypoallergenic.”

In short – the AQ880 is aesthetically beautifully designed, hassle-free for visitors and employees, and harm-free for all walls/HVAC, making it an ideal appliance for an instant, uniform, safely scented atmosphere in a wide variety of business venues.

Prolitec is the leading provider of scent delivery systems all manufactured in the U.S.A and has helped brands in 83 countries create perfectly scented environments.

Read more on:
The Link Lonk


April 01, 2021 at 04:32AM
https://www.clubindustry.com/press-releases/prolitec-ambient-scenting-introduces-aq880-easy-to-install-free-standing-diffuser

Prolitec Ambient Scenting Introduces AQ880 – An Easy-To-Install Free-Standing Diffuser - Club Industry

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

3 Easy Day Trips You Can Do From Christchurch, New Zealand - Forbes

easy.indah.link

As of this writing, Americans are unable to visit New Zealand due to Covid-19 travel restrictions, so use this story to plan for future trips.

Whether it’s your first time in New Zealand or you’ve been there for a while on the Working Holiday Visa, Christchurch is an underrated destination that deserves to be on your itinerary. Besides being one of the largest cities in the South Island—which makes it a great place to catch a cheap flight into and stock up on supplies for an epic road trip—it’s also a great base for exploring more of the Canterbury Region. Here are three of my favorite places to take a day trip from Christchurch, all within a two-hour drive of the city center and reachable by car, shuttle bus or train.

Akaroa

Distance from the city center: One hour and 20 minutes.

Why you should go: Situated along the Banks Peninsula, Akaroa is often referred to as “the most French town in New Zealand,” which makes sense since it’s the only French settlement in the whole country. Come for the seaside scenery and stay for the food, nature cruises, kayaking tours, hiking trails and the chance to visit The Giant’s House, an artsy Gaudí-esque garden designed by sculptor Josie Martin.

How to get there without a car: The Akaroa French Connection bus leaves daily from the Canterbury Museum in Christchurch, with round-trip tickets available for $35 ($50 NZD). Discounted tickets can also be found via Book Me, a popular New Zealand deals website.

Hanmer Springs

Distance from the city center: 90 minutes.

Why you should go: While the major attraction here is Hanmer Springs Thermal Pools and Spa, it’s worth leaving an hour or so to hike the Conical Hill Loop Trail, which takes you on a 1.7-mile zig-zagged journey through ancient forests to beautiful views overlooking the valley.

How to get there without a car: Hanmer Connection offers shuttle buses from Rolleston Avenue in Christchurch door to door to the Thermal Pools for $35 ($50 NZD) round-trip so you can visit for the day or $20 ($30 NZD) one-way if you’d prefer to stick around.

MORE FOR YOU

Arthur’s Pass National Park

Distance from the city center: Two hours.

Why you should go: What began centuries ago as a popular Māori cross-island hunting route is now home to sprawling 148-acre Arthur’s Pass National Park in the heart of New Zealand’s Southern Alps. Full of family friendly walking trails as well as several backcountry tramping tracks, the park offers a wide range of habitats depending on which part you’re visiting. Eastern sections feature forests of beech trees, while the western side is home to vast rivers and rainforests. Central areas of the park are where you’ll find majestic snow-covered mountains and impressive glaciers.

How to get there without a car: Several shuttle buses are available from Christchurch through Atomic Travel and East West Coaches—both offer one-way tickets for $35 ($50 NZD) or round-trip tickets for $70 ($100 NZD)—while travel sites like Viator offer guided day trip options. From Christchurch, you can also opt for an epic journey through the Southern Alps aboard the TranzAlpine train, which passes through Arthur’s Pass on its way to Greymouth on the West Coast (tickets from $41 or $59 NZD).

The Link Lonk


April 01, 2021 at 10:39AM
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kaeliconforti/2021/03/31/3-easy-day-trips-you-can-do-from-christchurch-new-zealand/

3 Easy Day Trips You Can Do From Christchurch, New Zealand - Forbes

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Memo to Biden: Stimulus Is Easy. Investment Is Hard. - The Wall Street Journal

easy.indah.link

President Biden’s ambitious agenda to remake the American economy comes in two stages. Stage one, the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, is intended to jolt the economy back to life with a huge dollop of old-fashioned Keynesian demand-side stimulus. Mr. Biden should be pleased with the results: as checks have landed in consumer bank accounts, growth has begun to surge.

Stage two, which Mr. Biden started rolling out Wednesday, is more supply-sided: He aims to raise the economy’s productive potential by investing in its physical and human capital. Stage two matters more than stage one because its consequences will be more enduring.

It is also much harder to pull off. That’s because long-run growth depends not just on the quantity of investment but how it’s targeted.

Mr. Biden’s $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan has goals beyond simply raising gross domestic product: narrowing racial, urban-rural and economic disparities, boosting union membership and combating climate change. Not to mention the challenge of getting any legislation through a closely divided Congress.

Federal investment in domestic physical infrastructure, research and development, and education and training has declined steadily since the 1960s, to between 1% and 2% of GDP recently. Mr. Biden aims to reverse that, boosting federal investment by 1% of GDP over eight years.

The Link Lonk


April 01, 2021 at 02:35AM
https://www.wsj.com/articles/memo-to-biden-spending-is-easy-investing-is-hard-11617192009

Memo to Biden: Stimulus Is Easy. Investment Is Hard. - The Wall Street Journal

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

21 Easy Easter Dinner Recipes - The New York Times

easy.indah.link

After cooking three meals day after day for an entire year, no one feels like spending hours in the kitchen whipping up an Easter feast, but eating handfuls of chocolate eggs and jelly beans doesn’t feel quite right either. These easy Easter dinner recipes, most of which come together in an hour or less, are for those of us who are tired of cooking, but still want to celebrate the day with a delicious meal.

This 15-minute salmon dish from Kay Chun is like a breezy spring afternoon on a plate. As the salmon roasts, the peas and radishes simmer on the stovetop in a light sauce of brown butter, capers, miso and mustard. And readers love it: “This is the most delicious meal I’ve cooked since the stay at home order, and that’s saying a lot since I’ve cooked every meal.”

Leave your mixer in the cabinet: This tangy, moist carrot cake from Yossy Arefi comes together in a single bowl. Some readers have added chopped crystallized ginger and ground ginger for a bit of a kick, and, if you’re running low on carrots, you can even substitute in grated apple or sweet potato for some of the carrots.

Recipe: Carrot Loaf Cake With Tangy Lemon Glaze

If roast lamb typically graces your Easter table, but you’re looking for a more casual recipe this year, this beautiful pasta dish from Kay Chun is an impressive option. It combines ground lamb with spinach, peas and lemon for a springtime version of Bolognese bianco, or white Bolognese.

Recipe: Spring Pasta Bolognese With Lamb and Peas

Great news: This stunning vegetarian tart from Sue Li is made with store-bought puff pastry, so it comes together in one hour. This recipe calls for carrots — use rainbow carrots if you can find them — but it works just as well with onions, parsnips, beets, zucchini or pumpkin.

Raise your glass to spring with this refreshing five-ingredient wine cooler — remember those? — from Rebekah Peppler. All you need is a bottle of rosé, lime juice, soda water and fresh thyme sprigs. One reader made a batch of these in a pitcher, allowing the thyme sprigs to sit in the mixture for a few minutes before straining them out, and it was such a hit she had to make a second batch.

Recipe: Rosé Cooler

Here’s another simple option for those in the must-have-lamb-for-Easter camp: This Alison Roman recipe involves searing quick-cooking chops with plenty of black pepper and fennel seed, then serving them with a cold and crunchy cucumber, fennel and shallot salad. Serve alongside roasted potatoes for a hearty meal.

Recipe: Spiced Lamb Chops With Fennel and Cucumber

Hetty McKinnon adds charred scallions and green beans to a pile of unassuming ramen noodles, transforming them into a meal that is holiday-worthy. If you can get your hands on ramps, use those in place of the scallions; they’re a lovely nod to the season.

Recipe: Vegan Ramen With Charred Scallions, Green Beans and Chile Oil

Scalloped potatoes look fancy, but this Mark Bittman dish is decidedly not, and it’s a fine accompaniment to ham, lamb or pork. You can use either Yukon Gold or russet, but stick with one or the other because the mixture won’t cook evenly otherwise. Feel free to tuck fresh or dried thyme or rosemary between the layers of potatoes if you have them.

Recipe: Potatoes au Gratin

This Colu Henry recipe takes roast chicken to another level with minimal effort. Just whisk together grapefruit juice, honey, curry powder and thyme, then spoon the mixture over the chicken before sliding it in to the oven. One reader smartly added fingerling potatoes and whole garlic cloves to the pan during the last 30 minutes of cooking for a smart side dish.

Recipe: Curried Roast Chicken With Grapefruit, Honey and Thyme

Kalbi jjim is a Korean long-braised, salty-sweet short rib and vegetable dish that is traditionally made for special occasions, but in this version from Kay Chun, an electric pressure cooker makes it possible in just over an hour. Make a pot of rice, and you’ve got a spectacular meal.

Recipe: Pressure Cooker Kalbi Jjim

Ali Slagle’s lemony orzo with asparagus has more than 2,000 five-star ratings, so you know it’s going to be good. Serve it as vegetarian main or as a side dish for roast chicken, pork or lamb.

It’s the season for rhubarb, and Mark Bittman’s dead-simple crisp is a great way to cook with it. You can substitute strawberries for some of the rhubarb if you’re a fan of that traditional combination.

Recipe: Rhubarb Crisp

“Lawdalmighty, this was delicious!” wrote one reader about these 25-minute salty-sweet pork chops from Samantha Seneviratne. What more is there to say? Serve it over creamy polenta and alongside something crisp and green like steamed asparagus or snap peas.

Recipe: Skillet Pork Chops With Blistered Grapes

Eggs may be the only thing that make it Easter-worthy, but, for the truly exhausted, we present Mark Bittman’s spaghetti with fried eggs. All you need is spaghetti, four eggs, olive oil, garlic and Parmesan. Sprinkle with fresh spring herbs for a little color.

Recipe: Spaghetti and Fried Eggs

This warm vegetarian bean salad from Colu Henry is, as one reader put it, “a perfect spring dish.” The creamy beans, the salty miso, the zingy radish and arugula and the tangy citrus work together for a perfectly balanced party on a plate. You can also make it with chickpeas if that’s what you have on hand.

Recipe: White Beans With Radishes, Miso and Greens

This ridiculously easy citrus custard and Saltine cracker crust pie is named for a lazy beach town on the barrier islands of North Carolina. I adapted it from Bill Smith — the chef at Crook’s Corner, a Chapel Hill, N.C., restaurant that specializes in Southern comfort food — and it’s a big reader favorite. Ritz crackers work for the crust, too.

Recipe: Atlantic Beach Pie

With more than 9,000 five-star ratings, this one-pan, egg-tomato-red pepper dish from Melissa Clark is a sure thing. Serve it for brunch or as a vegetarian dinner, and always with good bread.

Recipe: Shakshuka With Feta

This 15-minute vegan chocolate pudding from Ali Slagle is inspired by a recipe from the cookbook author Alice Medrich, in which she uses both cocoa powder and chocolate to create deep flavor. Sprinkle the finished puddings with flaky sea salt, cinnamon or chili powder, or top with a swirl of nondairy whipped topping and colorful sprinkles.

A classic French potato salad is delicious served at any temperature, and this one from William Norwich makes quite the sidekick to any roast meat or chicken. Bonus: The flavors get better and more complex with time, so this is the ideal make-ahead side.

Recipe: Potato Salad With Dijon Vinaigrette

The mild bitterness of thyme and oregano complement the sweetness of the carrots in this super easy, five-ingredient recipe from Martha Rose Shulman. If washing sticky, caked-on sheet pans makes you angry, line it with aluminum foil or parchment.

Recipe: Roasted Carrots

This recipe from Martha Rose Shulman calls for making a simple shrimp broth, but skip it if you don’t have the time, and substitute with chicken or vegetable broth. If you use frozen peas, skip the simmering in Step 3, and just add them in Step 4 as per the instructions. Serve over piles of fluffy white rice.

Recipe: Garlic Shrimp With Peas

“Husband says this is the best pot roast he’s ever had!” one reader wrote. This takes a good eight hours to cook, but the prep is minimal and the lengthy braise is done in a slow cooker, so you can leave the house to enjoy the warmer weather. When you return, sun-kissed and windblown, dinner will be ready.

Recipe: Slow Cooker Pot Roast

Get more recommendations in our collection of Easy Easter Dinner Recipes and Easter Recipes.

The Link Lonk


March 31, 2021 at 09:39PM
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/31/dining/easter-dinner-recipes.html

21 Easy Easter Dinner Recipes - The New York Times

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

New ACC commissioner Jim Phillips faces big challenges without easy answers - ESPN

easy.indah.link

Since officially taking over as ACC commissioner last month, Jim Phillips has spent much of his time getting to know people within the league. He likes to ask about family, saying it's a good way to connect. He is trying to build trust, get a lay of the land and absorb feedback from coaches and administrators on what he should prioritize.

Those within the ACC have been blunt with their assessments.

Given this pivotal moment for the conference, ESPN talked with 16 athletic directors and football coaches from across the league in recent weeks. Each one of them believes Phillips is the right man for the job, but they also know his influence could have ripple effects throughout the sport for years to come.

That is because the ACC's different financial trajectory compared to other Power 5 conferences leaves the new commissioner with a daunting task. Bringing in more money is a must, but to do that, the ACC must prioritize football and rewrite the league's image. To get there, Phillips' constituents will seek his guidance in the process, from reconsidering scheduling to divisional alignment, TV deals to expansion, and the league's long-term relationship with Notre Dame.

As Phillips gains valuable information and feedback to bring back to athletic directors, decisions can be made about how to approach its biggest football questions. At least for now, multiple athletic directors said, "Everything is on the table." But before any decisions can be made, Philips himself needs to do some evaluating of his own as he works on creating a blueprint for the ACC's future.

"Is it strictly just money [holding teams back]?" Phillips said during a recent telephone interview with ESPN. "Or have we not recruited as well? Or do we need some additional help from a support staff standpoint? Yes, revenue is a huge part of it, but are we scheduling accordingly? Do we have the right matchups? Are we playing in the right venues? Can we create our events that are one-offs that allow us to take some of our games to different places for interest and potential additional revenue generation?"

There is no shortage of answers, but the following are the consistent set of challenges that surfaced after speaking with those within the conference.

Relevance within the Power 5

On the football field, the league has become Clemson and everyone else, with the Tigers winning the conference six straight seasons, while signature brands such as Florida State, Miami and Virginia Tech have lagged far behind. The ACC also distributed a little more than half the revenue of what the SEC sent its member schools for the 2018-19 season, and that gap figures to grow unless the ACC can somehow convince Notre Dame to join as a full-time member.

The SEC and Big Ten remain the dominant financial forces in college football. From TV deals, merchandising, league championship games and bowl revenue, the two conferences sent member schools about $45 million and $54 million, respectively, in 2018-19 (the last year for which data is publicly available). The ACC, meanwhile, distributed at least $27 million to each school that year.

The Big 12 distributed an average of $37 million to its 10 schools, which represented a small decrease from the previous year. The futures of its TV deals, including the Longhorn Network, represent a clear inflection point on the horizon that has led some athletic directors to again ponder the possibility of another round of conference realignment, which nearly toppled the Big 12 a decade ago.

The Pac-12 saw a small increase in total revenue for 2018-19 and distributed about $3 million more per team than the ACC, despite failing to place a team in the College Football Playoff for four straight seasons and commissioner Larry Scott stepping down in June. While the league has had its own concerns over revenue and its struggling TV network, one Pac-12 administrator suggested there was obvious room for growth, while the ACC had flatlined. A number of ACC coaches and athletic directors who spoke to ESPN for this story agreed with that assessment.

"If we don't get our TV contract in the ballpark of [the SEC and Big Ten], there will be no level playing field in the Power 5," said one ACC coach, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "There will not be a Power 5 anymore, in my opinion."

Syracuse football coach Dino Babers likened the situation to a track meet.

"You're about to run a 4x100 relay, and you're Leg 1," he said. "You're coming out of the blocks, your head is down, you're pumping your arms. You slowly raise up and see someone already on the curve, which means your A-S-S is really far behind. That's how I feel when we're chasing the SEC and Big Ten when it comes to money."

There's no time to wait, Babers said. Closing in on the fastest runner requires an all-out sprint, and every debate over a step forward by ACC members puts the league further behind.

Meanwhile, Babers said, the SEC and Big Ten have a goal of their own: "Never let [the ACC] run them down."

The league cannot afford to be passive after watching its closest geographic rival improve its fortunes once again.

The SEC just negotiated a new 10-year deal with ESPN that will further increase its revenue starting in 2024. Although terms were not disclosed, multiple outlets reported the deal is worth about $3 billion. The Big Ten's current deal, meanwhile, goes through the 2022-23 season, and it will likely get a new, more lucrative television contract long before the ACC's current contract is up (2036).

The ACC does have a check-in window on its television contract with ESPN this spring, and although the discussions between the league and network are not expected to drastically alter the current contract, Phillips views the discussions as valuable. Multiple athletic directors talked about the looming look-in window, believing everything should be on the table to help enhance the football product and make the league more attractive to TV partners.

The conference isn't immune to financial woes caused by pandemic

In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, schools in any conference are feeling a serious financial pinch and have either cut non-revenue sports or furloughed or downsized athletic staff, and are borrowing against future revenue to make ends meet.

At Virginia Tech, AD Whit Babcock said the athletic department took in about $47 million less revenue than expected for fiscal year 2021 because of huge losses in ticket sales and canceled events, like the NCAA basketball tournaments. Because Babcock was able to cut costs, he expects the final numbers will show the Hokies lost about $15 million. With some schools forced to take out loans against future earnings, shelve planned projects or make dramatic staff cuts, Virginia Tech's shortfall might comparatively be a success.

"We have 15 teams all pulling into the pits, and we're all beat to heck," Babcock said, using an auto racing analogy to explain the league's financial position amid the COVID-19 pandemic. "Some have $20 million in damage, some have $40 million, but we're all under water. The next race is how we come out of the pits."

Another ACC athletic director offered similar thoughts on spending. Sure, the SEC has more money coming in, he said, but several SEC schools are spending that revenue before the checks have cleared. A smarter approach to spending -- investing in assets with a financial return over gaudy new facilities, avoiding massive buyouts after bad coaching hires -- can help offset some of the gap between the ACC and the SEC, he said.

"Everyone's thought for a long time that our league trended toward the bouncy ball rather than the pointy one. ... Has our league ever really looked at pushing football as the future?" An ACC football coach

Those smaller changes may all have a cumulative effect, but they also underscore an obvious problem facing the league: The ACC simply doesn't have the broader football success to leverage TV partners or sell out massive stadiums routinely. Clemson is running laps around the rest of the league, and just as the ACC Network got off the ground, marquee teams Florida State, Virginia Tech and Louisville finished a combined 12-19.

And with men's college basketball powerhouses Duke and North Carolina being close to the ACC's base in North Carolina, some coaches and administrators have long suggested it skewed the league's priorities away from football, which provides the overwhelming bulk of revenue.

"Everyone's thought for a long time that our league trended toward the bouncy ball rather than the pointy one," one coach said, "but college basketball is not what it was as a franchise 10 years ago. Does that hurt us? Has our league ever really looked at pushing football as the future?"

Phillips doesn't see it as a zero-sum decision but suggested the ACC must prioritize its biggest revenue stream across all schools -- football.

"We can have it all," Phillips told ESPN. "We've had our moments in the ACC, but we all want to see more sustained excellence because those two sports are important to the commitment we have as a league."

Nearly all of the athletic directors and coaches we spoke to suggested the massive gaps in revenue present extensive challenges for their schools, affecting the ability to retain assistant coaches, hire support staff and placate fans and boosters when the SEC and Big Ten have far deeper pockets.

"I'm under no illusion that we're going to close the gap and catch up with the SEC or Big Ten," another ACC AD told ESPN. "I'm optimistic that we can maintain the gap at the same level of increase that the SEC just got and what the Big Ten will get in their next go-round. If we cannot let the gap get bigger and can cut into the gap in some other ways, that will be success to me."

But there is not yet a consensus among the league's athletic directors on the right strategy.

"I don't know that there's any one thing that you say, 'This is the golden egg right here that's going to change everything,'" Miami athletic director Blake James said. "But I do think we have to be willing, as a league, to look at everything, and working with our television partner and figuring out what's the best way to position the ACC going forward."

Everything is on the table

To truly move the needle, many within the conference believe the ACC needs to think big, and that inevitably moves the talk back to a place it was nearly a decade ago with conference realignment.

And a few COVID-19-inspired tweaks from 2020 offered some insight to options.

First, the ACC brought Notre Dame into the fold for a one-off season amid COVID-19 cancellations. A league member in all sports but football, the Irish needed the ACC to be able to play a full football schedule during the pandemic in 2020, and there are some inside the ACC still upset the league did not use its leverage to bring Notre Dame in as a full-time member.

"We had the perfect ultimatum last year," one coach said. "We had them, they had nowhere to go. What would they have done? Why would we do that? Because we know that's our lifeboat out from where we're at right now. And to be honest, is that not Notre Dame's lifeboat? Can they survive if the Big Ten and the SEC start lapping everybody? Instead, we just let them run through the front door, take all of our stuff and run out the back."

As a non-football member of the ACC, Notre Dame's payout from the league combined with its NBC TV deal added up to about $22 million for 2018-19, less than full-time ACC programs, so the Irish certainly increased their TV revenue as a full member in 2020. But Notre Dame remains adamant about independence, meaning little real movement has occurred behind the scenes. Notre Dame's TV deal with NBC is up in 2025, and discussions around a possible playoff expansion that could reward conference champs means the incentive structure could change.

The ACC also played more league games -- 10 were scheduled for each team, up from the standard eight -- and scrapped the divisional format. The result was a larger inventory of quality matchups and two teams that made the Playoff, Clemson and one-year visitor Notre Dame. Discussions surrounding an enhanced league schedule or scrapping divisions are not new, but 2020 offered a litmus test. Perhaps that is why ACC athletic directors are already talking for the first time in years about reimagining divisions (Scrap them? Reconfigure them?) and scheduling as a way to enhance their product.

"There's a longer play to this thing, but what in the immediate can we try to get focused on?" Phillips said. "What does the ACC look like with 14 football-playing schools and Notre Dame playing five in that mix? Where do we have some opportunities to grow that revenue, including distribution and getting out into households that we haven't, in a format that allows people to watch us? I don't think there are any exact or right answers right now, but I'm cautiously optimistic about where we can go in this look-in."

Still, many coaches said they liked the divisional format because it made for predictable matchups, and programs such as Georgia Tech and FSU, that play a rivalry game against the SEC each year, are reluctant to add another conference game to their slate, potentially losing out on an easy win, making bowl eligibility more difficult, and missing the gate revenue from an added home game. Many ADs and coaches are skeptical there are enough votes to change now; even if the ACC scrapped divisions, it still would need to petition the NCAA for permission.

"Moving away from what we currently have just to move doesn't make a whole lot of sense," said Clemson athletic director Dan Radakovich, who remains a proponent of an eight-game league schedule because of its annual rivalry game with South Carolina. "If there's value for us to go to a different format, then that needs to be discussed given that value proposition. We're going to pay you X-plus if you do something different. OK, let's evaluate the 'X-plus' and the 'something different.'"

What has been good for Clemson, however, hasn't necessarily been good for the rest of the ACC, and some coaches and ADs have lamented the elephant in the room -- or, at least, in the Atlantic Division -- and suggested a shake-up is in order.

"Those types of conversations can all be had as we look to evolve and really take the best of what we learned from last year and try to figure out, 'OK, how do we massage this to make it good going forward?'" another ACC athletics director said.

Several athletic directors mentioned the Texas Longhorns, along with Big 12 rival Oklahoma, as another potential option to closing the gap with the SEC and Big Ten.

At this point, the conversations are mostly theoretical, but as the smallest and most geographically homogenous league, the Big 12 was a ripe target during the last round of conference realignment a decade ago, and is now looking at its own uncertain future with a new TV deal on the horizon and the shaky status of the Longhorn Network. That could make the Big 12's biggest brands -- the Longhorns and Sooners -- a perfect solution for the ACC or Pac-12's revenue woes and instantly transform an expanded conference into a bigger player in TV negotiations.

But Texas has outsized control in its own league along with a seemingly endless revenue stream, and past dalliances with the Pac-12 ultimately amounted to nothing. Could that change down the road if TV money and playoff expansion dominoes fall the right way? It was a common enough theme among ACC ADs to assume Phillips will at least do his due diligence.

The Link Lonk


March 31, 2021 at 06:46PM
https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/31114147/new-acc-commissioner-jim-phillips-faces-big-challenges-easy-answers

New ACC commissioner Jim Phillips faces big challenges without easy answers - ESPN

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Building a Mosque in France, Never Easy, May Get Even Harder - The New York Times

easy.indah.link

The disparities also touch on everything from government subsidies to private schools to credits on personal income for donations, which overwhelmingly favor Catholics and high-income taxpayers. But they are perhaps most glaring in physical structures. Even as Mr. Macron has pledged to nurture an “Islam of France,” followers of the faith suffer from an acute shortage of proper mosques across the country.

“It’s a total paradox,” Saïd Aït-Laama, an imam, said in an interview before Friday Prayer.

Unable to finance mosque-building themselves, generally unassisted by the state, Muslim communities have turned to governments abroad for help.

But that may now become more difficult under Mr. Macron’s new law, which is intended to combat Islamism by toughening rules on secularism and controls over religious organizations, including tightening the flow of foreign donations.

Last week, the government said that the new law would allow it to oppose the public financing of a large mosque in Strasbourg, in the eastern region of Alsace, where, for historical reasons, the construction of religious buildings can still qualify for government subsidies.

The interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, pressed the local government to cancel the funding, saying that the association behind the Strasbourg mosque had ties to the Turkish government.

Even before new law was drafted, the City Council of Angers used real-estate regulations last year to stop mosque leaders from turning to Morocco. A provision in Mr. Macron’s law would allow the national government, too, to oppose the sale of religious buildings to a foreign government if the French authorities consider the sale a threat.

Mr. Macron has said that the legislation is critical to fighting the kind of radical ideology that has sent French youths to fight in Syria and led to the deaths of more than 250 French people in Islamist terrorist attacks since 2015. Last fall, four people were killed in three separate terrorist attacks.

The Link Lonk


March 31, 2021 at 04:00PM
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/31/world/europe/france-islam-law-mosques.html

Building a Mosque in France, Never Easy, May Get Even Harder - The New York Times

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Navigating coronavirus pandemic has not been easy for Section II teams - Times Union

easy.indah.link

Soccer practices conducted in gyms or on tennis courts. Home games played off campus. Games canceled because of coronavirus protocols.

Fall Season II is well under way, as Section II soccer, football and volleyball teams are currently competing during months normally considered the offseason. Football season is in the third week of five regular-season contests prior to a pair of playoff weeks. Six of the eight area soccer leagues that pushed play back from the fall are competing and volleyball is rolling along as well.

Talking with Shaker senior safety John Graney after his team's season-opening football victory over Shenendehowa, you could feel his sincerity when he stated he did not know if that contest would be his last as scholastic athletes around the state continue to navigate all of the complexities of competing during the coronavirus pandemic.

One aspect that struck me, no matter sport it is, regards the level of play being put forth despite limited practice time. All things considered, play has been top-notch.

“It has very difficult, especially without the spectators and having to wear the masks," Fort Ann soccer standout Justin Zeh said. "We've had to practice in the gym. That is a lot different than doing it on the turf (for games). We didn't think we were going to play at all, so every game we play now is special."

"Sometimes we don't give these kids enough credit," La Salle boys' soccer Matt Michaud said. "They have gone through a ton of adversity just to get to this point. I am not surprised by anything they do. ... They appreciate things and realize nothing is promised."

"Truth be told, I think the pandemic has matured a lot of our young people. They have all been through a lot of crap,"  Holy Names girls' soccer coach Chukwuma Asala said. "There are different parts of life, whether it is losing a family member, being at home, having to take virtual school or having chores to do. They have all had to grow up and appreciate so much of this year."

"If we had 10 feet of snow on the ground, these kids would want to play," Schalmont boys' soccer Vito Urbano said. "They have been waiting for this all year. They don't care what the rules are. They have been really good about it and are enjoying it."

Shaker football impressive

In the first two weeks of the Class AA football schedule, Shaker played the two teams that played in the 2019 Section II Class AA Super Bowl. The Blue Bison went to Steuerwald Stadium in Week 1 and posted a 20-0 victory over 2019 Class AA champion Shenendehowa. Friday, Shaker improved to 2-0 by holding off a late rally by Guilderland to post a 35-25 triumph. The Dutchmen upset Shaker in the 2019 sectional semifinals.

The Blue Bison look to move to 3-0 Saturday in a road game against Saratoga.
 
"We are going to keep getting better and treat each game like it is our toughest," Shaker senior defensive end Ghassan Chehade said.

Shaker managed to build a 28-10 cushion through three quarters against Guilderland, then watched Guilderland senior quarterback Logan Broomhall engineer a pair of scoring drives he capped with touchdown runs.

Facing a third-and-9 situation, the Blue Bison responded as senior running back Connor Strand busted off a 50-yard touchdown run.

"What we're going to take away is there is always something we can improve upon, and there were some little mistakes that could use some fixing," Strand said.

"It is a seven-game season. You know the end is Week 7," Shaker coach Greg Sheeler said. "There are no states. There is nothing after that. The goal is to be our best in Week 7."

The Link Lonk


March 31, 2021 at 09:12AM
https://www.timesunion.com/sports/article/Navigating-the-coronavirus-pandemic-has-not-been-16062838.php

Navigating coronavirus pandemic has not been easy for Section II teams - Times Union

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Tried and true: Back-of-the-box recipes can make for simple and easy Easter dishes - The Columbus Dispatch

easy.indah.link

Recipes from the back of boxes, packages or cans are perfect for an Easter dinner and can tug at your heartstrings in any year, but especially this one.

They are minimalists, featuring easy-to-find ingredients and simple-to-follow directions. And that is exactly what is needed during these gloom-and-doom days brought upon by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has disrupted holiday festivities.

So why not turn to recipes found on staple items in the pantry cupboard, refrigerator or freezer for some of the best tried-and-true dishes.

Some of the cans, boxes and packages feature the recipes in their entirety. Others feature photographs of entrees, sides and pies along with the product’s website to learn how to make them.

Not only are most of the recipes budget-friendly, but they also don’t advocate complicated techniques.

The recipes do not judge you for the gadgets and kitchen tools you own, or don’t. So when they call for something to be mixed, you can use your faithful rubber spatula, cheap or pricey blender or state-of-the-art food processor.

Being product-based, the recipes’ sole aim is to shamelessly tout the manufacturing company and the other products made by it. This does not mean that you have to do that, too.

If you don’t have King Arthur flour for the bread, cake or cookie recipe, use Pillsbury or the store-brand one already in your pantry. The chocolate chip cookies will come out just fine whether the semisweet morsels are made by Ghirardelli or Nestle Toll House. Other than the difference in price and preference in brand, one company’s sweetened condensed milk is no different from another.

The best part of following the recipe on a can or box is that you already have one of the ingredients — you are looking at it.

Here are some recipes that have won likes and hearts:

Upside-down pineapple cake: I will buy canned pineapple slices and maraschino cherries just to make this King Arthur flour recipe that I first came across on the back of a 5-pound bag. The cake does not take much effort to make and plops out of the pan perfectly — all with just one egg and not too much butter, sugar or flour. 

One-bowl brownies: The recipe was first printed inside the box of Baker’s Chocolate some 20 years ago and it has been a keeper since. That’s right, you need just one bowl to make the brownies. Two cups of sugar might seem too much for one cup of flour in Baker’s recipe, but the sweetness is cut by the unsweetened chocolate. The straightforward recipe does not call for any embellishments; the pecans do the work. But it is Easter, after all, and why not top the brownies with Reese’s eggs to make them look festive.

Raspberry gelatin cake: “There’s always room for Jell-O” was a popular slogan in the 19050s and ‘60s. That jingle holds true even today at Easter when gelatin-based “salads” crop up in some fashion on the table. If the word “salad” can be used loosely with Jell-O, why not “cake”? Make a Raspberry Angel Cake, featured on the Kraft Heinz Co. website, with just three ingredients — frozen raspberries, raspberry gelatin and angel food cake. In the event, you can’t find prepared angel cake in the store, don’t go hunting for it; just use ladyfinger cookies or any other light and airy cookie. 

Lemon pie: Thick, sticky and sweet, the Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk by Borden was first introduced in 1856. In 1931, homemakers were paid 25 cents for submitting recipes to the company, which received 80,000 in all. Through the years, recipes for smoothies, fudge, cakes and pies were printed on the labeling around the can. The luscious lemon cream pie on a graham cracker crust is classic 100%. Sweet, tangy and straightforward, it is a reminder that there is something to savor during these times.

Crescent roll pie: In 1980, Pillsbury came out with an easy-peasy replacement for a pie crust — crescent rolls. And they have been popular since then with rookie bakers and those looking for shortcuts. Start by popping open a can with an image of the Pillsbury Doughboy. Then separate the premade perforated crescent dough into triangles and place them in a pie plate, pressing them down and together. And voila, you have a crust. All you do next is pile on a filling, savory or sweet, and you’ll have a ta-da moment.

Tortellini soup: Upgrade a soup by tossing in some tortellini, whether it is stuffed with cheese, meat or both. Missouri-based Louisa Foods, the longtime maker of the famed St. Louis Style Roasted Ravioli, features a recipe for pasta soup with broccoli to promote its tri-color frozen tortellini made with tomato, spinach and fresh egg dough and stuffed with a blend of cheeses. When combined with a made-from-scratch broccoli soup, it makes for a satisfying side or can be a meal in itself.

LEMON CREAM PIE

Makes 8 to 10 servings

The recipe calls for spreading the pie with whipped topping or cream, but a dollop does the trick. The pie also does not suffer if the cream is totally omitted as it is creamy by itself.

From Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk.

3 large egg yolks

1 (14-ounce) can Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk

½ cup lemon juice

1 (16 ounce) prepared graham cracker crust

Frozen whipped topping, thawed, or whipped cream

Lemon zest for garnish

Heat oven to 325 degrees.

Beat egg yolks in a medium bowl with a mixer.

Add sweetened condensed milk and lemon juice until well-mixed. Pour into crust.

Bake for 30 to 35 minutes, or until set. Remove from the oven. Cool for 1 hour on a wire rack. Chill for at least 3 hours.

Spread whipped topping or whipped cream over the pie before serving.

Garnish with lemon peel, if desired.

BAKER’S ONE BOWL BROWNIES

Makes 24 servings

From Baker’s Chocolate.

1 package (4 ounces) Baker’s Unsweetened Chocolate

¾ cup butter or margarine

2 cups sugar

3 eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla

1 cup flour

1 cup coarsely chopped Planters Pecans

Heat oven to 350 degrees.

Line 13-by-9-inch pan with Reynolds Wrap Aluminum Foil, with ends of foil extending over sides. Spray foil with cooking spray.

Microwave chocolate and butter in large microwaveable bowl on high for 2 minutes or until butter is melted. Stir until chocolate is completely melted. Stir in sugar. Blend in eggs and vanilla. Add flour and nuts; mix well. Pour into prepared pan.

Bake 30 to 35 minutes or until toothpick inserted in center comes out with fudgy crumbs. (Do not overbake.) Cool completely. Use foil handles to remove brownies from pan before cutting to serve.

RASPBERRY ANGEL CAKE

Makes 16 servings

From Kraft-Heinz Co.

Heavy whipping cream can be used in the place of the Cool Whip and the light and airy ladyfinger cookies instead of angel food cake, if that’s what you have at home. To unmold the dessert, dip a blunt knife in warm water and run it around the edge to loosen it.

3 cups boiling water

2 packages (3 ounces each) Jello-O Raspberry Flavor Gelatin

1 package (12 ounces) frozen red raspberries, straight from freezer

1 package (7.5 ounces) round prepared angel food cake, cut into 21 thin slices

1 cup thawed Cool Whip Whipped Topping

Add boiling water to gelatin mixes in a medium bowl. Stir 2 minutes until completely dissolved. Add frozen berries; stir until thawed. Pour into a 9-inch round pan sprayed with cooking spray.

Arrange cake slices in concentric circles over gelatin, with slices overlapping as necessary to completely cover gelatin.

Refrigerate 3 hours or until gelatin is firm. Unmold onto plate; top with Cool Whip.

TRICOLOR CHEESE TORTELLINI WITH CREAM OF BROCCOLI

Makes 4 servings

From Louisa Foods.

Remember not to cut the onion finely as it will be easier to remove the broccoli florets and tortellini without onion pieces sticking to them.

1 tablespoon butter

¼ cup chopped onion

1 package (32 ounces) chicken or vegetable stock (4 cups)

1 cup water

12 ounces broccoli crowns

½ (19-ounce) package Louisa frozen tricolor cheese tortellini (about 38 tortellini or 3 cups)

1 large Yukon Gold potato (about 6 ounces), peeled and cut into ¾-inch pieces

Salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

¼ cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese

3 tablespoons heavy whipping cream

In a 4-quart saucepan, melt butter over medium heat. Add onion and cook for 5 minutes or until tender, stirring occasionally.

Add broth and water; heat to boiling over high heat.

Meanwhile, cut broccoli stems into 1-inch pieces; set aside. Cut remaining broccoli into small florets.

Add florets and tortellini to broth; cook until mixture boils, about 4 minutes, stirring occasionally. With slotted spoon, transfer florets and tortellini to a medium bowl.

Add broccoli stems and potato to broth; cook 10 to 15 minutes or until broccoli and potato are tender.

Season with salt and black pepper.

Transfer broth mixture to blender. With center part of lid removed to allow steam to escape and with a clean towel loosely covering center, puree mixture until smooth. Add cheese and cream and puree to blend.

Return broth mixture to saucepan over medium heat. Cook for about 5 to 10 until it is hot. Add tortellini mixture to the saucepan; stir to combine. Ladle soup into soup bowls.

PINEAPPLE UPSIDE-DOWN CAKE

Makes one 9-inch cake

From King Arthur Flour.

Remember to use room temperature butter, egg and milk as that will result in a lighter and fluffier cake. The cherries will look tired after the cake is baked and so if you want them to look cheery, place a candied or maraschino cherry on top of the baked one.

The cake can be baked in an 8-inch pan, but the seven pineapple rings would be crowded together.

For topping:

4 tablespoons butter

½ cup light brown sugar, firmly packed

¼ teaspoon cinnamon

¼ teaspoon ginger

1 (20-ounce) can pineapple rings in juice, drained

Candied red cherries or maraschino cherries

Pecans or walnuts, halves or diced; optional

For cake:

3 tablespoons butter, at room temperature

¾ cup granulated sugar

1 large egg, at room temperature

½ teaspoon salt

1¾ teaspoons baking powder

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

⅛ teaspoon coconut extract, optional

1⅓ cups King Arthur Unbleached All-Purpose Flour

½ cup milk, at room temperature

Heat the oven to 375 degrees. Lightly grease a 9-inch round cake pan.

To make the topping: Melt the butter, and mix with the brown sugar, cinnamon and ginger. Spoon the mixture into the prepared pan.

Space the pineapple rings atop the brown sugar mixture. Place a cherry in the center of each ring. If you're using nuts, scatter them in any empty spaces.

To make the cake: Beat the butter and sugar until fairly smooth.

Beat in the egg, then the salt, baking powder, vanilla extract and coconut extract, if using.

Add the flour alternately with the milk, mixing at medium speed and beginning and ending with the flour. Once the last of the flour is added, mix briefly, just until smooth.

Spoon the thick batter into the prepared pan, spreading it to the edges of the pan. It may not cover the pineapple entirely; that's OK.

Bake the cake for 30 to 35 minutes, until a toothpick or cake tester inserted into the center comes out clean.

Remove the cake from the oven, wait 3 minutes, then turn the pan over onto a serving plate. Wait 30 seconds, then lift the pan off. If anything sticks in the pan, just lift it out and place it back on the cake.

Serve warm or at room temperature.

ITALIAN ZUCCHINI CRESCENT PIE

Makes 6 servings

From Pillsbury.

It’s important not to overcook the zucchini as that could result in a soupy top when the pie is baked. Let the pie rest for at least 10 minutes before it is cut to allow the filling to set.

2 tablespoons Land O’Lakes butter

4 cups thinly sliced zucchini

1 cup chopped onions

2 tablespoons dried parsley flakes

½ teaspoon salt

½ teaspoon pepper

¼ teaspoon garlic powder

¼ teaspoon dried basil leaves

¼ teaspoon dried oregano leaves

2 Land O’Lakes eggs, well-beaten

2 cups (8 ounces) shredded Muenster or mozzarella cheese

1 can (8 ounces) Pillsbury refrigerated crescent rolls

2 teaspoons yellow mustard

Heat oven to 375 degrees. In a 12-inch skillet, melt butter over medium-high heat.

Add zucchini and onions; cook 6 to 8 minutes, stirring occasionally, until tender.

Stir in parsley flakes, salt, pepper, garlic powder, basil and oregano.

In large bowl, mix eggs and cheese. Add cooked vegetable mixture; stir gently to mix.

Separate dough into 8 triangles. Place in ungreased 10-inch glass pie plate or 12-by-8-inch (2-quart) glass baking dish or 11-inch quiche pan. Press over bottom and up sides to form crust. Firmly press perforations to seal.

Spread crust with mustard.

Pour egg mixture evenly into crust-lined pie plate.

Bake for 18 to 22 minutes or until knife inserted near center comes out clean. If necessary, cover edge of crust with strips of foil during the last 10 minutes of baking to prevent excessive browning.

Let stand at least for 10 minutes before serving.

The Link Lonk


March 31, 2021 at 05:30PM
https://www.dispatch.com/story/lifestyle/2021/03/31/back-box-recipes-can-make-simple-and-easy-easter-dishes/7053431002/

Tried and true: Back-of-the-box recipes can make for simple and easy Easter dishes - The Columbus Dispatch

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Three easy steps to shifting the energy in your space - KARE11.com

easy.indah.link

Mindset coach JC Lippold talks about how to bring the "cruising in your car vibe" right into your home on this week's "Kozy with KARE."

MINNEAPOLIS — With so much time spent indoors working, it has a lot of us looking to get creative with how we shift the energy in our space. 

"How often do we use the image of rolling the top down, hopping in the car, and just driving. Turning up the music and being in that space," says JC Lippold.

JC Lippold is a mindset coach. He says that feeling of hitting the open road is something you can actually re-create right in your own home when you need a break. 

"Step one is to take the time to wash your face," he says. "Give yourself that crispness - the cold water making you breathe in a different way."

Face washed. Check.

"Step two, opening up your windows," he says. "Even if it is chilly out so you can feel that fresh air, so you can smell that fresh air."

The third step? Turning on the tunes.

"All of a sudden for even five minutes - face washed, windows open, music on - it'll put you in that same sensory experience that we desire, that we hunger for. Being in that open, free space," JC says.

So look, this might not magically solve all your problems, but JC says it's a chance to take a few moments for yourself in the midst of whatever it is you have going on. 

"You are your most important meeting of the day," he says, "When you remind yourself of that - that you're the most important meeting of the day - everything else gets easier, everything else gets brighter, everything else gets more potent. Your co-workers, your family get to see the best of you because you've seen the best of you first."

JC just launched an app that is focused on mindset and movement. More information about the app is available here. 

The Link Lonk


March 31, 2021 at 02:59PM
https://www.kare11.com/article/news/local/kare11-sunrise/three-easy-steps-to-shifting-the-energy-in-your-space-kozy-with-kare/89-a44c26bd-fab7-4972-8a0b-670f56a8b3cf

Three easy steps to shifting the energy in your space - KARE11.com

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

‘Backwards’ Grand Blanc boys making tournament basketball look easy - MLive.com

easy.indah.link

GRAND BLANC, MI – Grand Blanc’s boys basketball team has got this whole playoff thing backwards.

The games are supposed to get more difficult the deeper teams go into the state tournament yet Grand Blanc continues to make it look easy.

In three postseason games, the Bobcats have won by 50 points, 39 points and 25 points. For anyone without a calculator handy, that’s a total of 114 or an average of 38 points per win.

“It just us coming together at the right time,” sophomore point guard R.J. Taylor said Tuesday after a 64-39 Division 1 regional semifinal win over Flushing. “We went through a lot as a team and we’re just clicking at the right time. That’s all it is.

“We’re just so close together as a team, it’s starting to show at the right time. It’s a lot of new guys on the varsity team so by us playing together, it gives us a lot of confidence now that we’re starting to get rolling. I think we’re only getting better every game.

“A lot of teams fall under the pressure. They can’t handle the pressure and get nervous. We just go out there and have fun and worry about ourselves.”

The Bobcats have certainly been fun to watch during the tournament, what with the Taylor-to-Ty Rodgers alley-oop dunks, 3-point shots, a high-tempo offense and outstanding defense.

“I don’t think we’ve played our best game yet,” said Grand Blanc coach Mike Thomas. “Hopefully we’re saving it for the next couple games. It seems like as soon as the tournament started, we started getting better and better and better. We’re sharing the ball. I don’t have to call much.

“It just shows what kind of team we have. When we play hard, smart and together, it’s going to be hard for us to lose games. When Ty plays like he’s been playing, it’s going to be hard. This is the Ty I like. This is the Ty I love right now.”

Indeed, Rodgers has been outstanding in the tournament.

He’s averaging 25.3 points after scoring a career-high 34 points in a 91-52 win over Davison in the district title game before scoring 26 against Flushing. And he not only did while playing less than three quarters against both teams, the big games came against teams with a combined final record of 24-10.

So it’s not like he was cherry picking against bottom feeders.

“You can tell they’re locked in,” said Flushing coach Eric Smith. “If you look at the scores in their most recent games prior to ours, they’re starting to click. The Rodgers kid, he’s tough. He’s got an NBA-type body.

“They guard well. We couldn’t keep them off the boards tonight. We had some success in the district limiting teams to one shot and we really struggled tonight keeping them off the boards. And they shoot well, too.”

Sophomore A’Monte Allen-Johnson added 11 points for Grand Blanc while junior Shamus Thompson had his first career double-double with 10 points and 15 rebounds. Rodgers added 10 rebounds, giving the Bobcats (11-2) two players with double-doubles.

Grand Blanc will play Marquette (13-3) at 7 p.m. Thursday at Midland Dow for a spot in the quarterfinals.

Flushing was led by Chase Lueker with nine points and Spencer Willman with eight.

The Raiders finished with a 12-6 record after seeing their four-game winning streak end.

“I’m proud of the guys,” said Smith, who is in his first year as the Raiders’ head coach. “I’m proud of them for sticking with it. It’s not always easy in the first year. Everybody does thing differently and I appreciate them for sticking with it.”

MORE:

Updated Flint-area regional boys basketball pairings

The Link Lonk


March 31, 2021 at 10:04AM
https://www.mlive.com/highschoolsports/2021/03/backwards-grand-blanc-boys-making-tournament-basketball-look-easy.html

‘Backwards’ Grand Blanc boys making tournament basketball look easy - MLive.com

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

‘No game in this conference is easy’: YSU prepares for winless Western Illinois - WKBN.com

easy.indah.link

The Penguins will kickoff with the Leathernecks at 8 p.m. Saturday in Macomb

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (WKBN) – After a week off, the Youngstown State University football team will go back to work this weekend.

The Penguins will take on Western Illinois, the only team in the conference without a win this season.

Watch the video above to hear from the Penguins.

Head Coach Doug Phillips was quick to point out Tuesday, though, there are no easy games in this league.

“Realistically, we’re 1-4, so I can quickly diminish that,” said Phillips.

“He (Coach Phillips) has emphasized that all of their games have been pretty close to start out,” said YSU sophomore lineman Derek Hite. “So we are definitely approaching it like we have any other week. It’s not going to be easy. I mean, no game in this conference is easy, obviously. Everybody knows that. We’re going to have to have a great week of practice, preparation, and go in there and approach it just we did it against South Dakota.”

“If we ever want to be a playoff-contending, championship-contending program, you’ve got to play your best football at the end of the season,” said Phillips. “We are realistic with them, and we let them know, we’re nowhere where we need to be, but we’re making those improvements each and every day, and this is just another step to see it.”

Youngstown State has had tremendous success against Western Illinois in recent years. The Penguins have won 11 of the last 14 meetings, and the last time they played, YSU scored 59 points against the Leathernecks at Stambaugh Stadium in 2019.

Saturday also will mark the first night game for the Penguins this season. Kickoff is slated for at 8 p.m. in Macomb.

The Link Lonk


March 31, 2021 at 02:10AM
https://www.wkbn.com/sports/no-game-in-this-conference-is-easy-ysu-prepares-for-winless-western-illinois/

‘No game in this conference is easy’: YSU prepares for winless Western Illinois - WKBN.com

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

New, Easy-to-Use Conservation Data in RCA Data Viewer - USDA.gov

easy.indah.link
Posted by Roger Claasson, NRCS RCA Coordinator in Conservation

Mar 30, 2021

A farm with trees
A farm with trees.

Looking for NRCS conservation program data? Whether you need program financial information or number of conservation contracts, civil rights data or which practices are applied on how many acres – this and much more is available in the Soil and Water Resources Conservation Act (RCA) Data Viewer. The Viewer was recently updated with data for fiscal year 2020, and for those who want to use the numbers to create their own analysis, graphs or charts, conservation program data are now available in easier-to-use Microsoft Excel file format. The new Excel files combine data from national, state, and program reports into a handful of “flat” files that can be easily read using R, SAS, Tableau, and many other software packages. Each file includes multiple worksheets that offer statistics by program, practice, and year at the state and national level. A new file that identifies practices by land use is also available. Practices are associated with cropland, pasture, range, forest, farmsteads, and other land use/land cover categories.

Specifically, the RCA Data Viewer offers conservation program financials, contracts and easements, and civil rights data, as well as conservation practices applied (by program and fiscal year; by land use, program and fiscal year; and by conservation measure, program and fiscal year). It also contains information on land use, soil erosion, prime farmland, and wetlands based on the 2017 National Resources Inventory (NRI), available at state, regional, and national levels, an extensive collection of maps based on NRI data, and publications from the Conservation Effects Assessment Project (CEAP).

Category/Topic: Conservation

You May Also Like

Write a Response

The Link Lonk


March 30, 2021 at 10:45PM
https://www.usda.gov/media/blog/2021/03/30/new-easy-use-conservation-data-rca-data-viewer

New, Easy-to-Use Conservation Data in RCA Data Viewer - USDA.gov

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Make Car Ownership Easy | Indiana | kokomoperspective.com - Kokomo Perspective

easy.indah.link

NOBLESVILLE, Ind., March 30, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Cars are complicated. They need regular maintenance. Don't wait for an expensive failure to occur. That will cost much more long term than doing regular, preventive maintenance. 

What if you had your own personal assistant who knew everything your car needed to maintain it, reminded you at the right time to get it done and even helped you find the right mechanic to repair it or order the parts to do it yourself?

Introducing BluCare Auto 2.0, a smart car care app which knows what your car needs and when, and then delivers it to you.  It's like your own personal digital assistant.

Who needs BluCare? The answer is: every car owner. Does BluCare work for any car? Absolutely! All that is needed is your smartphone and the BluCare app. There's nothing to install or add to your car. Once you download the app, create an account and add your car (or cars) to the app with a quick barcode scan. The app is ready to use. It uses your phone to measure all trips and miles driven and provide you with time-sensitive reminders which are important to you and your car.

Our Mantra: Convenience and Security

Tagline: Make car ownership easy. Save Money. Less Worrying.

Key Facts

  • Industries: Car care, connected auto, connected home, consumer electronics, mobility.
  • Market Size: 286 million cars
  • Target Customers: Auto dealers, auto auction companies, carsharing companies, online delivery companies, wireless carriers, aftermarket auto parts suppliers, consumer electronics retailers,

The BluCare app is also intended to be a one-stop shop for all information related to your car, including: car odometer, last parking location, digital owner's manual, owner documents and car label data, records of all repair services, records of all driving expenses, weekly driving activity, thousands of how-to video tutorials specific to your car, pages to shop all major online car parts stores and search for highly-rated mechanics in your area. All of this content is right inside the app.

With over 280 million registered vehicles on the road in the US alone, most of these being privately owned or leased, there is a very large market for the BluCare Auto app. Whether the owner is a first time driver or car owner or a very experienced owner with lots of car knowledge, the app will provide peace-of-mind to all owners as a reference tool and for providing important reminders.

We are also developing and taking preorders for BluRemote, a patented self-powered robotic system that uses the touch of a robotic finger to control any car, regardless of make or model year, following a short and simple process to train the car's key fob. We are also developing BluStart, a universal replacement fuse for car engine computers that acts as an anti-theft device by wirelessly controlling a car engine's starting capability.

Our products offer a state-of-the-art solution for all vehicles through a super-easy plug-and-play format, giving consumers control with the touch of a smartphone or the sound of their voice.

Support Local Journalism

Now, more than ever, the world needs trustworthy reporting—but good journalism isn’t free. Please support us by making a contribution.

About Blue Eclipse

With our innovative app and patented technology, Blue Eclipse makes car ownership easy. We give users peace-of-mind and the power to connect, control, manage and share vehicles with our universal and future-proof, easy-to-use products and software.  More information is available at https://blueeclipse.co.

For more information about Blue Eclipse and BluCare, search for Blue Eclipse BluCare Auto in the Apple or Google app store or contact Craig Tieman, 306249@email4pr.com, 317-289-8780.

CONTACT:

Craig Tieman

306249@email4pr.com 

317-289-8780

Cision View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/make-car-ownership-easy-301258327.html

SOURCE Blue Eclipse LLC

The Link Lonk


March 30, 2021 at 07:36PM
http://kokomoperspective.com/politics/indiana/make-car-ownership-easy/article_ae99bfe3-644e-5ab3-964d-44daadedc394.html

Make Car Ownership Easy | Indiana | kokomoperspective.com - Kokomo Perspective

https://news.google.com/search?q=easy&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Featured Post

Investigation Clears Easy Group/Easy EDU of Any Involvement - GlobeNewswire

easy.indah.link TORONTO, June 29, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- A comprehensive internal investigation launched by Easy Group Inc. has found th...

Popular Posts