Clipp Store Serial
Find a trademark by serial number from 86633000 to 86633099. Retail discount store services in the field of foods, namely, groceries, snacks, delicatessen and frozen foods, beverages Owned by: RUIZ MAZA. Owned by: Clipp, Patricia.
NKBA members receive significant discounts on the course and materials. Program sistem informasi perpustakaan php code. As part of its strategic alliance with the Living In Place Institute (LIPI), NKBA is offering the state-of-the-art LIPI Certified Living In Place Professional (CLIPP) Certification Program to any qualified professional desiring CLIPP certification.
LIPI has established an NKBA Scholarship allowing NKBA members to participate for $949 — a savings of $350 off the regular price of $1,299 — for the certification course and materials. Click to register. Awareness of living-in-place design principles is becoming more critical in the building and remodeling sphere. Population is aging at a rapid rate: From now through 2036, 10,000 people will celebrate their 65 th birthday every day. There are certain physical realities of growing older that design can accommodate, but the issues are not limited to aging alone: The U.S. Centers for Disease Control estimate that roughly 20 percent of Americans have some physical limitation or disability, making design principles pertaining to accessibility and safety important for an even broader swath of the population. LIPI’s CLIPP certification program was developed specifically to make ALL homes accessible, comfortable and safe.
To that end, NKBA endorses LIPI’s GOAL 2028! Campaign that challenges all design, construction, medical and other professionals to work to achieve 50 percent fewer falls in the home within the next decade. A combination of safer designs and products, as well as inter-professional teaming with aligned individuals and associations/groups in all facets of home and human interaction, will collectively deliver the goal.
“This partnership with LIPI is in keeping with NKBA’s goals overall: to offer professional development and educational opportunities, and to create beautiful, functional and safe kitchens and baths,” said Suzie Williford, NKBA executive vice president of industry relations and chief strategy officer. “The NKBA is pleased to support Goal 2028! And deliver an important educational shift in planning and designing the two most susceptible spaces of the home: the kitchen and the bath.” Mary Jo Peterson, CLIPP, CMKBD, CAPS, an award-winning designer whose work has earned national recognition and induction into the NKBA Hall of Fame, and a member of the Living In Place Advisory Panel, said, “Living In Place is a practical and vital approach whose time has come. It addresses the intent of Universal Design in a positive and proactive program, responsive to the ever-changing human condition and the needs of today’s business environment.” The Living In Place Institute is the leading provider of information and education for home accessibility and safety. LIPI trains, certifies and networks professionals from all facets of the design, construction, medical, homecare, real estate and government sectors.
“We are honored to have our CLIPP certified program exclusively endorsed by the NKBA,” according to LIPI co-founders and partners, Erik Listou and Louie Delaware. “This alliance is a win-win for current and future NKBA members and others who are committed to making all residential environments safe, comfortable and accessible.” For more information about the strategic partnership and the CLIPP certification program, visit or contact the NKBA at.
My name is Nancy and I am a horror movieholic. I glory in this. I had, in my mind, the advantage of growing up in a 200 year old haunted house, originally built by John Dickinson of the Declaration of Independence fame. I never saw a physical manifestation but many times heard the heavy, measured sounds of footsteps in the attic in an otherwise empty house, save for me. That creepiness was not enough for me: I delved into the world of vampires, ghosts, mummies and monsters courtesy of Universal Pictures and the family television. One Christmas, my parents bought me a huge poster of Bela Lugosi posing in his famous role as Dracula. I bought every issue of the FAMOUS MONSTERS magazine.
I was doing all the fangirl things. At that time, vampire films were my movies of choice. SALEM’S LOT rocked my world, first as a novel then the miniseries. I was in high school when Stephen King’s second novel, “Salem’s Lot” was published in October, 1975.
I was mesmerized. A haunted house?
And a vampire?! How could I NOT like it? King was riding the wave of new success with his first published novel, “Carrie” a paperback best seller.
It was already being made into a major motion picture. “Salem’s Lot” became a blockbuster best seller, a novel inspired by King’s time as a high school teacher, teaching “Dracula” to his science fiction fantasy class. King wondered what would happen if Dracula came to the 20th century and landed in New York City. He toyed with that for a while until his wife, Tabitha, opined the setting should be a small town. It would offer a more intimate setting and a chance to integrate the fantastic story into a small town and all its gossip, dirty secrets, certainly a microcosm of the antics in the big city, but with a horrifying intimacy. Drop Dracula into that mix and you can have one hell of a vampire novel.
- понедельник 04 февраля
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