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Want great customer service? Shop local in downtown Aiken
Mary O'Hare can offer many reasons why she thinks downtown Aiken is the best place to shop, eat and play.
Recently, the owner of M.B. Jewelry and Beads on Laurens Street, was asked by the Aiken Downtown Development Association to serve as the chairman of the marketing committee. O'Hare accepted, continuing her five years of volunteer work with the ADDA.
"I love volunteering for the Aiken Downtown Development Association," she said. "There's so much that the ADDA does for the Aiken community to keep us (downtown businesses) unified."
ADDA committees are made up of local business owners who volunteer their time to help with the various aspects of keeping downtown Aiken vibrant. O'Hare also serves as the co-chair of the membership committee.
O'Hare said one of her goals as the marketing committee chairman is to change the misconception by many residents that it's too expensive to shop downtown. She cited a resident she knows who set a $20 budget for each loved one that he was purchasing a Christmas gift for, and he was able to do all his holiday shopping in downtown Aiken.
O'Hare said she wants to promote the fact that there is a level of customer service residents can receive in downtown Aiken that they can't find anywhere else. She remembers when her family came to Aiken to visit and stopped in Chris' Camera Center on Laurens Street. The employees of the store not only took their photograph but also made sure each family member got a copy.
"You can't get that kind of service at any of the large stores, but you can get it downtown," O'Hare said.
O'Hare wants more residents to come and explore the businesses in downtown Aiken. She's recently met people who have lived in Aiken for decades but never shopped downtown before. She wants residents to know that Plum Pudding sells not only cookware but also wonderful spices, candles and more. She wants them to be aware that 3 Monkeys has a bridal registry and the Aiken Center for Arts offers various classes.
"People don't realize what's here, and they don't realize what their missing," she said. "We want them to get off their computers and come out of the big box stores and come downtown."
Lastly, O'Hare said almost everything anyone could possibly need can be found in downtown Aiken from home furnishings to even a few groceries.
"We may be small, but we are packed with all the conveniences of big cities without the commotion," O'Hare said.
The reason she is so passionate about the downtown area is because of the sort of community it has become. O'Hare moved her store to downtown Aiken eight years ago from the basement of another business located on the corner of Pine Log and Silver Bluff roads. She said the business owners assist each other and are quite neighborly.
"There isn't a single downtown business that doesn't care about Aiken," O'Hare said. "We take pride, we're a neighborhood and I really want to market that neighborhood feeling."
Recently, the owner of M.B. Jewelry and Beads on Laurens Street, was asked by the Aiken Downtown Development Association to serve as the chairman of the marketing committee. O'Hare accepted, continuing her five years of volunteer work with the ADDA.
"I love volunteering for the Aiken Downtown Development Association," she said. "There's so much that the ADDA does for the Aiken community to keep us (downtown businesses) unified."
ADDA committees are made up of local business owners who volunteer their time to help with the various aspects of keeping downtown Aiken vibrant. O'Hare also serves as the co-chair of the membership committee.
O'Hare said one of her goals as the marketing committee chairman is to change the misconception by many residents that it's too expensive to shop downtown. She cited a resident she knows who set a $20 budget for each loved one that he was purchasing a Christmas gift for, and he was able to do all his holiday shopping in downtown Aiken.
O'Hare said she wants to promote the fact that there is a level of customer service residents can receive in downtown Aiken that they can't find anywhere else. She remembers when her family came to Aiken to visit and stopped in Chris' Camera Center on Laurens Street. The employees of the store not only took their photograph but also made sure each family member got a copy.
"You can't get that kind of service at any of the large stores, but you can get it downtown," O'Hare said.
O'Hare wants more residents to come and explore the businesses in downtown Aiken. She's recently met people who have lived in Aiken for decades but never shopped downtown before. She wants residents to know that Plum Pudding sells not only cookware but also wonderful spices, candles and more. She wants them to be aware that 3 Monkeys has a bridal registry and the Aiken Center for Arts offers various classes.
"People don't realize what's here, and they don't realize what their missing," she said. "We want them to get off their computers and come out of the big box stores and come downtown."
Lastly, O'Hare said almost everything anyone could possibly need can be found in downtown Aiken from home furnishings to even a few groceries.
"We may be small, but we are packed with all the conveniences of big cities without the commotion," O'Hare said.
The reason she is so passionate about the downtown area is because of the sort of community it has become. O'Hare moved her store to downtown Aiken eight years ago from the basement of another business located on the corner of Pine Log and Silver Bluff roads. She said the business owners assist each other and are quite neighborly.
"There isn't a single downtown business that doesn't care about Aiken," O'Hare said. "We take pride, we're a neighborhood and I really want to market that neighborhood feeling."
PR
Armageddon and Other Playthings
Judith McPherson, the plucky heroine of Grace McCleen's debut novel, “The Land of Decoration,” is a smart but extremely literal-minded 10-year-old English schoolgirl. She grows up, as Ms. McCleen did, in the midst of Christian fundamentalists. She has been raised with the guarantee that Armageddon is near.
To deal with this prospect Judith develops elaborate coping mechanisms. She imitates her absent mother, who was very adept at crafts. She imitates her father, who is methodical and dour. When she wants to understand why her father does not love her, for instance, Judith makes a careful outline and ticks off each individual reason.
But Judith's main feat of mimicry is the book's biggest selling point. As she narrates even the opening chapter, she speaks in a 10-year-old's version of the voice of God. And her one-room version of Creation is the model world that she builds in her bedroom. She uses brown corduroy to make fields, wire and beads for the sun, a mirror for the sea, tinfoil for rivers and cookie boxes for houses. She also fills this tiny place with human and animal populations.
“And I looked at the people and I looked at the animals and I looked at the land,” Judith says, in junior Biblical fashion. “And I saw they were good.”
She borrows from Ezekiel 20:5-6 (“a land flowing with milk and honey; it was the decoration of all the lands”) to name her mini-world the Land of Decoration. So far, so good. But at school she spooks her classmates. When Neil Lewis, a standard-issue bully, warns on a Friday that he plans to humiliate her on Monday, Judith is afraid to return to class.
So she builds her fears and hopes and dreams into the Land of Decoration. Realizing that snow will close the school, she uses cotton and feathers and all kinds of other stuff to coat the model world in white. And when Monday arrives, guess what happens? Flakes fall. School closes.
Lonely, neglected Judith suddenly feels very powerful. Did she make it snow? Did she wreak a miracle? She will gather more evidence, she tells herself, “and then we shall see.”
Then Ms. McCleen writes this line: “ ‘We certainly shall,' no one said back.”
All of the book's promise rides on that one sentence. At the point when it arrives it has been hard to tell whether “The Land of Decoration” is merely adorable verging on treacly, or will become something more. Judith's hearing an actual voice raises the question of whether she is divinely blessed or scarily deluded.
(Note to fans of the Library of Congress's classification system: Cheating won't help you. The Library has hedged its bets by classifying this book as both “Religious fiction” and “Psychological fiction.” The novel falls into the categories “Girls,” “Fathers and daughters,” “Good and evil” and “Miracles” too. Somehow a book featuring precise instructions on how to make people out of clay, beads and pipe cleaners has not been cataloged under “Handicrafts” as well.)
Anyway, Judith's faith in her omnipotence starts to grow. She devotes herself to fighting the Neil Lewis threat, and her efforts seem to work. Her father is the only person who might notice, but he is too distracted. In a plot twist so tidy that Judith might have invented it, he is a laborer embroiled in a factory strike, and his troubles at work parallel Judith's at school. The book even gives Neil a nasty, skanky father who is as mean to Mr. McPherson as Neil is to Mr. McPherson's only child.
Where is Judith's mother? This too is one of the story's unsurprising aspects, and it is hinted at very early. Let's just say that Judith has reason to view Armageddon as a happy time of reunion, and that when she hears God speak, she is drawn closer to something she deeply desires.
Ms. McCleen uses Judith as a conveniently uncomplicated young mouthpiece for big questions about faith and doubt. “All the important things, like whether someone loves you or something will turn out right, aren't certain, so we try to believe them,” Judith says precociously. “Whereas all the things you don't have to wonder about, like gravity and magnetism and the fact that women are different from men, you can bet your life on but you don't have to.”
“The Land of Decoration” doesn't get more nuanced than that. Yes, its voice of God evolves into a slangy, wisecracking, child's-eye version of divinity. (“Well, this is a busy time in heaven right now. Four horsemen are straining at the bit, there're some winds that are very restless, and there are a lot of locusts that are getting under everyone's feet. Oh, and some seals that have to be opened.”) And yes, the question of where this voice comes from remains a teeny bit open.
But the book's tensions mount in a simple and schematic way, with danger escalating on cue and Judith's mental state getting scarier, until it's time for them to stop mounting and for Judith's little world to become a better place. Then it finds resolution. This particular apocalypse is not what it's cracked up to be.
To deal with this prospect Judith develops elaborate coping mechanisms. She imitates her absent mother, who was very adept at crafts. She imitates her father, who is methodical and dour. When she wants to understand why her father does not love her, for instance, Judith makes a careful outline and ticks off each individual reason.
But Judith's main feat of mimicry is the book's biggest selling point. As she narrates even the opening chapter, she speaks in a 10-year-old's version of the voice of God. And her one-room version of Creation is the model world that she builds in her bedroom. She uses brown corduroy to make fields, wire and beads for the sun, a mirror for the sea, tinfoil for rivers and cookie boxes for houses. She also fills this tiny place with human and animal populations.
“And I looked at the people and I looked at the animals and I looked at the land,” Judith says, in junior Biblical fashion. “And I saw they were good.”
She borrows from Ezekiel 20:5-6 (“a land flowing with milk and honey; it was the decoration of all the lands”) to name her mini-world the Land of Decoration. So far, so good. But at school she spooks her classmates. When Neil Lewis, a standard-issue bully, warns on a Friday that he plans to humiliate her on Monday, Judith is afraid to return to class.
So she builds her fears and hopes and dreams into the Land of Decoration. Realizing that snow will close the school, she uses cotton and feathers and all kinds of other stuff to coat the model world in white. And when Monday arrives, guess what happens? Flakes fall. School closes.
Lonely, neglected Judith suddenly feels very powerful. Did she make it snow? Did she wreak a miracle? She will gather more evidence, she tells herself, “and then we shall see.”
Then Ms. McCleen writes this line: “ ‘We certainly shall,' no one said back.”
All of the book's promise rides on that one sentence. At the point when it arrives it has been hard to tell whether “The Land of Decoration” is merely adorable verging on treacly, or will become something more. Judith's hearing an actual voice raises the question of whether she is divinely blessed or scarily deluded.
(Note to fans of the Library of Congress's classification system: Cheating won't help you. The Library has hedged its bets by classifying this book as both “Religious fiction” and “Psychological fiction.” The novel falls into the categories “Girls,” “Fathers and daughters,” “Good and evil” and “Miracles” too. Somehow a book featuring precise instructions on how to make people out of clay, beads and pipe cleaners has not been cataloged under “Handicrafts” as well.)
Anyway, Judith's faith in her omnipotence starts to grow. She devotes herself to fighting the Neil Lewis threat, and her efforts seem to work. Her father is the only person who might notice, but he is too distracted. In a plot twist so tidy that Judith might have invented it, he is a laborer embroiled in a factory strike, and his troubles at work parallel Judith's at school. The book even gives Neil a nasty, skanky father who is as mean to Mr. McPherson as Neil is to Mr. McPherson's only child.
Where is Judith's mother? This too is one of the story's unsurprising aspects, and it is hinted at very early. Let's just say that Judith has reason to view Armageddon as a happy time of reunion, and that when she hears God speak, she is drawn closer to something she deeply desires.
Ms. McCleen uses Judith as a conveniently uncomplicated young mouthpiece for big questions about faith and doubt. “All the important things, like whether someone loves you or something will turn out right, aren't certain, so we try to believe them,” Judith says precociously. “Whereas all the things you don't have to wonder about, like gravity and magnetism and the fact that women are different from men, you can bet your life on but you don't have to.”
“The Land of Decoration” doesn't get more nuanced than that. Yes, its voice of God evolves into a slangy, wisecracking, child's-eye version of divinity. (“Well, this is a busy time in heaven right now. Four horsemen are straining at the bit, there're some winds that are very restless, and there are a lot of locusts that are getting under everyone's feet. Oh, and some seals that have to be opened.”) And yes, the question of where this voice comes from remains a teeny bit open.
But the book's tensions mount in a simple and schematic way, with danger escalating on cue and Judith's mental state getting scarier, until it's time for them to stop mounting and for Judith's little world to become a better place. Then it finds resolution. This particular apocalypse is not what it's cracked up to be.
Beads & Boos: Trauma care at Rapides Regional earns a vital mark
BEADS: To Rapides Regional Medical Center in Alexandria, which has been verified as a Class II trauma center. The designation, which requires recurring re-evaluation, is based on the American College of Surgeons verifying the presence at Rapides Regional of all resources listed for this performance classification in Resources for Optimal Care of the Injured Patient. That list of resources is extensive, and it touches every part of the medical center -- staffing, equipment, programs, procedures, services, protocol, training and backup. Level II trauma centers collaborate with their Level I counterparts, which have surgical expertise in additional disciplines and ongoing research programs.
BEADS: To the Rev. Chad Partain, chancellor of the Catholic Diocese of Alexandria and pastor of St. Paul's Church in Mansura, for writing "The Heart of Louisiana: An Illustrated History of Rapides Parish." And Beads to the Historical Association of Central Louisiana for urging him to do so. The illustrated book, a narrative history, may be purchased at Kent Plantation House in Alexandria, the Alexandria Museum of Art, Alexandria/Pineville Convention and Visitors Bureau, and Charrier and Charrier Law Offices, also in Alexandria. Proceeds go to the Historical Association. For more information, call the association at (318) 448-3952.
BOOS: To the conditions that have caused the nine-parish Baton Rouge metropolitan area to have the highest rate of AIDS among all metro areas in the country. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported the new statistics, for 2010, on Wednesday. Baton Rouge had the second-highest AIDS rate the previous two years. Baton Rouge has a rate of 33.7, which means 33 out of every 100,000 people have tested positive for AIDS.
BEADS: To Nazarene Baptist Church in Alexandria, for sponsoring informational meetings about underage drinking and other challenges faced by young people and their families. The church held a "Project Success" session last week at which participants learned about the causes and dangers of alcohol abuse. Learn more about the program by calling (318) 443-7327.
BEADS: To the 27th Louisiana Nursery Festival, held over the weekend in Forest Hill. The annual festival in the "Nursery Capital of Louisiana" is a special event for the village and the region. It showcases an important part of Louisiana's horticulture industry and is a late-winter tradition for Central Louisiana families and business owners. Good growers that they are, the people of Forest Hill are already planning for 2013.
BEADS: To the Rev. Chad Partain, chancellor of the Catholic Diocese of Alexandria and pastor of St. Paul's Church in Mansura, for writing "The Heart of Louisiana: An Illustrated History of Rapides Parish." And Beads to the Historical Association of Central Louisiana for urging him to do so. The illustrated book, a narrative history, may be purchased at Kent Plantation House in Alexandria, the Alexandria Museum of Art, Alexandria/Pineville Convention and Visitors Bureau, and Charrier and Charrier Law Offices, also in Alexandria. Proceeds go to the Historical Association. For more information, call the association at (318) 448-3952.
BOOS: To the conditions that have caused the nine-parish Baton Rouge metropolitan area to have the highest rate of AIDS among all metro areas in the country. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported the new statistics, for 2010, on Wednesday. Baton Rouge had the second-highest AIDS rate the previous two years. Baton Rouge has a rate of 33.7, which means 33 out of every 100,000 people have tested positive for AIDS.
BEADS: To Nazarene Baptist Church in Alexandria, for sponsoring informational meetings about underage drinking and other challenges faced by young people and their families. The church held a "Project Success" session last week at which participants learned about the causes and dangers of alcohol abuse. Learn more about the program by calling (318) 443-7327.
BEADS: To the 27th Louisiana Nursery Festival, held over the weekend in Forest Hill. The annual festival in the "Nursery Capital of Louisiana" is a special event for the village and the region. It showcases an important part of Louisiana's horticulture industry and is a late-winter tradition for Central Louisiana families and business owners. Good growers that they are, the people of Forest Hill are already planning for 2013.
Holyoke St. Patrick's Parade draws big crowds with the good weather
HOLYOKE – Fans wearing green hats and shirts, shamrock beads and green-tinted sunglasses turned the city into a sea of green, Sunday, for the 61st St. Patrick's Parade.
Unusually warm temperatures had marchers peeling off their Irish knit sweaters and delighting in the 70-degree day that made the 2012 version one of the biggest success in the long history of the parade.
“I don't know what I did to make it happen. We have had nice days in the past, but nothing like this,” said Russell McNiff Jr., this year's parade president.
Saying he feels blessed, McNiff talked about past parades where the Department of Public Works removed shoulder-high snowbanks from the route and people wrapped in blankets and shivered through the event.
He thanked the about 200 volunteers on the parade committee who have been working since last April to prepare for the event.
Barry Farrell Jr., this year's parade marshal, has officially marched in two other parades and unofficially as a band monitor in dozens.
“It was fantastic. I've marched in the parade for many, many years and I've never seen so many people,” he said.
He said he was impressed with the State Police Marching unit, which won the citizenship award this year for all the work troopers do for the city.
No crowd estimates were available, but organizers and police agreed the good weather brought out one of biggest crowds in recent history. People lined the route from the start at K-Mart plaza on Route 5 to the end on Main Street.
Larry Stock, of Connecticut, who has been selling horns, shamrock hats and green feather boas at the parade for 40 years, said parade-goers quickly bought up his souvenirs Sunday as he walked down Appleton Street.
“It is always big and it always depends on the weather,” Stock said of the parade.
Chicopee residents Pauline Belanger and Brenda Lauren sported bright green wigs in honor of the parade.
This was Lauren's first time watching the parade up close. The duo found seats right in front of the Kmart Plaza where the parade began.
Unusually warm temperatures had marchers peeling off their Irish knit sweaters and delighting in the 70-degree day that made the 2012 version one of the biggest success in the long history of the parade.
“I don't know what I did to make it happen. We have had nice days in the past, but nothing like this,” said Russell McNiff Jr., this year's parade president.
Saying he feels blessed, McNiff talked about past parades where the Department of Public Works removed shoulder-high snowbanks from the route and people wrapped in blankets and shivered through the event.
He thanked the about 200 volunteers on the parade committee who have been working since last April to prepare for the event.
Barry Farrell Jr., this year's parade marshal, has officially marched in two other parades and unofficially as a band monitor in dozens.
“It was fantastic. I've marched in the parade for many, many years and I've never seen so many people,” he said.
He said he was impressed with the State Police Marching unit, which won the citizenship award this year for all the work troopers do for the city.
No crowd estimates were available, but organizers and police agreed the good weather brought out one of biggest crowds in recent history. People lined the route from the start at K-Mart plaza on Route 5 to the end on Main Street.
Larry Stock, of Connecticut, who has been selling horns, shamrock hats and green feather boas at the parade for 40 years, said parade-goers quickly bought up his souvenirs Sunday as he walked down Appleton Street.
“It is always big and it always depends on the weather,” Stock said of the parade.
Chicopee residents Pauline Belanger and Brenda Lauren sported bright green wigs in honor of the parade.
This was Lauren's first time watching the parade up close. The duo found seats right in front of the Kmart Plaza where the parade began.
Save 44% on a Turquoise Bead & Feather Bracelet
Turquoise is a must-have in every girl's wardrobe! This turquoise and silver feather bracelet is the perfect earthy, yet statement making accessory.
Product Specifications
- Base metal silver ox plating
- Stretch bracelet
- Multi-bracelet, resins, seed beads, woods, metal base feather
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About Looksy
Looksy provides its members with exclusive deals on fashion accessories picked by today's leading celebrities and stylists.
Find new and exciting accessories to dress up your existing wardrobe and stunning statement pieces to transform your entire look.
Product Specifications
- Base metal silver ox plating
- Stretch bracelet
- Multi-bracelet, resins, seed beads, woods, metal base feather
- Lead and nickle free
About Looksy
Looksy provides its members with exclusive deals on fashion accessories picked by today's leading celebrities and stylists.
Find new and exciting accessories to dress up your existing wardrobe and stunning statement pieces to transform your entire look.