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Showing posts with label Christmas pudding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas pudding. Show all posts

Friday, December 24, 2010

Norad Santa and Christmas Greetings

With December 24th already here users on the popular social media site twitter.com are sending Christmas Greetings to their fellow tweeters and also searching for Santa with the Norad Santa tracking. The terms “norad santa tracker 2010,” “norad,” “santa tracker 2010,” “santa tracker,” “norad santa tracker 2010 official site,” “where is santa claus right now,” “where is santa,” “santa tracker,” “track santa claus,” “tracking santa claus” “christmas quotes,” “christmas greetings,” “christmas wishes,” “christmas cards,” “christmas message” are all over the major cities and worldwide trending topics list on twitter.com. Here are what so fellow Clevelanders have to say about these trending topics.

“I’ve been using the Norad Santa tracker,” says Bonnie of Cleveland. “Since my kids woke up this morning I’ve been getting the constant question, can you take santa? Where is santna?”

“I ended up waiting until the last minute to get my Christmas cards out so I just sent my Christmas message through email,” says Kevin of Cleveland.

“I’m broke this year, so I ended up sending my Christmas message through email,” says Patrick of Cleveland.

Kristieackert Got an internet video Christmas greetings from the Jets. It was very nice, but I was hesitant to open it in front of mom.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Christmas Wish list,Needy for whole lot more

Christmas Wish list, more,
Think I have a pretty good chance of getting the first two items; I guess we need to work on the last one. I think it would help if we remember the words of Mother Teresa: “If we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong to each other.”
In this community we call home, we all belong to each other in one way or another. We drive the same traffic-clogged roads, shop in the same multitude of stores and enjoy the same beautiful scenery.
Looking around this Christmas season, we can find ways to share what we have with each other. We can give gifts from the heart, gifts that bring a little peace on earth. If you need any ideas, here are just a few, off the top of my holiday-stressed head:
We can help Feed the Needy on Christmas Day or help pack the boxes full of food for the Covington Rotary Club’s Feed the Needy program. To help get the dinners prepared and boxed up for Christmas, just show up at St. Paul’s cafeteria anytime after 9 a.m. Thursday Dec. 23 and/or Friday Dec. 24. On Christmas morning, volunteers who want to deliver meals should arrive at St. Paul’s no later than 7:45 a.m. Feedy the Needy co-founder John Baldwin said that last year, all of the packages had been handed out by 8:25 a.m. The boxed-up meals come complete with directions and go to a variety of areas, so you can pick your destination.
We can spend some time over the holidays collecting food for the food bank in Covington or clothes for the thrift store right next door on Columbia Street. Maybe your closet will need a little cleaning after you unwrap all those new Christmas clothes. You might consider donating some time to the food bank, thrift store or even the dental clinic if you have the skills needed for that important ministry in Covington. For more information, call 893.3003 for the food bank, 892.5282 for the thrift store or 871.3939 for the dental clinic.
We can give the gift of life by donating blood. There is always a need for blood, especially during the holiday season. The Blood Center of Southeast Louisiana is offering free admission to Santa’s Secret Workshop in New Orleans for anyone who donates blood by Friday. You can find out more about donations, locations and requirements at The Blood Center’s website: http://www.thebloodcenter.org.
We can volunteer some time with Habitat for Humanity St. Tammany West, whether it’s time actually building a house or working in the ReStore. You can get more information at the website: http://www.habitatstw.org/index.php. Habitat has many ideas for involving younger children in the effort to help others build a better life, so you can check on that, too.
We can help the Covington Boys and Girls Club, which will reopen in January and will need adults willing to offer their time after school. For more information, call the city of Covington at 892.1811.
So there is my very incomplete list of gifts from the heart. I’m sure you have your own.
Meanwhile, I am looking forward to the day after Christmas, when I can sit back, read about Drew Brees and think about cultivating a little peace in my corner of the earth, like my friend the quarterback — just without the multimillion-dollar contract.


(source;nola.com)

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Christmas Shoppers Crowd Stores Last Weekend

The last weekend before Christmas is one of the biggest shopping weekends of the year as people headed out to grab those last minute gifts. Many shoppers were met with big crowds, and in some cases, big sales.
J.C. Penny Supervisor Duane McConnell says, "Last minute it's pretty much whatever's left on the table and as I said the MIP'S, Men In Panic come in here and they just need to go home with something."

But not all shoppers were in panic mode. There were plenty of gifts to choose from, and a lot of it was on sale. Some say they wait till the last minute on purpose.
Shopper Ann Reed says, "I kind of save it up for the week before so I have all week to finish up so I have no pressure no problem."

And at Kmart, some shoppers were just looking for bargains.

One shopper says, "We started back in June my wife and I started in June and we're just out looking for a deal, last minute markdowns."

Over at Target, last minute shoppers were greeted by long lines and busy aisles.

Shopper Miles Eason says, "100 percent doing last minute shopping. I put it off to the last minute and now I have no idea what to get of anyone in my family."

Target says last minute shoppers help make this one of the biggest sales weekends of the year. And while shoppers searched for gifts they say they brought along plenty of patience.

One shopper says, "It's been really hectic trying to get everything done the traffic, but the people have been real nice and everything so it's been great."

And with the stress of trying to find that perfect gift, retailers say their goal is to make the shopping experience as easy as they can.

McConnell says, "There are so many customers in here that we just really try to take care and touch base with each and every one and really try to make it like they're visiting someone's home."

Experts say the final ten days leading up to Christmas account for nearly one-third of total sales for the holiday season.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Cheap Christmas shopping

Discounting was something that didn't happen until after Christmas. This year, though, Santa's price-snipping elves have been out in force during the pre-Yuletide period, and evidence of their handiwork is to be found everywhere.
"Twenty-Five Per Cent Off Everything", blare the signs in my local Past Times store. "Fifty Per Cent Off Autobiographies", says W H Smith. And on www.direct cosmetics.com, they're selling 100 ml bottles of my mother's favourite Nina Ricci perfume, L'Air du Temps, at (look away now, Mater) £22 instead of £48.
Good news, then, for skinflints such as myself, although there are still some traditionally-minded people who feel there is something a bit, well, distasteful about getting gifts for loved ones at knock-down prices. "A lot of our customers don't like it known that they buy from us," confirms Kim Nicholls, managing director of ultra-cheap mail-order firm The Book People. "That said, people do seem to be less shy than in previous years."
No prizes for guessing why. A quick look at my last few bank statements has turned me from a boy who didn't acknowledge the existence of the Special Offer Fairy into a fully paid-up believer in Christmas bargains.
First step in my Supersaver Santa initiative was to place a bulk order for 16 books by children's author Michael Morpurgo for my four nephews and nieces. Only instead of paying £95.84 in the High Street, I got the lot for £16.99 from The Book People brochure.

It was, I confess, an exhilarating sensation. And, once you've started down the discount slope, it's an unstoppable sleigh ride. Not only do you feel the financial wind in your hair, you have the sheer satisfaction of piloting your own snowplough.
The shops don't like it, of course, preferring to keep us dependent upon them for reductions. When I asked Selfridges at what point before Christmas their prices would be cheapest, they didn't want to say.
"Discounts are not something which we particularly publicise," they replied, "in the interest of driving traffic to the store right up to Christmas."
Note the word "drive", which is the same as what happens to farm animals. This Christmas, however, more and more shoppers are resolving to rise above the level of turkeys. Me included.
The fact is, once you start looking for savings, you see them everywhere. Especially in your own home. Peering into my wardrobe, I see shirts and ties that have remained unused since the day they were given to me. What could be nicer, at this time of year, than letting others experience the joy of receiving these same gifts, albeit with a little note attached, saying you've lost the receipt (more believable if you're a man, than a woman).
Bottles of drink work well, too, when it comes to re-gifting, though if you won them in a raffle, do remove the little numbered ticket beforehand; there's a bottle of Warninks Advocaat that, to my certain knowledge, has been doing the rounds of south-west London school fairs for at least the past three Christmases.
Unwanted holiday souvenirs work well, too. I know just the couple who would like the hand-stitched Croatian tablecloth we bought a couple of summers ago in Dubrovnik. And, speaking of foreign travel, you can make good use of your unused air miles at this time of year. I was delighted to discover that I could exchange my 45,000 NatWest Your Points, not for a return flight to Krakow, but for £250 worth of Marks & Spencer vouchers. Job done. Another five people who are going to be bowled over by my amazing £50-a-head generosity – and it won't cost me a penny.
Then there are all your old childhood possessions. Sorry, did I say "old"? I meant "retro". That's not just a toy car, that's a classic Dinky. And that Rupert Bear annual is a nostalgia-rich collector's item, if given to the right person (that is, someone over 50). The same goes for old football programmes: find a game played on the day of the recipient's birthday, or involving their favourite team half a century ago, and you've given a gift with genuine meaning, for no money.
Oh yes, there are big thankyous to be had for giving a present that is Thoughtful. My brother-in-law, for example, is always having to go off on business trips at short notice, so I'm giving him my own, home-made Frequent Flyer Pack. This involves two miniature tubes of toothpaste, several free hotel shampoo and conditioner sachets, plus little plastic bottles of mouthwash, eye drops and contact lens liquids, all within the 30ml hand- luggage limit imposed by airport security. Cost to me: negligible. Thoughtfulness rating: priceless, as they say in the ads.
Operating a similar, person-targeting policy, I've gone on a gift hunt to Poundland. Here, I've bought an Archers autobiography (Brian Aldridge) for an Ambridge aficionado (brother), I've sourced a set of six brightly coloured egg cups (mother-in-law), a pair of Simpsons socks (teenage son) and a Cliff Richard 2011 calendar as a supplementary gift for my mother. Cost of each item: £1.
Of course, the key to getting away with cheap presents is presentation. Immaculate gift-wrapping can elevate the most bargain-basement item up to penthouse suite level. Which means that instead of using the same clingfilm that the chestnut stuffing has been wrapped in, you invest in a roll of up-market cellophane, complete with decorative ribbon-shredding-and-curling machine. And, if possible, go to Gift School.
"The perfectly wrapped present should not need to be ripped apart, it should elegantly unravel," declares Neelam Meetcha, who runs £95-a-day gift-wrapping courses all over the country (I've gone for the free mini-video instead, on her website www.gift-wrappingservices.com).
"And remember, if you are putting together a little collection of gifts, the secret is to use a small basket that looks full, rather than a big basket that looks empty."
How right she is. Armed with her tips (Sellotape is for amateurs, use double-sided tape instead), I set about making my home-made items look shop-bought (gingerbread man, potted plant from garden, re-sealed Lord of the Rings DVD).
After a while, however, I discover that there are limits to how low I can stoop, and I don't just mean in terms of price. For while I don't hesitate to use the advice from the website www.moneysavingexpert.com, which is to put a miniature brandy bottle inside a £1 Poundland photo frame, and affix a sign saying "In Emergency Break Glass", I find myself stopping short of filling a Fortnum and Mason box with cut-price liqueur chocolates.
I also can't quite bring myself to print out my own Name A Star certificate, confirming, on behalf of the (non-existent) Interstellar Identification Commission, that a particular astral body now bears the name of my five-year-old godchild. I may be a cheapskate, but I know when I'm on thin ice.
However, when it comes to the sums of money I've saved, as part of my festive fiscal freeze, I feel no remorse whatsoever. Well, only a tiny bit, and it will be gone the minute Christmas is over. After all, as Santa will tell you, present-giving involves going down a large number of grubby chimneys, and, at the end of the day, a little bit of guilt comes off a lot more easily
than soot.


(source:telegraph.co.uk)

Christmas security

Pofile Facts-MANILA, Philippines — The city government of Caloocan firmed up oin Thursday measures to ensure the security of the public especially shoppers doing last minute shopping for the holidays.

Mayor Enrico “Recom” Echiverri said that the security of his constituents this Christmas season against unscrupulous and abusive individuals has been always the primary concern of the city government.

In line with this, Echiverri directed the local police to further intensify its campaign on street crimes particularly those against holdup men and snatchers which increase in number during this time of the year.

Echiverri said that aside from uniformed cops, members of the Reformed Department of Public Safety and Traffic Management (RDPSTM) and barangay tanods are also making rounds in order to discourage criminal activity.

“Most of us are now busy shopping for gifts at different stores and in order to guarantee their safety from criminals, I’ve ordered the deployment of additional security personnel,” the mayor said.

The Special Weapons and Tactic (SWAT) operatives from the Caloocan City Police are also conducting surveillance at stores, bus terminals and places with heavy volume of people as a deterrent to terrorists this coming Christmas.

Authorities are particularly keeping a close watch on locations with ATMs (automated teller machines) as there have been reports of robbers targetting people who have just withdrawn their hard-earned cash.

Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) cameras at different establishments in Caloocan have also been checked to see if they’re still functioning.



(source:mb.com.ph)