Give Your Old Georgia Home a New Life with a Makeover











Change is constant and something that can be beneficial if done for the right reasons. If you have been living in Marietta, Georgia for the past decade or so in the same house, chances are you might be looking for something new or hoping to do something refreshing. What better way is there to start than to give your home a simple makeover?

Whether you’re aware of it or not, your home’s appearance affects you, your family and your community. A lovely house with a fine exterior can add more beauty to the neighborhood. Living within the walls of a well-organized and furbished home can be relaxing and inspiring. However, if your house is starting to look like an antique with peeling wallpapers, blistering paint and splitting roof shingles and siding, there are some simple things you can do to give your house a new look — and life!

Remove the Clutter

Over the years, you can accumulate a number of things such as old clothes, vacation souvenirs, discarded furniture and other items that eventually occupy a lot of space in your house. You can hold a yard sale to make some money out of your old belongings and probably donate the rest to charity. After getting rid of the clutter, you can buy organizing containers to store the rest of your things and keep them in closets or drawers. Having a place for everything will free your home from becoming messy and will also make rooms appear more spacious.

Redo the Paint

A new paint job can make your home look fresh and clean. If you’re too busy and don’t have the time to do the painting yourself, there is always a Marietta painting contractor you can contact to do the work for you. Choose neutral colors that are easy on the eyes and that will match your existing furniture or decorations.

Change the Gutters

Defective gutters may not be visible to passersby, but its effects are manifested by your home’s deteriorating foundation, muddy yard and crumbling sidewalk. Most roofing contractors have gutters Marietta GA homes use to effectively direct water away from their home’s foundation and yard. Changing the gutters can protect your home’s appearance and stability.

Replace the Roof

Having a new roof won’t only improve your home’s aesthetic value; it will also help you have a stronger defense against the forces of nature. There are Marietta roofing contractors who can inspect your roof and give you advice regarding repairs or restoration. For more information on how to give you home a makeover, you can visit infobarrel.com.

If you have questions, please visit us at www.sjroofing.net for complete details and answers.

This article has been viewed 8 time(s).

It is a violation of our terms and conditions for writers to submit material which they did not write and claim it as their own. If this article infringes on your copyrights, you MUST either call us at 706-866-2295 or send proof of infringement along with the offending article’s title, URL, and writer name to

IdeaMarketers.com
Attn: Marnie Pehrson – Copyright Concern
514 Old Hickory Ln
Ringgold GA 30736 USA
If you email us or use our problem submission form, we CANNOT guarantee we’ll receive your notice!

march madness swain match day nene dark shadows trailer nate mcmillan clooney arrested

Maine electrical union sues over embezzled money

May 15, 2012 07:08 GMT

Today is Tuesday, May 15, the 136th day of 2012. There are 230 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:

On May 15, 1972, Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace was shot and left paralyzed by Arthur H. Bremer while campaigning in Laurel, Md., for the Democratic presidential nomination. (Wallace died in 1998; Bremer was released from prison in November 2007 after serving 35 years of a 53-year sentence for attempted murder.)

On this date:

In 1602, English navigator Bartholomew Gosnold and his ship, the Concord, arrived at present-day Cape Cod, which he’s credited with naming.

In 1776, Virginia endorsed American independence from Britain.

In 1862, President Abraham Lincoln signed an act establishing the Department of Agriculture. Austrian author and playwright Arthur Schnitzler was born in Vienna.

In 1911, the Supreme Court ruled that Standard Oil Co. was a monopoly in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act, and ordered its breakup.

In 1930, registered nurse Ellen Church, the first airline stewardess, went on duty aboard an Oakland-to-Chicago flight operated by Boeing Air Transport (a forerunner of United Airlines).

In 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a measure creating the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps, whose members came to be known as WACs. Wartime gasoline rationing went into effect in 17 Eastern states, limiting sales to three gallons a week for non-essential vehicles.

In 1963, astronaut L. Gordon Cooper blasted off aboard Faith 7 on the final mission of the Project Mercury space program.

In 1970, just after midnight, Phillip Lafayette Gibbs and James Earl Green, two black students at Jackson State College in Mississippi, were killed as police opened fire during student protests.

In 1972, the United States returned the prefecture of Okinawa to Japanese administration.

In 1975, U.S. forces invaded the Cambodian island of Koh Tang and recaptured the American merchant ship Mayaguez. (All 40 crew members had already been released safely by Cambodia; some 40 U.S. servicemen were killed in the operation.)

In 1987, President Ronald Reagan told a gathering of out-of-town reporters at the White House he did not consider himself “mortally wounded” by the Iran-Contra affair. (The president got to relive his radio-announcer days when he complied with a reporter’s request to read aloud a promo for Nashville station WSM.)

In 1991, Edith Cresson was appointed by French President Francois Mitterrand (frahn-SWAH’ mee-teh-RAHN’) to be France’s first female prime minister.

Ten years ago: The White House acknowledged that in the weeks before the Sept. 11 attacks, President George W. Bush was told by U.S. intelligence that Osama bin Laden’s terrorist network might hijack American airplanes, but that officials did not know suicide hijackers were plotting to use planes as missiles. Financier Martin Frankel pleaded guilty in New Haven, Conn., to 24 counts of securities fraud and racketeering, admitting that he’d looted insurance companies of more than $200 million. (Frankel was later sentenced to nearly 17 years in federal prison.)

Five years ago: The Rev. Jerry Falwell, who’d built the Christian right into a political force, died in Lynchburg, Va., at age 73. Yolanda King, the firstborn child of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King, died in Santa Monica, Calif., at age 51. President George W. Bush chose Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute to oversee the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan as a war czar. Prime Minister Bertie Ahern became the first Irish leader to address the joint houses of the British Parliament. Kenny Chesney collected his third consecutive entertainer of the year trophy from the Academy of Country Music.

One year ago: Thousands of Arab protesters marched on Israel’s borders with Syria, Lebanon and Gaza in an unprecedented wave of demonstrations, sparking clashes that left at least 15 dead. Finland scored five late goals to beat Sweden 6-1 and claim its second title at the ice hockey world championship played in Bratislava, Slovakia.

Today’s Birthdays: Playwright Sir Peter Shaffer is 86. Actress-singer Anna Maria Alberghetti is 76. Counterculture icon Wavy Gravy is 76. Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright is 75. Singer Trini Lopez is 75. Singer Lenny Welch is 74. Actress-singer Lainie Kazan is 72. Actress Gunilla Hutton is 70. Country singer K.T. Oslin is 70. Singer-songwriter Brian Eno is 64. Actor Nicholas Hammond (“The Sound of Music”) is 62. Actor Chazz Palminteri is 60. Baseball Hall-of-Famer George Brett is 59. Musician-composer Mike Oldfield (“Tubular Bells”) is 59. Actor Lee Horsley is 57. TV personality Giselle Fernandez is 51. Football Hall-of-Famer Emmitt Smith is 43. Singer-rapper Prince Be (PM Dawn) is 42. Actor Brad Rowe is 42. Actor David Charvet (shahr-VAY’) is 40. Actor Russell Hornsby is 38. Rock musician Ahmet Zappa is 38. Olympic gold-medal gymnast Amy Chow is 34. Actor David Krumholtz is 34. Actress Jamie-Lynn Sigler is 31. Rock musician Brad Shultz (Cage the Elephant) is 30. Rock musician Nick Perri is 28.

Thought for Today: “Martyrdom has always been a proof of the intensity, never of the correctness of a belief.” — Arthur Schnitzler (1862-1931).

hunger games movie review bats hunger games review jeff saturday jason smith jon corzine austin rivers

UFC On Fuel TV 3 Results: Rafael Dos Anjos Flattens And Finishes Kamal Shalorus

UFC Lightweight Rafael dos Anjos caught Kamal Shalorus with a head kick that allowed him to take Shalorus’ back and quickly get the rear naked choke finish. Dos Anjos once again has followed a loss with a win but remains unable to put together a winning streak in the UFC.

UFC On Fuel TV 3 Results: Rafael dos Anjos defeats Kamal Shalorus via submission (rear naked choke) at 1:40 of round 1.

Shalorus, a native of Iran who once competed for England’s wrestling team in international competition, has a habit of sticking his chin out and winging wild punches. Dos Anjos made him pay for that bad bad habit with a brutal high kick that seemingly came out of no where.

Dos Anjos lost his last fight to Gleison Tibau at UFC 139. His overall UFC record is 5-4. His most notable wins came against George Sotiropoulos and Terry Etim. Clay Guida is his most notable loss.

SBN coverage of UFC on FUEL TV 3

jack del rio fired made in america made in america icam patrice o neal. osteopathy osteopathy

Wash Park Home Tour 2012 | Kentwood Real Estate – Denver …

John F. Kennedy once said, ?Children are the world?s most valuable resource and its best hope for the future.? These words still ring true today

One of the most important things we as a community can do to ensure a better tomorrow is to support our local schools. Kentwood Real Estate prides itself on being not only Colorado?s Premier Real Estate Company but also on giving back to the community.

This year Kentwood Real Estate was a Silver Sponsor of the annual Wash Park Home Tour. The event helps to support Steele Elementary School and also contributes 5% of revenue made to The Denver Public Schools Education Outreach which assists homeless students.

Michel Brossmer of Kentwood Cherry Creek was this year?s volunteer coordinator. She collected all 130 volunteers needed that day. On the day of the event Michel aided in the set-up and coordinated shuffling of positions to ensure every home as well as events at Steele Elementary had ample volunteers. Michel found the event to be very rewarding and a great success overall. ?It was a really great event, the weather cooperated and we had a record number of people come out to see the houses. To support our community as well as the homeless at the same time, I could not be happier!?

The weather was cool with a spots of rain but it made for great weather to walk around indoors and enjoy the homes. Five generous homeowners in East Washington Park opened their homes to the community. Included in the tour were: 1190 S. Franklin Street, a Historic Craftsman Cottage with a hand-crafted cedar plank roof, 1187 S. Gilpin, an L-shaped Mid-Century Modern home, 1010 S. Gilpin, an Arts & Crafts new build designed with modern living in mind, 938 S. Williams, a renovated Bungalow that added additional space while keeping the historic aspects of the home, and finally 1251 S. Williams, a Contemporary Dutch Colonial that combined a contemporary aesthetic with practical functionality.

At each of the homes soft music played while the community supporters bustled in and out of rooms awing at finishes and d?cor choices. You could overhear the adults commenting on what they would like to do to their own homes; some even gathering design ideas, while children scoured the homes to find any of the scavenger hunt items listed in the Home Tour program.

This year the Wash Park Home Tour sold 2,000 tickets and had over 1,600 attendees. In addition, they made $73,000 for Steele Elementary School, far exceeding their initial fundraising goal of $50,000. This money will be used to help Steele Elementary students reach their potential by providing second teachers, paying for field trips and aiding in classroom supplies. The 5% donated to the Homeless this year amounts to over $3,000 in aid! The Tour was a great success and will help to ensure a better tomorrow.


Use Facebook to Comment on this Post

mega millions march 30 lucky numbers odds of winning mega millions mary mary sag aftra merger dj am bully

Measuring CO2 to fight global warming, enforce future treaty

ScienceDaily (May 14, 2012) ? If the world’s nations ever sign a treaty to limit emissions of climate-warming carbon dioxide gas, there may be a way to help verify compliance: a new method developed by scientists from the University of Utah and Harvard.

Using measurements from only three carbon-dioxide (CO2) monitoring stations in the Salt Lake Valley, the method could reliably detect changes in CO2 emissions of 15 percent or more, the researchers report in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences for the week of May 14, 2012.

The method is a proof-of-concept first step even though it is less precise than the 5 percent accuracy recommended by a National Academy of Sciences panel in 2010. The study’s authors say satellite monitoring of carbon dioxide levels ultimately may be more accurate than the ground-based method developed in the new study.

“The primary motivation for the study was to take high-quality data of atmospheric CO2 in an urban region and ask if you could predict the emissions patterns based on CO2 concentrations in the air,” says study coauthor Jim Ehleringer, a distinguished professor of biology at the University of Utah.

“The ultimate use is to verify CO2 emissions in the event that the world’s nations agree to a treaty to limit such emissions,” he says. “The idea is can you combine concentration information — CO2 in the air near the ground — and weather patterns, which is wind blowing, and mathematically determine emissions based on that information.”

Ehleringer did the study with four Massachusetts atmospheric scientists: Kathryn McKain and Steven Wofsy of Harvard University, and Thomas Nehrkorn and Janusz Eluszkiewicz of Atmospheric and Environmental Research, Inc.

While the method can detect changes of 15 percent or more in CO2 levels, determining absolute levels is tricky and depends on certain assumptions, but it can be done, Ehleringer says.

“The model [new method] predicts more CO2 emissions than we see,” based on a federal government survey that previously estimated carbon dioxide emissions based on interviews with gas- and coal-burning utilities and sellers of fuel and natural gas, he says. “That shouldn’t surprise you. People are under-reporting.”

Estimating CO2 Emissions

Ehleringer began monitoring carbon dioxide levels in the Salt Lake Valley in 2002 as part of a National Science Foundation-funded study of the urban airshed. The monitoring network measures CO2 from six sites across the Salt Lake Valley and a seventh well above the valley at Snowbird.

“It is the most extensive publicly available and online data set of CO2 concentrations in an urban area in the world,” he says.

The new study created a computer simulation of CO2 emissions in the Salt Lake Valley using three sources of information:

  • CO2 measurements from three sites — the University of Utah, downtown Salt Lake City and Murray, Utah, about halfway south down the valley’s length.
  • Data from weather stations in the valley, crunched through weather forecasting software used to predict wind and air circulation.
  • Satellite data showing what parts of the valley are covered by homes, other buildings, trees, agriculture and so on.

The emissions estimates from the simulation were compared with the results of the government survey that estimates CO2 emissions.

“You come up with estimates for emissions that are within 15 percent or better of the actual emissions for the region,” Ehleringer says.

Even though that is not as precise as desired by the National Academy of Sciences, “it is a very powerful first step,” he adds. “However we would like to be within 5 percent for treaty verification purposes.”

Because urban regions are major sources of CO2, “a large fraction of a country’s emissions likely emanate from such regions, and results from several representative cities over time could provide strong tests of claimed emission reductions at national or regional scales,” the researchers write.

The simulation showed how ground-level CO2 concentrations increased overnight when air was calm, and then decreased in the morning as sunlight mixed the air and plants consumed CO2 due to photosynthesis. Sometimes the simulation failed to catch the exact time this mixing occurred.

That is part of the reason the researchers argue satellite measurements through a mile-thick vertical column of air may better estimate CO2 concentrations and thus emissions by being less sensitive to ground-level variations close and far from emissions sources like smokestacks or intersections with idling vehicles.

Several satellites around the world now make limited CO2 measurements. But the researchers write that “no presently planned satellite has the necessary orbit or targeting capability” for the desired urban CO2 measurements.

Several previous studies looked at CO2 levels in various cities, but none at the full urban scale or with accuracy near what is required for treaty verification, the researchers say. The only study that accurately measured an urban area’s CO2 emissions over time — in Heidelberg, Germany — did so with a method too expensive for routine use.

Ehleringer’s part of the research was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The study says his coauthors were funded by NASA, the National Science Foundation and — without specifics — “by the U.S. intelligence community,” which would be involved in treaty verification.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Utah, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

knowshon moreno sovereign citizen komen chrome for android hatchet leah messer freedom riders

Dimon “Barely A Democrat” (TIME)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics – Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

marlins park marbury v. madison 2013 lincoln mkz burger king mary j blige google project glass google goggles one tree hill

City Bans Texting While Walking: Good or Bad Idea? [Texting]

I’ve been bumped on the streets by people who were texting while walking. A thousand times. It’s annoying. I guess I should be happy that the town of Fort Lee, New Jersey, have started issuing $85 tickets to any pedestrians caught texting and walking. More »


slither chris christie naacp glen campbell jerusalem artichoke bud shootout aretha franklin

No More Beating Around The Bush At Yahoo: Thompson Is Out, Levinsohn In As CEO, Effective Immediately

Yahoo has now officially confirmed the news we reported earlier: Ross Levinsohn is now interim Chief Executive Officer, replacing Scott Thompson, and Fred Amoroso is chairman of the board. Scott Thompson’s departure and the reasons for it are not mentioned at all in the statement, which simply says he has left the company. (Earlier a report in AllThingsD had said he would resign for personal reasons, although at least in this statement nothing at all is mentioned for why he has left.) The announcement from Yahoo also underscores how activist shareholder Third Point is very much the key player in all of this.

blagojevich sentence mythbusters cannonball uss arizona myth busters tracy mcgrady tracy mcgrady mash

The Real Housewives of New Jersey Recap: Drowning Pool


Here comes the drama.

Hanging out by the pool. Doesn’t that sound relaxing? Yes, unless you’re on The Real Housewives of New Jersey. Then it’s pretty much the exact opposite.

Then you’ll probably need a stiff drink to get through an afternoon in the sun.

We recap all the fussing, feuding, and name calling in our THG’s +/- recap!

Teresa G. Photo

How can you not love Caroline’s mock phone call between Teresa and Joe? It was hilarious. Plus 10

And why does Caroline think Teresa hates Melissa. Because “she’s a better, younger version” of Teresa. Plus 8. That sounds about right.

But as everyone else is discussing Teresa’s behavior, Teresa is telling her husband her version of the Solstice party and Joe has some definite opinions.

First, Melissa is a horse-face, gold digging tramp. Caroline is boring. Rosie’s a butchy boy, and the idiot cousin (I can only assume he means Kathy … no offense to Kathy) looks like a frog. 

Joe Guidice certainly has an opinion about everyone but the scariest is the one he holds about himself. He tells Teresa he’s the powerhouse and she doesn’t need anyone else. Minus 12. What happens when they haul his sorry butt off to jail again?

Oh, and Teresa says her brother is a little pansy for telling his wife about their conversation. How can you not love family?

But Teresa’s not just sitting around bad mouthing her family. She’s off to Jacqueline’s for some gossip and a session with personal trainer Jolene. 

Pigskin

Why does Jolene have an open bottle of wine in her bag?  I’ve never known a trainer her brought her own cocktails. Minus 7. Besides, you should never hire a personal trainer who shows up wearing that much makeup to workout.

On a side note, was anyone else blinded by the amount of bling on Teresa’s phone. Minus 5. My eyes are still watering.

Let’s leave the train wreck that is Teresa for a bit to visit with Caroline’s family.

It almost made me sick to think that Chris was buying an $80,000 car. It disturbed me so much that I was grateful when Albert gave Caroline the Jag as her anniversary present. Plus 7.

But it wasn’t the overpriced car that earns them the big points. Plus 20 for walking us down memory lane at The Brownstone. Looking back at their first years living over the restaurant and raising their new family was so sweet. These two truly love one another 27 years later.

Unfortunately, the Teresa free zone doesn’t last long. Kathy invites the entire gang over for the end of the school year party. 

Plus 12 to Rich for warning the kids not to invite their friends. He can see the warning signs ahead and he’s getting the innocents out of the way.

Caroline and Jacqueline both bail and plus 10 for Joe Guidice not showing up. That truly would have been a nightmare.

Here We Go Again

For some reason Kathy thinks she can be the glue that will bring the Guidices and the Gorgas back together. Minus 12. Oh honey, let it go.

Teresa and her brother have a mini summit as Melissa runs around after the kids. Teresa tells Joe he’s no longer her brother because of what he’s done. She wants him to be the old Joe. The one that always put her first and spent lots of time at her house.

Hmm…uh, what part of being married and having kids doesn’t Teresa get. Minus 15. The man has a wife and a family yet she seems to think he should be his priority. Oye.

He’s just the meanest brother ever! 

Unfortunately Gorga ruins the moment by telling her he’s an angel from God. Apparently low self esteem isn’t a problem in this family.

I think that’s enough pool time. It’s going to be a long, hot summer in Jersey.

EPISODE TOTAL: +16! SEASON TOTAL: -116!

celebrity wife swap gla republican candidates mike martz hokies quadrantid norv turner

NEC tablet with GSM and HSPA breaks cover at the FCC

NEC tablet with GSM and HSPA breaks cover at the FCC

Regular readers will know that the FCC is a bit of a virtual whistle-blower, alerting tech-hungry Americans to when new goodies might soon be landing on their shores. Other times it coughs up the odd thing we weren’t even waiting for. Today’s offering appears to be a 3G tablet from NEC. There’s little in the way of specification, or even pictures, but we do know it’s sporting GSM and HSPA radios along with the standard WiFi. The device measures 222.6 mm across, which strongly points to a display somewhere in the 7-inch region. The KMP7R4D1-1A model number isn’t ringing any bells right now, but we do remember a few Japanese models that bear a passing resemblance not that long ago.

NEC tablet with GSM and HSPA breaks cover at the FCC originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 13 May 2012 09:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceFCC  | Email this | Comments


amas 2011 black friday elliot elliot la galaxy la galaxy jordy nelson