Friday, April 27, 2012

Zhang Hui's mother Deng Qiong had heard of his daughter | cabeal ...

228.  15 years old child repeatedly quit to end the fatality                     at the age of 15, Zhang Hui failed to get past the 2011 spring festival, in January 27th she left the world.
Then, Zhang Hui’s parents rushed to Zhang Hui’s work, the double post Hong Li painting factory the protection of employees, questioned the ineffective, and the boss went Zhang Huinai unmarried pregnancy as the cause of death, bleeding to death.
Both conflict and fight, Zhang Hui’s father Zhang Jingxi was wounded in hospital, there was no money for treatment. At present, the police have been involved in the investigation.                     multiple quit to end fatality         worker Wang told reporters: “since January 23rd, Zhang Hui evening overtime began uncomfortable to leave, until 3 days after the factory to pay wages, Zhang Hui still be completely bedridden, on the 27 day morning everybody feels that Zhang Hui is wrong, rush her to the hospital, but the night will not.
…..”For Zhang Hui’s death, the janitor Wang factory felt ignored,” Zhang Hui died 3 times to resign but without success. “        Hong Li painting factory boss Xu admitted that Zhang Hui quit the into view.
        wrong said the cause induced &nbsp &nbsp strike violently;;     Zhang Hui’s mother Deng Qiong had heard of his daughter, from his hometown in Anhui to Dongguan, but to her death but confused.
Their mother Deng Qiong speaks, the boss said in the factory started daughter pregnant uterine rupture hemorrhage, later died in hospital. But after they ask to the hospital, the doctor said Zhang Hui is not pregnant, they feel her reputation, coupled with the death of not clear, went to the factory to find the boss to denounce a view.
Then, both sides of the dispute. Deng Qiong told reporters:” the boss says that my daughter is pregnant uterine rupture die factory, and never mind, but the doctor told us, Zhang Hui is not pregnant “.
The reporter learned from the hospital, Zhang Hui died of meningitis in late, were sent to the hospital too late to delay treatment timing lead to death, and Zhang Hui is not pregnant.         however, the factory adhere to the death of Zhang Huizhi has nothing to do with the factory, so the dispute casesZhang Hui Zhang Jingxi, stepfather dispute whether Zhang Hui was injured.
The face of said one thing, the factory boss Xu does not come to mind, no response. However, the beatings incident, Xu boss denies. At present, the police have been involved in the investigation of coordination.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Explosion in local paint factory ;)

Red 98 TLR but looks like a yellow 02.Full Yoshi system ,airbox mod,Penske rear,SS brake lines,SteveTLS TRE,TLRstacker Sliders,Rifleman 1/5 throttle,TheRingIn swingarm pivots ,Pipercross filter,Pazzo levers,Vandriver tailrisers,PowerCommander lll,Projector headlights,GSXR forks,TheRingIn 30mm triple clamp offset, R1 Wheels ,brakes and swingarm,Ohlins steering damper...and counting. .......... PICK THE POINT IN THE SIG WHERE I JOINED TLZ

Insert lame S vs R wisecrack here...

"I refuse to prove that I exist," says God, "for proof denies faith, and without faith, I am nothing."
Douglas Adams

TLOTM Sept 2011........ BBOTM Nov 2011

Demetria Irwin: Esperanza Spalding on Creativity, Inspiration and ...

Twenty-seven-year-old Grammy award winner Esperanza Spalding is not only an amazing vocalist and musician, but also an inspiring public speaker. In support of her latest album, Radio Music Society, Spalding will be going on a world tour and she decided to gift a special group of fans and friends with an hour and a half long dress rehearsal at the Florence Gould Hall Theater in New York. Spalding is a passionate and accomplished musician and that was evident in how easily her lithe arms commanded the upright bass and how confidently her fingers strummed her latest instrument, the electric bass, in a way that rockstars would envy. Her long gown, delicate shoulders and voluminous afro all kept in time to the rhythms spun by Spalding and her 11 bandmates.

After an amazing performance that garnered a well-deserved standing ovation, Spalding spent 30 minutes answering questions about her craft, her process and creativity in general. Spalding also talked about her philanthropic efforts. Five dollars from each album sale goes to a human rights organization called Free the Slaves and on Earth Day, the young artist debuted a special sand animation video which is in support of the Amazon Aid Foundation. Her endearing almost shy laugh was sprinkled throughout the conversation as she spoke from a chair on stage. The talk, which with the addition of a projector and a few slides could have been a TED Talk, was a real treat--especially for the artists in the audience.

Here are just of a few of the gems Spalding bestowed upon her fans:


Translating an idea/emotion into a song:
"Some aspect of nature is trying to talk to us busybody human beings and we're not listening. The ideas for the songs are pure emotion that is diffused enough that so many people can connect to it on different levels and add their own storyline to it."

Learning from failure:
"Failure is where you have to get really creative. It's easy to do what you know. You start getting really creative when you have to start digging into things that you're terrible at. The process of growing is a process of constantly being uncomfortable.

"The reason I put electric bass in this project is because that's not my strength yet. I make mistakes and I learn from them. Failure is everything. One of the most valuable things I learned recently is that being an artist is not about being comfortable. What it really is about is gaining more awareness of what's out there and what's possible. As soon as you have enough of a foundation of what you know, you stand on that and reach for the next phase. So if you're a totally uncomfortable, miserable artist, that's great."

Courting inspiration:
"You have to stay on it. Keep working ion it. Steven Pressfield says that when you sit down to create, you feel like you're walking into the pitch black woods and it feels scary. You don't know what to do next. He says all you have to do is take that first step and the next step and then you keep you keep doing that, the muse alights on your shoulder to light the way. It might sound woo woo, but basically that's what happens, no matter how obscure or vast it seems, you just keep stepping into it."


Turning an idea into art:

"In the moment, the act of creativity seems miraculous because you have this amazing database of material. It's just so vast that you don't know how to express that moment. You can't intellectually know because it's so intuitive. The idea comes as intuition in this diffused image, so you're looking for the pieces that will make it real, but the only thing I can say is 'stay on it.'"

Appreciating the creative process:
"My hard drive crashed recently and I had years worth of compositions, ideas, sketches, fragments, and audio fragments. I lost it all. But you know what's crazy? It still counts. The process happened, so that got me somewhere. The creative process still counts."


Working with Q-Tip and other hip hop artists:
"It was great working with Q-Tip and I'm definitely interested in collaborating with anybody when there's something to be created. I would love to find a way to instrumentally bring out the beauty of the craft of hip hop. I think it gets lost a lot. The craft is incredible. What jazz musicans do instrumentally with the language of sonic, non-verbal sounds, hip hop artists do with poetry. Totally unbelievable.

"There's a TED Talk of a cat scan of a jazz musician improvising and an mc freestyling. The same areas of the brain light up, but in the MC's brain, the visual cortex also lights up. It's almost like not having the instrument allows something else to kick in. There's a stigma that MCs aren't musically educated, but you just can't equate hip hop to other music forms in that way."

Follow Demetria Irwin on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Love_is_Dope

Miller Paint Acquires Kelly-Moore's Puget Sound & Selected Assets ...

SpecialChem - Apr 26, 2012


Miller Paint announced a new alliance between Kelly-Moore Paints and Miller Paint. Beginning Monday, April 30, 2012, Miller Paint will acquire the Puget Sound business operations and selected assets of the nine Kelly-Moore Paints stores listed below. The nine stores will continue to operate and be immediately available to service existing Kelly-Moore business without interruption. The stores will close for a brief period beginning at 3:00 p.m. on Friday, April 27, and will reopen on Monday morning at 6:30 a.m.

  • 6101 Airport Way S., Seattle, WA (206) 767-3140
  • 12631 NE 85th Street, Kirkland, WA (425) 822-6092
  • 12012 Aurora Avenue N., Seattle, WA (206) 363-0520
  • 350 "C" Sunset Blvd. N., Renton, WA (425) 228-1750
  • 5009 196th Street SW, Lynnwood, WA (425) 672-2551
  • 4942 State Hwy 303 NE, Bremerton, WA (360) 479-4777
  • 5252 S. Washington Street, Tacoma, WA (253) 473-0221
  • 14205 Meridian E., Puyallup, WA (253) 840-2551
  • 3740 Martin Way E., Olympia, WA (360) 459-5411

The Kelly-Moore store located in Kent, WA, will close permanently on April 27, 2012, and be consolidated into the Miller Paint store in Kent located at the address below. The Kent Miller Paint store will carry the full line of Kelly-Moore products and will service the existing Kelly- Moore business beginning Monday, April 30, 2012, without interruption.

  • 8316 S. 259th Street, Kent, WA (253) 893-0070; store manager: Ryan Wells

With the transition of the Kelly-Moore business to Miller, their plan is to maintain the same fine Kelly-Moore store staff and professional outside sales personnel that currently service customers' business. Miller Paint's commitment is to maintain the same level of pricing for Kelly-Moore products, while extending the range of paint sundry products to include Miller Paint's sundry range. A new account at Miller Paint has already been established for customers with the same credit line and terms enjoyed with Kelly-Moore.

With the new strategic partnership, Miller Paint will have exclusive rights to sell the full range of Kelly-Moore paint products throughout Oregon, Washington and Northern Idaho. Along with Kelly-Moore's architectural and industrial product lines, Miller Paint will have full access to new Kelly-Moore products, color formulas, national specifications, CSI/Green Seal approvals, etc. Additionally, over time, the plan is to carry the Kelly-Moore line in select Miller Paint stores throughout the Pacific Northwest, including the Puget Sound market. This new alliance will allow them to provide the Kelly-Moore customer, with the same quality Kelly- Moore products that they purchase today, but at more store locations.

About Miller Paint Co., Inc.

Miller Paint is a well-established and respected manufacturing-retailer of paint and related products offering unique, high-quality products to both retail consumers and professional painting contractors through, now 49 Miller Paint stores located throughout Oregon, Washington and Northern Idaho. With the new strategic alliance, Miller Paint will have exclusive access to service all market segments with the full range of Kelly-Moore products in the OR, WA and Northern ID markets.

Miller Paint is an employee-owned company that was originally established by Earnest Miller, Sr. in 1890. Since its origin, when Earnest Miller first purchased a stone mill and began manufacturing its own paint, the rich heritage and history of Miller Paint has been centred in the Pacific Northwest. Their corporate headquarters, manufacturing plant and primary distribution warehouse is located in Portland, OR. The owners of Miller Paint are the 280 employees who work in the business today, and own 100% of the company. Miller Paint are active members of the ACA, PDCA, Guild CPO, All Pro, and Color Guild, organizations and associations which gives the company national purchasing power and representation in the US Paint industry.

About Kelly-Moore Paint Company, Inc.

Headquartered in San Carlos, Calif., Kelly-Moore is one of the largest employee-owned paint companies in the United States, where each employee-owner is committed to offering exceptional customer service. A leader and innovator of waterborne-coating technology, Kelly-Moore was the first major paint company to offer recycled paints, along with one of the largest selections of stock colors. Kelly-Moore is one of the few companies to continue to offer stock colors for superior color consistency. Trusted and preferred by professionals since 1946 as the "Painter's Paint Store" for its high-quality, performance and consistency, Kelly-Moore's paints are safe and easy to use for everyone. The company's environmentally friendly paint factory in San Carlos, Calif., is the recipient of four widely recognized and among the most stringent environmental awards. Kelly-Moore is dedicated to giving back to the communities it serves. This ethos is reflected in its corporate giving program and its numerous industry-leading green business accolades.

Source: Miller Paint

This document was provided by SpecialChem's editor. If you want to share your press release, please send it to chief-editor-pc@specialchem.com. SpecialChem reserves the right to refuse any article or news item.

The Painting Factory: Abstraction After Andy Warhol @ MOCA L.A. ...

Andy_Warhol_by_Jack_Mitchell-582x335

Beginning this Sunday, the Museum of Contemporary Art presents The Painting Factory: Abstraction After Warhol, on view through August 20, 2012 at MOCA Grand Avenue.

The exhibition explores abstract painting as one of today’s most dynamic forms of art, eloping with pop culture and technology, with work from Mark Bradford, Wade Guyton, Glenn Ligon, Kelly Walker, Andy Warhol, Christopher Wool and more.

Members are invited to preview the exhibition this Saturday, April 28 from 7-9pm with free admission. General admission begins Sunday. For more information, click here. (via)

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

GraphicSpeak » Dassault Systèmes Delmia scores competitive ...

The French automotive giant now uses Delmia in its powertrain division, displacing competitor Siemens PLM Software.

French automotive manufacturer PSA Peugeot Citroën has increased its deployment of Dassault Systèmes Delmia software for 3D digital manufacturing, by standardizing on it for the powertrain division. The deployment represents a competitive displacement of software from Siemens PLM Software. Delmia now supports assembly simulation, painting, factory layout, stamping, and powertrain at Peugeot, in a standardization of tools and methodologies in all major departments.

Peugeot Citroën’s new Dual Stock Transmission project, code-name Atrium, relies on Delmia technology for managing manufacturing processes and perform economic simulations.

Over the last few years Peugeot has been investing heavily in technological innovations for powertrain, including significant R&D investments to develop and market a new generation of engines and transmissions. One such innovation is the production of a new Dual Stock Transmission gear box with a double clutch. Peugeot says its use of Delmia makes it easy to make radical changes early in the manufacturing process without compromising the production schedule. The company uses Delmia to optimize implementations, reduce development costs, and perform economic simulations to evaluate productions costs before committing to specific factory layouts.

The transmission project, code name Atrium, included the use of Delmia to standardize a variety of heterogeneous work methods, says Emmanuel Chamouton, Powertrain, Digital Engineering and Metrology, PSA Peugeot Citroën. Delmia is now used in the Atrium project by more than 400 employees in seven production sites.

7 DIRT CHEAP Paintings « WOOF Factory

My dog Duke loves to dig. Sometimes he uncovers treasures like an old soggy rawhide another dog buried a few summers back.

In Duke’s honor I am selling 7 treasures dirt cheap. These are all original paintings. I poured my heart, soul and dog slobber into this art and now it can be yours for next to nothing. I need to sell this work and make room for new paintings. Please. Before one of my furkiddies sneaks it out to the backyard and buries it for Duke to recover in summer of 2014. I’m pretty sure no one would want a soggy painting.

Half Price Paintings>

7 dirt cheap paintings