Archive for July, 2007

Selling Out Fastly

Tuesday, July 31st, 2007 | Shoppings | No Comments


Selling Out Fastly
by T

List Price: Publisher: Noisy Revolution
Salesrank: 960522
Released: 1997-01-01
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Tracklisting:
1. Bakery Girl - Lucky Charms
2. Fuss - Lucky Charms
3. Go Back to Mama - Lucky Charms
4. U.I.M.G. - Lucky Charms
5. 50 Fifty - Lucky Charms
6. Plain Damn Junkie - Lucky Charms
7. New Song II - Lucky Charms
8. Lily White Hammer - Lucky Charms
9. Hardest Part - Lucky Charms
10. Stella - Tsunami Poets
11. George - Lucky Charms
12. Everything - Tsunami Poets
13. Sok-O-Luv - Tsunami Poets
14. Aquarius - Tsunami Poets
15. Bear - Tsunami Poets
16. P.S.A. - Tsunami Poets
17. Gallery - Tsunami Poets
18. Gotta Move - Tsunami Poets
19. Go Nuts - Tsunami Poets
20. Greenroom - Tsunami Poets
21. Holly - Tsunami Poets

NEW Nite White ACP 10% Teeth Whitening 6pk Kit (Latest Product)

Tuesday, July 31st, 2007 | Shoppings | No Comments


NEW Nite White ACP 10% Teeth Whitening 6pk Kit (Latest Product)

List Price: $80.00 Publisher: Discus Dental
Salesrank: 58469
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Features:

  • Manufactured by DISCUS DENTAL / Z-CP Formula (Maximum Sensitivity Relief)
  • 3 syringes for 9 full mouth applications, each 2.6g and 3 dispensing tips
  • Mint Flavor (most popular)
  • Detailed instructions for using teeth whitening gels

  • Chocolate Puzzle Wedding Favors - Wedding Car

    Monday, July 30th, 2007 | Shoppings | No Comments


    Chocolate Puzzle Wedding Favors - Wedding Car

    List Price: Publisher: Escape Concepts
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    Features:

  • Set of 12 Chocolate Puzzle Wedding Favors
  • Unique imported Chocolates from Spain
  • Great for Bridal Shower Favors
  • Perfect for Wedding Favors
  • Great for Candy Wedding Favors

  • Mozart’s Magic Fantasy: A Journey Through ‘The Magic Flute’

    Monday, July 30th, 2007 | Shoppings | No Comments


    Mozart’s Magic Fantasy: A Journey Through ‘The Magic Flute’

    List Price: $13.98 Publisher: Children’s Group
    Salesrank: 21752
    Released: 1995-04-11
    Our Price: $12.99
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    Tracklisting:
    1. Lost In the Opera House: Oh Help Me
    2. Papageno And the Birds: The Best Birdcatcher
    3. The Queen Of the Night: You Must Free My Daughter
    4. Pamina Arrives, Papageno’s Magic Bells: A Girlfriend
    5. The Castle Of Sarastro: O Endless Night
    6. The Magic Flute: O Listen
    7. The Escape: Let Us Hurry
    8. Sarastro’s Welcome: The Gods Above
    9. The Attack Of the Queen: The Powers Of Night
    10. Pamina’s Lament: Oh, My Heart Is Broken
    11. In the Labyrinth: Seekers Of the Light
    12. Papageno and Papagena: Ring, O Bells
    13. Conclusion: Our Journey Is Over

    Customer Reviews:
    Great intro to opera!
    I’m a general music teacher for grades K-2. I was a vocal major in college, and I am an opera singer. I really wanted to do an introduction to opera with my 2nd graders, and I think this CD is a great tool to do just that. The Magic Flute is one of my favorite operas, and it’s a perfect story for kids. The child narrator really makes the opera more approachable for children, and the performers have very clear, expressive voices, so the story is easy to follow.

    Magic Flute interpreted for children
    Outstanding way to introduce children to the classics in opera. Seems certain that this exposure will make them love music and expand their horizons. Album is expertly professional.

    Incredible! A blessing for your kids and yourself
    I have listen to this CD in the car during trips for the last 10 years, when my kids were 4,6 and 7. They all adore it! It is the best way to get kids into classical music and onto the magic of Mozart. Highly reccomended!

    this cd is not for the parents, it’s for the children.
    …so don’t put it down because the voices annoyed you but not your child. Being 19, I can still remember how I felt about this tape, so I’d like to think this review is somewhat more useful.

    It is, in my opinion, the perfect introduction to opera. Growing up, I would listen to this whenever I was poorly and off school. I found the storyline exciting, sometimes scary, romantic, and yes the little girl annoyed me the older I got, but nevertheless, I used to imagine that I was her.

    In response to the reviewer who said that this does not give you an appreciation of Mozart, I disagree entirely. It is true, Beethoven Lives Upstairs is also wonderful, and probably is a big influence on why he is one of my favourite composers, but thanks to Mozart’s Magic Fantasy I am now enthralled by the actual opera, and have it as one of the most listened to playlists on my computer.

    The most hum-able melodies and the scariest and jolliest tunes from his opera are on here, and it is the equivalent of an abridged book.

    I would also highly recommend Beethoven Lives Upstairs, Mr Bach Comes to Call, and Peter and The Wolf - A Young Person’s Guide To The Orchestra.

    My daughter fell in love with Mozart!
    Mozart’s Magic Fantasy captivated my daughter at the tender age of two. She is five now and still LOVES to listen to this recording! It’s a bit different from the traditional version, but it contains much of the original music, along with a milder story line for the kids. After two years of listening to this version, we purchased the full Opera performance on video. Despite the fact that the entire performance is in a language my daughter doesn’t speak (German) she has watched the film presentation of The Magic Flute over and over again. Now she wants flute lessons…! It all started with the Classical Kids story, Mozart’s Magic Fantasy.

    Deep Economy

    Sunday, July 29th, 2007 | Shoppings | No Comments


    Deep Economy
    by B

    List Price: $14.00 Publisher: Henry Holt
    Salesrank: 990
    Released: 2007-05-18
    Our Price: $9.99
    Availibility: 1
    Costumer Rating:

    Customer Reviews:
    Hope for New Economic Perspectives
    With Deep Economy, Bill McKibben delivers a book that challenges conventional economic and political wisdom. Simply put, we can no longer pursue unlimited growth while producing more and more stuff. This point is heavily underscored as we approach the upper bounds of Earth’s natural resources and come to terms with the damage caused by operating under the current prevailing wisdom for over a century.

    McKibben points out that, while economic growth is beneficial up to a certain point, it fails to produce corresponding benefits when it passes that threshold. The increased wealth tends to accumulate in the pockets of those who are already wealthy, while the majority of people see little to no increase in income. The endless cycle of consumption tends to produce more inequality and insecurity, rather than prosperity and happiness.

    Luckily, McKibben proposes a solution to the dilemma: we should shift our focus from growing economies to growing communities. The pursuit of this goal will yield different rewards, but those rewards will be experienced on a fundamental human level.

    Many will view the examples cited in the book as too small to be meaningful, undertaken with an overly optimistic outlook that will be impossible to achieve. But change has to start somewhere, and in the present situation a little inspiration is welcome. Deep Economy provides that inspiration.

    A bit repetitive, but incredibly powerful.
    This book was required summer reading for me, but I would’ve read it even if it wasn’t. It’s a book with ideas people can believe in. It’s not hard to understand and I enjoyed it very much. I’ve learned a lot and know that it will have an effect on what I think about, talk about and do with my every day life.

    An interesting study on what is and what should be valuable
    McKibbon’s “Deep Economy” is a very readable history of industrialized economics coupled with a blueprint (albeit one that is unlikely to be followed) of how we might change our economic direction into one that is more sustainable and beneficial on an individual and communal level.

    The idea that most clearly sticks out to me in this work is that of the “quality of life index,” which could also aptly be called the “happiness index.” That happiness within a society can and should be quantifiable, and that as a quantity, it should be factored into the overall values of this or that economic program is an interesting one, and also one that seems worth exploring in economics classes as well as sociology ones.

    The focus on local business and production also serves as a rallying point for people on both ends of the political spectrum. While buying locally and organically appeals at surface immediately to the crunchiest of hippies, the boost of small business and the opportunities that McKibbin’s plan offers swings the door open for the staunchest of the right-wing business class.

    This book, if not an obvious plan for going forward, serves at least to give all of us an opportunity to explore a world where our fundamental economic groundwork is altered. It is hard to put down, and once you do, it’s hard not to let it challenge your traditional understanding of what the economy is and should be.

    Changed the way I see the world
    I must admit, I wasn’t particularly enthused about “Deep Economy” when I picked it up… it was one of several shorter texts required for my senior seminar class as a business major. I’m so glad I stuck with it… because it’s had a lasting impression upon me.

    I won’t give all the details about the book… several reviewers have already done a great job with that.

    All I will say is that the issues that McKibben covers in “Deep Economy” are so very relevant, and I find that he has a way of cutting down to the very core of so many of the problems facing our society. I was mostly disaffected when I picked this up, and now I can say I’ve been transformed into an environmentally and economically responsible localvore. This should be required reading for everyone.

    Divorcing “More” from “Better”
    Many books have come along in the last several years that try to explain why MORE is not making us HAPPIER. Cliff notes: research indicates that health is most important to our happiness, followed by making at least $10-13,000 per year. Close relationships count, too. Marriage is a plus. Kids….not so much.

    As McKibben points out in the opening pages, “More” and “Better” began to be linked in the post-war economy. But not anymore.

    McKibben writes, “On the list of important mistakes we’ve made as a species, this one seems pretty high up. A single-minded focus on increasing wealth has driven the planet’s ecoligical systems to the brink of failure, without making us happier. How did we screw up?”

    McKibben continues by both charting our screw-ups, and pointing out useful ways that we can live happier and healthier lives. The main tenet of the book is that we must divorce the ideas of “More” from “Better.” At a point, “More” means finding a place to store it all.

    If you’ve read The Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan, Deep Economy’s Chapter 2, “The Year of Eating Locally,” will feel like a review. On the plus side, McKibben manages to make a conclusion that took Pollan an entire book to suggest: eating locally (1) is better for the environment (doesn’t require as much fossil fuel from farm to table); (2) is better for the local economy (keeping the profits close-by); 3) tastes better (tomotoes allowed to ripen on the vine for their whole lives develop all the sugars and nutrients that make tomatoes taste like tomatoes); and (4) feels better to support farmers you can meet and with whom you shake hands.

    In subsequent chapters, McKibben bounces among topics ranging from local radio, a shortened workweek, commute times, and consumer culture. To emphasize his points, he calls on others’ research and hooks them to his own global insights from experiences in China, Guatemala and other countries.

    My favorite thing about McKibben’s book is that it is accessible, and therefore a very solid start to helping us re-imagine what we as individuals can stand for…and against in building better lives for ourselves and future generations. McKibben has solidified the hunches that many of us feel - that living more simply and more locally is a key to personal happiness, and good for our communities, too.

    Locked in the Architecture

    Sunday, July 29th, 2007 | Shoppings | No Comments


    Locked in the Architecture

    List Price: Publisher: Neil Campbell & Nicole Collarbone
    Released: 2007-12-17
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    BenQ White Collection - 50 x CD-R - 700 MB ( 80min ) 52x - storage media

    Saturday, July 28th, 2007 | Shoppings | No Comments


    BenQ White Collection - 50 x CD-R - 700 MB ( 80min ) 52x - storage media

    List Price: Publisher: BenQ
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    American Medical Association Political Action Committee Membership

    Saturday, July 28th, 2007 | Shoppings | No Comments


    American Medical Association Political Action Committee Membership

    List Price: Publisher: American Medical Assn %Ampac
    Our Price: $60.00
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    Indian Heaven

    Friday, July 27th, 2007 | Shoppings | No Comments


    Indian Heaven
    by M

    List Price: $5.95 Publisher: Touchstone Pr
    Salesrank: 130963
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    ANNA GRIFFIN VICTORIAN RUBBER STAMP SET

    Friday, July 27th, 2007 | Shoppings | No Comments


    ANNA GRIFFIN VICTORIAN RUBBER STAMP SET

    List Price: Publisher: ALL NIGHT MEDIA PLAID ENTERPRISES
    Salesrank: 99794
    Our Price:
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    Features:

  • EMBELLISHED VICTORIAN ALPHABET STAMP SET
  • BY ANNA GRIFFIN, CELEBRATED DESIGNER
  • 60 FOAM MOUNTED STAMPS
  • 2 NON-TOXIC PIGMENT INK PADS
  • IMAGINE IT - CREATE IT!

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