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Purdue Cooperative Housing

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Posted on Oct 16, 2008 in Features

‘Live, laugh, learn” is the tag line Purdue Cooperative Housing uses on its Web site to describe the university’s alternative to residence halls and Greek fraternities and sororities. Co-op housing students live and grow close to one another like family in the 12 various co-op houses. They enjoy free time socializing together and competing in… Continue reading.

Lost River Community Cooperative

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Posted on Oct 16, 2008 in Features

The store is a consumer-owned cooperative, located a block off the courthouse square in Paoli. And while anyone can shop there, co-op members occasionally get discounts on its many locally-produced products. But more than that, members always reap the benefits of supporting a store dedicated to locally-grown, all-natural goods. They have a store dedicated to… Continue reading.

Reeling in the Years

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Posted on Sep 16, 2008 in Features

 Nostalgia and family: double feature now playing at today’s drive-ins One Saturday evening in August, Misty and Robert Shaffer drove up to the Huntington Drive-In Theatre from their home in Gas City and backed their pick-up truck into an open slot, front row center. As their daughters, Gabrielle, 11, and Marrah, 9, went off to… Continue reading.

Black Pine Animal Park

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Posted on Aug 16, 2008 in Features

In the heart of Noble County, a sanctuary offers a little “R and R” for animals. But here, that stands for “rescue and retirement.” The Black Pine Animal Park provides a permanent home for former performing circus animals and displaced exotic “pets.” And while caring for these animals, park personnel stress responsible pet ownership to… Continue reading.

In the Wind

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Posted on Jun 16, 2008 in Features

  Electric cooperatives share in nation’s quest to secure the promise of renewables Green sprigs of young corn plants signaled spring’s eternal renewal. Their two or three leaves, looking oversized to the yet tiny stalk, waved in the gentle breeze blowing across the open fields  of rich brown earth. Nearby — and all around to… Continue reading.

Electrical Safety Is No Accident

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Posted on May 20, 2008 in Energy, Features

Hazards commonly found in older homes are increasingly causing fires and fatalities in the United States. However, by taking a few simple steps and by incorporating newer technology, you can protect your home from many of these dangers. Each year the Electrical Safety Foundation International sponsors May as National Electrical Safety Month. For this year’s… Continue reading.

A Salute to Student Art

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Posted on May 16, 2008 in Features, For Youth

Artist of the year ‘works’ at his art The work of art winning the Best of Show in this year’s cooperative calendar of student art contest depicts children at play. But “work” was the operative word for this piece of art. Sophomore Kenny Martin and his Whitko High School art teacher, Walter Malicki, both agreed… Continue reading.

Horse Sense

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Posted on Apr 16, 2008 in From the Editor

I’m writing from a chilly horse barn. I’m watching my daughter perched atop a willful, yet beautiful, horse named Tucker. They’ve spent most of an hour trotting — first in a clockwise circle, then counterclockwise. Over and over again, they travel together around the dressage barn going faster than I’ve seen them go before. After… Continue reading.

Lighting the Candles on Lincoln’s Life and Legacy

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Posted on Feb 17, 2008 in Features

 (This article originally appeared in the February 2008 issue of Electric Consumer.) Before Abraham Lincoln belonged to the ages, he belonged to the Ohio, Anderson and Sangamon rivers. Before he belonged to the Union he saved, he belonged to the fields and flatboats, borrowed books and backwoods, creeks and courtrooms of Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois…. Continue reading.

Worry Wart

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Posted on Feb 01, 2008 in From the Editor

When magazine mascot Alfred E. Neuman asked, “What, me worry?” he obviously didn’t know what he was saying. There’s a whole list of reasons to worry: the economy, the election, the war, crime, our children, our jobs, our overloaded schedules. Of course we’re going to worry! After 10 minutes reading the newspaper or listening to… Continue reading.

For more information on stamp collecting…

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Posted on Sep 13, 2007 in Features

American First Day Cover Society Contact: Douglas Kelsey Executive Director PO Box 65960, Tucson, AZ 85728-5960 520-321-0880 afdcs@aol.com www.afdcs.org A full-service, not-for-profit, noncommercial society devoted exclusively to First Day Covers and First Day Cover collecting. Publishes 90-page magazine, First Days, eight times per year. Offers information on 300 current cachet producers, expertizing, foreign covers, translation… Continue reading.

Stamps of approval

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Posted on Sep 13, 2007 in Features

Electricity is probably the most profound and pervasive man-made power to touch our lives. It’s a product and a service. Electricity is power plants and poles, wires and meters, outlets and switches. But it’s also the light in the night, the world at our fingertips, TV and music. Electricity is the roar of machinery from… Continue reading.

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