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Sunday, May 31, 2020

Ft. Leonard Wood tests hundreds of soldiers and trainees, 70 tests come back positive - KY3

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FT. LEONARD WOOD, Mo. -- After testing hundreds of soldiers and trainees over a recent two-day period, military health professionals at Fort Leonard Wood say 70 test results came back positive.

Military health professionals with the General Leonard Wood Army Community Hospital conducted COVID-19 testing on nearly 500 Soldiers and trainees assigned to the 1st Battalion, 48th Infantry Regiment.

"Due to the aggressive mitigation strategies in place, the number of infected and exposed individuals has been minimized to the greatest extent possible, and contained within one training unit," according to an update from U.S. Army Fort Leonard Wood.

Affected individuals have been isolated or quarantined as appropriate and in accordance with CDC guidelines, per military health officials. All impacted buildings, dining facilities and training areas within the unit area have also been sanitized per CDC guidelines.

"Upon arrival to Fort Leonard Wood, all 500 Soldiers and trainees were medically screened and tested by GLWACH health professionals at the beginning of their 14-day controlled monitoring phase of basic combat training and all test results at that time were negative. Four days after the end of the group’s controlled monitoring phase, a trainee reported to Harper In-processing Health Screening Facility with symptoms, and immediately, all 500 were tested again, resulting in the increased positive test results.

All those who tested positive are being cared for and monitored according to CDC guidelines and have been isolated to prevent the potential spread to others. Most of those who tested positive are asymptomatic and none have been hospitalized at GLWACH," according to the update from U.S. Army Fort Leonard Wood.

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Ft. Leonard Wood tests hundreds of soldiers and trainees, 70 tests come back positive - KY3
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Ft. Leonard Wood tests hundreds of soldiers and trainees, 70 tests come back positive - KY3

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FT. LEONARD WOOD, Mo. -- After testing hundreds of soldiers and trainees over a recent two-day period, military health professionals at Fort Leonard Wood say 70 test results came back positive.

Military health professionals with the General Leonard Wood Army Community Hospital conducted COVID-19 testing on nearly 500 Soldiers and trainees assigned to the 1st Battalion, 48th Infantry Regiment.

"Due to the aggressive mitigation strategies in place, the number of infected and exposed individuals has been minimized to the greatest extent possible, and contained within one training unit," according to an update from U.S. Army Fort Leonard Wood.

Affected individuals have been isolated or quarantined as appropriate and in accordance with CDC guidelines, per military health officials. All impacted buildings, dining facilities and training areas within the unit area have also been sanitized per CDC guidelines.

"Upon arrival to Fort Leonard Wood, all 500 Soldiers and trainees were medically screened and tested by GLWACH health professionals at the beginning of their 14-day controlled monitoring phase of basic combat training and all test results at that time were negative. Four days after the end of the group’s controlled monitoring phase, a trainee reported to Harper In-processing Health Screening Facility with symptoms, and immediately, all 500 were tested again, resulting in the increased positive test results.

All those who tested positive are being cared for and monitored according to CDC guidelines and have been isolated to prevent the potential spread to others. Most of those who tested positive are asymptomatic and none have been hospitalized at GLWACH," according to the update from U.S. Army Fort Leonard Wood.

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2 seriously injured in Wood County crash - Toledo Blade

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Who's Who in the Sun City Camera Guild - John Wood - Your Valley

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John Wood, the current president of the Camera Guild of Sun City, was born in Pennsylvania and was always intrigued by his dad’s box Brownie. After moving to Phoenix with his family in 1966, a friend introduced Mr. Wood to serious photography.

Mr. Wood processed his first roll of film and was hooked for life. He has worked as a commercial/industrial photographer, shot freelance work, digitally restored old photos, and managed a large format color print department involved with outputting large color photographs, signage and banners, both in Arizona and back east.

Mr. Wood has been a member of the Professional Photographers of America and Industrial Photographers of Arizona and is a current member of the Photographic Society of America. After retiring and moving to Sun City, photography as a passion remained a part of his being.

Joining the Camera Guild offered a chance for Mr. Wood to share his knowledge and connect with like-minded photographers. That sense of community is all he could want out of the Sun City experience.

“Photography is all around us,” he said, “waiting to be incorporated into our life experiences. I have been lucky enough to mesh photography into my life.”

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Wooden Turbine Towers Promise To Push Wind Industry To Greater Heights - Forbes

Harrison’s Design + Furniture makes buying new pieces for your home fun - The Oakland Press

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Who's Who in the Sun City Camera Guild - John Wood - Your Valley

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John Wood, the current president of the Camera Guild of Sun City, was born in Pennsylvania and was always intrigued by his dad’s box Brownie. After moving to Phoenix with his family in 1966, a friend introduced Mr. Wood to serious photography.

Mr. Wood processed his first roll of film and was hooked for life. He has worked as a commercial/industrial photographer, shot freelance work, digitally restored old photos, and managed a large format color print department involved with outputting large color photographs, signage and banners, both in Arizona and back east.

Mr. Wood has been a member of the Professional Photographers of America and Industrial Photographers of Arizona and is a current member of the Photographic Society of America. After retiring and moving to Sun City, photography as a passion remained a part of his being.

Joining the Camera Guild offered a chance for Mr. Wood to share his knowledge and connect with like-minded photographers. That sense of community is all he could want out of the Sun City experience.

“Photography is all around us,” he said, “waiting to be incorporated into our life experiences. I have been lucky enough to mesh photography into my life.”

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Saturday, May 30, 2020

Kennedy: Furniture making an unintended consequence of COVID-19 cocooning - Chattanooga Times Free Press

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I've always been fascinated by the so-called law of unintended consequences.

Often applied to economics, it's the principle that when a solution is put in place to solve Circumstance A, it can inadvertently cause Circumstance B.

A good example of this is the current situation involving unemployment benefits in the United States. As part of a federal pandemic relief package, laid-off workers can receive their normal state unemployment benefits plus a $600-a-week bonus.

There's no doubt that this is helping millions of Americans weather the highest unemployment rate since the Great Depression.

The unintended consequence is that many workers are drawing more in unemployment pay than they made on their jobs, creating a short-term disincentive to return to work.

I'll let others weigh in on the "right and wrong" of this. I offer it only as a good example of an unintended consequence.

Everywhere you look during this time of isolation and social distancing, there are unintended consequences to the measures being taken to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

Even at home, I can see examples.

* Losing weight. I've heard that some people are gaining weight during their time at home. For me, it's been just the opposite.

I'm about 20 pounds under my average adult weight now, and the last 10 pounds have been shed since March. I had to go to Belk the other day to buy new pants that fit. I now have small, medium and large sizes in my closet. I'm currently wearing the "smalls," but I wouldn't bet on that lasting for long. My weight tends to yo-yo.

I attribute this weight loss to two stay-at-home factors. One is fast-food deprivation; the other is getting more exercise.

In normal times, I stop at a convenience store on the way to work most mornings for a bacon, egg and cheese biscuit. Then for lunch I usually grab a deli sandwich. At home, it's coffee for breakfast and a small, loaf-bread sandwich for lunch. I probably save 500-1,000 calories a day in the swap. That adds up.

Also, I'm using part of the hour I've saved by not commuting to the office to lengthen my daily walks to 40 minutes. Before, they were about 30 minutes long, and some days were so busy that I had to skip.

* Loving yard work. A couple of weeks ago, our 13-year-old son and I decided to visit a local nursery to buy hanging flower baskets for the front porch.

The place was so crowded that we never made it inside. The parking lot was full, and people were parking at crazy angles in the grass up to a block away. I thought to myself, "What the heck?"

Then, on my walk yesterday, one of my neighbors marveled that she is spending more time working in her backyard than she has in years.

For my part, I've started looking forward to mowing the lawn. I have begun cutting the grass before it needs it. Even through the roar of the Briggs & Stratton engine, it almost feels like meditation time.

* Learning a craft. One of the most gratifying parts of this stay-at-home period is watching our two sons turn our garage into a furniture-making enterprise.

Our 13-year-old already has three orders for his handmade tables, and our 18-year-old completed a live-edge table for the hall in our house.

They both recently spent a couple of days learning woodworking skills from their maternal grandfather on a farm in upper East Tennessee. They returned home with lengths of maple, walnut, cherry and white pine to create more handmade goods.

Under normal circumstances, the younger son would be peddling his pressure-washing business and our older son would be working at summer camps.

Instead, they have created their own jobs without ever leaving home.

Sometimes, unintended consequences are more like accidental gifts. They are the silver linings in a strange, dark time.

Email Mark Kennedy at mkennedy@timesfreepress.com.

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Kennedy: Furniture making an unintended consequence of COVID-19 cocooning - Chattanooga Times Free Press
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Houston furniture stores look for silver lining in pandemic - Houston Chronicle

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After nearly two months of a virtual citywide retail shutdown, a sign that reads “$8 Million Store Closing Sale” sounds like a business owner’s worst nightmare.

For Meredith O’Donnell, owner of Meredith O’Donnell Fine Furniture, it’s a result of the luckiest decision she ever made.

Several months ago she decided to leave an expensive, 17,000-square-foot showroom on Post Oak in Uptown Houston and reopen in a similar-sized space at half the cost in the growing design district on Old Katy Road.

She and her staff had planned a massive sale to get rid of not only her showroom’s inventory, but more in a warehouse that could fill her store four times over.

“I’d rather sell my inventory than pay someone to move it,” O’Donnell said of her furniture and accessories marked down 40 percent to 70 percent. Her new business plan includes a new Meredith O’Donnell Fine Furniture showroom side by side with another new venture, the city’s first dedicated Hickory Chair showroom, exciting news for the area’s interior design community.

Ultimately, the pandemic simply slowed down O’Donnell’s plans, making her inventory-reduction sale last longer and delaying just a little her plan to reopen her new showroom and her Hickory Chair partnership. Right now her Post Oak store closes every Wednesday so the staff can rest and replenish what’s left on the floor.

“Sometimes you work at a job and it’s just a job, and you wonder when you can retire. Right now we are so pumped up about it,” O’Donnell said. “The last several months have been strange and discouraging and frightening in some ways, yet there were only a few times I really felt afraid. I feel calm about our plans going forward.”

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, furniture stores have been considered essential businesses that could remain open, though most did not because traffic was so slow and owners feared exposing their own staff to the virus.

Even Jim “Mattress Mac” McIngvale, owner of Gallery Furniture, said when few customers were coming into the store, he kept his staff busy distributing sandwiches and other food to those in need.

The loss of income has been devastating to national chains that have fallen like dominoes. The list of retail stores filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy or closing altogether is growing: Neiman Marcus, Pier 1, Stage Stores, Tuesday Morning, JCPenney, J. Crew and Lord & Taylor.

Houston-area home-furnishings store owners say they can’t really make up for their lost income, but they have used the free time to adapt to a new market, update websites and plan for their future.

Suzanne Coppola added dozens of photos and a 360-degree virtual shopping tour to her antiques store’s Laurier Blanc website, and Courtney Barton has been rebranding her Mela & Roam home-goods boutique to a simpler-named Courtney Barton, located inside The Gray Door antiques store on Ferndale.

At Maison Maison in River Oaks, Suzanne Duin and her small staff looked at the things on their to-do list they never seemed to have time to do and started getting them done.

One staffer who was a new mom was already working mostly from home; another manned the shop; and Duin traveled between her home, store and warehouse.

“This was initially scary, but we turned it into an opportunity to do some things that were never at the top of the list in importance,” Duin said. “We uploaded (photos of) inventory and cleaned up and revamped our website. In a regular economy, we would never have had the time to do that.”

Part of the website upgrade is to accommodate Duin’s new line of lampshades that will launch in mid-July. They’re made of natural fibers such as seagrass and water hyacinth and are described by Duin as “elegant enough for an English manor house.”

At John Brooks & Co. in the Decorative Center Houston, Martha Lurie and her staff closed the to-the-trade store on March 25 — starting to return to the showroom in early May — and continued working from home to stay in touch with clients and handle orders that were in the works. They also spent more time that usual on social media, drawing attention to the johnbrookshouston.com website.

Lurie secured Payroll Protection Plan funding to continue to pay her staff’s salary but knows it won’t last forever.

“We’re good through July 1, then we have to treat this like a business and not like a family. We are sales-based and commission-based in compensation. If shipments don’t come back to a decent level, that affects our compensation,” Lurie said, noting that when furniture manufacturers and freight companies stopped doing business, it affected what she could offer.

So now she’s finding new revenue streams, doing home staging for real estate agents.

“I hope people will focus on their homes now, rather than taking big vacations or buy gas-guzzling SUVs. Maybe they’ll do their work from (new home) offices,” Lurie said.

Lurie hasn’t calculated the pandemic’s effect on her store’s revenue.

“That’s scary to even contemplate. Our financials and revenues are based on shipments, and we had very few shipments in April and very few shipments in May. I don’t even want to think about it, but it’s a significant amount,” she said.

Beyond the pandemic itself, the economic impact will be harsh and long lasting, she said, noting that business survival goes way beyond a two-month shutdown.

Lurie, who’s been in business in Houston for 35 years and survived the gas and oil crash of the 1990s and the 2008-10 recession, now is focused on surviving the current crash in oil prices.

“We’ve seen oil and gas crash and burn, and it gets ugly and doesn’t come back quickly. The effects of COVID-19 were immediate and just unbelievable. The next headlines will be about what’s happening in the Houston economy because of gas and oil,” Lurie said.

“They’re predicting oil and gas won’t come back for maybe two years. Long term, that’s my bigger concern. I think I can make it through this,” she added. “To have that (oil crash) on top of (COVID-19) is very difficult for any business — I don’t care if you’re a restaurant, a furniture store or you’re a dentist.”

diane.cowen@chron.com

Sign up for Cowen’s Access Design newsletter, delivered to your inbox Tuesdays, at houstonchronicle.com/accessdesign.

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Large crowds in Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo - WOODTV.com

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Wood vs. Composite Deck: What's the Best Choice for You? - Motley Fool

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Adding a deck to your home is a great way to make the most of your outdoor space. But not all decking material is created equal, and you may be torn between natural wood or composite, a material designed to mimic the look of wood. Here's how to weigh your options.

Aesthetics

You're no doubt familiar with the classic look of wood -- it's elegant and it goes well with a wide range of home exteriors. Composite, though designed to look like wood, isn't actual wood. From an aesthetic standpoint, that's a good thing or a bad thing, depending on your preferences. With composite, you may get more color choices, though keep in mind that wood can always be painted if you have your heart set on a specific shade. For example, if you have gray siding, you can look for gray composite decking or paint your wood gray.

Maintenance

If you're the type of homeowner who doesn't have a lot of time or patience for maintenance, you may want to steer clear of wood. With a wooden deck, you generally need to sand its surface every few years, as well as seal it. You should also plan to stain or paint your deck every other year, and you may need to pressure-wash it annually. Composite, on the other hand, doesn't require sanding, sealing, staining, or painting at all. All you really need to do is give it a thorough clean every year or two.

Upfront cost

The cost to install a composite deck is roughly double the cost of wood when you factor in the higher materials cost plus labor. If your budget for installing a deck is limited, you may choose to stick with wood. But keep in mind that composite requires less maintenance over time so that, depending on the size of your deck, at some point, you could break even. The question is really how much you're willing or able to spend upfront.

Durability

The downside of wood is that it can warp, rot, splinter, and fade over time. Maintaining your deck properly can help prevent all of these things, but you may reach a point when you need to replace a wooden deck -- if not the entire structure, then at least the top that's most exposed to the elements. With composite, you don't have to worry about the same level of wear and tear. You may find that a composite deck lasts twice as long as a wooden one.

What's the right choice for your deck?

Though composite decking is the more expensive choice initially, over time, it can pay for itself and save you a world of maintenance. But if you don't like the look of composite, wood may be a better choice despite the maintenance involved. Think about what works best for your taste and budget, and hopefully you'll land on the right decision. And no matter which material you choose, be sure to get your share of quotes so you're able to compare your options and snag a great deal.

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Wood vs. Composite Deck: What's the Best Choice for You? - Motley Fool
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Google offers employees $1K each to buy office furniture - Furniture Today

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MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. – Furniture retailers might want to offer some shopping incentives to Google employees. The company, which employs approximately 115,000 people worldwide, will be giving every employee $1,000 to purchase office furniture such as an ergonomic chair or desk.

“Because we still expect that most Googlers will be largely working from home for the rest of this year, we’ll be giving each Googler an allowance,” said Google CEO Sundar Pichai in a blog post. “We’re investing more in the work-from-home setup to make sure Googlers have what’s needed to be productive and comfortable.”

Pichai said that, beginning on July 6, the company will start to re-open buildings so that about 10% of the workforce can return on a limited, rotating basis. Google plans to have rigorous health and safety measures in place to ensure social distancing and sanitization guidelines can be followed.

The company plans to bring back additional employees during the September timeframe on a voluntary basis through the end of the year.

“We continue to study all the data and feedback you’re sharing on your current experience,” he said to employees in the blog post. “I believe that ultimately these insights will lead to more flexibility and choice for employees as they consider how to work in the future.”

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Anniversary: Wood — 50th - Journal Gazette and Times-Courier

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Anniversary: Wood — 50th  Journal Gazette and Times-Courier

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Wood Sheriff | News, Sports, Jobs - Parkersburg News

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Friday, May 29, 2020

Wood County’s 10th COVID-19 case visited Jammer’s in Wisconsin Rapids, another bar in Pittsville - Wisconsin Rapids Tribune

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WISCONSIN RAPIDS- The Wood County Health Department confirmed Friday the county's 10th case of coronavirus in an asymptomatic person who recently visited two local bars. 

Health officials say the person visited Blue Bayou Pub in Pittsville and Jammers in Wisconsin Rapids the evening of May 24 and was in close contact with others whose names are not known. The person visited the establishments prior to being tested and while potentially contagious, the health department said.

Health officials are working to determine how the person became infected and who he or she may have been in close contact with.

The health department asks anyone who was in those establishments Sunday evening to self-isolate and call the health department at 715-421-8911 for further direction. Anyone who would like to be tested can do so from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Marshfield Fairgrounds.

RELATED: Wood County's first death related to COVID-19 was of a man in his 30s with underlying issues

RELATED: Wood County to host drive-thru COVID-19 testing event in Marshfield

Symptoms of the virus include fever, cough, shortness of breath, sore throat, headache, fatigue, body and muscle aches, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, loss of smell and loss of taste.

“It is important to continue following the advice that has been shared to stay safe and keep our community safe and healthy," said Sue Kunferman, director and health officer for the Wood County Health Department. "Just because you can do something, doesn’t mean you should. It takes all of us together to control the spread of the pandemic; be mindful of the choices you make and how they may impact others."

The health department recommends people continue to follow safety guidelines, such as frequently washing your hands, covering coughs and sneezes, avoiding touching your face, staying home when sick, practicing social distancing, avoiding large gatherings and crowds and wearing cloth face coverings when physical distancing is difficult to do.

Contact USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin reporter Melissa Siegler at msiegler@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter at @Marie2Melissa.

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Wood County Sheriff Releases Statement on Minneapolis Case - OnFocus

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In Minneapolis, George Floyd, 46, died after a police officer knelt on his neck for an extended period of time during an arrest on May 25. The four Minneapolis officers involved have since been fired. The case has gained national attention.

Wood County Sheriff Shawn Becker released a statement addressing the incident:

With the recent tragedy of the death of Minneapolis citizen George Floyd at the hands of law enforcement, I know we should all try to wait to comment until the investigation is complete. I also know that is nearly impossible, especially considering the appalling video footage of the incident we have seen.

I’ve tried to imagine what the officer(s) was doing or thinking as his actions took Mr. Floyd’s life…and I just can’t think of anything reasonable or justifiable. There has to be accountability, and I’m confident there will be at many different levels.

From the officer that took Mr. Floyd’s life, his assisting officers, supervisors, and beyond. We all feel frustration as we all know this will take time. We want justice now, but have to wait and trust the criminal justice system will do its job.

There is further tragedy we are seeing unfold right now to a city and community that many of us have connections to. On a personal level, my wife was born in Minneapolis, and has many relatives still living there. We visit there often. It is a gorgeous place to visit and stay. I am worried, and wish this never happened. I hope leadership at all levels works together to address this. However, I know that this will take time.

I ask of all you, please do not judge all law enforcement officers for the terrible actions a few took. I speak for our sheriff’s department, each deputy/corrections officer takes pride in putting on the uniform to represent and protect you. They are great people that I would give my life for, just as I would for you.

Shawn Becker
Wood County Sheriff

Marshfield Police Department Addresses Minneapolis Situation

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Dane DeHaan, Anna Wood celebrate baby boy's birth - UPI News

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May 29 (UPI) -- Dane DeHaan and Anna Wood are celebrating the birth of their second child.

The actor and the actress, both 34, announced Thursday on Instagram that they recently welcomed a son, Bert Apollo.

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DeHaan shared a photo of himself with Wood, their 3-year-old daughter, Bowie Rose, and baby Bert.

"And just like that, we are a family of four.... Welcome to the [world] Bert Apollo DeHaan!!!" he captioned the post.

Wood shared the same picture and referenced a previous miscarriage in a post on her own account.

"He is our rainbow baby. Not just because of the loss we suffered before we conceived him. He also brings a hope and joy in this scary sad time for our nation and world," the actress wrote.

"He was born weeks early in nyc in the middle of a global pandemic," she said. "He is already a brave tiny warrior who has reminded us to live, love, and stay present in his five short days earthside. We can't wait to keep learning from him."

DeHaan and Wood's Chronicle co-star Michael B. Jordan and actresses Julianna Guill and Molly Ephraim were among those to congratulate the couple in the comments.

"Hello Bert!!!! You are darling!!!!! What a wonderful beautiful family!!!! Heart bursting!!!!" Guill wrote.

DeHaan and Wood married in June 2012 and announced in December that they were expecting their second child.

"DeHaan Party of Four comin' atcha in 2020!!!" Wood said on Instagram.

DeHaan is known for the films The Amazing Spider-Man 2, Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets and The Kid. Wood played Jamie Sawyer on Reckless and Maya Dobbins on The Code.

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Socially distanced summer good for sales of outdoor furniture, swingsets, bikes - Bizwomen - The Business Journals

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Socially distanced summer good for sales of outdoor furniture, swingsets, bikes - Bizwomen  The Business Journals

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Central Wisconsin COVID-19 update: Juneau, Marathon, Portage, Waupaca, Wood counties rise one case each - Wisconsin Rapids Tribune

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USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin will provide a daily update on COVID-19 cases in central Wisconsin, including confirmed test results, new cases, deaths, negative test results and recovered patients, when available. The following information was provided Thursday afternoon by local health departments and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services.

Adams County

Confirmed cases: 4

New cases since Wednesday: 0

Deaths: 1

Recovered patients: 3

Negative test results: 556

Clark County

Confirmed cases: 32

New cases since Wednesday: 0

Currently hospitalized: 0

Deaths: 4

Juneau County

Confirmed cases: 23

New cases since Wednesday: 1

Currently hospitalized: 0

Recovered patients: 13

Deaths: 1

Lincoln County

Confirmed cases: 7

New cases since Wednesday: 0

Recovered patients: 2

Deaths: 0

Negative test results: 660

Pending results: 22

Marathon County

Confirmed cases: 45

New cases since Wednesday: 1

Recovered patients: 21

Deaths: 1

Negative test results: 2,609

Portage County

Confirmed cases: 11

New cases since Wednesday: 1

Recovered patients: 5

Deaths: 0

Negative test results: 1,619

Taylor County

Confirmed cases: 2

New cases since Wednesday: 0

Negative test results: 368

Waupaca County

Confirmed cases: 28

New cases since Wednesday: 1

Recovered patients: 18

Deaths: 1

Negative test results: 2,229

Waushara County

Confirmed cases: 8

New cases since Wednesday: 0

Recovered patients: 6

Deaths: 0

Negative test results: 956

Wood County

Confirmed cases: 10

New cases since Wednesday: 1

Recovered patients: 8

Deaths: 1

Negative test results: 1,724

Wisconsin

Confirmed cases: 16,974

New cases since Wednesday: 512

Recovered patients: 10,384

Deaths: 550

Negative test results: 220,719

RELATED: Three Abbyland Foods employees test positive for COVID-19; about 60 people who had contact asked to quarantine

RELATED: Hodag Country Festival organizers cancel despite receiving Oneida County permit

RELATED: Big Bull Falls Blues Fest in Wausau postponed to 2021

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Donald E. Wood | Falmouth Obituaries - CapeNews.net

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Donald E. Wood, who spent many years as the proprietor of the former Lawrence’s Restaurant in Falmouth Heights, died at his home on May 19. He was 89.

He was the husband of Shirley A. (Childs) Wood. They had moved to their home in Falmouth Heights in 1957 and had been married for 52 years at the time of her death in August 2009.

He was the son of Clifford A. and Idamae (Yeager) Wood. Born in Barnstable, he lived in Falmouth for his entire life, aside from his time in the military.

After graduating from Lawrence High School, Mr. Wood became a member of the United States Army. He served during the Korean War and was honorably discharged.

Mr. Wood took over the operation of Lawrence’s from his father. Originally opened as a bakery in the early 1890s by Lyman M. Lawrence and then expanded and renamed Lawrence’s Sandwich Depot, the restaurant was sold in 1926 to Mr. Lawrence’s partner, Clifford Wood. Mr. Wood rebuilt the restaurant in stucco and stone in 1930 and expanded the kitchen to serve full meals. Donald Wood ran the restaurant with his wife until 1986, when he sold it.

The restaurant on Nantucket Avenue had served more than four generations of customers and was a popular spot for the summer community as well as year-round residents.

On the day of the Falmouth Road Race, Mr. Wood and his wife would be at the restaurant from 5 AM to closing and it would be filled with customers all weekend. For years, Nike gave parties at Lawrence’s; personnel from the company would find out the shoe size of all the employees who would be working the race day, and each received a pair of sneakers.

Mr. Wood was fond of hosting an annual slideshow of postcards and other memorabilia from fans of the eatery, who shared stories and more from as early as the 19th century.

During the off-season Mr. Wood was a self-employed general contractor performing carpentry and other home improvements.

Aside from his work commitments, he tended a substantial garden and, with his family, enjoyed clamming at Bournes Pond in East Falmouth.

Mr. Wood served as a Falmouth Town Meeting member and was a member of the Falmouth Lodge of Elks.

He leaves his daughters, Nadia Conrad of Niceville, Florida, Frances Smith of Falmouth and Rebecca Steinmetz of Montreal, Canada.

A celebration of the life of Donald Wood is being planned for a later date.

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Thursday, May 28, 2020

Lord of the Rings Reunion! Elijah Wood, Orlando Bloom, Ian McKellen Gather for Josh Gad's Show - PEOPLE

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Lord of the Rings Cast Reunion! Elijah Wood, Orlando Bloom Gather for Josh Gad's Show | PEOPLE.com

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The 6 Best Places to Buy Outdoor Patio Furniture Online - KCTV Kansas City

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The 6 Best Places to Buy Outdoor Patio Furniture Online  KCTV Kansas City

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AWC updates its report fire resistance of wood - Construction Specifier - The Construction Specifier

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The American Wood Council (AWC) has released an updated report on fire resistance of wood members and assemblies. Photo © BigStockPhoto.com
The American Wood Council (AWC) has released an updated report on fire resistance of wood members and assemblies.
Photo © BigStockPhoto.com

The American Wood Council (AWC) has released an updated Technical Report (TR) 10, Calculating the Fire Resistance of Wood Members and Assemblies.

“The emergence of mass timber as a competitive product in the construction marketplace has increased designers’ interest in the fire performance of mass timber. Recognizing that increased interest, the principal changes to this edition provide new examples and background on mass timber members and assemblies,” said Brad Douglas, AWC vice-president of engineering. “TR10 will assist in the design of efficient and building-code-compliant loadbearing wood members and assemblies by providing background information, examples of calculations, and end-use tables for a variety of structural wood products.”

Primary revisions to TR10 include the following.

  1. Expansion of design provisions for calculating the contribution of gypsum board protection in Chapter 4, “Design Procedures for Exposed and Protected Wood Members.” The revised provisions provide information for calculating both the increased structural fire resistance and thermal resistance provided by various types of protection.
  2. Calculation of thermal separation times were updated in Example 5 (Exposed Cross-Laminated Timber floor design) and Example 6 (Exposed Cross-Laminated Timber wall design) to more closely estimate the benefits of protection.
  3. Example 8 (Protection of Steel Ledger Connection) and Example 9 (Protection of Beam-Column Connection) were updated to include information on use of gypsum board as required to protect connections of mass timber members in the new Type IV-A and IV-B buildings permitted in the 2021 International Building Code (IBC); and a new Example 10 (Protection of Tension Splice Connection) was added at the request of designers seeking an example of a completely concealed mass timber connection.

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Global Wood Pallet Demand to Reach 5.8 billion units in 2024 - News-Herald.com

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Global Wood Pallet Demand to Reach 5.8 billion units in 2024 - Yahoo Finance

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CLEVELAND, May 28, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Like most industries, the global pallets industry faces a high degree of uncertainty due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. However, in the short term, the pallet industry is likely to be less impacted than many others, due to the essential nature of pallets.

Freedonia Group logo

Sustainability Among Decision-Making Considerations

Pallet manufacturers and users are increasingly considering sustainability factors as they make decisions on materials and products, particularly in high-income countries. Emphasis on environmental issues is expected to benefit producers of plastic pallets, as these are long-lasting products that can be made with 100% recycled material. Similarly, corrugated and molded pulp pallets are desirable for their low environmental impact. However, wood pallets will continue to dominate the global market.

See the study Global Pallets for these trends and more.

Wooden pallets are by far the most common type of pallet, accounting for 92% of unit demand and 83% of sales in value terms in 2019. Plastic pallets are a distant second. Wood pallets account for the vast majority of pallet consumption in every major pallet market around the world, as these products have a strong combination of cost efficiency and performance. Other types of pallets are largely limited to niche uses.

Global demand for wood pallets is forecast to rise 3.7% per year to 5.8 billion units in 2024, valued at $52.5 billion. Manufacturers choose either block or stringer pallets based on considerations like compatibility with automated systems, general ease of handling, customer requirements, and load capacity. Stringer pallets account for the majority of demand, although use of these is concentrated in mature markets, and many developing markets make greater use of block pallets.

About The Freedonia Group – The Freedonia Group, a division of MarketResearch.com, is a leading international industrial research company publishing more than 100 studies annually. Since 1985 we have provided research to customers ranging in size from global conglomerates to one-person consulting firms. More than 90% of the industrial companies in the Fortune 500 use Freedonia Group research to help with their strategic planning. Each study includes product and market analyses and forecasts, in-depth discussions of important industry trends, and market share information. Studies can be purchased at www.freedoniagroup.com and are also available on www.marketresearch.com and www.profound.com.

Press Contact:
Corinne Gangloff
+1 440.842.2400
cgangloff@freedoniagroup.com

Cision

View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/global-wood-pallet-demand-to-reach-5-8-billion-units-in-2024--301066267.html

SOURCE The Freedonia Group

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Court approves Robert Levin's bid to revive Levin furniture brand - TribLIVE

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Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Indonesia Revokes Ending Legality License for Wood Exports - EcoWatch

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By Hans Nicholas Jong

The Indonesian government has backed down from a decision to scrap its timber legality verification process for wood export, amid criticism from activists and the prospect of being shut out of the lucrative European market.


On May 11, the Ministry of Trade issued a regulation revoking its decision from February to no longer require Indonesian timber companies to obtain export licenses that certify the wood comes from legal sources. That earlier decision caught environmental activists, the Ministry of Environment and Forestry, and even timber businesses by surprise, prompting a widespread outcry.

Sulistyawati, the trade ministry's director of forestry product exports, said that with the revocation, the export process would go back to the previous system. She said the revocation was in accordance with a request from the Ministry of Environment and Forestry.

Under the trade ministry's controversial February regulation, which would have taken effect on May 27, exporters would no longer have needed to obtain licenses verifying that their timber and finished wood products come from legal sources. The so-called v-legal ("verified legal") licenses are at the heart of Indonesia's timber legality verification system, or SVLK, which took the country a decade to develop and implement in an effort to tackle illegal logging.

The European Union, one of the key markets for Indonesian timber and finished wood products, recognizes the SVLK as the basis for importing timber from Indonesia into its market. Scrapping the standard would have jeopardized exports to the EU, experts warned. Activists were also quick to criticize the move, saying it would open up the black market for illegally logged timber.

Businesses, meanwhile, were worried the decision would undermine hard-won gains for the reputation of Indonesian timber, which was heavily associated with illegal logging in the past.

A recent poll by Gadjah Mada University showed that nearly half of 137 timber businesses surveyed felt ending the v-legal license requirement for exports would harm their business. Industry groups in key export markets have also raised questions about the policy, including the International Wood Product Association (IWPA) in the United States and the Australian Timber Importers Federation (ATIF).

The Indonesian Furniture Entrepreneurs Association (Asmindo), a trade group, welcomed the government's U-turn and reinstatement of the v-legal license requirement. Robert Wijaya, the deputy head of regulation reviews at Asmindo, said the rationale that the licensing requirement put an onerous burden on exporters was baseless. He said data from the national statistics agency, the BPS, showed Indonesia's furniture exports increasing since the implementation of the SVLK.

In 2019, Indonesia exported $1.95 billion worth of wood furniture, a 14.6% increase from 2018.

"So it's not true that the SVLK is said to be hampering exports," Robert said.

Muhammad Kosar, from the Indonesian Independent Forest Monitoring Network (JPIK), which keeps track of the SVLK's implementation, said the trade ministry's about-face showed the lack of coordination between government institutions. As a result, he said, different government departments have different interpretations of the importance of the system.

Krystof Obidzinski, a timber legality expert at the European Forest Institute, agreed that appreciation of the SVLK and associated export agreement with the EU might have declined in recent few years. Thus it's important to communicate the importance of the SVLK to ministries other than the environment ministry, the main proponent of the system, so that the SVLK isn't jeopardized in the future, he said.

"Communication and understanding of the SVLK outside the environment ministry are very minimal," Obidzinski said. "Maybe that's because [of] staff turnover or other interests. So to increase export and [strengthen] the SVLK, it's important to build bridges with other ministries so that the level [of understanding] can be the same."

Under the Voluntary Partnership Agreement (VPA), signed in 2013, all timber shipped to the EU from Indonesia must be certified under the SVLK, which aims to track the chain of custody of timber products and ensure that timber is harvested in compliance with Indonesian law. The agreement also requires Indonesia to commit to SVLK certification for all timber exports — not just to the EU — as well as timber traded in the domestic market.

That stringent implementation of checks at every stage of the process was the justification for cited by the trade ministry for dispensing with the requirement at the end stage — exports. In making this argument, the ministry adopted the main talking point of the Indonesian Furniture and Craft Association (HIMKI), a trade body that has been at the forefront of the lobbying efforts to drop the SVLK requirement for producers of finished wood items. It argued that if a piece of timber has already been legally certified at the logging stage, then there's no need to continue with legality checks further on down the line, including for exporters.

HIMKI chairman Sunoto denounced the trade ministry's backtracking, insisting the SVLK requirement made it difficult for producers to export their furniture products overseas.

"Two months ago, we were already happy because the SVLK had been cancelled at the downstream level [exporters]," he said. "Now it is resurrected. It's not that we don't agree with the SVLK. HIMKI doesn't agree if the SVLK is implemented at the downstream level."

This argument was echoed by Industry Minister Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita during a government meeting on May 22. He suggested that the SVLK requirement should only be made mandatory at the logging stage, but not at the downstream level.

To address the concerns over the high cost of SVLK certification, the environment ministry will issue a regulation containing several changes to the system. Under the regulation, it'll be the government who verify SVLK certification, not third-party agencies, according to Bambang Hendroyono, the secretary-general of the environment ministry.

"So in the [planned] ministerial regulation, we will make sure that small-and-medium businesses no longer have problems for export, especially to China and Korea," he said.

Reposted with permission from Mongabay.

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Adorably Derpy Canines and Chunky Hounds Masterfully Chiseled into Wood by Misato Sano - Colossal

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Art

#carving #dogs #sculpture #wood

May 27, 2020

Grace Ebert

All images © Misato Sano and Kohei Shikama

Misato Sano ensures that she always has a loyal companion by her side, albeit with a little less slobber and fur. Based in the Myagi prefecture of Japan, the sculptor carves wooden busts and full figures of well-groomed dogs, preferring to leave the small gouges from her chisel on their textured exteriors. Despite being stationary, the pups have typical canine qualities like plump bodies, panting tongues, and pink bows adorning their ears.

Each figure has a distinct facial expression, whether curious, joyful, or contemplative. “When I make a work, I express the multifacetedness of a woman (myself and an object of admiration) as a dog,” she said in a statement. “Dogs are always loyal to their masters. I make my work with the hope (that) they will also nuzzle up to their audience.”

To dive deeper into Sano’s process and see some of the real-life canines that inspire her sculptural works, head to Instagram, and check out her forays in ceramics, embroidery, and drawing on her site. You also might enjoy these carved pets by Gerard Mas.

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member and support independent arts publishing. Join a community of like-minded readers who are passionate about contemporary art, apply for our annual grant, and get exclusive access to interviews, partner discounts, and event tickets.

 

 






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