How to Make a Great Hot Protein Porridge:A Total Approach Health
Posted: June 17, 2012 at 2:16 pm
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How to Make a Great Hot Protein Porridge:A Total Approach Health
June-Marie Raw Food Health and Fitness Health a quick wave and nature videos 005 – Video
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June-Marie Raw Food Health and Fitness Health a quick wave and nature videos 005 - Video
June-Marie Raw Food and Fitness Health assorted working in pool and garden videos 006 – Video
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June-Marie Raw Food and Fitness Health assorted working in pool and garden videos 006 - Video
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June-Marie Raw Food Health and Fitness Health video from my new funhugs1 channel – Video
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June-Marie Raw Food Health and Fitness Health video from my new funhugs1 channel - Video
June-Marie Raw Food Health and Fitness Health video from my funhugs1 channel – Video
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Harriet Bishop assembly honors commitment to health and fitness
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Posted: Saturday, June 16, 2012 2:00 pm | Updated: 2:11 pm, Fri Jun 15, 2012.
A whos who of Minnesota celebrities, including a Viking and a princess, converged on the gym at Harriet Bishop Elementary School in Savage recently. Those famous faces werent the main attraction, though. The hubbub wasnt for the royalty or the Norseman, but rather for two modest women committed to healthy living.
Annalisa Hultberg, Smart Choices health and wellness coordinator for the Burnsville-Eagan-Savage School District, and Jenny Hinman, Harriet Bishops administrative assistant and school wellness coordinator, were named Minnesotas Fuel Up to Play 60 Program Advisors of the Year.
Fuel Up to Play 60, a joint nutrition and fitness partnership between the National and Midwest dairy councils, the National Football League and the United States Department of Agriculture, furnished the morning assembly. The event featured a visit from Minnesota Vikings mascot Viktor the Viking, former Vikings linebacker Matt Blair and current Princess Kay of the Milky Way Mary Zahurones.
I have to thank Annalisa, said Hinman of the honor. She did most of the paperwork.
Hultberg secured two $4,000 Fuel Up to Play 60 grants for nutrition and physical activity in District 191. Those grants helped support everything from running clubs at Hidden Valley, William Byrne and Rahn elementary schools to cafeteria-based initiatives designed to help students make better dietary choices. Students have been doing taste testing yogurt parfaits, low-fat dairy, whole grains and veggies in their lunchrooms.
Ive seen a lot more interest in nutrition from the students, Hinman said. Its kind of cool.
And things have been kicked up a notch at Harriet Bishop.
Students host healthy cooking segments on the schools daily news broadcast, H.B. Buzz, and the buildings dance troupe just closed out its third season.Hultberg gave the credit to her fellow honoree when it came to divulging why Harriet Bishops success stood out.
I think Jenny has been huge in motivating staff, she said. Shes pushed students to take the lead.
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Harriet Bishop assembly honors commitment to health and fitness
Steuben Rural Health Network offers ‘Fitness in the Parks’
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The Steuben Rural Health Network, a program of the Institute for Human Services, will be feature Fitness in the Parks this summer in Bath.
Everyone is welcome and encouraged to bring their children on Friday afternoons for an hour of games and fun in the sun.
Two health educators from the Steuben Rural Health Network will provide free physical activities to children aged 2-12. This program will last for four weeks. Sessions will take place every Monday between July 9-30 from 1-2 p.m., in the center square in Bath.
Fitness in the Parks is a program created by the Steuben Rural Health Network to encourage active, outdoor play to keep children healthy and happy during the summer months when they have a break from school. SRHN staff will show children in attendance how to stay physically active while having a blast! The event is free to all children; however, care givers are asked to remain at the park in case of emergencies. In the event of rain, please call the number below to see if the session will still be taking place.
For more information or to register for this free workshop, call 607-776-9467, ext-229.
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Steuben Rural Health Network offers ‘Fitness in the Parks’
Councilmen encourage village outreach programs
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Sunday, June 17, 2012
THE old maxim "health is wealth" has never rang true nor been clearly more understood than today in this age of physical fitness regimes, cornucopia of health spas and keen awareness for physical well being.
Understandably not everyone is able to reach this level of wellness considering various limitations such as but not limited to poverty and scarcity of resources, financial.
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Seen in this light, the effort of the private and public sector to extend health services for free in the community has been continually commended and extolled for trying to achieve the noble purpose of looking out for the health and well being of those considered less fortunate in life.
In relation to this, a proposed resolution has been filed by the City Council seeking to direct all punong barangays in the city to allow and encourage the conduct of medical and dental outreach programs in their respective barangays for the benefit and interest of the poor and less privileged constituents of the City.
Recognizing the health services being offered by many charitable organizations who volunteer to render free medical and dental services by engaging in this outreach programs, Councilman Edison Bilog, in introducing the legislative measure to the august body, hopes to secure the commitment of the punong barangays in allowing the conduct of these programs within the barangays.
The councilman cited in his proposal that undergoing regular medical check-ups are often financially burdensome to those lacking in resources even if this is conducted by the government and offered at a discount.
He also observed, more often than not, that the poor only seek medical assistance when they already feel that something is seriously wrong with their health.
Bilog added the barangays must take advantage of the free medical and dental outreach programs offered by charitable organizations as a way to foster the health and well being of their constituents.
Retirement communities take tax dispute to Board of Equalization
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Each facility - Montereau, Tulsa Jewish Retirement and Health Care Center and Baptist Village of Owasso - will argue before the board that it should be exempt from paying property taxes because it is a nonprofit continuum-of-care facility, according to protests filed with the Tulsa County Clerk's Office.
State law defines a continuum-of-care facility as a home, establishment or institution providing nursing facility services. These include services at assisted living centers and adult day care centers.
A hearing before the equalization board is the second step in the formal appeals process available to all taxpayers. The first step is an informal hearing at the Assessor's Office.
Montereau, Tulsa Jewish Retirement and Health Care Center and Baptist Village of Owasso each participated in the informal hearing process, and the original assessments were reduced.
Before filing their protest with the Board of Equalization, Montereau and Tulsa Jewish Retirement and Health Care Center each took the unusual step of filing petitions in Tulsa County District Court, asking the court to order Assessor Ken Yazel to classify their properties as tax-exempt, as the Assessor's Office has done in years past.
At a court hearing last week, Tulsa County District Judge Mary Fitzgerald denied Montereau's request, saying the court did not have jurisdiction to take such action.
"The Legislature is clear ... in saying that proceedings before the county assessor and the boards of equalization and appeals therefrom shall be the sole method by which assessments or equalizations shall be corrected or taxes abated," Fitzgerald said, adding that "it is not up to this court to circumvent the administrative processes that are set out."
Immediately after Fitzgerald's ruling, Tulsa Jewish Retirement and Health Care Center filed its protest with the Board of Equalization and dropped its suit against the Assessor's Office.
The Board of Equalization on Wednesday will be asked to address two issues: whether all of the property at the continuum-of-care facilities should be exempt from paying property taxes and, if not, how much the assessment should be on the properties.
The equalization board is made up of three members: Ted Kachel, Warren Morris and Ruth Gaines. The Tulsa County commissioners, the Oklahoma Tax Commission and a district judge or a majority of the Tulsa County district judges each appoint one member.
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Retirement communities take tax dispute to Board of Equalization