Sometimes just going to the local convenience store is an international adventure. :)
Is that salsa music playing?
Link to: Earlier post about Budweiser Chelada
From the Shoreline-Lake Forest Park Arts Council website:
The Shoreline-Lake Forest Park Arts Council, which will celebrate its 20th anniversary in 2009, seeks an original graphic design for a new logo to be used on all marketing and collateral materials, such as posters, newsletters, letterhead stationery, etc., and on a redesigned website to launch at the end of the year. The artwork must include “Shoreline-Lake Forest Park Arts Council” in a creative way that conveys the Arts Council’s brand and messaging. The selected artwork and artist will be profiled on the website and to the press, and a $250 cash prize will be awarded to the selected artist.
Please send your submission to:
Shoreline-Lake Forest Park Arts Council
Attn: Logo Design
18560 1st Ave. NE
Shoreline, WA 98155
Or via email to info@shorelinearts.net
Deadline for submissions is October 31, 2008
For more information please call the Arts Council office at 206-417-4645.
Link to: Shoreline-Lake Forest Park Arts Council
August 14, 2008 – A Smog Watch has been called by the Puget Sound Clean Air Agency for King, Kitsap, Pierce and Snohomish counties.
People who are especially sensitive to pollution are advised to limit their time outdoors. Even healthy individuals should consider limiting their outdoor exercise, or plan to work out indoors.
The weather pattern from now through Saturday night will result in ozone pollution rising to unhealthy levels. The communities most impacted are south and southeast of the core urban areas of Everett, Seattle and Tacoma where air quality is predicted to decline to “Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups” on Friday and Saturday due to the production of ozone.
Fine particle pollution will also increase resulting in reduced visibility and likely creating “Moderate” air-quality conditions on Friday and Saturday in most areas throughout the Puget Sound region.
Air quality is predicted to improve overnight on Saturday as a push of marine air is expected to scour out the accumulated pollution in the Puget Sound region and return air-quality conditions to “Good” on Sunday. The Smog Watch will be cancelled at noon Sunday unless high temperatures and poor air quality persist.
The Department of Health reminds people with asthma and parents of children with asthma to limit outdoor activities during hazy, sunny, hot weather when ozone levels are high. Adults with lung and cardiovascular diseases (heart disease and stroke) should also be mindful of poor air quality.
This week’s Smog Watch is the second called this month. With a new, more stringent air quality standard for ozone, it will be difficult for our region to stay in compliance with the federal standard.
Ozone comes primarily from automobile tailpipes and “cooks” in heat and sunlight on hot days to produce smog. Exposure to ground-level ozone can reduce lung function, cause respiratory irritation, aggravate asthma symptoms, and weaken the immune system. Ozone has environmental impacts as well; studies show that ozone can damage agricultural crops and forests.
To learn more about smog and what you can to lessen the pollution leading up to it, visit www.pscleanair.org/airq/basics/weather/smog.aspx .
Check air-quality forecasts and current conditions atwww.pscleanair.org/airq/aqi.aspx# .
Link to: The Puget Sound Clean Air Agency home page