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Sometime this fall, Target will begin offering a 5% discount to customers who use its credit card for their purchases at the chain. So is this a good deal — or not?

Just about every discount offer raises the same question, since it is genuinely difficult to assess what a fair price really is. In most cases, discounts are intended to entice us to spend more, not less. Target says, for instance, that it hopes its offer will prompt its "better and best" customers to buy more at its stores, boosting its sales.

Therein lies my conundrum: My family buys most of its groceries at SuperTarget, and we spent close to $5,000 at the chain’s discount stores in 2009. So the offer would save us money — close to $250 a year — and I might be able to avoid trips to other stores.

Switching cards, however, would mean giving up the benefits of our travel-rewards card, which we estimate are worth $80 to $100 a year on our Target purchases. It also requires carrying around another credit card, paying another bill and — worse — trying to resist the temptation to buy extra, unnecessary stuff because of the discount.

While saving money is important, many discount offers have a darker side. Here are some of the ways we get lulled into thinking we are getting a good deal when we may not be:

– Membership has its delusions. In a 2007 paper on membership fees such as those charged by Costco, Harvard Business School professor Michael I. Norton and Columbia Business School professor Leonard Lee found that consumers equated the fees with especially low prices, even when the prices weren’t all that great. Assuming they were getting great deals, shoppers tended to stock up,rings, spending more than they planned and buying "enough pasta to outlive a nuclear winter," according to the professors.

When we pay for something in advance, we want to get the full value. So those who subscribe to Amazon.com’s Amazon Prime service, paying $79 for a year’s worth of two-day shipping,bangles, are more likely to spend more on the website, just as we might pig out at an all-you-can-eat buffet.

– Loyalty is expensive. My own wallet is full of loyalty cards — Chico’s, Barnes & Noble and Staples, to name a few — all intended to reward high-volume customers. The average consumer belongs to six such programs, says Joseph Nunes, a marketing professor at the University of Southern California’s Marshall School of Business. Once we belong, we are likely to spend more to qualify for a coupon or earn cash back — and then forget to spend it.

"All loyalty programs count on a certain percentage of consumers not redeeming," Prof. Nunes notes. In addition,earrings, he says, "once you get closer and closer to a reward, you want it more and more" and may spend more to get it.

– Free is seductive. Various studies have found that many people will respond more positively to an offer that appears free, even if it really isn’t. For example, consumers prefer a product that costs $5 and includes free shipping to an item that costs $2.50 and requires $2.50 to ship.

"When something is free, we have an overly excited reaction," says Dan Ariely, a Duke University behavioral economics professor and author of "The Upside of Irrationality." He marvels, for instance, at how long people will stand in line at Ben & Jerry’s on free cone day. But he asks, "How much time would you spend in line to get $1.75?"

In fairness, it is hard to compare an ice-cream cone and cold,Charm pendant, hard cash. A couple of years ago, Prof. Ariely asked about 50 people who were buying a car at a dealership what they would buy if they didn’t purchase a car. Most didn’t have an answer — and none of them saw the cost of the car as equivalent to, say, a tuition bill or multiple vacations.

Prof. Ariely says people should get more comfortable comparing apples and oranges — that is, an impulse purchase with something they truly value. Learning to weigh trade-offs is a good start to becoming a smart shopper.

So is making an extra trip to hunt for specials. Marketing professors Stephen Hoch, at the Wharton School, and Edward Fox, at Southern Methodist University, studied "cherry pickers," people who did most of their grocery shopping at one store, but then went to a second store the same day to take advantage of specials, such as soft drinks on sale. Even factoring in the extra time spent shopping, they found that cherry pickers actually can save big money.

Weighing the hassle involved also is important, of course, whether you are switching credit cards, surfing the Web for discounts or clipping coupons. When it comes to the Target card, I’m not yet convinced that the extra savings are worth the trouble.

Lauren Michitsch discovered bargain hunting site Groupon.com when she was looking for a Christmas present for her boyfriend last year. Now she’s hooked.

"I’m a huge coupon freak," laughed Michitsch, 26, of Charlotte,watches, who has used the site to find deals on everything from exercise classes to haircuts.

Online coupon sites such as Groupon, Restaurant.com, LivingSocial.com and HalfOffDepot.com have proliferated over the past couple years and their business is growing, said Dr. Kapil Bawa, a marketing professor at Baruch College in New York.

Online coupons are a relatively new phenomenon and still less popular than traditional clip-and-save coupons, but users number in the millions, said Dr. Tarun Kushwaha, an assistant marketing professor at UNC Chapel Hill.

These national sites are reaching out to local markets through Facebook, Twitter and traditional media and offering huge discounts, like a dental checkup and teeth whitening for $65 or a $30 meal for only $12.

But while these coupons can be a great deal for consumers, businesses might not be prepared for the flood of customers who take advantage of the deals.

"There are also cost issues associated with coupons," Bawa said. "You have to compare the cost to the benefit."

The concept behind sales promotions has most likely existed since trade began, said Dr. Ashwani Monga, assistant marketing professor at the University of South Carolina.

The appeal is that these deals lower costs for consumers and give companies a chance to promote their products, he said.

People love a great price and if a company wants to improve its weekday business or promote a new product, coupons can be a great way to fill the seats and bring in new faces, said Dr. Jennifer Aaker, a marketing professor at the Stanford University Graduate School of Business.

The hope is that once customers try something and like it, they’ll keep coming back for more.

"It’s short-term cash flow and long-term promotion," said Nick LaVecchia, owner of LaVecchia’s Seafood Grille, who said he made money off a Groupon offer.

But while most businesses said the deals brought in more customers, some said that they expected the majority of that new business to be temporary and that the promotions took a chunk out of revenues. With some of these sites, companies can end up making a small fraction of the original price after paying the sites a cut for offering the deal.

"When you do something like this, it totally blows everything out of the water…You find yourself having to work harder to get the same amount of profit per sale," said Jacob Penick, general manager of Terrace Cafe in Charlotte’s SouthPark neighborhood,tiffany, which has done deals on HalfOff Depot.com , Groupon and Restaurant .com .

Some coupon users said they often spend more than the coupon value, giving companies a chance to make up some revenue. But others stick to the discount budget.

"I never spend over," said Devon Reid, 30, of Charlotte, who is signed up for deals from several coupon sites.

Terrace Cafe owner Stewart Penick said the Groupon offer brought in plenty of new customers,tiffany, but many used the deal for the cheaper lunch and breakfast menu, rather than the intended dinner menu.

The discount knocked off an estimated $15,000 to $18,000 from what the restaurant would have made charging full price for the meals people bought, he said.

That kind of hit in revenue can be damaging, particularly when crowds of coupon users dominate business activity.

Pride Conditioning in Plaza Midwood had more than 500 people sign up on Groupon for a 68 percent discount on a fitness boot camp. The response was "overly successful," said owner Doug Seamans.

Seamans said Groupon marketing representatives encouraged him to offer a better deal to get a greater response. But he never expected this many new clients.

"I was honestly kind of dumbfounded," he said.

Groupon won’t run a deal without complete merchant approval, but the site wants offers to appeal to customers, said Groupon spokesperson Julie Mossler. (The Observer, through its website, offers a deal every weekday with HalfOffDepot.com. The newspaper’s parent corporation, McClatchy Inc., has announced a partnership with Groupon.)

Most people who had complaints about sites said their issues were with companies not following through on deals, not the site provider itself. Most sites offer refunds or credits if a business can’t honor coupons.

Seamans has asked people to commit to time slots up front to guarantee an immediate spot because he just doesn’t have space for every walk-in coupon user. His operating expenses exceed his profit from the coupons, and taking on so many new clients would require him to kick out paying, longtime customers.

"I have to leave space for those people because they’re my base," he said.

Seamans estimates that only 5 to 25 percent of his new clients will become regulars. That’s the potential caveat to an influx of new business from coupons, Bawa said.

"Coupons don’t build additional sales," he said. "What they do is build additional sales in the short-term."

Users of coupon sites said a great deal can motivate them to splurge or try something new. But not every new face sticks around — some simply don’t like a place and some just want to bargain hunt.

"I won’t buy anything full price," said Lisa Dickinson, 42, of Huntersville, who said she occasionally returns to restaurants she likes.

Since coupon sites don’t discriminate between first-time buyers and loyal product users, companies can also end up subsidizing dollars they would have gotten anyway, said Dr. Richard Staelin, a marketing professor at Duke University.

"I use these myself," he said of the coupons. "My favorite restaurant offers a … discount, so it’s a bargain and I go there all the time."

Whatever the flaws, coupons, particularly online sites, will likely stick around and get even more personalized and accessible, Monga said.

And companies may have to use coupons to stay competitive, Bawa said.

"If the whole industry starts going toward these discounts, you either adapt or die," said Jacob Penick of Terrace Cafe.

Coupons grow

Newspapers have long offered Sunday coupons,pendants, and many are now offering half-price coupons, too. In the case of the Observer, the company offers a deal every weekday with HalfOffDepot.com through CharlotteObserver.com. In addition, the Observer’s parent corporation, McClatchy Inc., has announced a partnership with Groupon.

Attention, Pizza Hut(R) Mayors on foursquare. Get a free single order of breadsticks with your order next time you check in!

Today, Pizza Hut is announcing a promotion with location-based service foursquare, becoming one of the first pizza chains to launch a national promotion with foursquare in the United States. The promotion rewards the "Mayor" of each restaurant with a free single order of breadsticks with the purchase of a large pizza.

The deal begins tomorrow and is currently planned to run through the end of the year. The "Mayor" of each Pizza Hut location on foursquare must show on their phone that they are the "Mayor" in order to receive the special. This offer is only valid for Dine-in and Carry Out orders placed at the restaurant. The "Mayor" special can only be redeemed once a day at each participating location, and there can only be one "Mayor" per restaurant per day.

"Through past experience, we’ve learned that our customers are spending a considerable amount of time using social media and mobile tools, increasingly incorporating them into their daily lives," said Brian Niccol, Chief Marketing Officer at Pizza Hut. "We see this promotion with foursquare as a win-win situation – loyal,pendants, digital-savvy customers will be able to take advantage of a fun promo, while we hope to see a bump in repeat traffic from Mayors looking to take advantage of this offer."

"We love to see QSRs using the foursquare platform to reward loyal patrons and bring in new customers,Atlas charm bracelet," said Tristan Walker, Director of Business Development for foursquare. "We’re very excited that Pizza Hut will be reaching out to their customers through foursquare on such a large scale."

Over the past decade, Pizza Hut has surprised and delighted fans by continuing to expand their menu of digital offerings, emerging as a leader in the digital space. In October 2008, Pizza Hut launched a Facebook ordering application, where customers could place orders without leaving the Facebook interface, and last July,key rings, Pizza Hut became the first national restaurant chain to launch an iPhone ordering app, an award-winning service that led to approximately $1 million in sales in three months.

For more information on Pizza Hut, visit PizzaHut.com or interact with Pizza Hut at facebook.com/pizzahut and twitter.com/pizzahut. And "Mayors," we’ll see you at Pizza Hut!

About Pizza Hut

Pizza Hut, America’s Favorite Pizza, delivers more pizza, pasta and wings than any other restaurant. The only pizza company to be named a top ten franchise in 2009 by Entrepreneur Magazine, Pizza Hut began 50 years ago in Wichita, Kansas and today operates nearly 10,000 restaurants in more than 90 countries. Pizza Hut, Inc. is a subsidiary of Yum! Brands, Inc. (NYSE: YUM). To check out what’s new at Pizza Hut visit pizzahut.com.

About foursquare

Founded in 2009, foursquare creates mobile phone applications that are designed to make cities easier to use and more interesting to explore. Foursquare combines friend finder functionality,bracelets, social city guide elements, and game mechanics to reward people for seeking out new experiences. Visit http://foursquare.com/ for more information.

Rally(R), the leader in Agile application lifecycle management (ALM), today announced new filtering features and performance metrics in its AgileZen product. New, user-defined filtering makes it easy to focus on and measure the most important work items. In addition, through Rally’s new non-profit discount program, educational and non-profit organizations now receive a 50% discount on Unlimited, Plus and Pro AgileZen accounts with a one-year service commitment.

"The whole value of Kanban is visualization, so we’ve added new filtering features without sacrificing the simple, elegant way AgileZen visually represents your work in process," said Niki Kohari, product manager for AgileZen at Rally. "Board filtering is much more effective at managing multiple lines of work on one board than the ‘swim-lane’ techniques some tools use."

New, user-defined filtering makes it easy for users to focus on what’s most important by fading or hiding content that doesn’t apply to a filter. Filtering also enables users to:

Filter by colors, tags, owners, priority,money clips, story size, text and more

Toggle between fading or hiding information

Create, name and save filters to re-apply them at any time

Share filters with individuals and teams

"AgileZen’s biggest strength is its clarity and simplicity. It provides a visual way to represent our workflow, and it’s flexible enough to allow us to continuously improve our processes," said Sibylle Schwarz, head of project management at SilverStripe. "By reducing complexity, AgileZen allows us to make more informed business decisions and focus on our main priority, which is delivering the best web experiences to our clients. In over a decade as a project manager, I’ve never seen developers or clients as excited about a project management tool as they are about AgileZen."

In the coming weeks, user-defined filtering applied to the performance screen will enable teams to better forecast outcomes and measure process improvements. Additional enhancements to the performance screen will include the ability to define custom date ranges for performance metrics and the addition of the following new metrics that enable users to tune value streams to find and reduce waste in work processes:

Throughput displays exactly how many stories were completed in a specified time frame

Wait Time displays the cumulative amount of time on average stories spend idle, waiting for a hand-off

Blocked Time displays the cumulative amount of time on average stories spend blocked

Non-profit Discount Program

Rally also launched its educational and non-profit discount program for AgileZen customers. Employees of qualified educational or non-profit organizations will receive a 50% discount on AgileZen Unlimited, Plus and Pro accounts with a one-year service commitment. In addition,bracelets, Rally offers open source projects a free AgileZen account that supports one project and unlimited users. Simply sign-up for a free account on AgileZen’s pricing page, and then send an email with links to the project web site and source control repository. Discounts are subject to certain conditions and limitations. Please contact giving@agilezen.com for details.

Pricing and Availability

AgileZen is immediately available in Unlimited, Plus, Pro, Personal and Free account subscriptions. Visit AgileZen’s pricing page for a comparison of account subscriptions, providing different levels of access to projects, collaborators, file storage, email notification, IM notification and SSL encryption. For more information about how AgileZen helps users stay organized and work efficiently, visit www.agilezen.com.

About Rally

Rally is the recognized leader in Agile application lifecycle management (ALM). We are dedicated to helping organizations embrace Agile and Lean development practices to achieve superior ROI, reduce risk and increase productivity. According to a study by QSM Associates, software-driven companies that rely on Rally’s Agile ALM products and services are 50% faster to market and 25% more productive than industry averages. The company’s experienced services group, including training through Agile University, guides companies through the organizational change required to become innovative, Agile businesses. Rally’s products, including AgileZen, currently support more than 3,cuff Links,000 corporate customers, 68,tiffany,000 projects and 123,000 users in 60 countries. For more information, visit www.rallydev.com.

Rally, the Rally logo, Rally Software Development, and AgileZen are trademarks of Rally Software Development Corp. Third-party trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

In ancient Egypt,key rings, minerals were used to enhance features and to provide a little color, while the Romans used oil-based perfumes to scent their bath water. But cosmetics since that time have evolved with a growing list of ingredients and an increasing potential for irritation.

But who is checking into the safety of cosmetics?

One issue that has gotten attention is lead in lipstick. As a result, the Food and Drug administration created a standard test that found 0.09 ppm to 3.06 ppm of lead in the lipsticks tested. The standard test is now used when there is a question about lead levels in lipstick.

You might be surprised at the chemicals found in cosmetics and their potential dangers. The Environmental Working Group provides a safety guide to cosmetics and ranks beauty products by the potential hazards. Visitors to the group’s website can search by product or brand and learn about the chemicals used and their possible side effects.

The group’s Campaign for Safe Cosmetics co-produced a seven-minute video about the dangers of cosmetics. The video, which was released July 21, points out the lack of oversight into what chemicals are used in makeup and other beauty products.

But the video is not without its detractors.

The Personal Care Products Council released a statement by spokeswoman Kathleen Dezio, who said the "’shockumentary-genre’ video bears no relationship to the ‘real’ story of cosmetics."

"This video is an unfortunate attempt to generate fear about an alleged public health risk from cosmetics that is unwarranted. It is repugnant to suggest that cosmetic companies would manufacture,Charm bracelet, and the U.S. Food & Drug Administration would allow them to market, products that are dangerous or contain toxins that cause cancer or any other disease.

It is absurd to suggest that the men and women in our industry would market products that could cause harm to themselves and their families," Dezio’s statement read.

The same day the video was released, a bill was introduced in Congress to increase oversight on ingredients for cosmetics. Three members of Congress introduced the Safe Cosmetics Act of 2010 (HR 5786), which seeks to close loopholes in federal law that allow companies to use virtually any ingredient in cosmetic and personal care products — even chemicals that are known to damage human health and the environment.

According to a press release by Illinois congresswoman Jan Schakowsky, one of the bill’s sponsors, the $50 billion cosmetic industry uses 12,500 unique chemical ingredients. Many have never been assessed.

So what’s a plain-faced girl to do? Looking at cosmetic labels may be a good start.

At Les Champs Elysees Day Spa and Salon on North College Avenue, customers can find Aveda products. Owner Margaretet Nowak said customers come to the salon for Aveda’s more natural products.

The company has become well-known for using natural ingredients and for reformulating some of its products to remove parabens, chemicals used as preservatives in some cosmetic products.

Although the FDA has not yet raised a red flag on paraben in cosmetics, it has acknowledged that "although parabens can act similarly to estrogen, they have been shown to have much less estrogenic activity than the body’s naturally occurring estrogen," according to the FDA’s website.

Disque said she’s aware that customers are now more concerned about what is in their makeup, hair care and body products. When people have their hair shampooed, she said the stylists can sometimes smell plastic residue from what clients are using to shampoo their hair. Once customers make a switch to something organic, the difference is clear,Atlas charm bracelet, she said,tiffany, including how much product they need to use.

"We get tons of people that come in and say "I can’t believe how little I need to use of the product,’" Disque said.

Esthetician Jacqueline Simpson said she often works with clients who have acne. She said she can always tell when someone is using a harsh, heavily formulated skin care line. She said many acne care systems contain more than one harsh chemical that dry out the skin.

Simpson knows the customers often will look to commercials to find a product, but she recommends people research products before buying to make sure the ingredients are safe.

"People are too trusting," she said.

Researchers detail in ‘Development of an acid challenge-based in vitro dentin disc occlusion model,’ new data in cosmetics (see also <http://www.newsrx.com/library/topics/Cosmetics.html> Cosmetics). "The objective of this study was to evaluate the utility of a novel acid challenge-based dentin disc occlusion model, and to compare the occluding effect and acid resistance exhibited by currently marketed occlusion dentifrices in vitro. Ninety-six bovine dentin discs were polished and etched in citric acid (6% w/w) for two minutes to provide a smooth dentin surface with patent tubules," scientists in Weybridge, the United Kingdom report.

"The discs were divided into three treatment groups. Each treatment group was brushed (Oral-B Vitality Precision Clean/EB 17 FlexiSoft head) twice a day, for up to four days, with either a strontium acetate dentifrice (Sensodyne Rapid Relief), an arginine-based dentifrice (Colgate Sensitive Pro-Relief), or water. Prior to and between treatments, the dentin samples were stored in human saliva. On days 3 and 4, following dentifrice treatment and incubation in saliva (60 minutes), the samples were subjected to a grapefruit juice challenge. Eight samples from each treatment group were removed from the study on each day and analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The SEM images were graded according to a categorical occlusion scale,Charm pendant, and the data were analyzed by ANOVA. The strontium acetate dentifrice occluded dentin tubules significantly better than the negative control (water) on days 1 through 4 (day 4 p<or=0.0001). The marketed occlusion-based dentifrices demonstrated various degrees of dentin tubule occlusion over the four days. The strontium acetate dentifrice demonstrated significantly better occlusion than a currently marketed arginine-based occlusion dentifrice on day 1 (p=0.0337), day 2 (p=0.0021 ), and day 4 (p <or=0.0001). An in vitro model has been developed that can differentiate the dentin tubular occlusive effects of currently marketed occlusion dentifrices," wrote C.R. Parkinson and colleagues,Atlas charm bracelet, GlaxoSmithKline.

The researchers concluded: "Surface analysis reveals that the occluding deposits vary according to product, and that some are more susceptible to acid mediated dissolution."

Parkinson and colleagues published their study in the Journal of Clinical Dentistry (Development of an acid challenge-based in vitro dentin disc occlusion model. Journal of Clinical Dentistry, 2010;21(2):31-6).

For additional information, contact C.R. Parkinson, GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare, Weybridge, Surrey, UK.

Keywords: City:Weybridge, Country:United Kingdom,bangles, Alkaline Earth Metals, Arginine, Basic Amino Acids, Cosmetics, Dentifrices,tiffany, Diamino Amino Acids, Essential Amino Acids, Strontium.

The "Michelle Obama effect" continued to grow interest and support for efforts to curb obesity as the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation (HWCF ) announced today that The PGA of America has become the Foundation’s 100th member.

The HWCF reported that due to the First Lady’s personal leadership and her "Let’s Move!" campaign, public awareness concerning the problem of childhood obesity is at an all-time high. "Let’s Move!" has created a first-of-its-kind focus and synergy throughout the country as companies, non-profits and sports organizations join together to collaborate and expand the reach of the energy balance message.

"We are extraordinarily pleased to announce The PGA of America as the 100th partner of the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation," said David Mackay, chair of the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation and CEO of Kellogg Company. "Our commitment and dedication to reduce childhood obesity aligns well with The PGA’s many programs, such as the recently announced ‘Let’s Move On Course.’ We are delighted to team with them as we work collaboratively in the fight against obesity."

The PGA’s "ad hoc" league of junior programs, conducted by the 41 nationwide Sections and grass roots PGA Professionals throughout the country, is the sport’s largest outreach to juniors. In 2009, PGA Professionals hosted more than 38,pendants,000 junior camps nationwide with more than 550,000 kids participating. The PGA announced earlier this year it would use this network to help support the "Let’s Move!" initiative.

"Golf is a great way for families to get outside, walk a beautiful golf course and make fitness fun,bangles," said PGA of America President Jim Remy. "The PGA of America wants juniors and their families to recognize the health benefits associated with walking the course when they play. We’re delighted to be joining the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation as another way to support the First Lady’s mission to reduce childhood obesity."

The PGA has demonstrated its commitment to promote physical fitness nationwide through its "Play Golf America" campaign, aimed at increasing participation among new and existing golfers and growing the number of people who play the game. The PGA’s Family Golf Month, conducted in July, features golf courses which offer a series of programs to learn and play golf as a family. These programs, such as Family Golf Clinics, Family Golf Days and Kids Play Free aim to make golf accessible and affordable for everyone.

The PGA of America’s decision to join the HWCF is a natural extension of its commitment to health and fitness. Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh determined the total caloric expenditure for a round of golf (18-holes) is approximately 2,000 calories for walking and carrying clubs. Walking 18 holes can also meet the daily recommendation of 10,000 steps (five miles). Health and fitness experts advocate that taking 10,000 steps per day will improve overall fitness and help control weight gain.

About The PGA of America

Since 1916, The PGA of America’s mission has been twofold; to establish and elevate the standards of the profession and to grow interest and participation in the game of golf. By establishing and elevating the standards of the golf profession through world-class education, career services, marketing and research programs, the Association enables PGA Professionals to maximize their performance in their respective career paths and showcases them as experts in the game and in the multi-billion dollar golf industry.

By creating and delivering dramatic world-class championships and exciting and enjoyable golf promotions that are viewed as the best of their class in the golf industry,Atlas charm bracelet, The PGA of America elevates the public’s interest in the game, the desire to play more golf, and ensures accessibility to the game for everyone, everywhere. The PGA of America brand represents the very best in golf.

The Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation is a first-of-its kind coalition that brings together 100 retailers, food and beverage manufacturers, sporting goods and insurance companies, restaurants, trade associations and NGOs,cuff Links, and now its first professional sports association. The Foundation focuses on activities in the schools, the workplace and the marketplace to promote healthy weight among Americans by balancing the energy they consume with the energy they expend through physical activity.

The Greenwood volleyball team got the season-opening win it was looking for Tuesday night, even if it wasn’t as crisp as it might have liked.

The Lady Gators (1-0) trailed in both sets but rallied to win 2-0 (25-19, 25-14) over Region 4 contender Logan County in the season opening match for both teams.

"Well, we played with some nerves," said GHS coach Holly Whittinghill, whose program honored several former players from the past decade prior to the match. "We had a few girls out there that this is their first time on a varsity court. So, I think overall we did pretty good."

Greenwood, ranked 12th in the Kentucky Volleyball Coaches Association preseason poll,bracelets, used a balanced attack against an LCHS squad (0-1) that faded late after hanging around early.

Five different Lady Gators recorded kills while setter Shelby Worthington dished out 12 assists.

"Yes, it’s a lot better," Worthington said of her arsenal of weapons. "(Samantha) Mosher was strong last year, but offseason club really helped her out, she’s gotten a lot better — it’s nice."

With junior star Courtney Smith on one side and the sophomore Mosher on the other, GHS hasn’t quite mastered its plan of attack just yet,tiffany, but was good enough on day one.

Greenwood reeled off five straight points to start the match — including two Smith kills from Worthington and two Mosher aces — before LC was forced to call timeout.

The stoppage settled the Lady Cougars down and they slowly climbed back even at 11-all on a Mosher attack error. The Lady Cougars then took leads of 13-12 and 14-13 on two GHS violations, but Smith and Julia Reed blocked a Taylor Oates kill to regain the advantage at 15-14.

The Gators built an 18-15 lead from there, only to see LCHS come back and tie it at 18 before a Smith kill from Worthington gave GHS the lead for good. Natalie Geis came off the bench and curved an untouched ace down the near sideline to make it 20-18 and Kelsey Srygler finished off the set with an ace for a 25-19 win.

In the second set, Logan again rallied from an early hole to take a small lead. Jennifer Bryant placed a tip to cut the deficit to 5-4 and a soft punch shot from Jessica Anderson that rolled along the net and dropped made it 5-5.

Hannah Hudnall followed that with an ace and Bryant put home a kill from a Kate Brooks set to make it 7-5. But that’s where the LCHS momentum would end.

Greenwood went on a 7-0 run from there,necklaces, getting kills from Smith and Hannah Duckett, a Worthington push shot and a Geis ace.

The Lady Cougars never recovered, getting as close as four the rest of the way as GHS won its fifth straight match and 10th straight set over LCHS since losing the 2008 region title game.

"Well,pendants, we didn’t play as good as we wanted," Worthington laughed. "We had some first-game jitters, but we got that out of the way I think."

The Lady Gators will take part in the Kentucky Play Day on Saturday, facing three of the state’s top teams in Presentation, Henry Clay and Owensboro Catholic. Logan County travels to the Summer Slam at Apollo on Friday.

Displaysense has revealed a growing trend among retailers requesting plus sized clothing displays.,money clips

Displaysense, the UK’s leading supplier of display cases and leaflet holders has seen a marked increase in requests from customers inquiring into purchasing display products able to accommodate clothes designed for the larger frame.

These requests range from larger mannequins that represent the fuller figure, to stronger and wider coat hangers that are able to display garments that use more material and weigh more than the average wire hanger is designed for.

Displaysense has also reported more unusual product requests including larger watch displays and a wider opening for their glass jars, both designed to appeal to those with wider wrists who may have been deterred from purchasing the products on offer for fear of embarrassment. These inquiries highlight the interest from companies that want to obtain displays that compliment products made for the growing population of overweight and obese individuals.

Whilst many retailers such as sports shops will want to keep their current designs and marketing strategies, others seem to be answering the publics call for a more varied and realistic depiction of the human body. Recent calls for the media to clearly label ‘touched-up’ and airbrushed photos are another indicator that consumers are losing patience with the growing disparity between what they see on the high streets and magazines and what they see in the mirror.

Steve Whittle, marketing director for Displaysense commented: "Staying relevant to your audience is one the most vital aspects of being a successful retailer. The fact that the population’s weight increase is driving shifts in consumer demands hasn’t really surprised us. Some of the more unusual requests have raised an eyebrow or two, but Displaysense is always open for fresh ideas when it comes to displays and visual merchandising."

He added: "We’re currently looking into bringing on board a full range of ‘plus- size’ display products to compliment our existing range that will allow us to provide all of our clients with the display units that best suit their products and target audience."

The news follows the revelation that high street giant Marks & Spencers has developed a ‘plus size’ school uniform to cater for those children unfazed by Jamie Oliver’s well publicised campaign against childhood obesity. Designed for children as young as four, Marks & Spencers "…wanted to make sure (their) schoolwear range is accessible for children of all shapes and sizes."

About Displaysense

Displaysense was established in September of 1978 as a manufacturer of quality point of sale displays. Displaysense has a wealth of experience in design and manufacturing and has been able to develop an ever growing standard range of more than 5,000 displays for retail,Atlas charm bracelet, exhibitions, office and home. The range is now hugely diverse including literature displays, display cabinets, mannequins, office displays, exhibition stands, catering supplies and even items for the home.

Displaysense works with a large range of clients including,watches, retailers (multiple and independent), blue chip corporate clients, cafes, bars, restaurants and night clubs, shop and office fitters,pendants, marketing and promotions companies, designers and architects, product distributors, exhibition contractors and exhibitors, printers, councils and NHS trusts, charities, schools and universities and even home consumers.

For further information please contact:

Steve Whittle

Marketing Director

Displaysense

Rye Street

Bishop’s Stortford

Hertfordshire

CM23 2HG

UK

0845 2008139

Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control issued the following news release:

The Kent Conservation District invites you to join them for a rompin’ stompin’ good time, from 6 p.m. to midnight, Friday evening, Sept. 17, for its 13th Annual Barn Dance fundraiser to be held in the Dover Building on the Delaware State Fairgrounds in Harrington. Activities include a down-home barbecue pork and chicken dinner, live and silent benefit auctions,tiffany, and dancing to music provided by Just Kidding Around Entertainment.

Guests are encouraged to be prepared to kick up their heels! Tickets are $15 per person or $25 per couple. Reserved tables with seating for eight are again available for $110 (one name – one check).

Funds raised through the Barn Dance are used to support the Delaware Envirothon,bangles, a competitive, problem-solving, natural resource challenge for high school students. The goals of the Delaware Envirothon are to test the environmental knowledge of high school students and to cultivate within the students a desire to learn more about their natural world. The students compete in the following categories: soils/land use, aquatic ecology,tiffany, forestry, wildlife,Beads necklace, and a current environmental issue.

The experience gained through the competition will prepare individual students and teams to make sound conservation decisions. The 2010 Delaware champions from the Charter School of Wilmington just returned from Fresno, Calif., and brought home the second place title after competing against other students from across the U.

S. and Canada.

A limited number of tickets to the Barn Dance are available and can be purchased by mail or in person at the Kent Conservation District office located at 800 Bay Road, Suite 2, Dover. Last year’s event sold out in advance, so hurry in to purchase your tickets today! For more information, please call the District at 302-741-2600 ext. 3. For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com