College Gift


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Pima Community College : Gift Managment Foundation & Alumni Ways to Give Alumni & Friends Business Partners Foundation Scholarship Application About the Foundation Board of Directors Gift Management News & Events Contact Us Getting Started Courses & Degrees Campuses & Centers About Pima Student Resources Community Resources Businesses Foundation & Alumni -- Gift Managment » Foundation & Alumni » About the Foundation » Gift Management The Foundation's Investment Committee professionally manages and invests private gifts for long-term growth. It meets at least quarterly to review the portfolio in light of current economic conditions. It provides a report to the Foundation's Board of Directors. Prudent procedures help the Foundation maintain a high standard of trust, effectiveness and accountability. They include accurate receipts for tax purposes. written acknowledgment of each gift. distribution of gifts as donors have directed. investment of endowed gifts to achieve growth and an enduring source of income to the designated program. Investment Policy Investable funds are invested in a manner that produces for the Foundation the optimum return, defined as obtaining the highest return commensurate with an acceptable risk level. Some permanently restricted endowment funds are invested based on a strategic asset allocation of 60 percent equities and 40 percent fixed-income securities. in a strategic allocation designed for long-term growth with moderate risk with an allowable variance of 10 percent. Other permanently restricted endowment funds are invested in accordance with contractual or other arrangements subject to other restrictions on investment alternatives. All short-term temporarily restricted funds are invested in 100 percent fixed-income securities for safety, income and low risk. The Investment Committee may select professional managers or use pooled funds at its discretion. A performance review of the portfolio is done at least annually.
Unique Gifts For Any
Collectible World Studios - Unique Gifts, Figurines & Home Décor newsletters about us artists affiliates contact us shopping help home Cookies Required You appear to have Cookies disabled, please click here for instructions on how to enable them. You may need to close and re-open your browser to remove this error message once you have made the necessary changes. sign in my account shopping help search Your Basket Items: 0 Total Price: (inc Vat) £0.00 view basket store locator newsletters factory shop affiliates The new shopping experience and Aladdin’s cave for presents and gifts at Wetheriggs Pottery. New Gift Ranges Now Available: New Gift Ranges Coming Soon: Unique Gifts For Any Occasion: Me to You Adorable Tatty Teddy figurines and giftware from the Me to You store. Piggin’ Humorous pig gifts and collectible pig figurines. Ideal gifts for pig lovers. Pocket Dragons The whimsical world of Pocket Dragons - an international collectible. CowParade Colourful CowParade figurines - sculptures based on cows from parades Worldwide. Friendship Ideal bronze finished figurine gifts for friends, family and that special someone. The Fairy Way Highly detailed fantasy figurines depicting fairies amongst wild life. Creature Comforts Collectable figurines based on the hit TV series by Aardman animations. WhimsiClay Collectible fancy felines and mouse figurines - ideal gifts for cat lovers. Just The Right Shoe Collectible Shoe Figurines. > UK Retirement Announcement > View The Range Home Décor Ranges: Alexandria's Lamps Colourful crafted glass fragrance lamps. Popp Rivet Garden Outdoor sculptures and garden accessories - unique giftware. Friendship Home New to the Friendship collection is a unique range of home decor items. Metal Urges Hand crafted steel wire-frame baskets and sculptured candleholders. About Collectible World Studios: Here at Collectible World Studios we produce high quality collectible figurines, sculptures and home décor ranges. Some so unique, whimsical, or humorous they are hugely popular with their own collectors clubs. Others are selected as African gifts, Oriental gifts, romantic gifts, or lifestyle gifts of distinction. Maasai Tribe Sculptures based on the unique ways of life within the Maasai Tribe. Also featuring a unique range of home décor - ideal African gifts. Spirit Song The Spirit Song range of bronze, steel and copper finished figurines are beautifully detailed and make an impressive statement when displayed around the home. The Silk Road Elegant sculptures featuring precious gem stones, inspired by an oriental trading route; the Silk Road - perfect oriental gifts. The Soul Journeys range of African, Oriental and spiritual collectables make unique gifts for special occasions. Popular presents for weddings, birthdays and anniversaries, they truly are romantic figurines. The new Maasai Home décor range also makes an artistic house-warming present, ideal for anyone looking for an African theme from unique tribal gifts. Store Locator © Collectible World Studios Limited 2004
Housewarming Gifts Smart Solutions
At Home : Shopping : Useful Housewarming Gifts : Home & Garden Television   Program Guide Shows A - Z Decorating Remodeling Gardening At Home Crafts Store SEARCH AT HOME Antiques / Collectibles Books / Videos Cleaning Entertaining Hobbies / Interests Kids / Family Moneysaving Ideas Organizing Personal Care / Health Pets Real Estate Recipes Shopping Tips / Techniques Antiques Cleaning Entertaining Food / Dining Organizing / Storage Shopping Other Vacations / Travel Useful Housewarming Gifts Smart Solutions : Episode SSL-545 -- More Projects » Creativity expert Karen Hartman shows how to make useful, eye-catching gifts. Figure A Figure A--The perfect gift for someone moving into a new residence is a cleaning-item bouquet. Cut craft foam so that it fits tightly into a wash bucket, then simply insert helpful items such as a feather duster, toilet brush, dish mop, etc. For a special touch, use floral foam instead of craft foam, soak the foam in water, then insert flowers, along with the cleaning items. Decorate the wash bucket with a colorful ribbon. Figure B Figure B--How about a treat to reward a friend for all the effort that goes into a move? A chocolate cake will certainly be appreciated, but don't present it on a white paper plate. Enhance the presentation by lining a hatbox (or any container) with decorative paper. Place the cake in the hatbox, then cover with a fabric remnant that has been bound up and secured with tulle. Figure C Figure C--A fruit basket is a traditional and healthy housewarming gift. Make it special by finding an oversized basket to hold the fruit, then surround the entire basket with tulle. It will take two to three yards of this inexpensive fabric to envelope the gift. Use two or even three different colors of tulle to really give it some pop, then just secure at the top with some ribbon. Figure D Figure D--Cleaning supplies and fruit are great, but for the college student that's moving away from home, a little bread might help--not just any bread, though. It has to be the kind that can be spent. Instead of passing an envelope, present the money in a card that has been inserted between two slices of tasty bread in a wicker basket. GUESTS: Karen Hartman Creativity Expert, Karen Hartman Productions 6601 Lindenhurst Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90048 Phone: 323-655-7469 E-mail: karhartman@aol.com Website: www.karenhartman.com ALSO IN THIS EPISODE: Smart Solutions : Episode SSL-545 • Useful Housewarming Gifts • Car Smarts • Mascara • Smart Solution of the Day Home | About Us | Newsletters | Questions | Advertising Site Map | Privacy | Legal DIY | Fine Living | Food Network | Shop At Home Great American Country | HGTVPro | Living | Video On Demand Comparison Shop for Home Gifts & Patio Furniture at Shopzilla © 2005 Scripps Networks, Inc. All rights reserved.
Birthday Presents || Special
GDR Souvenirs - Birthday and Anniversary Presents Preface || Introduction || Official Gifts || Gifts to the Party Birthday Presents || Special Items || Site Map Information || Guestbook || Picture galerie Birthday and Anniversary Presents by Andreas Michaelis One might be forgiven for thinking that birthdays, even those that come in round figures, are essentially private or indeed contemplative occasions. Not so, if the birthday boy happens to be the head of a state or Party or is in some other way in the public eye. In that case, a birthday becomes a public event. The guests can no longer be hand-picked, nor the tidal wave of presents averted. Gifts made to GDR leaders, if they were of the right kind, tended to end up in the museum. They included both highly individual pieces and items off the mass production conveyor belts. These souvenirs sometimes commemorated significant social occasions, sometimes insignificant; some were presented by governments, some by ordinary working people; and, while some might be suited to the personality and office of a president, others were given in friendship or comradeship. Along with presents to mark birthdays or other occasions in the lives of the state and Party leaders, there are certain items that were presented by home or foreign givers on particular GDR anniversaries. Most of these, and the oldest too, were left by Wilhelm Pieck at his death. One remarkable for its origins was given to him in Moscow in December 1943: a desktop calendar handcrafted out of wood for the Communist leader by German prisoners of war in the Soviet Union. The red crayon inscription reads: Unity and peace to the German people - Wilhelm Pieck - From antifascist prisoners of war in USSR p.o.w. camp 158. Three presents given to Wilhelm Pieck in Soviet exile in 1936, on his sixtieth birthday, have survived. They were made by Soviet industries, using material from the current production line, and represent a kind of gift that seems to have appeared for the first time in the USSR in the 20s. These presents signalled a deliberate rejection of feudal or bourgeois traditions and a liberation from the material and artistic values of an old societal system then supposed defunct, and their meaning to the recipient lay purely in their symbolic function. Doubtless it would be going too far to suggest that there was an individual artistic style of expression peculiar to socialism as practised in the Communist bloc countries - but it remains true that this kind of characteristic symbolic gift was in evidence in almost every east European country till the late 1980s. The workers at the factory or plant in question would normally be identified as the givers of presents of this sort. Thus Wilhelm Pieck was given a ball-bearing mount by the workforce at the 1st State Ball-Bearing Works, a clock (inevitably) by the workforce at the 2nd State Clock Factory in Moscow and a smoker's set made of cogwheels by the Sergo Orjonikidse Machine Tools Works. In 1954 the workers at Zeulenroda furniture factory took Pieck by surprise when they remembered an anniversary he had probably forgotten himself: in 1894, the President, then an apprentice carpenter, had joined the German Woodworkers' Association, and his fellows in the craft were keen to mark his diamond jubilee as an active member of the trade union movement. On the side of the chest they made to celebrate the occasion is an image of Stalinallee (Stalin Avenue) in East Berlin, which East Germany touted as the premier socialist street in the capital of the GDR. Naturally the Communist bloc had another tradition, first practised in the Soviet Union: the naming of cities, factories, co-operatives, streets and public amenities after prominent Communist personalities, often when they were still alive. A danger was concealed in this kind of honour, however. If a personality fell out of favour, or was downgraded by his successors, the names all had to be changed. Thus cities, works and streets named after Stalin were renamed almost immediately after the 20th congress of the Soviet Communist Party in 1956, and Stalin memorials were toppled. Stalin was dropped from the leadership hall of fame. The boulevard once known as Stalin Avenue became Karl Marx Avenue, which it remains to this day (though the names of other leading Communists have been largely removed following the velvet revolution in eastern Europe). In 1946, for his seventieth birthday, Wilhelm Pieck, then leader of the German Communist Party in the Soviet zone of occupation, was given a number of china figurines and a metal sombrero by the Party's cell in Mexican exile. Rather more useful, no doubt, was a cigarette case embellished with portraits of Lenin and Stalin which he received from Soviet comrades for his seventy-fifth birthday. One motif that recurs insistently in the presents given to him on that birthday and his eightieth is the first of the GDR's five-year plans. It was launched in 1951 and declared over in 1955, ahead of schedule, the targets more than met. Even at that date, the propaganda that accompanied the beginnings of an East German planned economy could be grotesque, and the items that recollect this phase will doubtless tickle many now. It would only be fair, however, to bear in mind that in the first decade of the GDR's history the struggle to fulfil plans was accompanied by a genuine sense of a fresh start, a new and energetic departure - and in this respect it was finally a more honest thing than the ossified, dogmatic planned economy of the 70s and 80s,with its clichés and hot air. Slogans such as Peace - Reconstruction - Prosperity, or the five-year plan emblem together with its motto The key to our success, are eloquent not only of the political vocabulary favoured during the 50s but also of the hopes and longings of the East German people. Among the many activities mounted by the Freie Deutsche Jugend (Free German Youth) was the Wilhelm-Pieck-Campaign , intended to prompt greater effort by the country's young people and the working population in general, to mark the President's eightieth birthday. On this occasion, the apprentices at the Bitterfeld electrochemicals combine gave Pieck a stylish folder containing documents and statements concerning their FDJ group. At their deaths, Pieck and Grotewohl left several hundred folders of this kind, with enough material for a hefty tome, or a feature-length satirical programme. Elsewhere, workers in factories set a good example in cost-cutting. If honorific gifts were produced in series, a given item could be made at a fraction of the cost of an individually-crafted piece. The figure of a muscular miner in a combative attitude, an optimistic expression firmly on his face, was far and away the most frequently given present for Pieck's eightieth birthday. He received numerous gifts from comrades in the Federal Republic too. Most of them were little items with some local connection, such as a figure of Roland from Bremen , or one of Hamburg's typical Hummel figures . The GDR leadership's duties routinely included visits to factories. These visits served primarily to demonstrate the closeness of the state and Party leadership to the working classes. In 1953, Prime Minister Otto Grotewohl visited the Ernst Thälmann Polygraphics Works at Saalfeld. He may have been critical of the work being done by the graphic artists and designers there; at all events, for his sixtieth birthday the following year he was presented with an entire collection of draft designs for new product labels. In the 50s, in addition to the obligatory gift, a leader might be honoured by having a work team (at least) named after him. Long before he officially took over the reins of the state and Party, Walter Ulbricht was so popular that labour collectives bore his name as early as 1953. For his sixtieth birthday, one of his work teams presented him with a desktop set praising his endeavours on behalf of peace, unity, democracy and socialism. Ten years later, as chair of the GDR's Council of State, he received for the first time one of the traditional presents from the Soviet armed forces in Germany - generally bombastic and symbolically top-heavy affairs. That first gift was a model of a Soviet cosmonaut memorial. A present from the Soviet armed forces to Otto Grotewohl has survived too, a figure reaching for the stars and thus symbolizing humanity's unceasing striving after higher things - an allegory that recurs frequently in Communist and socialist iconography. The Honecker era, too, in due course provided the Deutsches Historisches Museum with a number of anniversary presents. The desk set given to Erich Honecker, on his sixtieth birthday, by Lieutenant Colonel Kurkotkin, commander in chief of the Soviet armed forces in Germany, and bearing a personal dedication, particularly intrigues all who see it. The martial character of the set was no doubt intended to convey that the SED First Secretary could count on the massed firepower of the Soviet Union behind him, and thus settle in to a quiet period in power. The composition - typical in approach, given its origin - does in fact include a number of useful items, regardless of its military character and offputting design: a radio, a thermometer in the TV mast, a calendar, and four ball-points disguised as missiles. Ten years later a Soviet-German joint-stock company, SDAG Wismut - which was the last company in East Germany to remain under partial Soviet administration and control (till 1990), because of the uranium it was mining - presented a conversation piece inspired by mining. The bismuth workers, honouring an established tradition, selected a particularly fine mineral sample. The musical box they built into the sample seems never to have been used. On the same occasion, Honecker was presented with a pick by the Senftenberg Brown Coal Combine. It was not to be the last he received in his lengthy career as head of state and Party. It was not only the leaders of state and Party that were given these heavily symbolic presents; the tradition was observed at every level of the state and Party hierarchy. Stasi boss Erich Mielke kept a trophy room, as it were, at his headquarters in Normannenstrasse. Numerous honorifics are now on display there, gifts to Mielke or the ministry on a variety of occasions. Some were passed on to the Stasi ministry's information centre, whence they were made over to the Museum für Deutsche Geschichte in 1990. There are the usual plaques and tapestries, but one of the Stasi ministers birthday presents was a rather unusual model of an electric oven. In the GDR, 7 October was a national holiday, an annual celebration of the establishment of the first German workers' and peasants' state, and the date was marked with a grand parade, a government ceremony, and countless local festivities around the country. And every five years, on jubilee occasions, the state and Party leadership celebrated in lavish style. Leaders from friendly countries, and representatives from around the world, would pay their respects to the GDR. Again, it is the presents made by the Soviet armed forces that are especially striking. The model of the Soviet memorial in Treptow Park, which symbolizes the liberation of Germany from fascism and stresses the role played by the Red Army, was a gift to mark the GDR's silverjubilee in 1974. The outsized helm presented to Honecker on the 35th anniversary by the Schwerin SED regional leaders alluded to the well-worn image of Erich Honecker as the great helmsman of state. The accompanying letter is a gem, sparkling with all the routine phrases that had become de rigueur among the Party leadership echelons. The regional first secretary thanks our dear comrade Erich Honecker for his outstanding personal contribution to the conception and realisation of policies designed to assure the happiness of the people and the safeguarding of peace, and asserts that the people of our region are paying tribute to these fine socialist politics by making greater endeavours than ever before, in every field of society. By the time of the 40th anniversary celebrations, however, a gloomy knowledge of imminent upheaval darkened the leaders' festivities - though surely none of them could suspect at the time that it was to be the GDR's very last birthday.
Housewarming gifts Dating Photo
Housewarming gifts SY L.com > Online Dating Service > Flowers & Gifts > Popular gift ideas > Housewarming gifts Dating Photo Personals Meet singles Personal Ads Tour Join Articles Login Housewarming gifts Flowers & Gifts Your personal gift guide Gift aid Art of gift giving Choosing a perfect gift Gift packaging Gift wrapping Gift bags & boxes Gift cards & tags Popular gift ideas Thank you gifts Charitable gifts Baby & kids gifts Gifts for him Gifts for her Romantic gifts Religious gifts Get well gifts Party gifts Housewarming gifts Adult Gifts Sympathy gifts Gifts for friends Gifts for teens Business gifts Holiday gifts Graduation gift Easter gifts Valentines day gift Mothers day gift Fathers day gift Christmas gift Birthday gift Anniversary gift Bouquet & Arrangement Mothers Day Flowers Valentines Day Flowers Birthday Flowers Sympathy and funeral flowers Easter flowers Wedding flowers Flower language Exotic flowers Gerber daisies Carnations Tulips Roses Flowers & plants House plants Dried flowers Garden flowers Fresh cut & artificial flowers Flower market variety Seasonal flowers Flower delivery services Wholesale flowers Housewarming gifts Your friends or relatives are moving into a new house, and youre invited on the housewarming. Of course, guests arent supposed to come with empty hands, and the case is rather special. So you face a problem of a housewarming gift. A lot of different traditions are connected with moving into a new house. Some of them are very ancient, about most we dont know, and even less we follow. The times have changed a lot and so have done some of those traditions. Nowadays housewarming gifts arent supposed to be massive and expensive, as they were used to be before. But they should be useful. As well as in case of celebrating marriage, you are welcome to ask the hosts if they need anything on their new place. Nowadays its normal to present money, though it could be taken as offence in the previous centuries. Still you can present some symbolic housewarming gifts. It can be a figure of a household ghost, who is supposed to conjure evil away. There existed a tradition to let a cat or a cock into a new house first. So cats, cocks, hens and dogs are considered to be the keepers of a new home. Nobody expects that you will bring the whole zoo with you on the housewarming, but you may present some statues, figures and toys, shaped like these animals, or nicely decorated pictures with their images. Another ancient tradition is to hang a horseshoe, found on the road, over the door. So anything, that reminds of a horseshoe or has its shape, presented as a housewarming gift, will show the hosts that you wish they felt comfortable on the new place.. The prosaic, but useful gifts, like kitchen towels, set of glasses, frying pens, set of utensils, a small carpet in the corridor, bad-clothes wont excite a hostess too much. But you can be sure that already next day she might remember you in the warmest words. If you wan to give something both nice and useful, you may choose some original vases or wall clocks. Always keep in mind that humble but long-lasting gifts are much better, than a bunch of roses which will be thrown away by the end by the week. Online Dating Service · Photo Personals · Meet singles · Personal Ads · Directory · Dating Site · Dating advice · Articles Privacy Statement | Terms of Use | Site Map | Contact Us | Report a Bug © 2004,2005 SearchYourLove TM partners sites: Great Holidays and Hotels // Health and Beauty Journal // MotorListing // Millennium Rise // EstateIndex // Russian brides // Mail order brides // Casino journal // Dating & Personals // Admotor Russian brides // Gambling online // Mail order brides // Admotor // Millennium Rise // MotorListing // EstateIndex Great Holidays and Hotels // Health and Beauty Journal