Archive for March, 2017

Little princesses honored at Tea Party for Relay For Life – Hannibal.net

Each little Princess was formally introduced, then had Fairy Godmother dust sprinkled on her before being escorted by a young butler to her table at the Princess Tea Party in Palmyra. Later each princess was given a crown to wear and pages to color before being served tea and cookies by servers wearing black and white maids' uniforms. The tea party had 240 guests.

Each little Princess was formally introduced, then had Fairy Godmother dust sprinkled on her before being escorted by a young butler to her table at the Princess Tea Party in Palmyra. Later each princess was given a crown to wear and pages to color before being served tea and cookies by servers wearing black and white maids' uniforms. The tea party had 240 guests.

A total of $3,098 was raised for Relay For Life at this 12th annual tea party, which was Saturday morning, March 18, in the Sesquicentennial Building in Palmyra's Flower City Park. The total was reported by Yvonne Goellner, who chairs the fund-raiser each year, with the assistance of Carolyn Carpenter. We have raised over $40,000 in 12 years, Yvonne said, adding, we usually raise $3,000 each year.

She explained the tea party is funded by donations only, because, we wanted all to be able to attend. It's more about cancer awareness and making sure no matter how old they are, they are aware and help support it.

Yvonne founded the tea parties 12 years ago after her 2-year-old daughter, Emily,was diagnosed with what was described as terminal cancer. Her daughter is now in total remission, she said, by the grace of God and is a 17-year-old Palmyra High School junior. Yvonne enjoyed sprinkling her Fairy Godmother dust on Emily during the tea party.

Emily was among the queens hosting the tea party, and her brother, Brandon, was one of the butlers escorting the princesses.

Yvonne had a second reason to raise awareness about cancer her husband, Paul, is a 20-year cancer survivor.

This was not the only Palmyra family with both male and female members participating. Aiden Schaefer - wearing his crown as the Littlest Mr. Marion County - escorted each of his sisters, Autumn Schaefer and Lilly Borrowman, to their table. Their brother, Jonathan Borrowman, also served as a butler.

Some of the tea party's servers included two generations, such as Brittani Binson and her mom, Barb Binson.

A total of 21 queens in evening gowns hosted the tables, with 10 reigning queens and 11 former queens and other young ladies. Gracie Bross of Palmyra, who was crowned 2017 Miss Jesse James' Teen elsewhere in Missouri, hosted a table, as did Chloe Dent, a former Miss Mark Twain Outstanding Teen.

One family group included perhaps the youngest princess attending the tea party. She was Carissa Conrad, almost 2 months old, held by her mother, Stephanie, and accompanied by her sisters, Lydia, 2, and Adelyn, 6.

Most of the little princesses wore fancy gowns, and some were from literature. Among them was Natalie Vandiver, 7, wearing a Rapunzel wedding dress. She arrived with her sister, Sophia Vandiver,

After the tea was served, 2016 Miss Marion County Amanda Lewis played two songs on her violin.

While she was doing so, Annie Sodari of Palmyra enjoyed leading the music while Annie's sisters, Angie and Addie, watched.

See photo gallery for more pictures of the tea party.

Reach reporter Bev Darr at bev.darr@courierpost.com.

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Little princesses honored at Tea Party for Relay For Life - Hannibal.net

Alice’s Tea Party sets the table – Spencer Daily Reporter

(Left to right) Lillian Cadmus, Melissa Cadmus and Carol Cadmus show off some of the tea cups at the event. (Photos by Joseph Hopper)

The annual Arts on Grand event, Alice's Tea Party, created in honor of Joanne Schar's mother-in-law Alice, drew approximately 50 people to enjoy the art and a beverage in one of Alice's signature tea cups Sunday afternoon.

This year's event, delayed from a previous date due to weather, met during the Iowa Watercolor Traveling Show, allowing participants to enjoy many watercolor pieces adorning the walls at Arts on Grand.

"I just thought this wonderful watercolor exhibit is still on, and it's a great way to share the exhibit," Schar said.

The Mad Hatter (H. Schar) and company (Sky) show off their tea cup holding etiquette.

Schar shared that the idea for the annual event came about from a pragmatic solution.

"She (Alice) had collected all these teacups. When she died, I had to figure out, what am I going to do with all these tea cups? A year later I thought, let's do something fun. Alice was such a wonderful, fun loving person, so let's have a tea party. And when we call it Alice's Tea Party, it invokes all the crazy stuff from 'Alice in Wonderland,'" Schar said.

As more people filed in to enjoy the art and refreshments, music played from a piano and characters such as the Mad Hatter from Alice in Wonderland poured tea.

(Left to right) Shirley Clark, Violet Reason and Lavonne Peterson sit down to enjoy the artwork and conversation.

Schar noted that Alice's Tea Party was a way to spread benevolence in the community.

"I think as we are a place that honors arts and culture, it is important to include people in things that don't cost money, that encourage conversation and friendliness and part of the joy in our Spencer community, so if I can do that a little bit, things like Alice's Tea Party are one of the ways in which I can," Schar said.

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Alice's Tea Party sets the table - Spencer Daily Reporter

Ukraine Is Silently Leading A Digital Currency Revolution – Forbes


Forbes
Ukraine Is Silently Leading A Digital Currency Revolution
Forbes
There's a witticism sometimes used among Ukrainians: may you be forced to survive only on your official salary. The quip is both a tongue-in-cheek nod to the endemic corruption that is a daily, often necessary, reality of life in Ukraine and also ...

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Ukraine Is Silently Leading A Digital Currency Revolution - Forbes

Chernobyl-scale chemical disaster looms in Eastern Ukraine war, experts warn – Fox News

This isnt a cold war; its a hot war. And experts caution that the conflict in Eastern Ukraine could soon get a whole lot hotter if fighting damages huge industrial storage units of chlorine gas and there is a deadly release of the toxic gas.

If one of those uncontrolled sites containing chemicals were to detonate, tens of thousands of people could be poisoned. It is a potential disaster on the scale of Chernobyl, Robert Amsterdam, Russian political expert and lawyer at international law firm Amsterdam & Partners, told Fox News.

The risk is hardly hypothetical. Late last month a stray artillery shell hit the Donetsk Filter Stations chlorine gas depot, which holds 15,000 pounds of chlorine gas. While the containers -- by sheer luck were not damaged, the incident raised serious red flags.

In a situation like this, where a war zone is near a concentration of industrial facilities where toxic and explosive chemicals are manufactured and stored, it is possible that massive releases of toxic chemicals could be released, Rudy Richardson, professor of toxicology at the University of Michigan, told Fox News. And that would result in high levels of civilian casualties.

According to Baskut Tuncak,U.N. special rapporteuron human rights and hazardous substances and wastes, damage to just one chlorine-filled, 2,000-pound container has the potential to kill anyone within a 600-foot distance and poses dire health risks to the tens of thousands of surrounding residents.

RUSSIA SAYS US MISSILE SYSTEMS A RISK TO REGIONAL SECURITY

Large chemical and industrial facilities are in areas where fighting is ongoing, Tuncak said. Battles are now being fought in cities, close to industrial centers with factories increasingly at risk of being hit: The consequences for anyone living close by would be severe.

The three-year war which started as a trade agreement dispute but then burgeoned into a bloody conflict between support for Western-backed Ukraine and the Kremlin-supported separatists has already claimed the lives of more than 10,000 people, including 2,000 civilians, and wounded some 23,000. An estimated 2 million have been displaced or deeply impacted by dire shortages of food, electricity, water, heat, medical and social services.

Before the war, the Donbass region held more than 5,300 operational industrial enterprises, many of which are now under the control of separatist rebels who seized control of dozens of factories and mines, including those used to distribute aid.

John Gilbert, a senior science fellow with the Center for Arms Control and Non Proliferations Chemical and Biological Arms Control Working Group who previously conducted inspections in Russia and the Ukraine as a U.S. military officer concurred that a chlorine release would result in significant injuries and would be fatal to most. He also said that steps should be put in place now to minimize potential fallout.

The fact that there are many large industrial facilities and water treatment plants in the conflict zone is cause for concern. Ensuring that workers in the vicinity of toxic stockpiles have immediate access to protective equipment (such as masks) is important, Gilbert noted, cautioning that safety equipment is both costly and requires training to don and wear properly, in addition to having a limited shelf life. Collateral or even intentional chemical casualties from the Ukraine conflict is a real possibility.

AS CASUALTIES MOUNT IN EASTERN UKRAINE, SOME WONDER WHETHER PUTIN IS TESTING TRUMP

A reportissuedlast week by the Geneva-based Zoi Environment Network and the Toxic Remnants of War Project claimed that the damage to industrial installations has already resulted in a number of civilian health risks, and reinforced concerns over future disaster.

Gilbert stressed that there are precautions that industrial facilities can take, such as dispersing chemical storage containers rather than clustering them and looking at outside storage rather than inside a building. However, it is unknown if any such precautions are being implemented.

Several civilian sources on the ground in the conflict zone told Fox News that the chemical issue isnt even one being routinely discussed among them that they are merely trying to eat, keep a roof over their heads and live to see another day.

Russian forces have been accused of using chemical weapons in the Ukraine already, during the 2015 battle over the Donetsk airport in which 80 Ukrainian soldiers showed symptoms of being exposed to nerve agents, James Kirchick, author of The End of Europe, said. The Ukraine transferred its chemical weapons stockpiles to Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union, and is not known to be in possession of any chemical weapons while Russia maintains stockpiles of VR, Sarin and mustard gas.

Hollie McKay has been a FoxNews.com staff reporter since 2007. She has reported extensively from the Middle East on the rise and fall of terrorist groups such as ISIS in Iraq. Follow her on twitter at @holliesmckay

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Chernobyl-scale chemical disaster looms in Eastern Ukraine war, experts warn - Fox News

Ukraine’s escalating government corruption harms US interests abroad – Daddyhood

COMMENTARY by Chad Bannone

Recent media coverage addressing Ukrainian governments efforts to derail President Donald Trumps candidacy and embarrass his former campaign manager and political insider Paul Manafort is another indication that President Poroshenko is struggling to contain Ukraines growing corruption. A European country of some 44 million people that was once part of the Soviet Union, Ukraine is now engulfed in expanding regional civil unrest and economic and political turmoil. Stability in Ukraine is important for U.S. interests because of its strategic location, its conflict with its neighbor, Russia, and exorbitant stockpile of weapons it still possesses.

Ongoing jousting between former Ukrainian Parliament member Alexandre Onishchenko and Poroshenko are another example of the disarray in Ukraines government. Onishchenko, who is now purportedly hiding out in Moscow, is occasionally spotted in England and elsewhere in Europe with a Russian diplomatic passport, was a supporter of Ukraines former Prime Minister Yulia Timoshenko. Onishchenko has yet again released taped conversations that implicate Ukraines President in bribery, extortion, and grandiose self-dealing.

Ukrainian Oligarchs have divvied up regions and industries, hired mercenaries to run private battalions, and now resemble Somalian warlords rather than defenders of democratic principles embraced by the recent Maidan revolution. Recent coverage of Ukrainian governments shady tactics to win favor with Hillary Clinton and help her win the U.S. presidency was revealing. Ultimately, Ukraine has not changed. The new rhetoric embracing democracy is thinly veiled and hollow. It prostitutes slogans about human rights and Ukrainian self-determination to cover up corruption at levels Europe has not seen. The disintegration of Ukraine has been exacerbated by the Ukraine Russia conflict, which has all the earmarks of a budding civil war, and serves to deflect from serious ethical and operational challenges plaguing Ukraines government. The new Trump Administration, Congress and Senate are poised to investigate systemic Ukrainian government graft, and experts are lining up to provide insight into the political culture of the Poroshenko administration and to follow the money flowing out of Ukraine, which many insiders claim is in the billions of dollars.

Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, who chairs U.S. House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Europe, Eurasia and Emerging Threats, has been the main voice on the subject of corruption in Ukraine. The Committee scheduled a hearing to review the clandestine business activities of numerous Ukrainian politicians and business influencers. These business and political insiders have been accused of massive scale graft. They include Valeria Gontareva, Ihor Kononenko, Alexander Hranovsky, Vitaly Homutynnik and Alexander and Sergey Buryak, Anatoli Matios, Sergey Kurchenko, Igor Kononenko, Sergey Alexeev, Vasily Burba, Valery Kondratuk, Sergey Berezenko Maksym Burbak, Vitalii Nayda, Anatolii Mateos, and Boris Timonikin. There are many others.

Additional people are being investigated as they relate to U.S. national security, terrorism, and funds that have been directed by U.S. and its western allies to provide aid to the post-Maidan Ukraine. Members of Ukraines parliament and its ministers and officials still maintain ties to organized criminal groups in Eastern Europe and to the former President Yanukovych loyalists who have been accused of funding Ukraines separatist movement.

In particular, the activities of the head of the National Bank of Ukraine, Valeria Gontareva have caught attention of Western observers. A number of disparate charges of corruption have been leveled against her, and her cohorts. Gontarevas business was one of the main actors in a scandal with the Brokbusinessbank, a banking institution that was controlled by a Yunukovich frontman, businessman Sergey Kurchenko. Kurchenko was one of the youngest and most successful businessmen within the Yanukovych kitchen cabinet. He bought an 80% stake in the bank from brothers Sergey and Alexander Buryak. Alexander Buryak became a deputy head of the Supervisory Board. Gontarevas company had transferred the securities in amount equivalent to $240 million to that bank. Brokbusinessbank made a similar deal with the National bank of Ukraine. It sold bonds and received cash. In 17 days the National Bank of Ukraine, that was managed by Stepan Kubiv, declared Brokbusinessbank to be insolvent. Massive losses were booked to Ukraines treasury as a result of this scheme.

There is no shortage of controversial business and political personalities in Ukraine. Igor Kononenko is close to President Poroshenko. Kononenko is a major business magnate and member of the Ukrainian Parliament, the first deputy head of Poroshenkos faction. Companies that were managed by Kononenko were accused of money laundering, tax evasion. In turn, Mr. Granovsky is a close partner of Kononenko. He also has been repeatedly accused of corruption and even of raider-style seizures of businesses. Granovsky used to participate in a number of pro-Russian political projects, one of which was associated with Viktor Medvedchuk, who is in a close relationship with Russian President Putin.

Another Ukrainian parliamentarian, Serhiy Alexeev is a close ally of Alexander Granovsky. Alexeev is associated with illegal laundering of 300 Million Hrivna, illicit links to Yanukovych appointed judge Viktor Tatkov and Artur Emilyanov, as well as pressure on Ukraines judiciary to facilitate attacks and prosecutions in order to confiscate businesses and assets of other Ukrainian businessmen. Alexeev also collaborated in raider style schemes with Sergey Kurchenko and Boris Timonkin.

Bureaucrats turned business expediters close to President Poroshenko such as Sergey Berezenko, Alexander Gronovsky, Sergey Kovolenko, Vasily Burba, and Valery Kondrachuk have engaged in schemes for personal pecuniary gain that have threatened Ukraines national security. Contraband sale of cigarettes via military conflict zones, human trafficking, and weapon smuggling into the rest of Europe seem to be their forte. Money for contraband cigarettes smuggled into Europe is controlled by an individual by the name of Seyar Korshutov. A criminal kingpin based in Russian occupied Crimea, he is purported to collects funds from these illegal ventures. In turn, Korshutov is protected by Yuriy Sheremeta, an agent of the Fiscal Services of Ukraine.

Ukraines Military prosecutor, Anatoli Mateos is another enigmatic and corrupt business tycoon. He seems to be in charge of coal distribution and all funds from transport of vodka and general consumption products in Ukraine. Mateos is a relative of former speaker of Ukraines parliament, Vladimir Litvin. Criminal schemes headed by him deplete Ukraines budget and increase prices for consumer goods. Many of the Maidan personalities have turned out to be Ukraines false prophets, making unholy alliance with corrupt business elite and are now promoting Mateos for higher posts. The list of corrupt transactions and politicians that are embroiled in them is a long one as long as Ukraines history of political discord, growing civic unrest, and descent into what may soon become a completely defunct nation in the middle of Europe. Corrupt business and political associates such as Kononenko, Granovsky, Kovalenko, Kontratuk, Kurshutov, Mateos, and scores of others are leading Ukraine and its president on an inexorable march to economic destruction. Corruption that has weighed down Poroshenko administration is bringing Ukraine towards another revolution. Kremlin is using this for its advantage and has used the corrupt Ukrainian system to create a blocade in Donbas. These well know personalities like Medvechuk, Levochkin, Sadovoy, Tymoshenko, Semenchenko are some of the engineers of Ukraines continuing downfall. Supported by people like Kondrachuk, Nalivaychenko, Burba, and Mateos, criminal organizations are systemically depleting Ukraines resources.

As it examines Americas relationship with Europe and the delicate condition of the European Union, Trumps administration and U.S. Congress ought to consider consequences of Ukraine becoming a major destabilizing force in Europe, with business elite resembling warlords, and Ukraines politicians forsaking their duties as public officials for short term profit. They and their ties with the Yanukovychs people, their offshore accounts and corrupt schemes will be an object of the downfall of Ukraine as a country.

Congress ought to consider creating a special committee to investigate financial crimes of Ukrainian government official both appointed and elected. The U.S. government has not ignored the requests of Mikheil Saakasvili, former governor of Odessa, and once President of the post-Soviet Georgia. Sakashvili urged the U.S. government to investigate offshore accounts and business practices of parliamentarian Homutynnik accusing him of tax kickback schemes.

The Trump Administration should establish a list of corrupt Ukrainian politicians, suggest corrective measures and possible list of sanctions. It should investigate illicit flow of funds into offshore accounts and start holding Ukrainian politicians and their financiers accountable. These measures should prevent the disintegration of Ukraine. If that happens, Ukraine will become a polygon for illicit trafficking of weapons, drugs, and extremist groups. The risks to Europes economic and political stability and Russias further incursion into Ukraine are real, and the implications of Ukraine breaking up and erupting into warring regions can impact U.S. and Europe in terms of geopolitical leverage and expansion of Russias influence.

The invocation of democratic principles and efforts to appease current American political insiders are nothing more than rhetoric aimed at deflecting and confusing Western leaders to avoid being exposed as fraudsters and thugs that have yet again seized control of a European country of nearly 44 million people a country that once was called the Breadbasket of the Soviet Union with stockpiles of dangerous weapons and an even more dangerous culture of political graft.

This article is paid promo content as syndicated from PR NewsChannel, the press release newswire. For more information about advertising on DADDYHOOD, please contact Donna Tafuro at (813) 708-1220.

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Ukraine's escalating government corruption harms US interests abroad - Daddyhood