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Australia - "ORANGE" Set of 4 Mini-Mousepad Coasters
List Price: $8.99
Sale Price: $8.99
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Protect your furniture with this set of 4 mini-mousepad coasters. Each coaster is 3.5 x 3.5 inches (width & lenght). They are soft top made out of mousepad material (polyester surface, neoprene backing) and work well as coasters.
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Belize - "ORANGE WALK" Set of 4 Mini-Mousepad Coasters
List Price: $8.99
Sale Price: $8.99
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Protect your furniture with this set of 4 mini-mousepad coasters. Each coaster is 3.5 x 3.5 inches (width & lenght). They are soft top made out of mousepad material (polyester surface, neoprene backing) and work well as coasters.
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St. Elsewhere
List Price: $18.98
Sale Price: $8.46
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
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150 Cartoon Classics
List Price: $14.98
Sale Price: $1.98
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WOW! 150 Cartoon Classics DVD Set. PRICED LOW! Hours of classic animation! Here's the ultimate collection of 150 Classic Cartoons. A laugh a minute featuring all-time favorite characters and fun-filled antics from the Golden Age of animation...
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Music From The O.C. Mix 4
List Price: $13.96
Sale Price: $3.84
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
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![Stuart Little [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5140T6RR7CL._SL75_.jpg) |
Stuart Little [VHS]
List Price: $14.95
Sale Price: $1.25
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This live-action version of E.B. White's novel doesn't have quite the magic of, say, Toy Story. Instead of entertainment the whole family can be enthralled with, Stuart Little is squarely aimed, and successfully so, at the 4- to 10-year-old watcher...
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SAM Medical Products Finger Splints (Orange, 5-Pack)
List Price: $9.99
Sale Price: $5.80
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36" SAM SPLINT FLAT FOLDIndispensable backcountry first aid gear. Just mold it to shape, wrap or strap it into place, and you're done. Transparent to X-rays. Firm and extra-firm ends allow different levels of resistance to motion, according to needs...
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Disney Mickey Mouse Plug-In Night Light (Designs may vary)
List Price: $9.99
Sale Price: $0.48
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No more nightmares or worrying about what's hiding under the bed! With everyone's favorite cartoon character, Mickey Mouse, your kids will be sleeping through the night once again. This small nightlight features 7...
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Mickey Mouse Clubhouse: Mickey's Storybook Surprises
List Price: $15.99
Sale Price: $8.74
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The only thing more fun than listening to a story is actually being part of it. So just say the magical words, "Meeska, Mooska, Mickey Mouse" -- and let the enchantment begin! When Donald Duck turns into a frog after drinking Professor Von Drake's new potion, only a kiss from Princess Daisy can change him back...
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Disney Animation Collection 1: Mickey & Beanstalk
List Price: $19.99
Sale Price: $9.37
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Professor Ludwig Von Drake narrates "Mickey and the Beanstalk" (1947), a hilarious spin on the fairy tale favorite, as Mickey, Donald Duck, and Goofy shimmy up the stalk to find fantastic treasure and a shape-shifting giant named Willie...
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Panic Room (Superbit Collection)
List Price: $9.95
Sale Price: $1.96
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An effective exercise in "confined cinema," Panic Room is a finely crafted thriller that ultimately transcends the thinness of its premise. David Koepp's screenplay is basically Wait Until Dark on steroids, so director David Fincher (Seven, The Game) compensates with elaborate CGI-assisted camera moves, jazzing up his visuals while a relocated New York divorcée (Jodie Foster) and her daughter (Kristen Stewart) fight for their lives against a trio of tenacious burglars (Jared Leto, Forest Whitaker, Dwight Yoakam) in their new Manhattan townhouse...
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Self Tan Bronzing Lotion
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What it is:An original, salon-inspired formula that delivers a rich, long-lasting, deep-bronze tan.What it does:The original, salon-inspired formula is specifically created to deliver a richer, deeper tan...
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Puss in Boots (el Gato Con Botas), an Opera by Xavier Montsalvatge
Just occasionally – in fact pretty rarely these days – something utterly surprising emerges from an evening in a concert hall. Almost forty years into an interest in music which has focused on every style of western music from Gothic to minimalism (perhaps not such a great leap!), real surprises are now quite rare and often come about on hearing a work by a young composer, someone just starting to seek a voice. But Xavier Montsalvatge died aged ninety in 2002 after a lifetime longer than most as an active composer, but few outside his native Catalunya were then familiar with his music. Since moving to Spain I have actively sought programmes that featured his increasingly popular output and have been impressed with the eclecticism of his style, usually neo-classical, but often laced with popular tunes, folk song and jazz, and sometimes even giving more than a hint of Bartokian toughness. But nothing from the piano works and pieces for strings I have heard up to now could have prepared me for the experience that was Montsalvatge’s opera, El Gato con Botas, Puss in Boots.
Obviously an opera for children and with a text by Charles Perrault which faithfully follows the familiar pantomime version of the tale, we know from the first rhythmic string figures, with their shifting harmonies and ambiguous keys, that we are to experience a work which exists simultaneously on different levels, similar in some ways to Janacek’s Cunning Little Vixen, but lighter in its touch, a Miro to Janacek’s Dadd.
The work lasts just an hour and has five scenes. In the first our Puss is lazing on a cushion in front of the television, occasionally offering her skin-tight costume with its hanging baubles in languorous lines to the audience. The children were captivated from first to last, mesmerised by this wonderful engaging character, elegantly and excitingly portrayed and sung by Marisa Martins. Older members of the audience might have had other things in mind, such is the nature of pantomime. It is in this first scene that her new sequinned, high heeled and pointed boots are presented, along with a cloak to emphasise her pinkness. The king and princess lament the state of the kingdom. Apparently it’s a boring life when there are no wars or civil strife. Neither are there husbands, it seems. Puss with boots appears and is hired. The miller, a suitor for the king’s daughter, strips to his shorts and takes a swim in the river and immediately gets into difficulty. Puss summons her trusty white rabbits who, until now have balletically moved props and rearranged the kindergarten’s alphabetic furniture. They don snorkels and goggles and rescue the lad. The king is overjoyed and the princess’s eyes are seen to bulge a little. And then the ogre appears to rough things up a bit. In his lair, he laments the fact that the high life might have rendered his nose the colour of an aubergine. Puss sorts everything out, of course, whimsically avoiding the lion into which he transforms himself, then wooing the canary which is his next trick and finally, of course, dealing (offstage) with the radio-controlled orange mouse which was the form she requested him to take. Are all ogres that stupid? Anyway there’s a wedding and clearly all live happily ever after, including Puss who gets her television back.
So that’s the story. It’s pantomime, but it is superbly done and it’s filled with wonderful imagery. Marisa Martins as the Puss is quite outstanding in the role. She has a dancer’s use of the body alongside coquettish expressions and interpretive gestures which seem to draw the music rather than follow it. And she also has that unmistakable talent to sing beautifully and act apparently effortlessly at the same time. Enric Martinez-Castignani as the king gives an excellent portrayal of a bumbling idiot whose deafness perhaps hides his wisdom. Miguel Zapater as the ogre is outstanding. He becomes a real pantomime character who admits he has had a few too many glasses of wine. Maria Luz Matrinez as the princess carries off the apparent naiveté of the character with aplomb and her voice shines in a role that has to bear the sledgehammer imagery of a wedding dress of pure white hung with bright red balls. How’s that for subtlety! And if David Menendez had stripped down to his swimming trunks to take his dip in the river in an older-style opera house, no doubt a section of the audience would have called for a diversion of the glasses otherwise permanently trained on Pussy’s pinkness. His playing of the role was a superb blend of clown and suitor and his singing was excellent.
But underpinning all of this was the music, which was brilliantly expressive, a deceptively simple yet eclectic mix of recitative, full orchestra and inventive ensembles. The trombone and tuba figures that accompanied the ogre were a touch of genius. The recitatives were superbly cast as not quite Mozartian, whilst the neo-classicism was always delving into interesting harmonic shifts. And there was always the hint of a cat’s paw flick in the strings to allow Puss to draw us all in with that playful flick of the hand and wrist. In the pit the World Youth Orchestra played flawlessly and Josep Vincent, who is surely one of the brightest and most accomplished of young conductors, is surely destined for global recognition.
This was music and performance of the very highest standard – and all happening in this increasingly sophisticated little town of La Nucia, just outside Benidorm. What a wonderful place to live!
About the Author
Philip Spires
Author of Mission
http://www.philipspires.co.uk
Will The orange Box run on a laptop?
ok so i have a dell inspiron 1720 laptop and i was wondering if the game The Orange Box would run on it. And also do i need some special controller or something or can i just use a mouse. I'm not much a gamer atall so i dont know much just this game looked really cool and i wanted to try it. plus iv never played a game on a computer before so i figure this might be cool.
http://systemrequirementslab.com
Click on Can You Run It and pick the Orange Box from the games( Or Team Fortress 2 if they dont have it listed under Orange Box) and of course a mouse and keyboard will work fine; in fact they are preferred for fps.
Chapel Field math team advances to sectionals
PINE BUSH — Chapel Field Christian School's varsity math team has become the mouse that roared: The small school's team has, for the second year in a row, beaten significantly larger schools to become division champions.
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