The Choice boxed beef cutout value was $197.16/cwt. last week, the second highest weekly average this year and only $1.35/cwt. below the early March peak. Choice values have made a strong rebound after dropping to a weekly low of $177.79/cwt. in mid-April. Currently, Choice boxed beef is 13 percent higher than the same time last year. The latest Select boxed beef weekly average was $185.01/cwt., up 10 percent from one year ago at this time.
The Choice-Select spread has widened sharply in recent weeks, which is the typical seasonal tendency at this time of year. The latest boxed beef values increase the Choice-Select spread to $12.15/cwt., about double the $6.03 spread this time last year. The spread is also above the five year average level of $10.13/cwt. (for this time of year), which represent the first time the spread has exceeded the five year average weekly level since the first week of January. Thus, the Choice-Select spread has gone from a seasonal low in late March of $0.30/cwt. (well below the average seasonal low) to current levels above the average level for this time of year.
What do the increase in both Choice and Select boxed beef values from year ago levels and the widening of the Choice-Select spread in recent weeks tell us about beef market conditions and, in particular, about beef demand? Total beef production is down 2.8 percent so far this year so higher prices would be expected with steady beef demand. Thus, higher boxed beef prices do not necessarily reflect increased beef demand, though they do suggest that demand is holding steady in the face of reduced supplies and higher prices. However, the increase in Choice relative to Select prices does suggest stronger demand for high quality beef. This is borne out in the changing values of various wholesale cuts. At the current time, Choice wholesale values for Ribeye and Tenderloins are up 27 and 24 percent year over year while Chucks and Rounds are up 13 and 6 percent compared to last year.
The increase in wholesale beef prices from year ago levels could be due mostly to reduced beef production so far this year. However, the sharper increase in middle meat values relative to end meat values and the wider Choice-Select spread suggest that beef demand is improving. Wholesale values are expected to increase further with sharper year over year beef production decreases in the third quarter. Continued improvement in beef demand will determine how much higher wholesale beef prices may go.
Source: Derrell S. Peel, Oklahoma State University Extension Livestock Marketing Specialist
CTS Wholesale Sunglasses Announces The Great Summer Sunglasses Contest In Support of Cataract Awareness Month And UV Safety Month - YAHOO!
CTS Wholesale Sunglasses is launching a new contest this summer called the Great Summer Sunglasses Contest, in support of Prevent Blindness America's national Cataract Awareness Month and UV Safety Month.
Salem, OR (PRWEB) June 11, 2012
CTS Wholesale Sunglasses believes in maintaining good eye health with the use of proper eye protection. In support of Prevent Blindness America's (preventblindness.org) national Cataract Awareness Month (June 1st - 30th) and UV Safety Month (July 1- 31st), CTS Wholesale Sunglasses is announcing a new 30-day contest.According to Prevent Blindness America’s 2008 Vision Problems in the U.S. report, 50% of all Americans will develop cataracts by age 80, and more than 22 million Americans age 40 and older already have cataracts in one stage of another. It is predicted that by 2020, 30.1 million Americans 40 plus years of age will have cataracts. One of the known causes of cataracts is exposure to ultraviolet radiation.
According to the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO), recent studies have shown that prolonged exposure to the sun’s ultraviolet rays without protection may cause serious eye conditions, such as cataracts and macular degeneration, which can lead to vision loss and even blindness.
"We really believe in proper eye protection," says Kirk Bachelder, owner of CTS Wholesale LLC, "Especially when it comes to spending extended periods of time outdoors during the summer."
Summer is a busy time for Bachelder and his employees at CTS Wholesale Sunglasses. Not only are they busy filling many of their retailers' orders, who are stocking up on supplies in anticipation of a warm and sunny summer, but they are also busy manning their own vendor booths at the many summer festivals and fairs across the country. "We know firsthand just how important a pair of sunglasses is when spending long days outside in the summer," says Bachelder.
The Great Summer Sunglasses Contest will begin on Friday, June 15th, 2012 and run until Saturday, July 14th, 2012, where one lucky winner will have the option to choose from a $100 gift certificate to CTSwholesaleSunglasses.com or a fully loaded sunglasses display rack.
To enter the contest, simply visit the blog (http://blog.ctswholesalesunglasses.com) on Friday June 15th. There is no purchase necessary and entrants may enter once every day for the full contest.
About CTS Wholesale LLC:
CTS Wholesale Sunglasses markets bulk sunglasses, party hats, oil lighters and other items for retailers to buy conveniently at any time and place from the Internet store. Toll-free numbers help to clarify doubts and get any questions answered before finalizing the order. Visit the online store at http://www.CTSwholesaleSunglasses.com.
Kirk Bachelder
CTS Wholesale LLC.
503.364.3486
Email Information
Robert Pyper: Reform best the slow way - scotsman.com
RESTRUCTURING Scotland’s public services is a process that should be piecemeal rather than wholesale, and is complicated by the unsettled constitution, writes Robert Pyper
Recent articles on these pages by Professor Stephen Osborne and Des McNulty brought with them a certain sense of déjà vu. It seems as if we are doomed to retrace our steps across a landscape littered with think tank reports, academic articles, parliamentary papers, white and green papers, and associated contributions to the never-ending debates about the future of our public services.
The discussions about inter-agency collaborations, joint service delivery, integrated public services, joined-up approaches and partnership working have a certain circularity. They take place on the assumption that the existing mosaic of public service bodies in Scotland is more or less “a given”, and the task we face is how best to co-ordinate the work of these bodies in order to enhance service delivery. Last year, the Christie Commission devoted a section of its report to matters relating to “inter-agency training to reduce silo mentalities, drive forward service integration and build a common public service ethos.”
In his article, McNulty might justifiably have cited the thorough work carried out some time ago on this theme by the Scottish Parliament’s finance committee under his chairmanship. That committee’s 2005 investigation into “efficient government and civil service reform” gathered a plethora of evidence on the future direction of the public services in Scotland’s devolved polity.
The question of structure, which featured in the 2005 debates, remains germane to the issues and themes covered by Christie, as well as by Professor Osborne and former Labour minister McNulty. Returning to the evidence I submitted to the McNulty Committee, the continuing relevance of the key issues, and the lack of forward movement on the question of the overall structure of the Scottish public services, is striking.
It makes sense to start at the top of the structure, with the civil service. The unified, but broadly federal UK civil service has evolved under devolution to strike a balance between the core principles which emerge from Whitehall and the necessary flexibilities which allow the day-to-day governance of Scotland and Wales to reflect local culture, behaviours and priorities. Since 1997, the prevailing view in Edinburgh has been that there would be little purpose in embarking on the expensive and time-consuming rebranding exercise which would be required in order to create a distinct Scottish civil service. The SNP favours this concept, but apparently prefer to wait for the inevitable break with Whitehall which would result from independence.
What of the relationship between the civil service and the other elements of the public service? In 2005 the head of the civil service in Scotland dismissed the possibility of fundamental structural changes to the organisation and was especially negative about any proposals to bring public sector staff within “a single employment structure”.
That traditional view notwithstanding, it seems that no change for the civil service has consequences for the broader public services, and is not a long-term option. The quest for the type of integrated public service model set out in the articles by Osborne and McNulty has implications for all levels of the system, and will inevitably involve grasping the nettle of structural change. We have already seen how budgetary pressures and financial retrenchment, coupled with fundamental questions about the needs of a relatively small total population, have forced the issue of restructuring in the police service. The move to the “single Scottish force” will not be without its problems, and, of course, in any radical change of this type the major challenge is to ensure that economies of scale and the benefits of enhanced strategic coordination are achieved without loss of vital local accountabilities.
Nonetheless, the direction the rest of the public services are going could perhaps emerge from this case. In 2005 there seemed to be an opportunity to take the system of governance in the direction of an inclusive public service, and arguably facilitate a distinctly Scottish approach to public management and administration within the UK context, regardless of questions about long-term constitutional arrangements. Scottish governance would then be characterised by an approach common in many European states, where the civil service typically encompasses officials at central, federal and local levels. Undoubtedly, a series of legislative and organisational obstacles would have to be overcome in order to create a Scottish public service, but change of this type, properly managed, could help secure service integration, efficiency gains, rational policy-making, clarified lines of accountability, and opportunities to address perceived gaps in leadership or other specialised skills.
How could such a change be taken forward? Two possible routes would be a radical, “big bang” approach or a pragmatic, incremental approach. The former, implying a swift move involving extensive legislative change with only the basic required consultation and experimentation would be inadvisable, and would be at odds with the desire to engender an inclusive, cross-party culture and ethos.
The pragmatic approach would involve establishing key building blocks for reform, developing practices and processes from extant pilot schemes and moving from these to create selected experiments with public service integration, spanning, inter alia, local government, the health service and the civil service. The problem with the incremental building block approach, which features in the sub-texts of the Christie Report, is that we have seen rather a lot of it, over the years. If the “shared services”, “integrated public services” agendas and their associated offshoots are isolated from clearly enunciated commitments to broader strategic reform, they simply spawn a plethora of units and cross-cutting task forces and, ultimately, add to the problem of initiative overload and reform by management fad, from which aspects of the system of government already suffer, without producing the required outcome.
For the pragmatic approach to stand a chance of succeeding, there needs to be a clear balance struck between incremental experimentation and a specific medium to long-term commitment to use these types of building blocks as the basis for the bigger change, the major strategic overhaul of the public services within an agreed timetable.
Professor Osborne argues that constitutional change in the form of independence or devo-max could be the catalyst for long-awaited public service reforms which would link funding and delivery. McNulty questions the need for such macro change as the prerequisite for the required reforms. In 2005 there was no looming independence referendum, and the devo-max agenda, though not described by that term, was about working within the spirit of the emerging Scottish polity and seeing devolution as a “process not an event”.
If a radical reconfiguration of public services could be envisaged in that context, there is no logical reason why such a reform agenda should now been seen as being dependent on major constitutional reform and the outcome of a referendum. However, abstract logic matters little in government, and realpolitik suggests that there will be little significant movement on this reform agenda until the constitutional questions are settled.
• Professor Robert Pyper is head of the school of social sciences, and Professor of Government and Public Policy at the University of the West of Scotland.
Teenager, 19, dies and two of his friends are hospitalised after taking £10 'legal high' Benzo Fury at music festival - Daily Mail
- Alex Heriot, 19, collapsed in the main area at the RockNess festival at Dores, on the shores of Loch Ness, on Saturday night
- Before festival he had tweeted: 'To say I am excited for RockNess 2012 is an absolute understatement'
- Two other festival goers believed to be friends of the dead teenager described as being in a 'comfortable' condition
- Benzo Fury can be bought wholesale over the internet and usually sells for 10 a pill, or 25 for three
By Jill Reilly
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Alex Heriot, 19, collapsed at the RockNess festival
The devastated family of a teenager who collapsed and died at a music festival after apparently taking a 'legal high' have warned about the dangers of taking drugs.
The grieving family of Alex Herriot described the 19-year-old as a 'happy, caring and kind young man' after he collapsed at the RockNess festival in Scotland.
Mr Herriot, from Portobello in Edinburgh, is thought to have experimented with a legal drug called Benzo Fury at the festival, on the shores of Loch News at Dores in the Highlands.
The 19-year-old collapsed in the main area on Saturday night and died in hospital a short time later. His relatives say he was not a habitual user of drugs and had been warned to steer clear of them.
They spoke of their devastation at the loss of an 'immensely popular' young man, saying they would never get over his death.
In a statement issued through Northern Constabulary, the family said: 'Alex, our much loved son, was happy, caring, kind, loyal and affectionate and joined in enthusiastically with any project. He was very popular with a large group of close, good friends.
'He was beautiful both on the outside and the inside where it matters most. He loved his life.
'The fact that we will not be seeing him wandering around the house with his laptop playing his music, teasing his sister and asking if there was any food and 'could he have a bus fare please' is unbearable.
'Alex was attending a music festival which he had been looking forward to enormously. As a young man who enjoyed life, it was unfortunate he chose to experiment with a drug that had such a catastrophic effect on his system.
'We are devastated that we have lost him but anything he did, in every area of his life, was done with good intent, in this case to get the most out of his festival experience.'
Mr Herriot had almost completed an HND in media studies and planned to go to Edinburgh's Queen Margaret University. He was said to have enjoyed film, anime, comedy and music.
Thanking the police and the medics who tried to save his life, the family said: 'The sudden death of our beloved son Alex has left his family in a state of shock and is a loss we will never get over.
On Thursday, the teenager, had written on his Twitter profile page about how much he was looking forward to the Scottish music festival
Festival: More than 30,000 people attended the weekend event and police said 144 revellers had been arrested over drug possession and one for dealing
Friends: Hours later, a 19-year-old woman and 20-year-old man, believed to be friends of the dead teenager, were taken to Raigmore Hospital in Inverness
WHAT IS 'LEGAL HIGH 'BENZO FURY?
‘Legal highs’ are substances which produce the same, or similar effects, to drugs such as cocaine and ecstasy, but are not controlled under the Misuse of Drugs Act.
There are a large number of 'legal highs' - some are known by their brand/product name, such as Benzo Fury and it's not always clear what's in these products and their contents can change regularly.
Benzo Fury is a man-made amphetamine which can give users a euphoric high.
It induces feelings of empathy similar to Class A drug ecstasy.
Benzo Fury is also a stimulant and it's side effects include loss of appetite, hallucinations and paranoia.
Controversial 'legal highs' such as Benzo Fury and Ivory Wave are manufactured in laboratories in the Far East and eastern Europe.
They have become a popular alternative to illegal ecstasy and Meow Meow..
'He was a very special person, always in a good mood, funny, interested in everything around him, immensely popular and loved by everyone who knew him.
'He had everything going for him: personality in abundance, very good, close friends, a large extended family unit that supported and adored him; and we are all devastated by our loss.'
In a warning to other youngsters, they said: 'Alex was not a habitual drug user. We know that young people dabble in drugs and Alex had been warned to steer clear. Please, please be aware that certain drugs can kill and please don't be the next youngster to leave their family bereft.'
Mr Herriot died in the early hours of Sunday morning at Raigmore Hospital in Inverness, failing to respond to treatment.
Police said over the weekend that early indications show that he may have taken drugs.
Officers said a 19-year-old girl and a 20-year-old man were also taken to hospital from the festival in the early hours of Sunday morning. They are thought to have taken drugs, including so-called legal highs.
The man and woman are described as being in a ‘comfortable’ condition.
Northern Constabulary confirmed Mr Heriot’s death is believed to be drug-related but would not say whether he had taken Benzo Fury.
Toxicology tests are being carried out to discover what substance or mixture, if any, was involved.
Benzo Fury can be bought wholesale over the internet and usually sells for 10 a pill, or 25 for three.
Mr Heriot's father told the Daily Record: 'We are still talking to the police liaison people and we are not sure of the full circumstances of what has happened.
'We are still struggling to take it in.'
On Thursday, the teenager, who was studying at Jewel and Esk College in Dalkeith, Midlothian, had written on his Twitter webpage about how much he was looking forward to the festival, headlined by acts including Mumford & Sons.
Benzo Fury can be bought wholesale over the internet and usually sells for 10 a pill, or 25 for three.
He wrote: ‘To say I am excited for RockNess 2012 is an absolute understatement.’
More than 30,000 people attended the weekend event and police said 144 revellers had been arrested over drug possession and one for dealing.
Legal highs defeat sniffer dogs which are not trained to detect legal substances and so far no other Benzo Fury has been found.
Police and organisers minimised the risk of controlled drugs at the festival through measures, including searches and the use of drugs dogs as well as amnesty bins.
Event commander, Superintendent Stevie Mackay, said: 'Taking drugs or any medicines, which you have not been prescribed, is an extremely risky thing to do.
'If anyone has the tablets described or any other drug, whether controlled or a 'legal high', in their possession, they are advised not to take them and to hand these in.
'Amnesty bins are available at the main Nesstival entrance or anyone can hand in substances to Crew 2000 at the welfare tent.'
‘Legal highs’ are substances which produce the same, or similar effects, to drugs such as cocaine and ecstasy, but are not controlled under the Misuse of Drugs Act.
There are a large number of 'legal highs' - some are known by their brand/product name, such as Benzo Fury and it's not always clear what's in these products and their contents can change regularly.
Legal high deaths: Hester Stewart's body, left, was found next to a bottle of GBL in a house in Brighton after a party while Lois Waters, right 24, is believed to have taken party drug mephedrone - known as meow meow - in the lead up to her death
In recent years there have been several highly publicised cases of young people dying after taking drugs which were legal highs.
Hester Stewart's body, 21, was found next to a bottle of GBL in a house in Brighton after a party in 2009, while Lois Waters, 24, is believed to have taken party drug mephedrone - known as meow meow - in the lead up to her death in 2009.
Both substances are now banned, but health professionals and police fear each time a drug is outlawed, a new alternative is introduced on to the market.
Benzo Fury is a man-made amphetamine which can give users a euphoric high and induces feelings of empathy similar to ecstasy.
It is also a stimulant and its side effects include loss of appetite, hallucinations and paranoia.
Fatal collision: Two men killed in a road crash on Friday that involved a bus taking people to RockNess have been named as Mark McFarlane, 38, and Barry Murray, 28
Controversial 'legal highs' such as Benzo Fury are usually produced in laboratories in the Far East and eastern Europe.
They have become a popular alternative to illegal ecstasy and the now banned drug meow meow.
Meanwhile two men killed in a road crash on Friday that involved a bus taking people to RockNess have been named.
A van driver and passenger died in the accident at Ralia, near Newtonmore, Inverness-shire.
Northern Constabulary said the men were Mark McFarlane, 38, and Barry Murray, 28, decorators from the Glasgow area.
Meanwhile, police are anxious to trace Zoe McArthur, 18, of Edinburgh, who was last seen on Saturday evening at the festival.
It's a Hungry Game for Jennifer Lawrence... as she goes shopping for groceries - Daily Mail
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Jennifer Lawrence was the image of bohemian chic as she headed to the supermarket yesterday to stock up on groceries.
The Hunger Games actress donned a floaty patterned skirt for her outing to Whole Foods in Los Angeles to stock up on food.
A lettuce could be seen peeping out from the top of her bag as she left the store, before continuing her shopping trip at high-end homeware shop Williams-Sonoma.
Feeling hungry: Jennifer Lawrence was spotted leaving Whole Foods in Los Angeles yesterday
Jennifer, 21, completed her hippy-esque look with a grey T-shift and green jacket, teamed with a white crochet bag.
Not very filling: A lettuce could be seen peeping out the top of her bag
The actress has recently returned from London with boyfriend Nicholas Holt.
While there the pair enjoyed the Queen's Jubilee celebrations, including watching the procession down the River Thames.
She recently finished work on comedy film Silver Linings Playbook, in which she co-stars with Robert De Niro, Bradley Cooper, and Julia Stiles.
Jennifer and boyfriend Nicholas, who met on the set of X Men: First Class in 2010, went public with their relationship last year.
Bohemian chic: The 21-year-old actress donned a floaty patterned dress, teamed with a grey T-shirt, green jacket and a crochet bag
Getting in the goods: After her grocery trip she headed to high-end homeware store Williams-Sonoma
Lawrence with Brit boyfriend Nicholas Holt in London earlier this month
While the couple have been tight-lipped on the subject of their relationship, Jennifer did hint at what may have attracted her to the actor during an interview earlier this year.
She told UK Glamour magazine: 'British men have these wonderful manners, and everything they say is funnier just because of the accent.
'There’s this cute "I'm trying to be adorable because I know you’re mad at me" accent, and then the drunk accent where all the consonants have vanished.
Having spent a lot of time in the UK since she started dating Hoult, Lawrence has also developed a fondness for the country's fashion.
She explained: 'I love the relaxed way British girls dress. I think I dress like one.
'I like Topshop, Portobello Road and Selfridges - although I always get Selfridges and Waitrose mixed up, which has led to a few disappointing shopping trips.'
Rising star: Lawrence seen in character as Katniss Everdeen in her blockbuster hit, The Hunger Games
Wholesale Bridal Dresses Beautiful And Romantic - Salon
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