Texas Coffee People
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Costa Rica Espresso Roast Whole Bean Bag 2 lbs (908 Grams) $20.95 Many people mistakenly believe that espresso is a particular variety of coffee. In fact, it is neither a bean nor a blend. Espresso results from the process of roasting and brewing. The best e |
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Gourmet Hot Cocoa Canister 14.1 Ounces (400 Grams) $9.95 It should come as no surprise that we understand quality hot cocoa. This indulgent drink was born in our region more than 500 years ago. Mexico’s Aztec people were known to crush cacao beans and |
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Hazelnut Coffee $8.49 Our 100% Arabica gourmet coffee is infused with the smooth and nutty tasted of fresh hazelnut. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Decaffeinated Coffee $6.49 A distinctive and balanced flavor for those who love the richness of a darker roast and the smooth flavor of a lighter roast coffee. Ground 13 oz. |
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Crescent City Blend® Coffee $8.49 A tribute to the rich, bold coffee served in New Orleans. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Dark Roast Coffee $6.49 The rich aroma of our original coffee blend will awaken your senses. Ground 16 oz. |
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Brazil Santos Bourbon Coffee $8.49 This delectable gourmet coffee yields an enticingly smooth cup with a rich aroma and mild acidity. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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French Vanilla Coffee $8.49 A truly delectable and luxuriously sweet French Vanilla coffee you are sure to enjoy. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Pecan Praline Coffee $8.49 Our Pecan Praline flavored coffee is a truly delightful Southern treat. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Fresh-O-Lator® Coffee Canister $29.95 Our airtight canister will preserve the freshness of your favorite coffee. |
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Kenya Coffee $8.49 Bright acidity and fruity flavors combine for a wonderfully aromatic cup with a taste that maintains a refined winey character. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Around the World Gourmet Coffee Sampler $34.95 Explore four specialty coffees from distinctive coffee-growing regions around the world. Whole Bean Four 12 oz. packages. |
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Medium Roast Coffee $6.49 This extraordinarily aromatic and light-roasted blend produces a fragrant and mellow cup. Ground 16 oz. |
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Kona Blend Coffee $8.49 Our Kona Blend is light-medium roasted and produces a sweet and mellow floral tone. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Café Special® Coffee $5.99 Roasted medium-dark to a rich brown color for a distinctive café taste and aroma. Ground 12 oz. |
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Breakfast Blend Coffee $8.49 Ease into the day as we do down in New Orleans with the smooth and mellow flavor of our Breakfast Blend. Ground 12 oz. |
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An Appeal To The People Of Massachusetts, On The Texas Question $11.78 An Appeal To The People Of Massachusetts, On The Texas Question |
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Texas at the Crossroads: People, Politics, Policy $29.5 Texas at the Crossroads: People, Politics, Policy |
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New Orleans Blend® Coffee and Chicory $5.49 Indulge in a delicate combination of fine Arabica beans and high quality chicory that is steeped in the traditions of New Orleans. Ground 16 oz. |
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Louisiana Blend™ Medium-Dark Coffee $8.49 This blend of gourmet Latin American coffees embodies the distinctive flavor of Louisiana. Whole Bean 12 oz. |
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Texas $22.5 Powell”s Texas begins with a panorama of the vast Texas landscape, from thepiney woods to Big Bend country, before turning to the people of the land nowcalled Texas. |
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Coffee People® Coconut Mocha Coffee $11.99 K-CUP® COFFEE. Coffee People® Coconut Mocha Coffee. K-Cup for the Keurig gourmet single cup brewer are convenient and easy to use. Airtight container locks in freshness and flavor. Includes 18 k-cup coffee pods. Compatible with all single-serve Keurig brewers. Click on Alternate Views to see additional details. |
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Coffee $15.57 Linking alchemy, anthropology, politics, and science, Antony Wild uncovers the intrigue that coffee has woven into its 500-year history. Coffee trader and historian Antony Wild delivers a rollicking history of the most valuable legally traded commodity in the world after oil–and an industry that employs one hundred million people throughout the world. from obscure beginnings in East Africa in the 15th century as a stimulant in religious devotion, coffee became an imperial commodity, produced by poor tropical countries and consumed by rich temperate ones. Through the centuries, the influence of coffee on the rise of capitalism and its institutions has been enormous. Revolutions were once hatched in coffeehouses, commercial alliances forged, secret societies formed, and politics and art endlessly debated. Today, while coffee chains spread like wildfire, coffee-producing countries are in crisis: with prices at a historic low, they are plagued by unprecedented unemployment, abandoned farms, enforced migration, and massive social disruption. Bridging the gap between coffee’s dismal colonial past and its perilous corporate present, Coffee reveals the shocking exploitation that has always lurked at the heart of the industry. |
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Absolute Certainty of Life after Death $0.91 THIS IS THE STORY OF TWO MEN. ONE VERY RICH. ONE VERY POOR. THEY BOTH DIED.Most people are intrigued by the subject of life after death. Whether in a classroom, at church, or talking with a friend over a cup of coffee, the same questions are asked over and over again…”What happens the moment you die?”"Where do we go?”"Will we see our loved ones in heaven?”"Do dead people know what’s going on here on earth?”"How can a loving and merciful God send people to hell?”Author Don Wilton looks at these questions and more in The Absolute Certainty of Life after Death, a modern retelling of the Biblical story of the rich man and Lazarus. This compelling story chronicles that choices and fate of two very different, but ordinary men. Set in Texas and New Orleans, this fictional story traces the contrasting lives of Albright A. Rhodes, a multi-millionaire and Billy Bob Malkmus, a homeless beggar, from birth to death….and beyond. |
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J Mac Is The Freestyle King! $27.12 J Mac loves basketball, books and hanging out with his close friends but it’s his self-proclaimed title as the Freestyle King that has his school mates and the people in the small town of Conroe making fun of him. J Mac decides that his passion for music is worth standing up for and he becomes determined to prove once and for all to himself and everyone else that he is indeed the real Freestyle King.Terri Thomas is an author, motivational speaker and successful Radio Personality and Program Director based in Houston, Texas. Terri is hard wired with a creative spirit and a zest for helping people realize their full potential in life. She’s passionate about writing, music, photography, pets, shoes, and her close friends and family. She’s hoping that her books inspire children to believe that anything is possible and to realize that we are only limited by the limitations we set on ourselves. For more info visit www.TerriThomas.com.Wendy Lynn Sefcik is an illustrator/designer, owner of Broken Box Designs, LLC. She’s addicted to artsy things and obsessed with color! From childhood scribbles, to doodles in grade school, through on the job training after college, she is an experienced artist. Gratefully, she loves her job! Wendy lives in Northeastern, Ohio with her husband (Scott) and kitty (Luigi). She’s the middle child of five “Dister Sisters,” and loves to spend time with family. She’s a runner and tennis player. Also loves to shop, cook, sip coffee, decorate, travel and cherish the simple moments in life. For more info visit www.brokenboxdesigns.com! |
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J Mac Is The Freestyle King! $17.71 J Mac loves basketball, books and hanging out with his close friends but it’s his self-proclaimed title as the Freestyle King that has his school mates and the people in the small town of Conroe making fun of him. J Mac decides that his passion for music is worth standing up for and he becomes determined to prove once and for all to himself and everyone else that he is indeed the real Freestyle King.Terri Thomas is an author, motivational speaker and successful Radio Personality and Program Director based in Houston, Texas. Terri is hard wired with a creative spirit and a zest for helping people realize their full potential in life. She’s passionate about writing, music, photography, pets, shoes, and her close friends and family. She’s hoping that her books inspire children to believe that anything is possible and to realize that we are only limited by the limitations we set on ourselves. For more info visit www.TerriThomas.com.Wendy Lynn Sefcik is an illustrator/designer, owner of Broken Box Designs, LLC. She’s addicted to artsy things and obsessed with color! From childhood scribbles, to doodles in grade school, through on the job training after college, she is an experienced artist. Gratefully, she loves her job! Wendy lives in Northeastern, Ohio with her husband (Scott) and kitty (Luigi). She’s the middle child of five “Dister Sisters,” and loves to spend time with family. She’s a runner and tennis player. Also loves to shop, cook, sip coffee, decorate, travel and cherish the simple moments in life. For more info visit www.brokenboxdesigns.com! |
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Josh’s Halloween Pumpkin $6.71 Front Flap As far as Josh can see, rows of his grandfather’s pumpkins stretch out in front of him. In fact, every October, people come from all over the county to buy pumpkins from Grandpa Frank. But this year, Josh plans to keep one special pumpkin–the biggest pumpkin in the patch–for himself. With this pumpkin, he will surely be crowned the Harvest Festival Pumpkin King and get to ride in the biggest float in the parade. As he imagines the possibilities for his giant find, he tells his little sister stories about magic flying pumpkins. Josh’s pumpkin is so big that it must be magic too, so they agree to keep it a secret. But when Callie gets lost in the woods before the Harvest Festival, Josh forgets all about the parade. It’s getting dark and Callie will be scared. They have to find her. Josh reveals his secret pumpkin with a clever idea. The whole town unites in the effort to locate the sweetest girl in the county. Will Callie find her way out of the dark? Only the magic of Josh’s pumpkin can save her.Back Flap Kathryn Lay loves the unusual. She was inspired to write this book by the giant pumpkin exhibit at the Texas State Fair. Fall being her favorite season, she wanted to write a sweet family story without the spooky aspect of most Halloween books. Lay teaches writing classes online for Coffee House for Writers. She received the 2005 Golden Spur Award for Crown Me! and has taken part in the Texas Book Festival. She is a past Texas regional advisor of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators. Her work has been included in Guideposts, Family Circle, Cricket, Spider, Highlights for Children, Woman’s Day, US Kids, Pockets, Jack & Jill, SCBWI Bulletin, The Writer, Writer’s Digest, Boys’ Life, Children’s Book Insider, Spellbound, Wee Ones, Hopscotch, Teen Power, Teen Life, and Children’s Playmate, among others. Katy Bratun’s art has appeared in more than thirty picture books as well as advertisements, greeting cards, puzzles, |
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Mediterranean Design $39.95 More countries line the Mediterranean Sea than any other body of water. Mediterranean conjures up passionate, sensual visions of the ocean and charming villages. Mediterranean Design has universal appeal, reaching from the roots of Morocco, Spain, Italy, Greece, Turkey, France, and Croatia to interpretive architecture in the United States, most especially in California, Arizona, Texas, and Florida. Mediterranean architecture touches people through comfort on a basic level with charm, beauty, and nature, wrapped in sculptural elements and tempered by vivid colors and tactile textures. Mediterranean communities are tight-knit, friendly circles where partnership is valued. Invite this engaging design into your living space to encourage social interaction and elegant warmth. Author Mary Whitesides, an accomplished designer and photographer, has created designs for everything from interiors and home furnishings to pottery and coffee mugs. Her unique Peruvian-inspired furniture collections are widely distributed, and her African and Peruvian-inspired accessories are featured in museums, including the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. One of the four founding members of the Sundance Catalog, Mary was a partner in developing the Sundance look and style. She is also the author of Wine Country, Desert Style, Mountain Style, and Wicker Design. Whitesides travels frequently to South America and throughout the United States. She makes her home in Park City, Utah. |
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People From Rutherford County, Tennessee $14.14 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Benjamin Mcculloch, William Barksdale, Thomas Benton Smith, Ethelbert Barksdale, Donna Rowland, Simpson Harris Morgan. Excerpt: Benjamin McCulloch (November 11, 1811March 7, 1862) was a soldier in the Texas Revolution, a Texas Ranger, a U.S. marshal, and a brigadier general in the army of the Confederate States during the American Civil War. He was born November 11, 1811 in Rutherford County, Tennessee, one of twelve children and the fourth son of Alexander McCulloch and Frances Fisher LeNoir. His father, a Yale University graduate, was an officer on Brig. Gen. John Coffee’s staff during the Creek War of 1813 and 1814 in Alabama (and apparently at the Battle of New Orleans in 1815). His mother was a daughter of a prominent Virginia planter. The McCulloch family had been wealthy, politically influential, and socially prominent in North Carolina before the American Revolution, but Alexander had wasted much of his inheritance and was unable even to educate his sons. (Two of Ben’s older brothers had briefly attended a school in Tennessee taught by their neighbor, Sam Houston.) One of Ben’s younger brothers was Henry Eustace McCulloch, also a Confederate general officer. Another brother, Alexander, served in the Texas Revolution and as a captain in Mexico. The McCulloch family, like many on the frontier, moved often by choice or necessity. In the twenty years following their move from North Carolina and Ben’s birth, they lived in eastern Tennessee, Alabama, and then western Tennessee, finally settling at Dyersburg, where one of their closest neighbors was David Crockett — a great influence on young Ben. In 1834, McCulloch headed west. He reached St. Louis just too late to join the fur trappers headed for the mountains for the season. He then tri… More: |
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The Big Enchilada: Campaign Adventures with the Cockeyed Optimists from Texas Who Won the Biggest Prize in Politics $13.99 Six years ago he owned a baseball team. Now he’s the leader of the free world. The Big Enchilada is a comic anthem to the wild and improbable crusade that propelled George W. Bush into the White House and to the close-knit group of Texans who made it happen, written by “the Bush campaign’s Renaissance man” (Time magazine). Writer and political strategist Stuart Stevens has been hailed by Martin Amis as “the perfect companion: brave, funny, and ever-watchful,” and The New Yorker has praised him for having “a wonderful eye for the curiosities of human behavior.” Here he tells the surprisingly funny, adrenaline-fueled story of the Bush campaign the public never saw — from the Austin coffee shop where Stevens watched Karl Rove sketch out the Republican master plan on a napkin to the small Methodist church in Crawford, Texas, where the blue-jeaned future president prepared for the make-or-break debates that no one expected him to win. He offers the inside view of the rise and flameout of maverick John McCain; the struggle to come up with a message that could be heard over a booming economy (“Times have never been better. Vote for change,” campaign aides joked); and the fierce debates over the upside and downside of “going negative” against a vulnerable adversary. Above all, Stevens turns the familiar political tale of disillusionment on its head. From the moment he arrived in Austin to join the campaign — “Stevens, get in here and let’s bond!” the governor said — he discovered the peculiar pleasure of working with people who not only respected and admired their candidate but actually liked him. They faced formidable obstacles, from a nation surfing a vast wave of peace and prosperity to an experienced opponent whose seasoned advisers bragged that the campaign would be “a slaughterhouse.” But Texans, as Stevens learned, are a confident bunch, and the Bush crowd remained convinced they would win the biggest prize of all — even |
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The Big Enchilada: Campaign Adventures with the Cockeyed Optimists from Texas Who Won the Biggest Prize in Politics By Stuart Stevens $13.99 Six years ago he owned a baseball team. Now he’s the leader of the free world. <I>The Big Enchilada</I> is a comic anthem to the wild and improbable crusade that propelled George W. Bush into the White House and to the close-knit group of Texans who made it happen, written by “the Bush campaign’s Renaissance man” <I>(Time</I> magazine).<P>Writer and political strategist Stuart Stevens has been hailed by Martin Amis as “the perfect companion: brave, funny, and ever-watchful,” and <I>The New Yorker</I> has praised him for having “a wonderful eye for the curiosities of human behavior.” Here he tells the surprisingly funny, adrenaline-fueled story of the Bush campaign the public never saw — from the Austin coffee shop where Stevens watched Karl Rove sketch out the Republican master plan on a napkin to the small Methodist church in Crawford, Texas, where the blue-jeaned future president prepared for the make-or-break debates that no one expected him to win. He offers the inside view of the rise and flameout of maverick John McCain; the struggle to come up with a message that could be heard over a booming economy (“Times have never been better. Vote for change,” campaign aides joked); and the fierce debates over the upside and downside of “going negative” against a vulnerable adversary.<P>Above all, Stevens turns the familiar political tale of disillusionment on its head. From the moment he arrived in Austin to join the campaign — “Stevens, get in here and let’s bond!” the governor said — he discovered the peculiar pleasure of working with people who not only respected and admired their candidate but actually <I>liked</I> him. They faced formidable obstacles, from a nation surfing a vast wave of peace and prosperity to an experienced opponent whose seasoned advisers bragged that the campaign would be “a slaughterhouse.” But Texans, as Stevens learned, are a confident bunch, and the Bush crowd remained convinced they would win the biggest prize of all — even on the bri |
performing in places?
Hi I am a singer/songwriter, I have only performed a few times in front of people that I don’t actually know. I want to get used to the idea of performing in front of people, any suggestions? also should I just go and book spots and like coffee houses or venues or open mic nights etc. I live in austin texas if anybody is from there? all answers are much appreciated. Thanks
Do you lover performing? If your skill is that strong, you will sing wherever you are, at home, on the bus, in front of family, in front of strangers, walking down the street. Concentrate on loving what you do so much that you will want to do it everywhere you go. There are three ways to perform in front of others, either you are doing it because you love hearing yourself perform, or you love hearing the audience response, or both. In the end you will have to get out there and try and maybe fail a few times and win a few times. Some performers are great but abhor crowds, some performers hate the studio (being in a small area) but get their thrill off the crowd reaction. Are you the shy behind the scenes artist or are you the thrill seeker? If you are the former, you may want to get someone to act as your PR/manager person to scout out locations and get open mic information for coffee houses, etc. Try to visit coffee houses and college open mics, perhaps the local library music section, and talk with musicians who will refer you to places and managers. Your priority should be concentrating on perfecting your craft and producing the best singing effort product. If you do that where ever you go (school, work, etc.) someone will hear you and refer you to the right places to perform. If I were to see you in person signing on the street, and I was impressed, I would do my best to try to find you contacts. So the booking contacts you seek may be the stranger who walked right past you but didn’t hear you sing. It can be that easy! [Also, try stating your Yahoo answers question as "Open Mic/Talent Showcases in Austin Texas? ]
DFW SNS with Heather Perry Promo
Need Texas Self Storage?
Downsizing while in Dallas coming from a family house to an apartment is often as much a logistic relocation as it is in relation to saving money. However, the problem takes place any time you are wanting to combine a bigger house into a smaller studio. Sizeable items such as furniture, chest pieces together with coffee tables usually takes up a lot of space in a small condo. Having said that, eliminating those items awaiting the next move back into a house seems like a complete waste of hard earned money. There’s a simple solution any time you don’t want to get rid off heirlooms should be to consider Dallas storage companies.
Storing the furniture is an option to look into specifically when you have items you can’t chuck out but unfortunately will likely not fit it inside your new place. Storage space definitely provides a temporary solution to store ones own bigger pieces until you will be able rationally deal with all the scheduling details about the move. Relocation ıs definitely an emotional struggle. Many times there may be a substantial amount of sentiments attached with a few items. A Dallas Texas self storage location can provide you with a chance to emotionally have to cope with not just the relocation but also in helping to make necessary conclusions about what you should do with the furniture itself.
It is especially simple to find a Dallas storage company that matches your own preferences. There is something to consider prior to seeking out exactly what storage company you wish to use. One of the first factors is most likely the location. Location is extremely important because you eventually need to be able to get to your storage space unit within a relatively short period of time. This way if you want something, you can easily easily head out and get it without much of a headache.
One additional thing to consider with Dallas storage is the security measures. Most storage units just have a single access gate and an additional gate to get out. Many of these gates tend to be coded to make sure that only the people who have items put into storage there may access the area. In addition, there may be surveillance cameras and each unit is locked with your personal lock. This is because you’re the only one that can access your unit.
Dallas storage units come in all shapes and sizes to suit your fixtures and your spending budget. A great way to choose the dimensions you will want is to take a close look at precisely what you are considering storing. It may help to take a few dimensions of the biggest items just before see the storage unit. Dimensions ought to be taken of the width and length of the biggest piece you plan to store. However it is not only the large things that fill up space.
If you have a substantial amount of smallish things, they’re able to occupy just as much space as one large piece of furniture. A good way to guesstimate the approximate space for storage is to put them together and then take the all around dimension. That can provide an approximate over all size on the storage unit you must have. For those who have any specific uncertainty, the Dallas storage company personal can help you get the overall size you’re looking for.
The Culture of South 1st Street in Austin by dane
Some streets lead to wherever it is you want to go. Some lead to surprises both bad and good. Some streets are destinations in themselves, stretches of thoroughfare where the journey itself is all that matters.
South First Street between Riverside and St. Elmo’s is one of those streets, one of the last in Austin where , block after block, the old magic of the city that once attracted musicians, artists and other creative minds to move and settle down here, is still palpable, still crackling in the air.
Going south from Riverside, you pass shops and boutiques on the right, converted from 1930’s private homes, turned into artsy clothing and import stores. They sit across the street from the broad, green campus of the Texas State School for the Deaf. Further south, the Bouldin Creek Coffee house serves up its eclectic, health-hip food and drink to its neo-Bohemian clientele. Beyond that, Jovita’s, one of the city’s more venerable but less well-known music venues, beckons the eye with Joyce Dibona’s colorful, Aztec-theme artwork adorning the outside walls.
As you drive still further south, you pass more colorful buildings and businesses that crowd the four-lane street. Some are well-established and thriving, some look almost abandoned, decrepit even. All are obviously small operations, like the Resistencia Bookstore. At the corner of Oltorf and South First, one of the more eye-catching businesses houses what may be the perfect Austin enterprise for the times, Baby Green’s, a fast health food joint.
Continuing on, you pass one of the less visually appealing buildings, which however happens to be the home of the GHS Lounge, an old neighborhood drinking establishment with street cred to burn. Boot repair shops, used book stores, bicycle shops, art galleries and a nursery in a converted private home line the street as you head towards the intersection with Ben White. Before arriving there, you may notice the Summermoon Coffee house on the east side of the street, one of the coziest and most intimate of neighborhood coffee shops in the city. The surrounding neighborhoods of Barton Hills and Travis Heights are populated by people that have a steadfast devotion to their local businesses neighborhood businesses.
Next door is the SHAC, the Self Help and Advocacy Center which is run by the Austin Area Mental Health Consumers, an organization of people with a mental illness. This community center provides services and information to people suffering from mental illness and to the community at large. The mostly volunteer staff here has helped many people to find housing, jobs and renewed hope to re-integrate them selves into society.
Of course, along the way there has been a colorful liturgy of Mexican food restaurants: Aranda’s, Polvo’s, Little Mexico, Mexicana Panderia, Evita’s Botanitas. Even San Antonio would be hard pressed to present a street with so many colorful and deliciously promising establishments in a stretch of so few miles.
And all up and down this road which has somehow escaped the clear-cut style of development that brings condos and super-centers and grid-locked traffic, there is still the green of the Austin hills. From a long stretch of the street, if you’re heading north, you can see the towers downtown floating in the hazy distance. This is indeed Austin without the cookie-cutter architecture of anywhere USA. It’s local in character, content and color, a true reflection of the creativity and productivity of the people who live here.
It may only be a matter of time before this fine old street cedes to the pressure of development and big money, like so much of the rest of the town has. But for now, it’s still Austin the way it used to be, or nearly, ready for a road trip with no clear destination when the trip itself was all that mattered.
Ki lives in Austin as a realtor in the Austin real estate market. His site provides a free mortgage calculator along with a search of the Austin MLS
Article Source: http://www.earticlesonline.com/Article/The-Culture-of-South-1st-Street-in-Austin/315441
Visiting Vineyards To Purchase Texas Wine Gift
Last few years have witnessed a growing popularity of Texas wine in the national as well as international market. One of the biggest testaments to their growing popularity was Grapefest 2004, where over 240,000 people attended this fest and over 20,000 plus votes received for the 2004 Peoples Choice. Grapefest is the largest wine festival in the state. According to one estimate, Texas now has 87 wineries and is the 5th largest wine producing state in the nation. Texans consume nearly 37 million gallons of wine a year and upon given a chance most Texans would prefer to buy a wine produced in Texas. That clearly leaves a plenty of room for Texas wineries to produce an increasing share. In addition to that there is a huge demand of Texas wine in the open market.
No doubt, wine has a great impact on Texans life because it generates revenue and employment. During the year 2004, the wine industry generated $200 million along with 1,898 jobs for Texans. And, now due to new legislation, you as a wine lover can enjoy wine direct from the winery of Texas. Most of these wineries and vineyards encourage visitors to visit their vineyards and taste different wines before purchase in tasting rooms. Not only this, but you can also buy different Texas wine gifts for your family or friends while visiting or tasting wines at their wineries and vineyards.
The Overall Scenario Is Fast Changing and Promising
Although, earlier there were many restrictions in the past, but during the last two decades Texas wine industry has seen a time of incredible growth. In the last few years the number of wineries has increased from 50 to 87 or even more. According to one estimate, currently there are around 20 more wineries that are pending for state approval bringing the number of wineries to 104. Nowadays customers can directly place their orders with the winery and can also visit them to taste different wines in their tasting rooms.
And, there won’t be any exaggeration if we say that the day is not too far when these wineries will sell more wine over the Internet than in the tasting room in winter. Moreover, people would visit these wineries and vineyards not just to see, taste and purchase wine but to buy different wines and other related gifts for special occasions such as Christmas, New Year and Thanksgiving. Texans who visit a winery and make purchases in person can also have them shipped directly at their home. Purchases of these wines and other wine gifts can also be made by phone, fax or online for shipment to a Texas package store for pick-up or further delivery. So everything seems to be fast changing and promising especially when it comes to customer satisfaction.
At age 74, Del Harris returns to the bench (Star Telegram)
By Art Garcia
Sitting across from Donnie Nelson at their usual coffee spot, Del Harris asked
how the Texas Legends’ coaching search was coming.
“We’ll probably have one in the next five minutes,” Nelson answered.
Harris, 74, couldn’t resist the pull. After realizing he could handle the
travel schedule and his teaching obligations at Dallas Christian College, the
silver-haired basketball lifer agreed to his first full-time coaching job
since the Los Angeles Lakers in 1999.
Being back on the bench is hardly a surprise in a career that’s spanned more
than 50 years. The former NBA Coach of the Year slides over from his Legends
general manager seat to coach the Dallas Mavericks’ D-League affiliate.
Nelson and the second-year Legends sure know how to make a splash when it
comes to coaches. Nancy Lieberman made gender-breaking history last season
before the Frisco franchise failed to lure Bruce Pearl this off-season with a
truckload of cash. (Lieberman moved into the Legends’ front office.)
The Legends began training camp this week in Frisco with 17 players, including
last week’s draft haul. Harris talked about his decision, and the team.
What got you back to bench? The timing is kind …
How To Locate A TI84 Plus Graphing Calculator
Are you browsing for the proper graphing calculator? If so the Texas Instruments TI-84 Plus Graphing Calculator has anything that you are hunting for.Why obtain the TI-84? It really is an great unit and handles anything from calculus, engineering, trigonometric, and also fiscal functions plus as opposed to other graphing calculators the Texas Instruments TI-84 arrives with USB on-the-go technologies for file sharing with other calculators. You can connect this calculator to your Personal computer as nicely.
The TI-84 plus is fantastic for complex math and figures, due to the fact it can show solutions in the form of graphs. If you are a parent you really should contemplate obtaining this calculator for your college student due to the fact it will support them to productively remedy their mathematics and science materials.
College students can easily share their work on the TI-84 Plus due to the fact the created in USB port can make info transfer to computers and in between hand held’s extremely easy.
Numerous college students at the higher college and university levels have identified this calculator helpful at understanding their mathematics and geometry classes. Some universities now demand their college students to have this unit as 1 of their understanding tools.
I really like this calculator due to the fact it has a apparent show and rapidly processing pace plus it really is also mild bodyweight (weighs only 4 kilos) and I can easily take it with me everywhere that I need it.
With the TI-84 plus you are obtaining A great deal of worth for your investment. It arrives loaded with thirteen programs including Cabri Jr., CBL/CBR and so much a lot more!
Other cool points to know are that you can see an equation, its graph and jump from position to position by entering a amount. Plot sorts are also offered, including scatter, box-and-whisker, XY-line, histogram, and typical probability plots.
Where can you discover the TI-84 Plus Graphing Calculator In Stock? Numerous corporations market it on the internet and currently have it in stock. You really should use your favorite search engine to see which websites have the finest specials proper now.

