Finally, after Googling non-toxic pesticides bedbugs cats mammals, I came upon a product called diatomaceous earth, I which kills insects by desiccating them rather than poisoning them, and is ...harmless to people and pets. More research found a product called Hydroprene, which acts as "birth control" for insects, available in "roach motel" type devices - but it gives off fumes, so the bugs do not have to come in direct contact with it.
Iaconetti highlights Danny Seo, author of "Heaven on Earth: 15-Minute Miracles to Change the World." Seo, 21, founded Earth 2000, now an award-winning non-profit organization, at the age of 12.
Dan Neuharth's first book, "If You Had Controlling Parents: How To Make Peace with Your Past and Take Your Place in the World," appears in bookstores Sep 10. Neuharth's father is self-proclaimed SOB ...Al Neuharth, founder of "USA Today."
Love at first sight Iaconetti, Joan
Edmonton journal,
05/1989
Newspaper Article
YOU LOOK UP and there he is. You freeze. Your heart stops. Everything stops. Who is he? The room whirls, your stomach churns, and you know just what's happened. You've taken that dizzying, delightful ...plunge into what can only be described as . . . love at first sight. You say, "It was love at first sight." Translation: "He matched my fantasies perfectly!" The way a boy looks, his sense of humor, even his smile may be enough to capture your heart as well as your eye. Some girls, in fact, don't get around to actually meeting the boy until after they've fallen head over heels "in love" with him. Even without talking to him, they somehow "just know." According to Michael Kimmel, a sociology professor at Rutgers University in New Jersey, "If you ask 15-year-olds, "True or false: Love at first sight is usually the truest love," more boys than girls will answer `true.' Girls seem to know better, and boys continue to believe in love at first sight until they are well into their thirties.
More of everything Iaconetti, Joan
Successful meetings,
10/1998
Magazine Article
In Orlando, they have never heard the phrase, "Less is More." As Pavarotti was born to sing, latter-day Orange County was born to entertain, and in much the same style: bigger, better and bolder than ...the rest. With theme parks, water parks, shopping, sporting venues, recreation, restaurants, nightlife and special events, Orlando's opportunities for fun and entertainment approach the overwhelming. Osceola County, just south of Orlando proper, recently got the go-ahead to develop World Expo, a gigantic new convention center complex - a building so large, its planners say, it will be visible from outer space. The convention center has gotten very high-tech, and Orlando has added many facilities conducive to serious business meetings. Orlando is attracting more and more software companies - very large groups requiring lots of space, with complex technology requirements.