| Total Nutrition Technology and Pilates Studio at the Lake Create ...
Total Nutrition Technology, Inc. (www.tntgetfit.com), specializing in weight loss, health management and sports performance guidance, has opened a new office at Pilates Studio at the Lake in Davidson. Jill Schuman, RD, CNSD, CSP, LDN, will be providing client services at this location in downtown Davidson. We are thrilled to have Total Nutrition Technologys services here at Pilates Studio at the Lake, said Carrie Jacobs, owner and founder of the Pilates studio. We help people train their body to be the best and the opportunity to offer our clients more health guidance allows us to be a more full-service health studio. A good wellness program is a lifestyle and the opportunity to join forces with Pilates Studio at the Lake is exciting because we share the same goals for our clients to maximize their health, said Angela Gallo, founder and President of Total Nutrition Technology. Together we are able to offer motivation in all areas; therefore, a clients progress in achieving his or her goals can remain consistent.
Arroyos Back in the Biz
Despite the angry rhetoric being bandied about, charter school enthusiasts have every reason to be happy. The number of charters has been doubled. That's a lot, considering that it took almost a decade to exhaust the 100 charters provided for by the initial legislation, some of the original charters proved to be awful, and the jury is out on many others. The granting of a charter to run a school at the taxpayer's expense is no small privilege. Young lives hang in the balance. Giving permission to some entity to educate children should be considered with the same seriousness with which we charter a hospital or health care facility. There's a feeling out there that anyone can run a school, even lawyers or politicians, certainly the last people I would look to in any quest for excellence.
It’sa man’s world costing Asia about $80 billion a year
WE LIVE IN A WORLD of daunting economic challenges: debt imbalances, out-of-whack currencies, Chinese overheating, wobbly housing markets, erratic energy prices, terrorism, geopolitical risks, you name it. Lets add another one to the list: women. Gender discrimination is often seen as a social issue. Increasingly, though, its becoming an economic one, even worthy for the Group of Seven nations to discuss it. If youre not convinced, would the annual loss of almost $80 billion of Asian output change your mind? That estimate comes from the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, and it could be a conservative one. The group says the Asia-Pacific region is losing as much as $47 billion of output per year from a lack of female participation in labor markets.
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