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459 result(s) for "Arnold, Stuart"
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Dolphin watching soars in the Bay
\"It's a genuine safari; no two days are the same,\" said Mr [Stuart Arnold]. \"The blue water has been so clear we've had visibility of 30-40 metres. And because of the warm temperatures, the rare (marine) visitors are coming to New Zealand waters.\" \"Our whole business is about watching and swimming with the dolphins, and we find more of them here than anywhere else in the country,\" he said. \"I'm marketing Tauranga and the Bay as the No1 destination for dolphins in New Zealand.\" Eight weeks later she contacted Mr Arnold, saying she was four months pregnant. \"The dolphins knew,\" he said. \"I'm positive they can scan humans and they must have detected two heartbeats.\"
Dolphins aplenty in sunny Bay
Stuart Arnold of Dolphin Seafaris NZ told Bay of Plenty Times that this season \"we've had some of the best dolphin encounters in the five years we've been operating here.\" Since the start of the latest season in November, the Dolphin Seafaris crew and their customers have missed out on seeing dolphins on only one day. \"We are finding large pods of dolphins, each between 50 and 300, anywhere up to 32km offshore (Tauranga),\" said Mr Arnold, who skippers his powercat, called Guardian.
Tourist pound may be town's saviour
\"If people rally round and continue to support their local shops, we will get through this. \" Don Moore, a former pub landlord, who is the chairman of Thirsk and District Business Association, in North Yorkshire, said smaller shops which adapt to tough economic conditions could benefit. \"As smaller retailers they are quicker to adapt, they don't have the big overheads and management costs that some of the larger chains have and all this comes together to give them a better fighting chance. \" Yvonne Rose, chairwoman of the Chamber of Trade in Bedale, North Yorkshire, said the town had recently seen a couple of businesses close, including an estate agent. \"They are going to face very challenging times because they are predominately about discretionary spending and as everybody is tightening their belts that is often the first to go. \" Ms Rose, who is an independent financial advisor, added: \"You have to make sure that the service you give makes existing customers come back and recommend you to other people.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Denial of the seriousness of this environmental threat by the current administration and many Republicans is untenable. The \"enormous cost\" is the naysayers' chief reason for their opposition to significant efforts to combat global warming. That argument should be soundly rejected. It's not that we can't afford the cost of reducing carbon emissions. It's that we can't afford not to. In fact, a significant shift to alternative fuels has enormous short- and long-range benefits. We shouldn't waste a single day arguing about it.
Soccer club in hunt for finance
A MIDLAND football club today began an urgent search for investors to safeguard its future. But the club's chief executive Pat Bannister said it had a big future if financial backers could be found to help him buy out the club from former chairman Stuart Arnold.
Angry Judge Jails Former Cop
\"Ohhh, that's awful,\" the teenage girl shrieked, looking at her profile on a computer screen. \"I hate my nose.\" \"Hey, you're a beautiful girl, but watch this,\" said plastic surgeon Stuart Arnold. He took up a pen attached to the computer, drew a line on a white board in front of him, and the computer image of the girl's nose straightened. \"I'm just going to just thin this out.\" The nose thinned. The girl stared, transfixed, then pointed to the screen, where \"before and after\" profiles were displayed. \"Ohhh, I just hate my nose,\" she said convincingly.
Laying network foundation, CPN Television buys rival
\"We're been hardware intensive so far,\" said [Stuart Arnold]. \"We needed more creative people. This acquisition brings them to us.\" \"Now it's the best of both worlds,\" said Mark Baszto, creative director at FKQ Advertising in Clearwater. \"Both companies always bent over backward to accommodate us. Now we can still use the studios in Tampa or Clearwater, whichever is more convenient.\" \"We suffered some heavy losses and had to shrink last year, but now we've been rescued,\" Cornelius said. \"Now we're stable again almost overnight. And we can offer better and faster service than ever.\"
Other news to note
THE NOSE KNOWS. The eyes may be the windows of the soul, but the nose shows a person's character -- at least according to plastic surgeon Stuart Arnold. He has counted noses among some 1988 presidential possibles and come to some conclusions. \"Governor Cuomo's nose shows the character and strength of his entire face.
Cabinet response to Corus report
Government response: We continue to engage with [Corus] and (Corus owner) Tata at the highest levels to ensure that all possible options, including the potential sale of a majority stake that would secure the future of TCP, are pursued. Ultimately the decision to mothball the TCP plant is a commercial matter for Corus.
Rain pain makes farming a battle
Looking out over the Western Riverina plains, Stuart Arnold scrapes his boot over the parched land and admits \"farming has become a battle\". It has been three years since his...