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1,380 result(s) for "Clay, Sam"
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Kernels thrash Cougars 11-5
  Cougars Galli Cribbs hit a 2-run RBI triple in the sixth. The Cougars loaded the bases sending [Sam Clay] out of the game as Williams Ramirez (0-0) took the mound for the Kernels. Ramirez forced a double play after Fernery Ozuna hit a soft liner to second, and Joe Munoz was doubled off at the bag. But Cribbs saved the day steering his second triple of the season to right field to shave the Kernels' lead to a run, 5-4.
RSS rivals thrive after Google Reader's demise
  \"I think it's important to remember that Google Reader and RSS are not inherently co-dependent,\" says Neil Sisson of Dublin-based digital marketing company Lime Canvas. \"Google Reader is simply an app which aggregates the RSS that a particular [Google] account holder has selected to be informed about.\" Freddy Mini, chief executive with NetVibes says the company has welcomed \"several hundreds of thousands\" of new users since last month's announcement of Google Reader's demise. Sam Clay, founder of NewsBlur meanwhile says \"business is booming\". Elsewhere, former Reader users have begun switching attention towards Twitter lists as a quasi-replacement, while social news site Digg is currently building an RSS reader as well. Senior lecturer in DCU's business school and e-commerce expert Dr Theo Lynn wonders if the heyday of RSS feeds has been and gone. \"They're a hassle,\" he says, adding that while he and his digital marketing students will have conversations \"daily\" about the effectiveness of Twitter or LinkedIn, RSS \"doesn't come up in conversation\" at all these days. Maybe, he says, it is down to changing user habits - such as a reliance on the \"favourite\" feature in Twitter to bookmark articles, or increased usage of the tailored news feed in LinkedIn's app - or perhaps, Lynn adds, the RSS industry could simply be in the middle of a \"versioning\" crisis.
Pharmacy provides good medicine for downtown Petersburg
\"The face of health care has changed dramatically since our doors opened in 1968,\" [Sam Clay] said. \"We have strived to stay ahead of the curve and provide our customers the best care possible. [Kirkpatrick]'s Pharmacy has always been known as the place to send people for items that they could not get anywhere else. \"After 40 years,\" Clay said, \"we are proud to say, we are Kirkpatrick's Pharmacy, a different kind of pharmacy.\"
FAIRFAX LIBRARY POLITELY PRESSURES PATRONS HOLDING OVERDUE ITEMS
Beginning in April, Equifax Risk Management Services of Atlanta started mailing letters to library users who owe more than $40 in fines. The courteous but firmly worded letters - which begin, \"The purpose of this letter is to collect a debt\" - went out to 267 patrons who owed a cumulative $22,000 in fines and materials. The first week, 36 letters went out, and 13 patrons came in to return books and pay fines, [Sam Clay] said. The second week, half of the 38 nimble-fingered borrowers who got letters paid up. Clay said that the library collected $552 in fines alone in April. In May, patrons contacted by the collection agency paid $519.25 in fines and reimbursed the library $433.91 for the books they had lost.
Lots of sympathy but no results for jobless man
Mr. [SAM CLAY] has had calls from across the province from sympathetic souls, expressions of understanding from friends and strangers, and calls from the national media interested in his unusual methods. \"I'll take clerical, I'll take working in a warehouse, I'll take driving a truck. As long as I'm not up to my knees in sludge.\"
If he can't buy happiness maybe he can buy a job
Mr. [SAM CLAY], who lives in Burlington, is offering $1,000 to anyone who will hire him for six months. If you hire Sam Clay, the $1,000 will be held in trust by a lawyer. At the end of six months, he'll sign a $1,000 cheque over to you. John Rennison, The Spectator Sam Clay is getting used to rejection.
Right job still eluding Sam
Mr. [SAM CLAY] has had calls from across the province from sympathetic souls, expressions of understanding from friends and strangers, and calls from the national media interested in his unusual methods.
Man offers $1,000 if he's given job
After being laid off from his job at Dofasco Steel in Hamilton after 29 years, [Sam Clay] says he has sent out 200 resumes. In the meantime, Clay says he and his wife and son have lost their home. The family has been forced to live on a pension Clay wasn't planning to use for another 16 years.
If he can't buy happiness maybe he can buy a job
Mr. [Sam Clay], who lives in Burlington, is offering $1,000 to anyone who will hire him for six months. If you hire Sam Clay, the $1,000 will be held in trust by a lawyer. At the end of six months, he'll sign a $1,000 cheque over to you. Mr. Clay's fall has been precipitous, and he cautions others not to take life or their job for granted.
Community Shocked To Learn Owner Of Jimmy's Grille Died In Car Crash
\"I've been coming here for more than 25 years,\" said Ada Branch, who had pulled up to the restaurant Monday. \"It's a wonderful place.\" \"They're good people, he was a wonderful man,\" Branch said of Basis and his wife, [Frances], who owned the restaurant. \"It's just terrible what happened.\" \"They've been an institution here for 40 years,\" [Sam Clay] said adding that he's been going to the Basis' restaurant for about 35 years. Clay described Jimmy Basis as being the type of business owner to always take time to greet and interact with his customers. Whether it meant coming out and shaking your hand at your table or - if things were busy - a greeting through the window into the kitchen. \"I'm still in shock.\"