PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Artisanal Bistro, Time In Program at HiArt & Share Our Strength Will be Hosting 50 Students Age Five Years Old From Public School 30 Hernandez/Hughes in East Harlem

Artisanal Bistro, Time In program at HiArt & Share Our Strength will be hosting 50 students age five years old from Public School 30 Hernandez/Hughes in East Harlem on Tuesday, February 26th, to experience Fondue for the first time ever.

2013-02-23
NEW YORK, NY, February 23, 2013 (Press-News.org) February Fondue month takes on a special meaning at Artisanal Fromagerie, Bistro and Wine Bar. On Tuesday, February 26th, from 10 to 11 a.m., our award-winning restaurant will host 50 students from Public School 30 Hernandez/Hughes in East Harlem to experience fondue for the first time.

For these 5-year-old students, many whom live in high-risk areas or have even lived in homeless shelters and domestic shelters, it will be their first time eating fresh produce and cheese. Artisanal's vast cheese selection will provide these children an opportunity to taste a cheese that's beyond American cheese or another over-processed variety. They will not only be eating a healthful meal but dining outside of their everyday environment.

The following sponsors have also made this event possible: Balthazar Bakery is donating baguettes, V & J Produce will provide fresh produce and certified humanely raised, antibiotic free chicken from DeBragga, New York's Butcher which the children will enjoy with their fondue.

This experience would not be possible without the organizing and planning of Share Our Strength's No Kid Hungry campaign and the Time In program at HiArt.

Further information please contact: Sharon Bridbord, e-mail: sbridbord@artisanalbistro.com, phone: 212-532-4016

Website: http://www.artisanalbistro.com


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Trinkets 'N Whatnots by Janet Galla to Shine at GBK's 2013 Academy Awards Gift Lounge with Signature Button Necklace and Ring Collection

Trinkets N Whatnots by Janet Galla to Shine at GBKs 2013 Academy Awards Gift Lounge with Signature Button Necklace and Ring Collection
2013-02-23
When Janet Galla ended her tour of duty in Iraq as a Navy hospital corpsman in 2005, she turned to making jewelry as a hobby. That hobby turned into a lucrative career, and eight years later, under the name Trinkets 'N Whatnots, an array of her dazzling Swarovski crystal rings and one of her signature mother-of-pearl button necklaces will be on showcased at the GBK Gift Lounge for the 2013 Academy Awards on February 22-23 in Beverly Hills, California. What will no doubt surprise visitors to the gift lounge, one of Hollywood's most popular celebrity events of the awards ...

Experian Enhances Hunter Fraud Prevention System

2013-02-23
Experian announced it has further enhanced Hunter, its industry-leading data-sharing fraud prevention software, improving its performance and efficiency for anti-fraud operations. The upgrade goes live in the UK this week and allows banks, insurance companies, and other financial services and credit granting organisations to manage and investigate organised fraud more effectively. Providers are now able to group several applications into a single 'case', allowing investigation of all 'linked' applications and identify whether they are linked to earlier fraudulent ...

Diamond Reveals British Women's Shoe-Buying Habits

2013-02-23
New research from Diamond has revealed women in the UK spent around GBP3.35billion* on shoes in 2012 but still leave two thirds of their collection of high heels, boots and sandals in the wardrobe. Diamond revealed the average woman owns 19 pairs of shoes but regularly wears just seven pairs of them. The study of 2,000 women across the UK also revealed one in twenty women are true shoe devotees and own more than 50 pairs while 7% buy 10 or more pairs each year. Natalie Grimshare, spokesperson for Diamond said: "According to our study, the average woman owns ...

New findings on debated authorship

2013-02-22
University of Adelaide researchers have provided new evidence on the long-debated authorship of two famous texts – the US Federalist Papers and the Letter to the Hebrews in the New Testament. The results of a 10-year project led by Professor Derek Abbott, School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, was published today in the prestigious journal PLOS ONE. The team has developed an automatic authorship detection system, using advanced software techniques to analyse author style based on commonly used words. "We applied our new authorship detection technique to ...

Drug delivery strategy eliminates myotonia symptoms in mice with myotonic dystrophy

Drug delivery strategy eliminates myotonia symptoms in mice with myotonic dystrophy
2013-02-22
New Rochelle, NY, February 21, 2013—By targeting the specific mutation that causes the hereditary neuromuscular disease myotonic dystrophy, it is possible to neutralize the mutant RNA toxicity and minimize or even eliminate the disabling symptoms of the disease. New classes of drugs called antisense oligonucleotides are being designed to achieve this. Innovative work to develop a modified antisense drug that can be administered intravenously and achieve the desired therapeutic effect is described in an article in Nucleic Acid Therapeutics, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary ...

Greater representation of elderly patients in Phase III trials are needed

2013-02-22
DENVER – The median age of patients diagnosed with advanced non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has steadily increased over the recent years and is presently 70 years. Despite this, the elderly are significantly underrepresented in clinical trials. A recent study published in the March 2013 issue of the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer's (IASLC) Journal of Thoracic Oncology, investigated the degree to which exclusion or underrepresentation of elderly occurs in practice-changing clinical trials in advanced NSCLC. Researchers conclude that greater representation ...

Local therapy followed by treatment with EGFR TKI is well tolerated

2013-02-22
DENVER – Local therapy is not commonly utilized in metastatic lung cancer. Researchers at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center investigated the efficacy of local therapy with continued EGFR TKI therapy specifically in patients with acquired resistance to EGFR TKIs. A recent study published in the March 2013 issue of the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer's (IASLC) Journal of Thoracic Oncology, found that EGFR- mutant lung cancers with acquired resistance to EGFR TKI therapy are amenable to local therapy to treat oligometastatic disease when used in ...

UCSB anthropologist studies cattle ranchers in Brazilian Amazon

UCSB anthropologist studies cattle ranchers in Brazilian Amazon
2013-02-22
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– For over a century, the rubber tappers of Acre, Brazil collected the valuable sap of the rubber trees from the forests of the western Amazon. As the demand for natural rubber declined, however, the Brazilian government sought to stimulate the economy in the 1970's by encouraging southern ranchers to bring their cattle to the isolated state and convert the forests to pastureland. During the dramatic land conflicts that ensued, rubber tappers captured international media attention by arguing that their harvesting of rubber and other products from ...

Vibrant mix of marine life found at extreme ocean depths, Scripps analysis reveals

2013-02-22
The first scientific examinations of data recorded during a record-setting expedition have yielded new insights about the diversity of creatures that live and thrive in the cold, dark, and highly pressurized habitats of the world's deepest points and their vastly unexplored ecosystems. Natalya Gallo of Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego will present preliminary findings from the DEEPSEA CHALLENGE expedition, a project led by James Cameron in collaboration with Scripps, and supported by National Geographic and Rolex, on Feb. 22 (GS09: Community Ecology ...

February highlights from Ecological Society of America publications

2013-02-22
Weighing the costs and benefits of plastic vegetable greenhouses The economic benefits of intensive vegetable cultivation inside plastic greenhouses, particularly for small-holders, have driven a rapid mushrooming of long plastic tents in farmlands worldwide – but particularly in China, where they cover 3.3 million hectares and produce approximately US $60 million in produce (2008 figures). The method conserves water, binds up carbon, shrinks land use, protects against soil erosion and exhaustion, and mitigates problematic dust storms. But this change from conventional ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Scientists wash away mystery behind why foams are leakier than expected

TIFRH researchers uncover a mechanism enabling glasses to self-regulate their brittleness

High energy proton accelerator on a table-top — enabled by university class lasers

Life, death and mowing – study reveals Britain’s poetic obsession with the humble lawnmower

Ochsner Transplant Institute’s kidney program achieves ELITE Status

Gender differences in primary care physician earnings and outcomes under Medicare Advantage value-based payment

Can mindfulness combat anxiety?

Could personality tests help make bipolar disorder treatment more precise?

Largest genomic study of veterans with metastatic prostate cancer reveals critical insights for precision medicine

UCF’s ‘bridge doctor’ combines imaging, neural network to efficiently evaluate concrete bridges’ safety

Scientists discover key gene impacts liver energy storage, affecting metabolic disease risk

Study finds that individual layers of synthetic materials can collaborate for greater impact

Researchers find elevated levels of mercury in Colorado mountain wetlands

Study reveals healing the ozone hole helps the Southern Ocean take up carbon

Ultra-robust hydrogels with adhesive properties developed using bamboo cellulose-based carbon nanomaterials

New discovery about how acetaminophen works could improve understanding about pain relievers

What genetic changes made us uniquely human? -- The human intelligence evolved from proximal cis-regulatory saltations

How do bio-based amendments address low nutrient use efficiency and crop yield challenges?

Predicting e-bus battery performance in cold climates: a breakthrough in sustainable transit

Enhancing centrifugal compressor performance with ported shroud technology

Can localized fertilization become a key strategy for green agricultural development?

Log in to your computer with a secret message encoded in a molecule

In healthy aging, carb quality counts

Dietary carbohydrate intake, carbohydrate quality, and healthy aging in women

Trends in home health care among traditional Medicare beneficiaries with or without dementia

Thousands of cardiac ‘digital twins’ offer new insights into the heart

Study reveals impacts of Alzheimer’s disease on the whole body

A diabetes paradox: Improved health has not boosted workforce prospects

USTC achieves krypton-81 dating of 1-kilogram Antarctic ice

Novel method for satellite 3D component layout optimization based on mixed integer programming

[Press-News.org] Artisanal Bistro, Time In Program at HiArt & Share Our Strength Will be Hosting 50 Students Age Five Years Old From Public School 30 Hernandez/Hughes in East Harlem
Artisanal Bistro, Time In program at HiArt & Share Our Strength will be hosting 50 students age five years old from Public School 30 Hernandez/Hughes in East Harlem on Tuesday, February 26th, to experience Fondue for the first time ever.