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Deer Valley Corporation Announces Multifaceted Strategic Move Into ...

TAMPA, FL--(MARKET WIRE)--Mar 26, 2007 -- Deer Valley Corporation ("Deer Valley" or the "Company") (OTC BB:DVLY.OB - News) today announced that it has chosen the South Central Manufactured Housing Institute Show in Tunica, Mississippi to showcase its recent entry in the production and sale of modular homes. The show is scheduled to open on March 28, 2007. The new modular units of the type being displayed at the Tunica show are designed to be sold through the Company's existing dealer network.As part of a strategic plan to extend its year over year growth rate, the Company plans to rapidly increase its involvement in the modular segment of the factory built housing industry. To accelerate its entry into the factory built housing industry, the Company is also currently considering the potential acquisition of one or more well established modular home manufacturers.


Moses as tyrant

Without Le Corbusier and other Modernist visionaries, there could be no Robert Moses. Corbu, as he is familiarly known, adored cars, speed, high-rise towers, superhighways and superblocks. So did Moses. Corbu dreamed of clearing cities to the ground and starting anew. But it was New York's Moses who executed what the Modernists only imagined in their wildest fantasies.

To Hilary Ballon and Kenneth T. Jackson, the historians who put together a three-part, two-borough New York exhibition that reexamines Moses' legacy, his astounding run of completed projects was largely for the good of the region. In "Robert Moses and the Modern City," they take the heretofore heretical view that New York needed a wise tyrant to push the creaky metropolis into a lifesaving infrastructural upgrade.

"Had Moses never lived," Jackson asserts, "America's greatest city might have deteriorated beyond the capabilities of anyone to return it to prosperity."

It's a contentious statement from a contentious catalog that was written as a counterpunch to Robert A.


Students still need to care

(Re: “Unnecessary Courses 101," 27 March). I would like to thank Ms Malcolm for proving why there is a need for better awareness of sustainability issues on campus: while a class is not the solution per se, her article provides ample evidence that our current approach to environmental awareness is not enough to address the very real issues that our collective generation will face in our lifetimes.

While we sit on campus and congratulate ourselves for “reading the odd article" and discussing the Kyoto Accord in class, people outside of our very cozy University life must live with the consequences of our comfortable, consumer-driven lifestyle. It [takes] more than flipping off light switches and recycling paper. We must situate ourselves within the greater global context and understand what social, economic and political factors shape the current situation.



 

 

 

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