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***(Please Read Instructions OvernightPrints.com Coupon)***

Important:
If coupon code is mentioned below, use the coupon link and use the page after clicking the coupon link to make your purchase during checkout. After selecting Overnight prints Letterhead, overnight prints Brochures, Overnightprints.com Envelopes, and Greeting Cards designs. Proceed to check out, You'll see the box Says " Redeem Coupon " and the discount will apply to your orders!!

STEP1: Use Link Below


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STEP3: Enter Coupon in the Redeem Code ( See Picture )





GENERAL COUPON CODE FOR OVERNIGHTPRINTS.COM


Coupon: OCT 2009



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Coupon: JULY 2009 - some are still working

[ BC100 ] - 100 free business cards

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Postcards from the Past

The past will return for another Christmas, thanks to the team behind "Tupelo Area Picture Postcards Volume II: Lee County."

In 2008, "Mem" Leake, Bill Lyle, Boyd Yarbrough, Julian Riley and David Baker released their first volume of picture postcards that showed Tupelo homes, churches, businesses and other landmarks.

"Volume II" includes a look at Park Lake, also known as Gum Pond, from 1907, an early view of the Private John Allen Fish Hatchery and a shot of North Mississippi Community Hospital sitting on a hill.

"I like the one of the Lyric Theatre," Baker said. "Of course, it was the Old Strand Theatre, and the Comus Theatre before that."

The new collection goes beyond Tupelo's borders to feature historic postcards of Baldwyn, Saltillo, Verona, Shannon, Nettleton and Sherman.

You'll find shots of the Verona Presbyterian Church, a Frisco engine in Nettleton, Sherman before its streets were paved and many more.

"We tried to schedule it to have it hit at the Christmas season," Lyle said. "It's something for somebody who has everything."

The book is $39.95, and it'll be available at Reed's Gum Tree Bookstore, Village Green, Oren Dunn City Museum and the Lee County Library gift shop.

The authors will have a book signing at noon Nov. 10 at Reed's, and proceeds will benefit the Dunn museum.

Changing plans

The idea for 'Volume I' began about four years ago.

"It started with a project to make a calendar, and that evolved into this," Yarbrough said.

The plan continues to expand.

"After we finished the first one, we knew we had enough for another one," Lyle said. "We've already done 'Volume III.' That's Tippah and Union County. We've already got 'IV' and 'V.'" planned."

"Volume III" will be available at the Union County Heritage Museum in New Albany, Blue Mountain College and Tippah County Development Foundation in Ripley for $39.95.

Number "IV" will focus on Pontotoc, Okolona and Houston, while the fifth installment will be geared toward Amory and Aberdeen audiences.

All of the books will offer trips

through Northeast Mississippi's past, and they'll probably start a few discussions in the present.

"It's a shame that building was destroyed," Riley said, talking about the Union Station depot in Tupelo. "It would've made a great museum."

"Only if they could have fixed the odor," Baker recalled. "It smelled terrible."

Postcard: Detroit.

With a police force decimated by budget woes, the Motor City's middle-class enclaves are hiring their own to fight rising crime. Where security is a booming business.

Shortly before noon on a recent Monday, T.J. Cooper sat in his red pickup, showing off his digital camera. He clicked through pictures he had taken a few weeks earlier of a man driving a truck full of radiators stolen from a vacant home here in Indian Village, one of Detroit's last middle-class neighborhoods. No one, Cooper notes wryly, likes having his picture taken. "They try to hide their face. Or break your camera. Or," he says, driving up a tree-lined street, "break you." Minutes later, Cooper passes the same man, in the same truck, apparently scoping out another house.

Cooper, 29, is a private-security detective, one of many who patrol once prosperous enclaves like Palmer Woods, Boston-Edison and Indian Village. With the city's police force cut more than 25%, private security appears to be one of Detroit's few growth industries. Local precincts are overwhelmed with shootings and other violent crime, leaving companies that supply home protection with long customer waiting lists. "People put a premium on security when unemployment and crime go up," says Larry Dusing, founder of Dusing Security & Surveillance, which has expanded into three neighborhoods.

Crime weighs heavily on the minds of Detroit's middle class, although it's an issue few residents want to discuss. In some neighborhoods, armed guards stand watch outside houses of worship; in September a pastor shot a man trying to rob his church. In others, street barricades have been set up to help deter potential thieves.

A short, plump Michigan native, Cooper worked in store security before joining Dusing about eight years ago. Now he manages Dusing's patrols, driving around Indian Village in his truck with an orange light bar on the top. He wears a black baseball cap reading security and a bulletproof vest but travels unarmed, partly for liability reasons. He keeps his camera, equipped with a massive telephoto lens, near his lap.

An Indian Village security guard's job is much like that of any cop on the beat. That afternoon Cooper investigated a report of suspicious activity from one of the neighborhood's few markets. (The suspects, sitting in a brown minivan, turned out to be selling state-issued cards used to buy food.) He continued his patrol, eyeing the men walking up and down the street. "If you notice a guy stopping and staring" at a house, Cooper says, "he's obviously up to no good." Especially suspicious are people who walk up to homes and stuff flyers into doors. Sometimes they are testing to see whether a door is unlocked or are casing the property for valuables. "A lot of times we'll see the same car come back three or four times in a single shift."

The community of Indian Village hired Dusing in 2003, after a rash of property crimes. An estimated 15% of the neighborhood's homes are foreclosed, a result of the national real estate crisis, which has hit Detroit particularly hard. Vacant homes are an open invitation to burglars and vandals. Neighbors install motion sensors and curtains in them and maintain the lawns to make the properties appear occupied.

Members of the Historic Indian Village Association, a local residents' group, share the cost of private security--about $30 per household each month. Association president Doug Way, 42, moved to Detroit with his wife seven years ago and fell in love with Indian Village's 19th century manors, built for the city's emerging industrial barons. Footing the bill for private security is almost like paying an extra tax, he acknowledges, but it's worth the cost. The median sale price of homes in Detroit has plunged from $59,700 in August 2005 to $8,000 just two months ago. "You could argue that one reason the homes are less expensive in the city is the level of services isn't as high," he says. "If there's some way we can make this a better place to live, these homes will actually be worth a lot more in the long term."

A Year in Detroit, Day by Day

For daily coverage of the issues and challenges facing this once great American city, go to time.com/detroit

Postcard: Kolkata Overnightprints.Com Coupon

She's known as Blessed Teresa of Calcutta, but her ancestors were Albanian--and now that nation wants her back. The fight for Mother Teresa's remains.

It's only 7:30 a.m., but the front door of 54A Lower Circular Road is already open. Outside, a short, bald man dressed in a neat, black-checked shirt and faded gray trousers stands beneath the nondescript building's large windows, bows his head and puts it against the wall in a sign of obeisance. Arun Mukherjee, an accountant in his late 40s, has been stopping at Mother House every morning on his way to work for decades. For him, the building--the former home of Mother Teresa--is no less than a temple. "I feel very calm when I stop here," he says.

Behind the house's high walls, the remains of the Mother, as she is popularly referred to in Kolkata, are buried in the courtyard. The Catholic nun, founder of the Missionaries of Charity order, is revered by followers of many of India's panoply of religions. At her tomb, some visitors pray with folded hands, some with palms in front of their faces and some with rosary beads. Up a flight of stairs is her room, sparsely furnished with a narrow iron bed, a long table and bench, and a desk where she worked. Mohammad Hossain, a merchant, stands outside the room with eyes closed and head bowed in prayer. "I always feel her presence here, which fills me with hope," he says.

That presence is under threat. Mother Teresa, born to ethnic-Albanian parents in what is now Macedonia, spent more than 70 years aiding the poor of Kolkata before her death in 1997 But with the approach of the centenary of her birth in August 2010, Albania has demanded the return of her remains. While Mother House has declined to comment on the issue, a nun there privately admits she was appalled, wondering why the country would want the Mother's remains when it had so little connection to her. In anticipation that Macedonia might also demand her remains, West Bengal's million-member State Forum of Christians has called for a mass protest. Herod Mullick, leader of the forum, said the group will be sending a memorandum to the Pope to forestall any such "unjustified, irrational and impractical" demands.

In the years since Mother Teresa's death, her name has become intertwined with the identity of this city in eastern India. "She is part of the chromosome of Kolkata," says retired police officer Rekha Roy. "You cannot imagine Kolkata without Mother Teresa." Bengali author Nabarun Bhattacharya's prized possession is a yellowing postcard with a blessing written in Mother Teresa's hand on the back. "Everything the Mother stood for--her genesis from a common nun to an eminence of world stature--happened in and around Kolkata," he says. "This creates a very special bond." Sabrina David, 39, goes to Mother House every day for Mass. Years ago, she recalls, she approached Mother Teresa on the doorstep of the house for help because she had no warm clothes to cover her 2-year-old son. "She took off the blanket that was around her and put it around my son. I get goose pimples just talking about her," David says.

Some things have changed at Mother House. Shoes, once strictly prohibited inside the house, were allowed after thieves began stealing the footwear visitors left on the doorstep. "No one would even dream of stealing anything from the house" when the Mother was alive, says Theresa Bhajo, a cleaner who worked there then. "The sense of respect and awe is not there anymore."

Still, Kolkatans are not prepared to say goodbye to the Mother's earthly remains. The Indian government, for its part, views Mother Teresa as an Indian citizen and refuses to consider letting her remains leave the country. The Vatican, which beatified her in 2003 (she is now known to Catholics as the Blessed Teresa of Calcutta), has not commented. But amid the dispute, it's worth remembering the words of the Mother herself. "By blood, I am Albanian. By citizenship, an Indian," she once said. "As to my calling, I belong to the world."

Global Dispatch

For more postcards from around the world, visit time.com

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Penn Libraries Receive Gotham Book Mart Collection

When the Gotham Book Mart closed its doors last year, the disposition of its precious contents was in question. But thanks to the generosity of an anonymous donor, the Gotham Book Mart Collection has a new home at the University of Pennsylvania Libraries. A landmark cultural institution in New York City, the Gotham Book Mart was the epitome of all that is engaging and inspiring about an independent bookstore. It was an oasis where poets, writers, and lovers of literature could gather for readings, discuss and discover authors and their works, and while away hours poring over the store's eclectic and often unique inventory.

The Gotham Book Mart Collection comprises some 200,000 items, primarily focused on modern and contemporary poetry and literature, but also encompassing art, architecture, jewelry, music, dance, theater, drama, and film. The collection includes many first editions, books from small presses, experimental literary magazines, outsider literature published by Black Sparrow Press, poetry published by St. Mark's Church, books from the personal libraries of Truman Capote and Anais Nin, proofs, advance copies, pamphlets, photographs, posters, reference works and catalogs, broadsides, prints, postcards, and items signed by Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, Robinson Jeffers, Woody Allen, Wallace Stevens, and John Updike.

"We're very excited about this gift to the Penn Libraries," said Carton Rogers, Vice Provost and Director of Libraries, "and we're honored to steward the collection, and give it new life as an academic resource." Penn has an eager audience waiting for the collection's arrival, including many prominent modernist scholars, who teach classes that will make use of the Gotham materials as part of undergraduate assignments, and for research at the graduate level. According to Al Filreis, Kelly Professor, Faculty Director of Kelly Writers House, and Director of the Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing at Penn, the Gotham gift "... [will] solidify Penn's holdings in modern and contemporary American literature," thereby rounding out a Rare Book and Manuscript Library collection already rich in pre-1850 antiquarian materials.

The Gotham Book Mart Collection's new home will be Penn's Rare Book and Manuscript Library (RBML), a locus of collaborative learning at Penn, where students, faculty, and independent researchers have access to rare primary source research materials. The timing of the Gotham gift could not have been better according to Rogers, who points to the RBML as a cornerstone of Penn Libraries' capital campaign. "We have an opportunity to include Gotham in our planning for significant renovations to the fifth and sixth floors of our main library, and to really showcase Penn's unique collections."

In addition to making the collection available in the RBML, Penn Libraries will create a virtual home for the Gotham Book Mart. The display will provide, for the first time ever, a complete inventory of the collection's contents, available through Franklin, Penn Libraries' online catalog. The Libraries will also work with faculty and researchers to identify materials to be digitized in order to open the treasures of the Gotham Book Mart Collection to a wider audience.

On-demand printer starts new venture

Brandon Lee, former owner and current president of By Design Publishing Inc., a Hayden Lake-based publisher of specialty magazines, has launched another new venture, called Digital Lizard, that already employs 18 and is landing sizable contracts.

Digital Lizard prints postcards, newsletters, fliers, and other promotional materials that it can customize with different names, addresses, messages, and graphics without stopping the print run, Lee says. He calls the service personalized custom printing, and says it's known in the industry as "on-demand" printing.

"We can literally print 5,000 ultrahigh-quality pieces, each with a personalized message, in a single uninterrupted run," he says. The company also provides letter insertion, folding, and e-mail marketing services.

Lee says he expects Digital Lizard, which he launched last month, to grow rapidly. The company this month landed a $1.5 million contract with Re/Max International Inc., the worldwide real estate company, Lee says, adding, "I estimate this year's revenues will be $7 million."

The company's customers for print and digital marketing services already include casinos, car dealers, hotels, and banks, he says.

Digital Lizard operates six high-speed presses in a 12,000-square-foot facility at 11862 Tracey Road, in Hayden Lake. Lee expects that the company will hire five to10 more employees by the end of this year.

"Most likely, we will be looking for more space within the next year," he adds.

Lee, who is staying on as president of By Design Publishing, says he chose the name Digital Lizard for his new venture because he wants the company to be "fast, agile, and chameleon-like." Bill Wieners is the new company's general manager.

In 2001, Lee launched By Design Publishing, which produces custom magazines for companies that include hotel, real estate, and personnel services. By Design Publishing's annual revenues grew to more than $10 million and it employed 80 workers at the time Lee sold it to Network Communications Inc., of Lawrenceville, Ga., last year.