2014年5月10日 星期六

Family tragedy in Tampa, FL

A man, his wife and their two teenage children were shot before the million-dollar home they were renting burned down in what investigators called arson, a fire perhaps exacerbated by fireworks and gasoline, authorities said Thursday.
Autopsies were still being completed to determine how they died, but investigators have said they are looking into the possibility of a murder-suicide. Authorities recovered a gun at the home registered to Darrin Campbell and he bought an "exceedingly large amount" of fireworks and gas cans days before the fire, Hillsborough County Sheriff's Col. Donna Lusczynski said.
Authorities still have not positively identified the bodies, but the family has not been accounted for and a relative said they were inside the home when it burned.
As flames shot through the roof Wednesday morning, neighbors reported explosions, presumably hearing fireworks go off inside. Authorities have not indicated who may have started the fire or why.
Campbell bought $650 of fireworks on Sunday and authorities said fireworks were found throughout the five-bedroom home. Still, it wasn't clear what role the fireworks might have played, though Lusczynski said they could've been used to ignite the fire or keep it going.
Campbell had been an executive for several high-profile businesses. He was currently working at a records management firm and volunteering as treasurer at his children's private school. His wife, Kimberly, was a stay-at-home mom, according to her father, Gordon Lambie.
The family moved to Tampa more than a decade ago. They sold their home in 2012 for $750,000 and signed a two-year lease for the 6,000 square-foot home owned by former tennis pro James Blake. He bought the home in the Avila community in 2005 for $1.5 million, according to property records.
Avila is known for its mansions, heavy security, country club and golf course. Many well-known athletes have called the community home over the years.
Lambie said the family wanted to move closer to the children's school, Carrollwood Day School.
Nineteen-year-old Colin Campbell was a talented baseball player who planned to graduate high school next month. His teenage sister, Megan, was a ninth-grader who made an honor roll and took dance lessons.
"I've lost my entire family," Lambie said from his Michigan home. "It's very tough right now because I'm 1,500 miles away."
Campbell bought six packages of firecrackers and about the same number of fireworks designed to shoot into the air, said William Weimer, vice president of Ohio-based Phantom fireworks. He described them as backyard fireworks someone might set off on the Fourth of July.
He said the fireworks could have started a fire but it would have spread slowly. The amount of powder inside each one was smaller than an aspirin, he said.
A store manager, Rocky DiRoma, said there was nothing unusual about the $650 purchase.
"He was just an average Joe," DiRoma said.
Neighbors described hearing the fireworks.
"Geez. What is that popping noise?" a man said on a 911 call.
Another 911 caller, a security manager for the gated community, told dispatchers the fire was in the garage.
Darrin and Kimberly met in Lansing, Michigan, when they both worked as aides in the state legislature, her father said. Kimberly Campbell had graduated from Central Michigan University and Darrin Campbell had an MBA from the University of Michigan.
They lived in San Antonio, where Campbell was an executive with Pearl Brewing Company, before moving to Tampa.
At some point, he became senior vice president at PODS, the mobile storage company, and left in 2007. He was currently chief operating officer at Vastec, where he worked for the past six months.
Friends of the teens gathered Wednesday and released balloons with messages on them as a remembrance.
A former neighbor, George Connley, said Kimberly Campbell was "sophisticated and classy."
"We know nothing of any problems," Connley said. "The kids were outstanding children. This is very difficult to put our arms around."
 
Schneider reported from Orlando.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/05/08/4104905/bodies-found-after-fire-at-tennis.html#storylink=cpy

2014年5月8日 星期四

工程師變「收買佬」

【晴報專訊】環保大勢所趨,兩名香港70後碩士看準回收商機,放棄工程師高薪厚職轉行回收業,每月生意額達30萬元。二人憑清潔光亮的回收站,為回收業形象大翻新,近年推出回收交易網站,開拓電子產品回收的商機。

專營回收及環保產品銷售衡睿有限公司的創辦人譚偉傑與仲雪林,近月推出「回收易」網站,賣家只需上載三張產品照片,經SMS定下回收價後,公司便派員收機。隨後拆件處理,確保打碎硬碟機外,其他電子零件亦會送往日本等地作無害處理,以免污染環境。
上載三張相片 即傳短訊報價

譚偉傑與仲雪林認為回收電子產品商機大,因政府提倡廢電器電子產品強制性生產者責任計劃外,亦因港人愛追求新型號,及近年不少企業亦着手更換電腦,高峰期每月可回收100噸電子廢物。仲雪林指,智能手機、平板電腦及電腦利潤最大,其熒幕、底板等零件都可回收並出售,機內亦有貴金屬可提煉,因此一般賣家都可獲高價回收,例如iPhone 4近日回收價達1,000元,三星Galaxy Note2「價位」亦有1,200元。惟仲雪林笑言,最怕遇上回收洗衣機等產品,因幾乎都蝕本收場。

70後的譚偉傑與仲雪林是環境管理及環境工程的碩士畢業生,過去任職環境工程師,05年看準香港環保及回收漸成氣候的商機,毅然放棄高薪厚職創業,憑積蓄及向青協「香港青年創業計劃」借貸10萬元,開設公司。

確保打碎硬碟 零件無害處理

二人堅持回收站一定要清潔、光亮,所有舊報紙、廢紙都整齊擺放,並標榜不「呃秤」,一改「收買佬」傳統形象,回收站一年半已收支平衡,平均每月生意額30萬元,並於09年在葵芳開設第二個回收站。

他們指,目前回收電子產品未見太多「行家」,儘管日後有新手加入市場亦未感到有挑戰,因其公司優勝之處在一條龍式服務,上門回收方便賣家外,自設回收場拆件處理廢物,亦會確保電子資料不外洩,提高賣家信心。

http://www.rweee.com/


2014年5月7日 星期三

农家寻美味_望江楼

夏日农家寻美味  望江厨神秀出品夏日里,市区热浪袭人,而郊区水边则凉风徐徐,风景天然。此时,邀约三五好友,郊游去傍水而吃,可谓幸事一桩。

在广州番禺石基附近,珠江入海的某一支流,当地人称为小东江的所在,临江建有一排农家食肆。每到傍晚时分,便灯火通明,车水马龙,好不热闹。

          
美不胜收,身临其境才能感受到那种意境

夏日农家寻美味  望江厨神秀出品夏日里,市区热浪袭人,而郊区水边则凉风徐徐,风景天然。此时,邀约三五好友,郊游去傍水而吃,可谓幸事一桩。

在广州番禺石基附近,珠江入海的某一支流,当地人称为小东江的所在,临江建有一排农家食肆。每到傍晚时分,便灯火通明,车水马龙,好不热闹。


          
美不胜收,身临其境才能感受到那种意境
望江楼  望江而立
3月,此地又新开一家农庄,名曰“望江楼”,主打粤式特色菜与各式海鲜。望江而建,简朴小巧,与一般农家餐厅并无二样,但不敢小觑。据闻其主理大厨是香港四大名厨之一的高荣新师傅,他也是大喜庆高級粤菜创办人,在餐饮界有翅神、酱皇之称,享有颇高声誉。有幸,闻名不如亲见,高师傅给人感觉比较随意,面相亲切,随性自然。入厨五十载,每谈及食材、酱料、厨艺等相关之事往往严肃而认真。有此顶级大佬坐阵,望江楼出品应当有保证。

高师傅认为做菜首先食材要好,望江楼的鸡鸭都由自己养殖,鱼虾鳝等河鲜则是新鲜捕捞,在江面上还有收河鲜的长廊。二在乎酱汁,望江楼菜式所用酱汁全是高师傅亲自调配,提鲜增味,很受欢迎。当天,高师傅亲自下厨,表演了多道名菜,

3月,此地又新开一家农庄,名曰“望江楼”,主打粤式特色菜与各式海鲜。望江而建,简朴小巧,与一般农家餐厅并无二样,但不敢小觑。据闻其主理大厨是香港四大名厨之一的高荣新师傅,他也是大喜庆高級粤菜创办人,在餐饮界有翅神、酱皇之称,享有颇高声誉。有幸,闻名不如亲见,高师傅给人感觉比较随意,面相亲切,随性自然。入厨五十载,每谈及食材、酱料、厨艺等相关之事往往严肃而认真。有此顶级大佬坐阵,望江楼出品应当有保证。

高师傅认为做菜首先食材要好,望江楼的鸡鸭都由自己养殖,鱼虾鳝等河鲜则是新鲜捕捞,在江面上还有收河鲜的长廊。二在乎酱汁,望江楼菜式所用酱汁全是高师傅亲自调配,提鲜增味,很受欢迎。当天,高师傅亲自下厨,表演了多道名菜,下面一一介绍。