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(Schnecksville's Danica Schofer, 14, wins big at Allentown Fair baking contests)
(Judge lifts order banning Baylor alumni building demolition)
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And it didn't stop there. Each night, Danica was working hard in the kitchen, preparing her entries as her grandparents, Isabelle and Frank Kercimar of Allentown, called in with tips and advice.Danica's grandparents were part of a family team. Her <a href=http://www.mahaloshuttle.com/service/Tory-Burch-Flats-Sale-Jelly-Sandals-Discount-Flats-Saffiano-Tote.html>Tory Burch Discount Flats</a>  dad, Tim Schofer, made trips to the store for supplies and ingredients.Her mom, Diane Kercimar Schofer, says, I am the sous chef that cleans up. Danica's family supported her, even when disaster struck.At one point, Danica was baking an apple pie. Danica told me, 'This is a good one,' Diane says.Danica and her mom realized, however, the oven had started to smoke, caused by dripping juice from the pie. Their attempt to rescue it from the smoky oven ended in catastrophe the pie fell to the floor. We started over at 1:30 a.m., Diane says.It's that determination that helped Danica earn those six ribbons at her first Allentown Fair appearance.Danica takes her baking seriously. You have to be very precise in the recipe and the measurements, Danica says. Sometimes you can add things to be more creative. I like a challenge. Danica's flavors are layered, balanced and textural, requiring a precise hand.Take her winning angel food cake, for example.Making a good angel food cake isn't easy. Any mistake in technique can cause you to have a flat, dense, chewy (and inedible) cake.Danica's was like a cloud, and like any good angel food cake, it was the perfect canvas for delicious add-ons such as drizzle, frosting and icing.Danica's angel food cake featured a <a href=http://www.mahaloshuttle.com/service/Tory-Burch-Outlet-Online-Thin-Flip-Flops-Handbags-Cheap-Wristlets.html>Tory Burch Thin Flip Flops</a>  raspberry buttercream filling and a seven-minute icing (a simple frosting made with egg whites and sugar), a white chocolate drizzle and fresh raspberry toppings.Her complex Mocha Choco-Coco Brownies took home top honors at the fair's Chocolate Cookie, Brownie or Bar Baking Contest. Danica's brownie was a multi-layered fudgy treat with chocolate coconut, coffee buttercream and mocha ganache layers.Both her angel food cake and her brownies are now eligible for entry for the 2015 Pa. Farm Show competition in Harrisburg in January. Danica plans to keep going.She also won with her No Bake Chocolate Espresso Pie at the fair's Best No Bake Dessert contest.Family tradition is baked into everything Danica makes. Adorning the mocha/chocolately mousse pie were rum balls made from Danica's grandmother's recipe.Danica took home second-place awards for: Blue Ribbon Apple Pie, Chocolate Cake and Pampered Chef Cookie Independent Cooking Consultants Original Cookie Contest.Danica's family also attributes her success to their strong Catholic faith. Everyone should have faith in God, Danica says, With him, everything is possible. So what does the future hold? A strong student, Danica likes to bake but <a href=http://www.wfxqbj.com>True Religion Sale</a>  also enjoys dance as well as singing opera.Diane says her daughter competed not for herself but to make her family proud. She offered her ribbons to her and other awards to her grandparents. She's really doing this for them, Diane says.Coming Sept. 17 and 24: More Allentown Fair winning recipestwitter @jenwsheehan610-820-6628 Copyright 2014,
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U.S. District Judge Walter Smith Jr.鈥檚 decision to dissolve the order follows a nine-hour mediation session Monday between Baylor, the Baylor Alumni Association, and the Chicago-area alumnus who obtained the restraining order ended without a resolution on the building鈥檚 future.
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Kurt Dorr, who is described as a lifetime member of the BAA in legal documents, on Thursday amended his <a href=http://www.cicviseu.net/page.php?sale=Jimmy-Choo-Kitten-Heel>Jimmy Choo Kitten Heel</a>  suit to seek at least $10 million in damages 鈥?$5 million minimum from Baylor and at least $5 million from Collin Cox and Elizabeth Coker, the current and former presidents of the BAA, respectively.
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The judge鈥檚 Friday order gives Dorr up to seven days to announce whether he still intends to pursue the financial damages, or the case will be dismissed.
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The Hughes-Dillard building has served as the headquarters for the Baylor Alumni Association since 1978.
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鈥淲e鈥檙e disappointed in the judge鈥檚 decision to dissolve the (restraining order) and we are weighing our options and will proceed in a way that we feel is appropriate for our client and the mission he is on to save the (alumni center),鈥?said Waco attorney John Mabry, one of Dorr鈥檚 five lawyers.
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Mabry declined to comment on whether Dorr would still continue to seek the monetary damages.
 +
Baylor had planned to tear down the building earlier this month to clear way for what will eventually become a grassy plaza leading to a pedestrian bridge across the Brazos River that will connect the campus to the stadium, which is being built on the opposite riverbank.
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鈥淲e鈥檙e obviously glad that this action has allowed us to continue to move forward on Baylor Stadium and the exciting progress there, as well as our future relationship with the alumni association,鈥?Baylor spokeswoman Lori Fogleman said.
 +
Emotional connection
 +
Fogleman added that the university understands the emotional connection alumni had to the building and the various historical items that were collected in the center. Baylor last month began relocating statues and markers from Hughes-Dillard to other campus facilities.
 +
Dorr originally sought the restraining order, signed by Smith on July 2, to delay the demolition until the alumni association鈥檚 full membership could vote Sept. 7 on whether to turn the building over to Baylor.
 +
Mabry said he hopes Baylor will hold off on the demolition until BAA members are allowed to weigh in on the project.
 +
鈥淥nce you tear down the building, it鈥檚 gone,鈥?Mabry said. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 unspill the milk.鈥?
 +
Relinquishing the Hughes-Dillard building to Baylor was among a number of changes the university and BAA leaders agreed upon in an effort to mend what has become a contentious relationship between the entities beginning in the early 2000s.
 +
Cox and members of BAA鈥檚 executive committee on May 30 voted for the association鈥檚 staff to vacate the building in June and move into administrative offices in Baylor鈥檚 Clifton Robinson tower.
 +
The executive committee also approved a proposed transition agreement that would turn over most alumni outreach efforts to Baylor except for publication of the Baylor Line magazine, which the BAA has printed since 1948.
 +
The agreement also would spur the creation of a independent Baylor Line Corp. to continue the magazine, an alumni advisory board to include some current BAA leaders, <a href=http://www.cicviseu.net/page.php?sale=Tory-Burch-Makeup-Bag>Tory Burch Makeup Bag</a>  and a non-voting alumni seat on Baylor鈥檚 board of regents.
 +
The BAA鈥檚 full membership is set to vote whether to approve the agreement on Sept. 7, a day before Baylor plans to terminate its existing licensing agreement that allows the BAA to perform alumni duties.
 +
鈥淲e鈥檙e certainly pleased with the court鈥檚 actions and we鈥檙e looking forward to things moving forward,鈥?said J.D. Pauerstein, a San Antonio attorney who represented the BAA, Cox and Coker.
 +
1994 agreement
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Dorr鈥檚 suit charged that the demolition plans for the Hughes-Dillard building violated a <a href=http://www.cicviseu.net/page.php?sale=Red-Tory-Burch-Flats>Red Tory Burch Flats</a>  1994 agreement about the use of the building which states that Baylor can only reclaim the facility if it has a need for the space, no alternative location exists, and it pledges to provide a building of comparable size, condition, quality of location and 鈥╟onstruction.
 +
Cox said in a July 10 federal hearing that Baylor has announced intentions to build a new facility to accommodate the Baylor Line staff in the 鈥╢uture.
 +
Baylor regents last week announced a $17 million fundraising campaign for a new alumni events center that would be built next to the new stadium and include meeting rooms for special events. But it was unclear whether the building would include office space that would serve the Baylor Line employees.
 +
Fogleman did not know when the Hughes-Dillard demolition would commence or whether the university would incur additional costs because of the delay. She did not know what date the demolition originally was supposed to begin this month.
 +
Brian Nicholson, associate vice president of facilities, planning and construction for Baylor, previously said the university could have incurred as much as $300,000 in overtime costs if the project was delayed until the Sept. 7 vote.

Revision as of 23:19, 11 September 2014

@@@ U.S. District Judge Walter Smith Jr.鈥檚 decision to dissolve the order follows a nine-hour mediation session Monday between Baylor, the Baylor Alumni Association, and the Chicago-area alumnus who obtained the restraining order ended without a resolution on the building鈥檚 future.

Kurt Dorr, who is described as a lifetime member of the BAA in legal documents, on Thursday amended his <a href=http://www.cicviseu.net/page.php?sale=Jimmy-Choo-Kitten-Heel>Jimmy Choo Kitten Heel</a>  suit to seek at least $10 million in damages 鈥?$5 million minimum from Baylor and at least $5 million from Collin Cox and Elizabeth Coker, the current and former presidents of the BAA, respectively.
The judge鈥檚 Friday order gives Dorr up to seven days to announce whether he still intends to pursue the financial damages, or the case will be dismissed.
The Hughes-Dillard building has served as the headquarters for the Baylor Alumni Association since 1978.
鈥淲e鈥檙e disappointed in the judge鈥檚 decision to dissolve the (restraining order) and we are weighing our options and will proceed in a way that we feel is appropriate for our client and the mission he is on to save the (alumni center),鈥?said Waco attorney John Mabry, one of Dorr鈥檚 five lawyers.
Mabry declined to comment on whether Dorr would still continue to seek the monetary damages.
Baylor had planned to tear down the building earlier this month to clear way for what will eventually become a grassy plaza leading to a pedestrian bridge across the Brazos River that will connect the campus to the stadium, which is being built on the opposite riverbank.
鈥淲e鈥檙e obviously glad that this action has allowed us to continue to move forward on Baylor Stadium and the exciting progress there, as well as our future relationship with the alumni association,鈥?Baylor spokeswoman Lori Fogleman said.
Emotional connection
Fogleman added that the university understands the emotional connection alumni had to the building and the various historical items that were collected in the center. Baylor last month began relocating statues and markers from Hughes-Dillard to other campus facilities.
Dorr originally sought the restraining order, signed by Smith on July 2, to delay the demolition until the alumni association鈥檚 full membership could vote Sept. 7 on whether to turn the building over to Baylor.
Mabry said he hopes Baylor will hold off on the demolition until BAA members are allowed to weigh in on the project.
鈥淥nce you tear down the building, it鈥檚 gone,鈥?Mabry said. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 unspill the milk.鈥?
Relinquishing the Hughes-Dillard building to Baylor was among a number of changes the university and BAA leaders agreed upon in an effort to mend what has become a contentious relationship between the entities beginning in the early 2000s.
Cox and members of BAA鈥檚 executive committee on May 30 voted for the association鈥檚 staff to vacate the building in June and move into administrative offices in Baylor鈥檚 Clifton Robinson tower.
The executive committee also approved a proposed transition agreement that would turn over most alumni outreach efforts to Baylor except for publication of the Baylor Line magazine, which the BAA has printed since 1948.
The agreement also would spur the creation of a independent Baylor Line Corp. to continue the magazine, an alumni advisory board to include some current BAA leaders, <a href=http://www.cicviseu.net/page.php?sale=Tory-Burch-Makeup-Bag>Tory Burch Makeup Bag</a>  and a non-voting alumni seat on Baylor鈥檚 board of regents.
The BAA鈥檚 full membership is set to vote whether to approve the agreement on Sept. 7, a day before Baylor plans to terminate its existing licensing agreement that allows the BAA to perform alumni duties.
鈥淲e鈥檙e certainly pleased with the court鈥檚 actions and we鈥檙e looking forward to things moving forward,鈥?said J.D. Pauerstein, a San Antonio attorney who represented the BAA, Cox and Coker.
1994 agreement
Dorr鈥檚 suit charged that the demolition plans for the Hughes-Dillard building violated a <a href=http://www.cicviseu.net/page.php?sale=Red-Tory-Burch-Flats>Red Tory Burch Flats</a>  1994 agreement about the use of the building which states that Baylor can only reclaim the facility if it has a need for the space, no alternative location exists, and it pledges to provide a building of comparable size, condition, quality of location and 鈥╟onstruction.
Cox said in a July 10 federal hearing that Baylor has announced intentions to build a new facility to accommodate the Baylor Line staff in the 鈥╢uture.
Baylor regents last week announced a $17 million fundraising campaign for a new alumni events center that would be built next to the new stadium and include meeting rooms for special events. But it was unclear whether the building would include office space that would serve the Baylor Line employees.
Fogleman did not know when the Hughes-Dillard demolition would commence or whether the university would incur additional costs because of the delay. She did not know what date the demolition originally was supposed to begin this month.
Brian Nicholson, associate vice president of facilities, planning and construction for Baylor, previously said the university could have incurred as much as $300,000 in overtime costs if the project was delayed until the Sept. 7 vote.
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