Top 10 ways to positively change your day
Here are the top 10 ways to positively change your day: 1. Don’t blame others for making you unhappy. Take responsibility for making yourself happy.

Here are the top 10 ways to positively change your day: 1. Don’t blame others for making you unhappy. Take responsibility for making yourself happy.
NEW SMYRNA BEACH — Bert Fish Medical Center will hold an open house and health fair on Monday, Oct. 3, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 5 to 8 p.m., in the Schildecker Outpatient Lobby of the hospital, 401 Palmetto St. This event offers a variety of screenings — blood pressure, pulse oximeter, and body mass index — free of charge.
DAYTONA BEACH -- DuvaSawko, a local employer and national leader in medical billing for emergency physicians and hospitals, has announced the acquisition of a large new client.
North East Tennessee Emergency Physicians, headquartered in Kingsport, Tenn. with facilities in eastern Tennessee and western Virginia, has contracted with DuvaSawko to provide coding, billing and practice management services for their emergency physician group. NETEP treats approximately 200,000 patients annually.
“This represents a 20% increase in our business," said Dr. Charles Duva, DuvaSawko's president & CEO. "In these challenging economic times, we are pleased our business has grown by 40% in the previous year and we continue to grow.”
“This represents a 20% increase in our business," said Dr. Charles Duva, DuvaSawko's president & CEO. "In these challenging economic times, we are pleased our business has grown by 40% in the previous year and we continue to grow.”
ORMOND BEACH -- Movies on the Halifax presents "The Haunted Mansion," 7 p.m., Friday, Oct. 7 at Rockefeller Gardens, 25 Riverside Drive, Ormond Beach. Admission is free. Refreshments are available for purchase. For more information, please call 386-676-3216; Ormond Beach Department of Leisure Services.
HOLLY HILL -- Bellman Donald Wiggins, Holly Hill's former longtime mayor who held the post during parts of three decades, died Saturday with family members at his bedside at Oceanside Hospice Care Center in Ormond Beach, losing a longtime battle with cancer. He was 80 years old.
Services were held Wednesday at The Lighthouse Church of Christ in Holly Hill. Wiggins is survived by his wife, Shirley; three sons, four brothers, two sisters and six grandchildren.
The Georgia native, who went by Don Wiggins, moved here in 1950, and later managed the A&P grocery store before launching his own chain. He was first elected to the city commission in 1966 and then mayor in 1970 for two terms before gaining the top post again in 1981 and serving another 10 years.
When he lost a re-election bid in 1991, Wiggins didn't give up; instead moving up politically by winning election for the dist. 4 Volusia County Council seat where her served a full term.
When he lost a re-election bid in 1991, Wiggins didn't give up; instead moving up politically by winning election for the dist. 4 Volusia County Council seat where her served a full term.
When it comes to Facebook, the saying that comes to mind is, "The more things change, the more they stay the same." I am speaking, of course, of the newest format from the social media giant. It's confusing, complicated and has me feeling clueless, especially this new "Subscriber" option. I can't really complain, though. Facebook has proven to be a very big marketing tool for NSBNews.net.
That's the part I have most embraced. I have one of the largest, if not the largest individual social network on Facebook in Volusia County with 9,144 contacts and counting. Here is my Facebook breakdown: Henry Frederick: 4,075; NSBNews.net: 3,062; VolusiaNews.net: 1,976; NSB News LLC: 31.
This has allowed me to market NSBNews.net near and far.
NEW SMYRNA BEACH -- The way Mayor Adam Barringer sees it, the developers of the much-ballyhooed Hampton Inn and Suites on Flagler Avenue have three years to get the job done building it and the clock is ticking.
The way neighbor Deborah Dugas sees it, it has been an albatross from the onset and she hopes it never gets built, but she blames the city, not the developer.
The way local attorney Glenn Storch sees it, scuttlebutt that the lack of activity over the last couple of weeks is all to do about nothing. Well sort of.
"The property was funded -- the mortgage has closed," insisted Storch, who helped developer David Swentor of South Carolina-based Premier Development Corp. with all of the red tape, including securing of building permits and other zoning issues. "We're still waiting on a draw."
Swentor told NSBNews.net in a phone interview this morning that it's understandable with such a large-scale project like this in a small city that hasn't had anything of this magnitude in 30 years where people would become suspicious with the bulldozers silent just two weeks after a much-hyped groundbreaking.
Far more than any president in my lifetime, Barack Obama has used the executive order to bypass or contravene the legislative authority of Congress.
One of the most challenging aspects of developing a business, especially in this economy, is generating enough revenue to sustain it. This is certainly true of media, which is why the public has so few options in getting viable news. NSBNews.net takes great pride in carrying out its mission of reporting the news.
When we launched NSBNews.net in April 2008, I had very little revenue to work with, but enough to get started. My strength was and is the news or reporting side of the 24/7 website. Advertising and marketing are an Achilles heel not only of new mediums like our's, but the traditional media outlets too, with small businesses reluctant to part with money in this lousy recession. Still, we are becoming a player without compromising our news coverage for the sake of trinkets.