ProductSTAR WARS Jedi: Survivor
Platform:Steam-PC
Summarize your bug Door in desert passages wont open. Its a green door that says "Open Path" but when i walk towards it it wont open, and ive tried looking up if im doing something wrong but nowhere says any extra steps, everyone else just walks up to it and it opens. Ive finished the game and am getting collectables but theres a chest behind this door that i cant reach
How often does the bug occur? Every time (100%)
Steps: How can we find the bug ourselves? Im not sure what caused it it just wont open for me
What happens when the bug occurs? The door wont open
What do you expect to see? The door opening
Desert Diamond Arena parking locations open one hour prior to the event door time. Day of event parking is available in multiple Desert Diamond Arena lots including lots G, J, L, Yellow, Garage, South VIP, East VIP, and West VIP. (Available on an event-by-event basis).
Pre-paid parking can be purchased through Ticketmaster.com or AXS.com (depending on event) up to one hour prior to the event start. We recommend visiting our individual event pages to purchase parking through the link we provide.
You might have seen the open shelving in our reading nook/music room, or on a smaller scale in our bathroom. No matter the size, I always follow a similar formula for styling shelves. Begin with anchor pieces. These are your largest pieces: typically larger books you may place horizontally or trays for trinkets. Next add in any decorative objects or artwork you would display vertically. I love resting framed art behind a shallow stack of books or placing a larger ceramic piece next to or atop some books. Lastly any smaller bowls or candles. When using the same colors or similar shaped vessels, be sure to use a zig zag technique.
A good example of this method is in our living room shelving seen above. The top shelf has a large ceramic vessel on the right, then on the left on the second shelf. A similar colored vessel on the right on the third shelf and so on. You can also see the mix of the vertical and horiztonal stacked books.
Currently you have JavaScript disabled. In order to post comments, please make sure JavaScript and Cookies are enabled, and reload the page. Click here for instructions on how to enable JavaScript in your browser.
Robert and Christina are the husband-and-wifeduo behind the lifestyle and design blog New Darlings. Since 2013, they've been documenting their life in the Southwest andrefining their personal style. Follow along for snapshots into slow living, organic design, style finds and peaceful interiors.
First of all I enjoy reading your column. I do have a question for you if you care to answer. My husband and I have moved to the desert from Michigan. I was recently in my first serious dust storm, driving. I did have to pass open areas or fields of sand. Oh my! In the areas where they had walls, fences, trees, grass, bushes, etc., there seem to be less dust. Even back home in Michigan, we would plant trees or bushes as a snow and wind fence. I know what drifting can do. Maybe all these open areas should be growing bushes near the roads. I can hear it now that the property owner, whoever owns these lands, complaining about the cost. But there is a cost to the cities and our cars. Maybe lower taxes to begin with? Plus any kind of greenery would be good for the environment. I know they have all those trees along the railroad track. What do you think?
I hope you enjoy your time in the desert, I've found it to be a remarkable habitat. However, many of the geographic factors that make living here so pleasant most of the time also create the occasional unpleasantness. A low incidence of rain, hot sunny days, and steady breezes might be perfect for lounging by the pool, but they're also idea conditions for sand and dust. Kick up the wind a notch or two and, as you've seen, it can get rather scary around here.
Even when the blowing sand isn't enough to completely shut down a road, as has happened several times in the past few months here in the west end of the valley, it still takes its toll on a paint job or windshield. But as my Desert Sun colleague and Road Warrior columnist Colin Atagi reported in January and February, the city of Palm Springs is working on a solution, beginning on Gene Autry Trail just south of Interstate 10, an important portal to the city that is often closed down when high winds pick up. A test wall was installed along a 100-yard stretch of road, which officials say has been effective at keeping dunes off the road.
A successful test could mean, somewhere down the line, we might be treated to walls lining roadways through open desert between the interstate and the edge of town, not unlike the cinder-block corridors along Fred Waring and other roads through the mid-vally. Keep in mind, however, that even a wall lining the entirety of Gene Autry or any other road leading off the freeway across the open desert isn't going to completely protect your car from blowing sand, only an impermiable dome would really guarantee that flying particles won't be a problem. Under certain conditions, with dust blown high enough, the problem becomes less about drifts across the road and more about just plain visibility.
It makes me think a better solution to the problem of blowing sand, and also for those times when flash flooding from the mountains makes many of the same roads impassable, is an elevated causeway that would preserve natural views while allowing sand and water to pass beneath our vehicles. But this is highly unlikely to happen as long as the number of people affected by sandstorms and flooding in the Coachella Valley remains a lot smaller than the "why should I have to pay for THAT?" crowd. Considering we have a hard enough time convincing some Americans that food inspectors or national parks are worth paying taxes for, I think it might be a long wait.
As for those tamarisk trees lining the railroad tracks, it's not necessarily true that any kind of greenery is good for the environment, at least for the environment we also inhabit. Here's what another colleague, Maureen Gilmer, has to say about those sturdy trees, imported from the Middle East:
"Most of the older trees have naturalized and do not receive irrigation. They survive by a huge taproot that can extend 100 feet into the soil and lateral roots that can spread nearly double that. A single individual can consume up to 300 gallons of groundwater a day.
"Consider miles of tamarisk windbreaks along a road or railroad track, then calculate the cumulative effect of all those taproots on the water table. In one case, a small spring that served wildlife over many square miles of waterless terrain dried up due to the demands of tamarisk roots."
In fact, conservationists are already working on trying to get rid of tamarisk trees in places like the Coachella Valley Preserve in Thousand Palms, because their water-hogging abilities are making life difficult for native plants, as well as competing with us humans for precious groundwater, which contributes a large share of our drinking supply. Most other plants that would serve as effective wind breaks would require active irrigation.
As soon as we start developing expectations of how things "should" be, most of us humans find ourselves seeing trade-offs. If we want to get away from snow and rain, it only makes sense that we're going to have to do with less water, but decades of manipulating the environment for our comfort have lulled several generations into thinking we can always come out ahead in the deal. But most of the time, all we're doing is borrowing from the past or the future.
Just like in finding a mate, it's mostly a matter of finding a situation in which the inevitable flaws and annoyances are those you don't mind so much, or better yet, embrace. I live just a block off Gene Autry Trail, but I would rather have to drive 40 minutes out of my way once in a while to get to the freeway than see walls blocking out the desert on every other day. But maybe that's just me. Then again, further down the line we might be treated to condos and strip malls lining the roadways between the freeway and what used to be the edge of town. That would take care of the sand problem, but I don't believe it would make the roads any easier to navigate.
"Jeopardy" champ and copy editor Will Toren is The Desert Sun's resident know-it-all. He defies you to stump him. Follow Will on Twitter @WillToren for his daily downloads and send him your questions at will.toren@thedesertsun
Open Enrollment is a process allowing parents and guardians the ability to apply for admission to any public school, as long as there is classroom space available. Parents and guardians choose to open enroll their children in PVSchools for a variety of reasons, including the unique and innovative award-winning programs, teaching philosophy, extracurricular activities, and more.
*This chart reflects capacity for the listed school year and is subject to change based on current capacity and staffing. Please contact the appropriate school for up-to-date information. Grade levels and programs listed as closed, may become available without being reflected as "open" in the chart above.
**A specialized program with a closed status, will remain closed for the following school year unless otherwise stated. Students interested in being put on the waitlist should complete an Open Enrollment application.
3a8082e126