| Applicants needed for Student Workshop Leader & Assistants ...
Job Description: Student workshop leaders for Business and Technology Careers Camp 2007. Student workshop leaders will lead camp workshops to assist high school student participants project of creating an online shopping mall. Student role models will facilitate all activities, monitor behavior and ensure the safety of all campers. Description of camp also available online. Start/End Date: Required one week training in June on campus, must be available the week of the camp from Sunday, July 14 through Friday, July 20. Shifts Available: Assistants (40 hours) and Leaders (100 hours). Hours per week: Students must be available 24 hours a day from Sunday, July 14-Friday, July 20 and for one week 40 hour training. More about the event: This is a hands-on, interactive camp designed to help high school girls see how business and technology skills are combined in a variety of high profile careers.
The tool for renewal: Port's revival hinged on a few crucial actions
It was 1960. In Washington, D.C., Ike held the White House, with John Kennedy and Richard Nixon each hoping to be the next to own the Oval Office. In Massachusetts, Democrat Foster Furcolo was governor, trying to deal with the fading of the post-war economic boom, striking unions, rusting industrial complexes and fleeing manufacturers taking jobs with them as they left for friendlier business environments. In Newburyport, the economy and historic downtown center were crumbling. Local merchants, like Byron Matthews running his family's market, were holding their own, but other businesses had already fallen by the financial wayside. Al Zabriskie had been elected mayor. His theme was "a better Newburyport for all people." Setting a nine-point agenda, he promised "action and progress, rather than words and stagnation." His plan included open government, better schools, more off street parking, a search for new industries, and urban renewal of the downtown.
American Fork's: Meadows to rival Orem mall
When phase two of American Fork's The Meadows development is complete in the next few years, it will rival Orem's University Mall in size and offerings. Retail stores, restaurants, housing, offices, a park-like atmosphere and more are planned for the phase two portion of the shopping center in west American Fork. But the city's zoning laws might hold up plans for housing. Representatives of Woodbury Corp. and Woodfield Development presented plans for the next phase of its successful shopping center at a joint session of the City Council and Planning Commission recently. Lynn Woodbury told the group that the development would be approximately the same size as the main section of University Mall, which they also developed. George Melara, an architect preparing the design of the second phase, said the developers had a vision for the center.
Kenya: Pioneering New Concept in Country's Hotel Industry
On 17th January 2007, three days before the World Social Forum opened in Nairobi, a gentleman walked into the Jamia Plaza, which is located behind the Jamia Mosque in Nairobi's Central Business District. He walked around some of the almost 100 shops selling apparel, cosmetics, cell phones, fast foods and other merchandise on the ground floor and first floor of the building and ended up on the second floor of the Jamiat Hotel. .
ATSC supporters celebrate 25th years
The Sophisticates, the major support group for the Assessment and Treatment Services Center, chose a "Haute, Haute, Haute/Where the Element of Art Meets Fashion" theme to celebrate its 25th anniversary March 19 at the Balboa Bay Club & Resort. With Ferrari and Maserati of Newport Beach supplying luxury cars at the entrance, upscale store offerings via drawings and live auction and a first-class St. John spring fashion runway show, the 430 guests luxuriated in the moment. Sophisticates president Sarah Corrigan and event chairwoman Lisa Hallaian welcomed everyone, introducing Christopher Tate, St. John vice president of retail, Western region, and celebrity stylist and emcee Mark-Alan Harmon, who proclaimed long shorts to the knee, a J. Crew T-shirt, a blazer and cork platform heels a fun spring fashion trend.
Not a small place, but cozy
BOLINGBROOK -- A thousand trees, a dozen bronze butterflies and stained glass windows are a few of the details that architects put into The Promenade Bolingbrook to create a sense of place. The shopping center that opens April 26 is designed to be part shopping mecca and part community gathering place. At 1.1 million square feet with 100 stores and restaurants, Promenade Bolingbrook won't be small. .
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