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36 result(s) for "Helman, Andrea"
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Northwest animal babies
Introduces some of the baby animals found in the Pacific Northwest, including mammals, marsupials, fish, and birds.
Council OKs Sign at Center's Food Court
Things are looking up for vendors al the Westminster Center, Food Court.
Till you drop
LOS ANGELES--When Carol Jerex and her mom get together, they do one thing.
1, 2, 3 moose : an animal counting book
Introduces the numbers one through twenty against a background of photographs and brief text describing animal and plant life found in the Pacific Northwest.
O is for orca: a Pacific northwest alphabet book
You thought A was for apple! This lovely book combines stunning photos of west coast wildlife and environment, a short but informative text -- and, of course, the alphabet.
Northwest animal babies
Polar Bear Cubs Creamy white polar bear cubs are hard to see or babies of the land are porcupine, racoon and mountain goat kits, bison polar bear cubs. [Art Wolfe]'s photographs are really portraits which capture
A vacancy at the helm
Amorello's resignation, which takes effect Aug. 15, caps a 3 1/2- year effort by [Mitt Romney] to take control of the Turnpike Authority. The governor had won control over safety inspections of the Big Dig under a bill passed by the Legislature two weeks ago, and now Amorello's resignation effectively hands him everything else he's wanted: control over who leads the Turnpike Authority, oversight of the $14.6 billion project, and an end to the bitter wrangling between his administration and the independent agency. Amorello's announcement ended several weeks of political turmoil. Until yesterday, he had resisted every call for him to step down, from Romney, Attorney General Thomas F. Reilly, Mayor Thomas M. Menino, and even his top allies in the Legislature. But after Wednesday, when a Supreme Judicial Court justice denied his bid to block a hearing where Romney sought to remove him as chairman, Amorello concluded that it was time to go. Amorello's ouster represents a major victory for Romney, who has called for his resignation ever since the discovery in 2004 of hundreds of leaks in Big Dig tunnels. Romney, considering a presidential run in 2008, won a similar high-profile political duel nearly three years ago when he forced out William M. Bulger, former Senate president, as president of the University of Massachusetts.
A VACANCY AT THE HELM ; ROMNEY BEGINS SEARCH FOR TURNPIKE SUCCESSOR
Amorello's resignation, which takes effect Aug. 15, caps a 3 1/2- year effort by [Mitt Romney] to take control of the Turnpike Authority. The governor had won control over safety inspections of the Big Dig under a bill passed by the Legislature two weeks ago, and now Amorello's resignation effectively hands him everything else he's wanted: control over who leads the Turnpike Authority, oversight of the $14.6 billion project, and an end to the bitter wrangling between his administration and the independent agency. Amorello's announcement ended several weeks of political turmoil. Until yesterday, he had resisted every call for him to step down, from Romney, Attorney General Thomas F. Reilly, Mayor Thomas M. Menino, and even his top allies in the Legislature. But after Wednesday, when a Supreme Judicial Court justice denied his bid to block a hearing where Romney sought to remove him as chairman, Amorello concluded that it was time to go. Amorello's ouster represents a major victory for Romney, who has called for his resignation ever since the discovery in 2004 of hundreds of leaks in Big Dig tunnels. Romney, considering a presidential run in 2008, won a similar high-profile political duel nearly three years ago when he forced out William M. Bulger, former Senate president, as president of the University of Massachusetts.
ROMNEY REJECTS MINIMUM WAGE
Democratic legislators and candidates for governor immediately blasted [Mitt Romney]'s move and predicted a quick rejection of his proposed amendment, perhaps as early as Monday. That would send the bill back to Romney, who could then sign it or veto it. In 2002, Romney proposed modest, regular increases in the minimum wage that would be indexed to inflation. [James Marzilli] criticized Romney for never acting on that as governor, and he sees Romney's rejection of the bill yesterday as proof that he never had any intention of doing so. Romney spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom said the 25-cent increase the governor is calling for reflects the rate of inflation. He said the Legislature rejected earlier proposals to index minimum wage increases to inflation. Romney, he said, is hoping legislators will instead embrace the idea to study increases every couple years.