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178 result(s) for "Christy, Linda"
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Essay contest has land prize
  \" You're basically submitting $100 for the chance to win property, and there's no guarantee you're going to get anything out of it.\" \"Living out in Florida, there's a great need for walkable communities and affordable housing, particularly in Northwest Florida,\" said [Linda Christy], who added that the site is \"an ideal location to build a new urbanism community\" that is affordable for people such as firefighters, police officers and teachers. \"We have business consultants who volunteer time to work with emerging artists to help them acquire some of the business skills they need to start a business,\" Christy said. \"They help them put together business plans, establish business goals and help them work with bankers and small business associations to get the loans they need.\"
59 acres for an essay?
\"The state of Florida has pretty strict rules on raffles and drawings,\" she added. \"You're basically submitting $100 for the chance to win property, and there's no guarantee you're going to get anything out of it.\" \"Living out in Florida, there's a great for walkable communities and affordable housing, particularly in northwest Florida,\" she said, adding that the site is \"an ideal location to build a new urbanism community\" that is affordable to people who work as firefighters, police officers and teachers. \"We have business consultants who volunteer time to work with emerging artists to help them acquire some of the business skills they need to start a business,\" [Linda Christy] said. \"They help them put together business plans, establish business goals and help them work with bankers and small business associations to get the loans they need.\"
CV, PM entries draw accolades Art graces PP&L, recycling calendars
Michele Altilio and Carson Beyl won't have to think twice about which calendar to hang in their bedrooms this year. Altilio, an eighth-grader at Conestoga Valley Middle School, won grand prize for her grade level in the PP&L Inc. Safety Poster Contest. Almost 6,200 students in kindergarten through 12th grade entered the contest. Beyl, a fourth-grader at Central Manor Elementary School in Penn Manor School District, won second place for her grade level in the Pennsylvania Recycling Poster Contest. She won first place in the same contest two years ago and second place last year.
CV, PM students draw accolades Artwork graces PP&L, recycling calendars
Michele, an eighth-grader at Conestoga Valley Middle School, won the grand prize for her grade level in the PP&L Inc. Safety Poster Contest. Almost 6,200 students in kindergarten through 12th grade entered the contest. Her cartoon figure, Electric Ed, tops a poster-sized calendar circulating among schools and PP&L employees in central and eastern Pennsylvania. Electric Ed, a figure from Michele's imagination, warns children against playing, climbing or going inside a substation. Carson [Beyl], a fourth-grader at Central Manor Elementary School in Penn Manor School District, won second place for her grade level in the Pennsylvania Recycling Poster Contest. She won first place in the same contest two years ago and second place last year.
Patriotic graffiti; CV students keep 30-year tradition alive
PHOTO; Madelyn Pennino; (1)Kelly Potts, left, and [Kelsey Martin], both eighth-grade students at Conestoga Valley Middle School, put the finishing touches on sidewalk art. (2-South) Kelsey Martin, an eighth-grade student at Conestoga Valley Middle School, puts the finishing touches on her sidewalk art. The themes of sidewalk chalk may change but the rules are staying the same. Students who want to participate in the event submit sketches of their projects several weeks before the contest. [Linda Christy] then picks 20 of the best sketches. Students, who work in pairs, have three hours to complete their artwork. Winners are chosen by judges based on the project's originality, workmanship and creativity. But what students were thinking about on this particular afternoon is how to keep the wind from carrying off their projects. Eighth-grader Samantha Lawrence looked perplexed as she wiped her chalk-stained cheek. \"The wind keeps blowing the chalk. I have to keep going back over it until it finally sinks in,\" Samantha said. \"Besides, my wrists are killing me. I'm aching all over,\" she said.
Ice cream lures blood donors in Loma Linda
LOMA LINDA Christy Hernandez nervously waited while Nikki Emerine, a donor specialist, placed a needle in her arm that would draw nearly a pint of blood from her right arm. Cold Stone has been sponsoring blood drives for the Blood Bank of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties since December, said Jean Cannon, public relations coordinator for the blood bank. Other Cold Stone locations in Yucaipa, Riverside, and Highland have each had the drives. This was the Loma Linda location's first time sponsoring the drive.
CONTINUED: The dirty past of the former tax exile who's the new Tory Treasurer
It's not just Mr Rowland's garden ornaments that the Prince is prepared to unveil. Last September Andrew opened Mr Rowland's latest acquisition, the Luxembourg arm of an Icelandic bank which he had snapped up after it fell victim to the international financial crisis. 'As the UK's Special Representative for International Trade and Investment, I welcome the initiative of an English family who took the risk of investing outside the borders of the United Kingdom,' said the Prince. 'Such a motivated team that is able to work beyond borders and cultural barriers can only expect success. In the past I have had the pleasure to meet and work with the Rowland family in the framework of my functions and I wish the family every success in this new business venture.' Former employees also claimed their pension entitlements had been diverted. Legal documents alleged that Rowland had 'engaged in a course of conduct designed to loot and waste the assets of the company'. For his part, Mr Rowland's representatives say such claims are 'false and unsubstantiated'.
This is the era of the 'lingerie model'
Amodel was once a rare, gazelle-like creature, possessed of aristocratic bearing, if not origins. In the Sixties, she became a more egalitarian figure - think Twiggy and Jean Shrimpton.
Return of the supermodels ; (1) Step aside, girls, Linda and the gang are back in vogue (2)LIFE&STYLE
It didn't stop there. The new face of Carlsberg lager, [Helena Christensen], popped up at littleknown designer Allesandro Dell'Acqua's Milan show, as well as at Prada; while [Eva Herzigova] reappeared on the catwalks of Antonio Berardi, Blumarine and Jil Sander. By the time Amber Valletta (who took two years out to have a baby) opened the supremely grownup Versace show on the last night of Milan fashion week, editors sent up a cheer. Not just because the original supermodels are back, but because these women - some of them mothers and none of them skinny waifs - are signalling a new era in fashion: a return to womanliness. Linda's enthusiastic welcome back into the fashion fold has, it seems, opened the doors to the old gang. At last, we can look at a catwalk or magazine photograph - of a supermodel, no less - and imagine the clothes on our bodies, too.
Pumpkin math adds up to fun at Leola Elementary
By JEANNETTE SCOTT Correspondent \"My pumpkin weighs 100 pounds! I carried it all the way here on the bus!\" exclaimed Leola Elementary School second-grader Monique Rivera. She would soon discover if her estimate was close by participating in Pumpkin Math last Thursday. Her teacher, Linda Christy, uses Pumpkin Math as a festive way to let her students apply skills they are learning in math class, such as measuring weight and size, and counting by place values. Students measured and recorded the weight and circumferences of their pumpkins.