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282 result(s) for "Starr, Sean"
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Sean Starr: A Return to the Traditional Way
Companies such as The Gap and Ocean Spray are seeking him out because they want a product that's hand painted. \"Undoubtedly, they could go to a thousand different sign shops to print something, to cut it out in vinyl, or whatever, but they're seeking us out now, which we find very exciting,\" says [Sean Starr]. \"We've got a commitment to keep the traditional aspect to sign making alive, and it's starting to affect corporate America. They are seeing the value in it.\"
Trade Publication Article
Lions runner tops in Ontario: Shoeless Sean makes the finish line
St. James cross-country runner Megan Brown is the junior provincial champion after her first place run at the Ontario (OFSAA) cross-country championships Saturday in Ottawa. In the senior girls event, Lourdes runner Sasha Henry was fifth place. In the midget girls, Maeve O'Regan of Lourdes was 13th. In the senior boys race, Centennial's Angus McCauley finished 22nd.
Standing on Their Own - Meeting special needs
[Joan Amburn]'s son, Sean Starr, is 20 and has fetal alcohol syndrome because she drank throughout her pregnancy. Though she has been sober for 14 years now, she confronts her past every time she looks at her son. Now she's Starr's fiercest advocate, attending workshops and job fairs like the Adult Agency Fair on Wednesday. There, she quizzed social services representatives about maximizing her son's benefits, and she wasn't shy about her opinions. After all, like most mothers, she wants the best for her son. Starr is part of the first generation of special education students who have been mainstreamed into society. He's enrolled in a Vancouver program called Gateway to Adult Transition Education, or GATE. The program targets 18- to 21-year-olds with special needs who need that extra boost getting ready for the real world.
Vancouver team wins Special Olympics title
Members of the Evergreen Bulldogs soccer team pose with their gold medals near the Olympic torch at Fort Lewis on Sunday during the Special Olympics of Washington Summer Games. Pictured in the front row, left to right, are team supporter Josh Krieg, players Patrick Blue, Richard Farris and A.J. Summers. In the back row are coach [Cherie Skelton], players Samantha Spencer, Sean Starr, Jennifer Replogle, Heidi Baldwin, and Danny Baragary, and coach [Michelle Hyde]. Playing for the Bulldogs were: Heidi Baldwin, 16; Danny Baragary, 19; Patrick Blue, 17; Richard Farres, 12; Jennifer Replogle, 17; Samantha Spencer, 19; Sean Starr, 18; and A.J. Summers, 16.
Standing on Their Own - Meeting special needs
Now she's Starr's fiercest advocate, attending workshops and job fairs like the Adult Agency Fair on Wednesday. There, she quizzed social services representatives about maximizing her son's benefits, and she wasn't shy about her opinions. After all, like most mothers, she wants the best for her son. \"He's my gift, and no one could raise him the way that I have,\" [Joan Amburn] said. \"We never said, 'You're disabled or handicapped' or 'You can't do this.' \" \"We've had students get their driver's license, get married, and we've had students master the bus system, and that's the best thing that has ever happened to them,\" [Leslie Morrison] said.