[pic] [pic] 16th Annual Etouffee Festival Queens Pageant Jr. Miss, Teen and Miss Saturday, April 30, 2011 Arnaudville Civic Center 291 Guidroz Street (Next to U.S. Post Office) Arnaudville, Louisiana Barbara Sanders, Director (337) 288-4571 Age Categories and Interview Times: No Interview - Jr. Miss Etouffee (13 to 14 Years) Formal Wear 2:00 p.m. - Teen Miss Etouffee (15 to 17 Years) Business Suit for Interview, Formal wear for Pageant 2:30 p.m. - Miss Etouffee (17 to 23 Years - must be 18 by January 31, 2012) Business Suit for Interview Formal Wear Registration begins at 1:30 pm. Pageant begins at 6:00 p.m. Entry Fees $55.00 - Jr. Miss Etouffee $65.00 - Teen Miss Etouffee $100.00 - Miss Etouffee Please make all checks
Women Civil Rights 1865-1992 Key : Black = random facts, red = presidents, orange = congress, yellow = Supreme Court, lime = individuals, green = groups, blue = war, indigo = economy, purple = riots/protests/strikes. 1865-1914 1900 4 million children worked in industry or coalmines 1907 – 30 states had abolished child labour Civil War – unmarried women worked as nurses, some went to HE but men opposed it 1870 – 13% of unmarried women worked domestically or in factories. 1900 this trebled – they made up 17% of the workforce. Married women remained at home 1890s – women who graduated could get office jobs due to invention of typewriter and telephone, could earn up to $7 a week 1900 – 949,000 women worked as teachers, secretaries, librarians
The 'burbs (1989) (500) Days of Summer (2009) 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) 3 Ninjas (1992) 3 Ninjas Kick Back (1994) 3 Ninjas Knuckle Up (1995) 3:10 to Yuma (2007) 4: Rise of the Silver Surfer (2007) 8 Mile (2002) 8 MM (1999) 9 (2009) 10 Things I Hate About You (1999) 13 Assassins (2010) 16 Blocks (2006) 17 Again (2009) 21 (2008) 21 Jump Street (2012) 25th Hour (2002) 27 Dresses (2008) 28 Days Later... (2002) 28 Weeks Later (2007) 30 Days of Night (2007) 30 Minutes of Less (2011) 40 Days and 40 Nights (2002) The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2005) 50/50 (2011) 50 First Dates (2004) 101 Dalmations (1996) 127 Hours (2010) 300 (2006) 1408 (2007) 2012 (2009) 10,000 B.C. (2008) Æon Flux (2005) A Beautiful Mind (2001) A Bug's Life (1998) A Better Life (2011) A
This is demonstrated through the introduction of the decree in 1882 which forbade children under 12 years old from participating in labour by Alexander III. Nicholas continued with these reforms by introducing factory inspections in 1904 and placing limits on working hours, in 1917 the average working hours in a week consisted of 50 to 60 hours and 8 hours per day. Another reform that took place was Stolypin’s installation of a sewerage system in St Petersburg in 1911 after 100 000 deaths were reported as a result of cholera in 1910, this suggests that the tsars treated the workers well during their reign. Although this is the case, Bloody Sunday in 1905 suggests that the workers were not actually content under the tsars due to working and living conditions and the firing of other workers. However there is evidence to suggest that the workers were not treated worse during the rule of the
In 1946, the “Chamber led the efforts to change the name of the community and the last day of 1948 saw the demise of Roscoe and the birth of Sun Valley” (Sun Valley Area Chamber of Commerce, 2010). Sun Valley later made headlines four years later when “Mrs. Florence Shea became the President of the Sun Valley Chamber; she was the first woman to be president of a Chamber of Commerce in the States” (Sun Valley Area Chamber of Commerce, 2010). During the early 1900’s, there were only seven families (Sun Valley Area Chamber of Commerce,
Henry D. Seum Professor Greenhaw AMH 3547 23 November 2009 Mission Impossible: A Historical Review of the U.S.S Pueblo Incident The events of January 23, 1968 have slipped away from the collective conscious of the American people. For the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea (DPRK) that day’s proceedings are forever enshrined as a tourist attraction in Pyongyang and receive some 250,000 tourist annually (Gluck). On the morning of January 23, 1968 DPRK forces attacked and commandeered the U.S.S. Pueblo while in international waters. To add insult to injury the crew of the Pueblo were held in captivity for nearly a year and used as a propaganda tool by their communist captors.
Malik Murray Tag 04/29/2007 Ms. Alexandria Wilma Rudolph Wilma Rudolph was born in Clarksville, Tennessee, in 1940. Wilma Rudolph was crippled with polio at the age of 4. Until she was 12 she had to struggle to walk, even a few yards with a cumbersome leg brace. Yet eight years later she emerged from the 1960 Rome Olympics as the "Tennessee Tornado" the fastest woman on earth. Rudolph was the 20th child in a family of 22 children.
Cole Porter • Born June 9th, 1891, Peru, Indonesia • American composer/songwriter • Violin, age 6. Piano, age 8. • Wrote first operetta age 10, with help from mother • Mother changed his legal birth year from 1891 to 1893 to make him appear more precocious • Studied at the Worcester academy and then Yale university • First song on Broadway, ‘Esmeralda’, 1915, revue ‘Hands Up’ • First broadway show, flop, ‘See America First, 1916 (1916) See America First (1919) Hitchy-Koo Of 1919 — "An Old Fashioned Garden" (1928) Paris — "Let's Do It, Let's Fall in Love" (1929) Wake Up and Dream — "What Is This Thing Called
loool In 1903 veteran socialist Tom Mann spoke to a crowd of a thousand people at the unveiling of the Eight Hour Day monument, funded by public subscription, on the south side of Parliament House on Spring St before relocating it in 1923 to the corner of Victoria and Russell Streets outside Melbourne Trades Hall It took further campaigning and struggles by trade unions to extend the reduction in hours to all workers in Australia. In 1916 the Victoria Eight Hours Act was passed granting the eight-hour day to all workers in the state. The eight-hour day was not achieved nationally until the 1920s. The Commonwealth Arbitration Court gave approval of the 40-hour five-day working week nationally beginning on 1 January 1948. The achievement
Date accessed 4/25/2009 http://www.si.umich.edu/CHICO/Harlem/text/hurston.html). In 1897, her Father, John Hurston, was elected mayor. Eight years later, her mother, Lucy Potts, dies. Her father remarries and leaves home. In 1915, Zora moved to Memphis, Tennessee.