| Supermodel Rachel Hunter Helps Over 300 People Find Their Slim
ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS, N.J., Dec. 11 /PRNewswire/ -- This past summer hundreds of women heard supermodel Rachel Hunter loud and clear: Find the Weight that's Right for YOU! Rachel joined forces with Slim-Fast and iVillage, the #1 destination for women online, to help women achieve realistic and healthy weight loss and challenged them to "find their slim". This effort was part of the launch of a new communications campaign called, 'Find Your Slim,' for the Slim-Fast brand. The campaign is a new point of view for the brand based on the guiding principle that there is no one ideal weight or size that suits everyone, and that each individual should set their own personal weight loss goal that is realistic and achievable. Rachel Hunter challenged women across America to join her in a 10-week "Find Your Slim" contest.
The Main Street Hyannis location closed June 21
Here's my concern," said School Superintendent Robert M. Sullivan. "I just spent the last three months eliminating 34 positions. Class sizes have increased to numbers no one should accept. That's where my concern really is, it's not with a casino." Sullivan said the school system is in "deep trouble" due to the lack of financial support from the town. "How much worse can it get than what we've already done?" he said "I support the concept of having any industry that can come into Middleboro and be a good neighbor. If the results bring a financial benefit, even better." Read the rest of this Brockton Enterprise story here. ________________________ On the waterfront, real estate economics become bizarre How a poor man can afford to own his own waterview BAYSIDE, Maine — The midday sky darkens as the Surprise slides toward its mooring.
Young voters are a wild card in the presidential race _ how much ...
Tammy Hsu is one of those 20-something voters who can drive a presidential candidate crazy. She registered to vote during the recent Illinois "grace period" and cast an early vote in her state's Super Tuesday primary. But she's still not completely sold on any candidate, not even Barack Obama, the home-state Democrat widely depicted as the choice of young voters. Nor is she committed to a political party. "I don't want to associate myself with a party because I learn something new every day. I try to make an educated decision," says Hsu, a 23-year-old theater worker from Chicago. She didn't reveal how she voted for in the primary and still considers herself undecided for the general election. With young voter registration rising and a strong independent streak among them, there are a lot more people like Hsu out there.
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