http://www.supershowrooms.com/children-with-cancer-foundation/

Atlanta based non-profit orginization seeking local talent to perform at children’s festival and fashion show
Entertainment includes; modeling, singing, comdians or anything that a child will enjoy.
Also seeking children retailers to provide clothing to our cancer patients. Date of event Aug. 25, 2007.
If you have any knowledge or relationship with any local celebrities please e-mail me at watsonfund@yahoo.com
To view what the foundation is all about please visit www.watsonfoundation.org
We are also looking for vendors to rent booths.
500 children are expected to attend.
Please help us make this an life altering experience for the children with catastrophic illnesses.
you please search the local people and give them chance to perform who don’t know to perform.
thank you
Children’s Cancer Foundation Hair For Hope 2006
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Grizzly Breast Cancer Training Gloves, XS, Pink $14.99 Each Pair Sold Donates $2.00 To The Breast Cancer Foundation! |
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Grizzly Breast Cancer Training Gloves, Small, Pink $14.99 Each Pair Sold Donates $2.00 To The Breast Cancer Foundation! |
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Grizzly Breast Cancer Training Gloves, Medium, Pink $14.99 Each Pair Sold Donates $2.00 To The Breast Cancer Foundation! |
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Grizzly Breast Cancer Training Gloves, Large, Pink $14.99 Each Pair Sold Donates $2.00 To The Breast Cancer Foundation! |
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The Foundation $11.99 The Foundation |
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Nebraska Symposium on Motivation, 1997, Volume 45: Gender and Motivati $86.95 DIVDoes knowing a person’s gender give us a reliable sense of how aggressive, competitive, or emotional he or she is? In this volume leading scholars examine different aspects of this issue. Carol Tavris discusses the state of gender research and the reasons for the continuing popularity of essentialist theories of gender opposition. Nicki Crick and a team of researchers reassess stereotyped assumptions about gender and aggression, employing a more comprehensive definition of aggression as damaging relations rather than only bodies. Diane Gill looks at the relationship between gender and sports competition, explicating how the unique social context of sports affects gender perceptions and performances. Reed Larson and Joseph Pleck question the popular conception of men as less emotional than women, studying gender differences in “felt” rather than “expressed” emotions in daily life. Leonore Tiefer considers the ways in which gender roles in sexuality are socially rather than biologically constructed./DIVDIVDan Bernstein is a professor of psychology at the University of Nebraska./DIV |

