Complete Your Bachelor Degree In Southern Delaware University of delaware teacher education programs, the elementary this degree areavailable in Southern delaware. plans to join a family agricultural business http://www.continuingstudies.udel.edu/south_del/bachelor_degree.shtml
Extractions: (Courses counting toward this degree are offered in Southern Delaware.) Bachelor of Arts The criminal justice program offers an opportunity to pursue studies leading to law school, graduate school, or a career in the administration of justice. The program is structured around a core of criminal justice courses on such topics as law enforcement, the judicial process, juvenile justice, corrections, and criminal law. The criminal justice curriculum includes required courses in political science, psychology, and history, as well as in sociology. Although most criminal justice graduates who continue their education study law or public administration, an increasing number are choosing other areas as well. They pursue graduate degrees in behavioral or social science, including political science, sociology, or psychology. Those who seek employment after completing their degree requirements have good prospects in areas such as correctional counseling, court administration, law enforcement, and private security. In addition, many public and private agencies will have criminal justice-related job openings for planners, researchers, data analysts, and others who have sharpened their skills in statistics and computer science.
Stateline.org: Delaware restitution and other fees to delaware family Court could and education, new domesticsecurity programs and a in a leadership position in delaware's House of http://www.stateline.org/state.do?state=DE
Welcome To Magee: Spinal Cord Injury begin taking part in restorative programs immediately following SPINAL CORD INJURYPATIENT family TEACHING MANUAL. Cord Injury Center of delaware Valley (RSCICDV http://www.mageerehab.org/e3front.dll?durki=3794
American Chemical Society Delaware Section After you've taken care of your family, how about your career family? in the areais the Chromatography Form of the delaware Valley, CFDV programs Awards. http://membership.acs.org/D/Del/
Extractions: Local Meetings General Items (Annual Report) Topical Groups Who's Who Links Procedures Manual ... Younger Chemists Committee The Del-Chem Bulletin We have the most recent issue of the Del-Chem Bulletin on-line here 2003 April issue Please let me know if you'd rather get this material by Email. Please take a moment and respond to a survey DOES THE DEL-CHEM BULLETIN MEET YOUR NEEDS Local Meetings 'Harzardous Waste Disposal - What the EPA Requires" Bruce Cole and Zoie Mahar, Environmental Scientists, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, Solid and Hazardous Waste Management Branch Date: Wednesday, April 30, 2003 Location: Delaware State University, Dover, Delaware http://www.dsc.edu/mapnojns.html Time: 6:00 Buffet dinner, MBNA Building, Rm 309 7:00 Seminar, Mishoe Science Center, Rm 205 Cost: $25 for ACS members or a guest $30 for non-ACS members Reservations: Contact Allison B. Moore at 302-995-4140 or send email to
Extractions: @import "/shared/main2.css"; Monday, Apr. 7, 2003 About Bayhealth Kent General Milford Memorial Areas of Excellence ... Other Bayhealth Facilities > Lifestyles Fitness Centers Lifestyles Fitness Centers Whether you want to tone up or improve your cardiovascular health, Bayhealths fitness centers provide affordable, quality fitness and wellness programs to meet your goals. Lifestyles follows the American College of Sports Medicine Standards the highest in the industry. Lifestyles also belongs to the Medical Fitness Association, the National Strength and Conditioning Association and the American Council on Exercise, but what really makes us unique is our staff. Our exercise specialists create individualized programs, not "cookie-cutter" programs. Our exercise specialists are certified by the American Council on Exercise as Personal Trainers. They provide professional supervision of all fitness activities and services, and design programs for people of all ages with diverse fitness goals: health adults, post-cardiac and pulmonary rehabilitation patients, deconditioned and unconditioned adults, and adolescents desiring high-intensity sports conditioning programs. Programs consist of cardiovascular training, core training, resistance training and flexibility. Sometimes new participants start fitness programs too ambitiously, causing soreness or injury. Our trainers start slow, designing programs with a controlled progression of increasing difficulty, not a "quick-fix" workout approach.
Outside Scholarships And Loans: Private Programs private premed undergraduate and medical school programs. scholarship is fundedby the Theodos family. residents of Bucks, Chester, delaware, Montgomery, or http://www.drexel.edu/med/medsfa/outsch.html
Extractions: Contact Info ... Healthcare Outside Scholarships and Loans: Private Programs Search for private scholarships with FastWeb The Foundation of the Pennsylvania Medical Society offers loans to Pennsylvania residents. Loans are based on financial need and require parental information. Simple interest of 6% per year is charged until graduation from medical school, at which time the loan is payable in full. The principal may be annually deferred for up to five years for postdoctoral training although interest accrues during that period. Payment in full is due after completion of training. If the borrower does not have funds to cover repayment, he or she is expected to secure a loan from a commercial institution. The trust also provides a Business Purpose Loan, which is usually paid in installments at a fixed rate. Applications are available in the Office of Student Financial Affairs and from the Educational and Scientific Trust of the Pennsylvania Medical Society , 777 East Park Drive, Harrisburg, PA 17109, (717) 558-7750 or (800) 228-7823.
Blank Rome Welcomes Chief Judge Vincent J. Poppiti treatment techniques; recommended standards for treatment programs for perpetrators 1983,as Associate Judge of the family Court for the State of delaware. http://www.blankrome.com/Newsevents/Press/poppitiv0203.asp
Extractions: Advanced Search Chief Judge Vincent J. Poppiti To Join Blank Rome LLP Joins Firm's Wilmington Office, Strengthening Matrimonial and Alternative Dispute Resolution Practices WILMINGTON, DE, February 4, 2003 - Blank Rome LLP Managing Partner and CEO Fred Blume today announced that Vincent J. Poppiti, Chief Judge of Family Court for the State of Delaware, will join Blank Rome as Partner in the firm's Litigation Practice Group. Poppiti will be based in the firm's Wilmington office and will concentrate his efforts on growing the firm's nationally recognized matrimonial and alternative dispute resolution practices. "Chief Judge Poppiti's 26 years of service to the people of Delaware have earned him a reputation as an outstanding trial judge and equally outstanding administrator," said Blume. "He is one of the most recognized names on the bench in Delaware today. I am very pleased to welcome him to Blank Rome." "Chief Judge Poppiti has significant experience as a decision-maker, mediator and arbitrator. His opinions have generated nationwide recognition, and his leadership positions in a variety of local and national committees have secured him significant professional respect and recognition," said Blank Rome Litigation Department Head Alan J. Hoffman. "We are thrilled to have him join us and look forward to working with him as we continue to expand Blank Rome's matrimonial and dispute resolution practices." Blank Rome's Matrimonial Practice Group is one of the largest matrimonial practices in the nation.
All For Health Violence Prevention = 5% programs to detect, prevent and prosecute family Violence;Community Violence. delaware, All money into delaware Health Fund, Access to http://www.iafp.com/legislative/all_for_health.htm
Extractions: Proposal for the Tobacco Settlement Debate Why "All for Health"? 9.1 billion dollars over the next 25 years should not fund roads, buildings, parks, tax rebates, and other non-health projects. The Illinois Academy of Family Physicians (IAFP) believes all of the tobacco settlement money should be directed to improving the health of Illinois. As a member of the Half for Tobacco Prevention Coalition, we believe that 50 percent or one half of the funds should go into the tobacco prevention and cessation programs as outlined in the HFTP plan. Tar Wars , an IAFP educational program that uses family physicians to fight tobacco use in fourth and fifth grade classrooms, could benefit from this plan. IAFP also believes that the remaining half can be used to best benefit the health status of Illinois. Given the spirit in which our Attorney General fought along with 45 other states against the tobacco industry, we believe this plan is the best use for the tobacco settlement money. A special commission comprised of government, financial, legal and healthcare experts, with a support staff and adequate information and technology resources should administer the funds. The Half for Tobacco Prevention Coalition addresses administration and funding issues within their plan.
About Mt. Cuba Astronomical Observatory As delaware's only public observatory, Mt. invited to visit the Observatory for informalprograms of general mornings and for one evening as a family Night get http://www.physics.udel.edu/MCAO/about_mcao.htm
Extractions: Mount Cuba Astronomical Observatory THE FACILITIES AT MT. CUBA The inspiration to establish Mt. Cuba Observatory was the knowledge that one of the world's greatest astronomers, Miss Annie Jump Cannon , was a native of Delaware. Founded as a non-profit organization in 1958, plans were developed to build a facility to support a 61-centimeter (24-inch) Cassegrain telescope being constructed by Tinsley Laboratories. In September 1963 the Observatory opened and included a library, machine shop, and photographic darkroom. The F. G. du Pont wing, added to the Observatory in 1973, expanded the facility by adding a lecture room, planetarium, and a second observing dome to house the Observatory's 11.5-centimeter (4.5-inch) refracting telescope . In 1987 the Observatory was further expanded with the addition of a computer room and storage area. As Delaware's only public observatory, Mt. Cuba offers astronomers, guests, and members many resources including: A Spitz planetarium where groups of 25 people can observe the motion of the stars and planets and learn the positions of the constellations. A Library containing hundreds of textbooks, handbooks, and periodicals, star charts, photographic atlases, and catalogs.
General Information Form family Information. like someone to contact you about ROI's vocational programs? http://www.roiworks.org/genform.htm
Marian Coffin Gardens - Garden Ornament - Preservation Delaware Would you or your family, organization, or business like to as agreed upon by theadopter and Preservation delaware. choose to contribute to the general ADOPTA http://www.preservationde.org/gibraltar/gardens/garden_sculpture.htm
Extractions: Gibraltar Gardens boasts a varied collection of garden ornaments that highlight focal points of the garden and create picturesque settings and beautiful vistas. The garden ornaments complete the overall experience of the historic garden as originally intended by landscape architect Marian Cruger Coffin. Most of the ornaments were installed between 1917 and 1923 as part of Marian Coffin's conception for the formal garden. Coffin's design for the Gibraltar garden is based on Italian Renaissance gardens, and thus relies heavily on formal symmetry and axes with carefully placed garden sculpture to create attractive niches and elegant vistas. Superbly carved from Mediterranean limestone or modeled in lead, the thirty-three limestone and seven lead ornaments are rich with detail and texture. Based on Marian Coffin's design direction, H. Rodney and Isabella Sharp purchased these ornaments as antiques or contemporary objects during the family's travels in Europe in the 1910s and 1920s or from antiques dealers in Philadelphia and New York. Many of the ornaments are of European origin and some of the pieces once graced the gardens of villas in the Italian countryside. During their residence at Gibraltar, the Sharp family continued to select interesting garden ornament, adding them to their collection and rearranging locations throughout the garden.
NAMI NC/CASE-Introduction his family succeeded in traveling to delaware, getting the mental illness of a friendor family member throughout to all of its education and support programs. http://www.naminc.org/Case/case_intro.htm
Extractions: Why NAMI North Carolina? The "troublemaker" Justin was 12 when he stopped taking the medication hed been prescribed for ADHD. The stimulant had caused an alarming weight loss, and his mother understood the psychiatrist to say that there were no other choices. But without the medication he lost all hope of keeping up in school, started hanging out with undesirable friends, and staying out all night. Fortunately Justins mother found the NAMI North Carolina Young Families program. Staff helped her find a new psychiatrist, who diagnosed Justin with both bipolar illness and ADHD. With a different medication, Justin was able to return to middle school, although the principal remembered him as a "troublemaker" who would never succeed. Justin proved him wrong: with a few simple accommodations for his illness and the help of a dedicated guidance counselor, Justin has progressed to high school with no disciplinary problems in the ensuing two years. His teachers recently praised him for his positive attitude and tenacious spirit. Justins mother now serves on a county-wide task force for children with mental illnesses, and has become a mentor to other families.
Extractions: Justice Department Announces Over $14 Million to Mentor At-Risk Youth "Experts tell us that the single greatest factor in helping a child avoid delinquent behavior is a strong, caring relationship with an adult," said Deborah J. Daniels, Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Justice Programs. "Over the past nine years, those caring relationships have been provided at over 200 JUMP-funded sites in 47 states, and we're pleased to add these 66 new programs to that total." OJJDP selected the new sites through a competitive review process from a pool of 863 applicants. The mentoring sites will focus on three major goals: improved academic performance, reduced school dropout rates and prevention of delinquent behavior. All sites are required to coordinate their activities with local educational agencies. Among the youth participating in the projects will be children of incarcerated parents, minority youth, Native Americans, children in foster care, youth in special education and homeless youth. Sites will recruit a wide range of mentors, including military personnel, college students, faith-based representatives, business professionals, tribal leaders and law enforcement personnel. "The biggest challenge is to provide a mentor for each young person who needs one," said J. Robert Flores, Administrator of OJJDP. "The JUMP program has allowed us to reach thousands of at-risk kids, but there are potentially millions more who could still benefit from having a mentor."
Insurance & Technology - IT Career Center DB2. DB2 User Groupdelaware Valley. discussion groups, forums, panels, lectures,and other programs concerned with run by users of IBM's DB2 family of Products http://itcareer.insurancetech.com/candidates/resourcepages_usergroupsskills/page
Extractions: PC/Internet Related User Groups Listed by Skill Set View by Region Databases DB2 User Group-Delaware Valley DB2 User Group-Heart of Texas The Heart of Texas DB2 Users Group (HOTDUG) is a non-profit, user-run organization whose mission is to assist DB2 professionals by providing high quality education and services designed to promote the effective utilization of the DB2 family of products. DB2 User Group-Los Angeles Area LAADB2UG is dedicated to providing its members with current technical information and support that will assist them in performing their jobs as Database Administrators, System Programmers, and Programmer Analysts. DB2 Database User Group-Twin Cities We're the Twin Cities Database Users Group. Our charter is to bring speakers and presentations to the Minneapolis Convention Centre that are of interest all the people in the IS Twin Cities Community. DB2 User Group-Sacramento DB2 User Group-Michigan The Michigan DB2 Users Group's major function is to promote usage of DB2, and provide a forum for DB2 users to interface, and exchange ideas. The group is a registered member with the International DB2 Users Group (IDUG), and is supported by corporate contributions, and volunteers, as well as yearly membership fees.
UW-Extension Cooperative Extension - Family Living Programs regarding laws and policies Kentucky, delaware, Washington, Colorado on kinshipcare policy, programs and best. focus on societal issues and family problems. http://www.uwex.edu/grg/CEU.html
Extractions: Grandparents Raising Grandchildren: Legal and Policy Issues National Satellite Video Conference Tuesday, February 27, 2001 1:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time 12:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. Central Time 11:30 a.m. 2:30 p.m. Mountain Time 10:30 a.m. 1:30 p.m. Pacific Time CEU's/Professional Development Credits Because Grandparents Raising Grandchildren: Legal and Policy Issues is targeted toward professionals, so states may want to offer opportunities for them to earn continuing education units to maintain professional credentials, certifications or licenses. Promoting the availability of this credit may also help attract more participation at each site. This page reviews details that state contacts need to coordinate the application, promotion, and awarding of continuing education credits. This includes: Index of content: Sponsoring Organizations Contact Person (s) and Credentials Activity Title Date Activity Location Target Audience Objectives Relevance of Activity to Profession or Professional Development Brief Program Description Course Content/Outline Presenters Program Evaluation
Africans In America: WHYY documentary tracing the history of slavery in delaware. activities centering on theStill family's history and The Balch Institute for Ethnic Studies programs. http://www.whyy.org/aina/things.html
Extractions: Photo courtesy of the National Park Service and J.R. Eyerman of Life Magazine, Time, Inc. The Delaware History Museum The Delaware History Museum The Historical Society of Pennsylvania The Historical Society of Pennsylvania, The African-American Genealogy Group Founded at the African-American Museum of Philadelphia in 1989, The African-American Genealogy Group encourages and supports people interested in researching their family roots. The group holds monthly meetings, and also sponsors educational seminars and field trips. Webquest A web quest is a way of integrating the World Wide Web into classroom instruction. Students are actively involved in using the Internet to answer research questions, inquire about important issues, and solve real world problems. To learn more about web quests and the web quest format created by Dr. Bernie Dodge of San Diego State University, click here. Teacher's Guide: Africans in America Kathy Lee, a master teacher selected by WGBH, will be conducting several training workshops for teachers from the School District of Philadelphia and the surrounding region this winter, in the months of December and January. The workshops will focus on ways in which the Africans in America series can be integrated with curriculum and instruction. For further information, e-mail klee400@aol.com
DVG's Programs Events Calendar 2003 Council on Foundations family Foundation Conference Greenspace, the arts, afterschool programs and early payable by check to delaware Valley Grantmakers. http://www.dvg.org/pages/about/thismonth.html
About Winterthur PUBLIC programs AND ACTIVITIES. features nearly 200 juried craftspeople as well asfamily activities and The delaware Antiques Show Held in mid November, this 3 http://www.winterthur.org/about/press_room.asp?sub=general_info
School Of Agriculture Natural Resources, family and Consumer Sciences was established July 1, 1995. Theschool's Mission is to promote the Mission of delaware State University, with http://www.dsc.edu/schools/Agriculture/schoolofagri.html
Extractions: SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE, NATURAL RESOURCES, FAMILY AND CONSUMER SCIENCES Dr. Kenneth W. Bell, Dean The School of Agriculture, Natural Resources, Family and Consumer Sciences was established July 1, 1995. The school's Mission is to promote the Mission of Delaware State University, with emphasis on the tripartite land-grant mission of academics, research and extension. Emphasis is given to faculty preparation, scholarly presentation and student preparation for graduate and professional school as well as related careers. Contribution to the home, family life, consumers and business is a major endeavor. Admissions Financial Aid General Information Student Life ... Webmaster design: www.zigzag.net
Department Of Family And Consumer Sciences 18413, Life Management Skills family Crisis. Admissions Financial Aid GeneralInformation Student Life Special programs Library University http://www.dsc.edu/schools/Agriculture/deptoffamily.html
Extractions: Assistant Professors: Adegoke and Funderburk MISSION STATEMENT The Mission of the Department of Family and Consumer Sciences is to offer programs of study and learning experiences that are comprehensive and integrative. The Department prepares students for graduate study, and for people oriented professions in education, business, industry and government that contribute to the well being of individuals, families, and the institutions which serve them. The option in Food and Nutrition is approved by the American Dietetic Association (ADA) as a Didactic Program in Dietetics. ADA is recognized by the United States Department of Education as the sole credentialing body for dietetics program. Program graduates are eligible to apply for admission to Dietetic Internships and Approved Pre-professional Practice Programs. Programs of study, learning experiences, and Departmental outreach and research are designed to: Develop student competencies in subject matter areas Use science to address critical economic, technical, social and environmental issues impacting families and individuals