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Want to save time and money on your child's next birthday party or summer gathering? Think small. Imagine this: Give more control to your child and her friends. Here are some tips:
Creative kids in the 4- to 7-year-old set will enjoy playing a part in making invitations, decorating, deciding on games, putting together costumes, mixing lemonade and icing cupcakes. Whether mom likes it or not, by about age 8 or 9, children tend to outgrow birthday parties and prefer a movie outing and pizza with their pals.
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By Sandra J. Pennecke
Correspondent
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RiverKings mascot Sheldon the turtle and several of the RiverKings team members brought a new buzz of excitement to the playground at Wooten Park in Horn Lake as they hosted the RiverKings Kids' Club party.
Kids' Club members feasted on Domino's Pizza and sparkle cupcakes from AnnOlivia's Sweet Shop in Hernando. The children and their families explored the playground and enjoyed visiting with the RiverKings players. There was also a chance to tour the team bus.
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When/Where: A mysterious invitation arrived last year. No hostess; no return address.
It toyed with numbers: "One celebration, one weekend, all as one....Smith Mt. Lake, July 2009. Stay tuned." And "Sixty...the age soon-to-be for nine Salem beauties." The age was right, but beauty? Was I only invited as a reporter?
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AS I SCRAMBLE through stores across New Jersey on an urgent mission to create the quintessential goody bag, I'm filled with dread. My daughter's birthday is less than 20 weeks away, and the pressure is mounting.
I thumb through the phone book, wavering between laser tag, jugglers or a magician.
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Partnership Offers Food for Crowds with a Slice to Benefit Junior Achievement
LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Papa John's International, Inc. (NASDAQ: PZZA) and ...
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Learning shouldnt take a summer off
School is finished for the summer. Kids rush eagerly for the exit door. All parties involved hope it was a productive year. However, when all is said and done, a well-informed and concerned parent is the linchpin for a childs long-term academic success.
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When Tom Lampkin watches baseball on TV, he sometimes can't keep from uttering advice for the pitchers.
He'll sit there and shout a warning to the pitcher about the risk of throwing a breaking ball to the man at the plate.
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NEW YORK - For many, Memorial Day's unofficial start of summer means grilling, pool parties and kids wildly happy to be at the end of another school year.
For John Drengenberg, a safety expert and dad in suburban Chicago, it's a dangerous time for the law of unintended consequences, especially in the backyard.
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What's BounceU?
Sherri Hayn,owner, with her husband, Dejay, has a ready answer. "It is an inflatable party center."