Radio shack rarely has Job Fairs anymore your best bet would be to go to www.radioshack.com and click careers to fill out an application in the area you are in or want to work in.
Fair Game - radio - ended on 2008-05-30.
He performed at the Mississippi-Alabama Fair and Dairy Show.
About 80 dollars in fair condition.
Yes he is, it said so on the radio, but no one knows when though. That's what I'm trying to find out.
The type of music played by Smooth Radio is mostly older music that appeals to it's 30-60 year old target audience. It includes a fair proportion of jazz music as it was previously Jazz FM, and has a minimum of 20% of daytime music programming that is at least 40 years old.
She worked in a shirt factory in Montgomery, Alabama, in the 1930's, and at the Montgomery Fair department store in the 1950's.
She was in Montgomery , Alabama siting in the back of the bus. she was coming from her job at the Fair Department Store as a seamstress.
Montgomery Fair was the name of a department store in Montgomery, AL several decades ago.
Fair Game - radio - was created in 2007.
The duration of Fair Game - radio - is 3000.0 seconds.
Fair Game - radio - ended on 2008-05-30.
alabama
Rosa Parks, was an African American civil rights activist. On December 1st, 1955 in Montgomery, Alabama she refused to obey the bus driver who had ordered her to give up her seat to a white passenger. The bus driver got angry and called the police to come and arrest Parks. She would work at the Montgomery Fair department store.
Rosa Parks had several jobs including a domestic worker, housekeeper, seamstress, hospital aide, and secretary. At the time that Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to give up her seat on the bus in December 1955, she was a seamstress in a Montgomery, Alabama department store. As a result of her arrest and her activities in the protest movement that followed, Rosa lost her seamstress job and found it very difficult to find employment.
old shep
He performed at the Mississippi-Alabama Fair and Dairy Show.
Yes. Alabama is a tornado-prone state and has had more than its fair share of highly destructive tornadoes. Alabama is tied with Oklahoma for first place in number of tornadoes officially rated F5 or EF5.