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We’ve got our hands full at the moment but we should be up and moving shortly.This page will automatically refresh and bring you into the website as soon as we can handle it. or reach us by phone. 電話 : 受付時間 9:00-17:00(日・祝日も営業) Auto - Car Stereo Auto - Tires, Wheels, Rims Cell Phones - Accessories Clothing - Hats / Caps Cosmetics And Beauty Supplies Imports - Mexican/latin America Musical Instruments And Equipment Purses, Handbags And Wallets Rocks, Stones And Crystals Texas Souvenirs / Accessories Video / Internet Gaming Western Wear / Gear Directions to Houston Market Open Saturday & Sunday 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Vendor Gates Open 7 a.m. Sorry No Pets or Firearms Allowed Learn more about selling your items at Traders Village Lonely Is A Lifetime CD CD + T-Shirt Package Lonely Is A Lifetime Vinyl Pyramid Beam Women’s Tank Top Polaroid Text Striped T-Shirt
Black Freight Train T-Shirt Freight Train Red T-Shirt Warpath Heather Grey T-Shirt Warpath Heather Blue T-Shirt The Wild Feathers Vinyl The Wild Feathers CD The City of Chicago has changed their procedure for Trade Licensing and Exams. Testing, Exams and License Renewals are now handled by an outside agency. Click here for information The Chicago Federation of Labor Scholarship application deadline (available to Union Members) is Wednesday, February 15, 2017.nala hoodie Click here to learn moreugliest hoodies Local 399 members are invited to join us for our Annual Founders' Night Celebration. caving hoodiesIt's a great event that allows us to come together to honor our 50 year gold card members. vag hoodie
Please make plans to join us! Follow us on Facebook & Twitter Local 399 is now on both Facebook and Twitter. Please follow us to stay up to date on all the latest Local 399 news as well as other issues important to our members and the Labor Community. AT&T Union Member Discounts Local 399 members can save up to 15% on the monthly service charge of qualified wireless plans. Just another benefit of being a union member! Click to lean moreA group of students at Buffalo Grove High School recently won $2,500 at the Northwest Suburban High School District 214 Startup Showcase for creating a device that could solve a regular clothing problem for most people.The group of four boys and one girl, all from Arlington Heights, were asked for class by their entrepreneurship teacher, Karen Roberts, to devise a business solution to common problems. After going to the drawing board and brainstorming a few different ideas, the group finally came up with the product "Hoodie Hoop" that already has been sold more than 100 times and attracted more attention after the co-creator of Cards Against Humanity tweeted about Hoodie Hoop.
The idea came from student Emily Zint, who was doing her laundry one day and realized she couldn't easily put back the drawstring that had fallen out of her hoodie."At first we dismissed the idea, we thought it was kind of stupid and it didn't need a solution," said group member Will Sobecki. As the group looked at other ideas, they realized how Zint's idea could create a real product to fix a problem. The students' business planning and strategizing all unfolded during their time at an entrepreneurship class at Buffalo Grove High School.The course was inspired by similar business startup courses that have started in recent years at Elk Grove and Wheeling high schools, and Barrington High School, according to district officials. Every school in the district, except for one, has the new program that featured participation from 240 students districtwide.At Buffalo Grove, 56 students enrolled in the class this year, district officials said. "It is an incubator classroom, which is a new innovative way of transforming the traditional classroom into something more real life," Roberts said.
To prepare for the class, Roberts found community members and business professionals to serve as coaches and mentors for the students. The coaches visited the classroom to teach certain content to students, while the mentors chose a student group to work with and guide them through different business processes.Each group gave initial sale pitches to prospective mentors about their different products before each mentor selected individual student groups. Matthew Grana, the vice president at Grand Frame in Arlington Heights, decided on Hoodie Hoop."I chose Hoodie Hoop over a group who was designing an app because they were selling a tangible product that you have to manufacture, create and sell," Grana said. "And that is what we do at Grand Frame, so I felt like I could help them and relate to them."Grana worked alongside the students with Hoodie Hoop, developing and planning every business detail from the ground up. Grana and members of the team agreed that designing the prototype of Hoodie Hoop was the biggest challenge they faced."
The group was so innovative and just to see their determination was amazing," Grana said. "I was there to mentor and to inspire them, but they inspired me."The group designed more than 25 different prototypes. Student Greg Harner used his craft skills and came to school with a few different apparatuses that could work for their product.They started with a bent clothes hanger and moved onto an alligator clip that was attached to wooden chopsticks by duct tape. The alligator clip became the easiest way to put drawstrings back into hoodies, students from the group said.Through trial and error, they eventually landed on their finished Hoodie Hoop product, including a thin nylon rod connected to the alligator clips. The students designed Hoodie Hoop in a way that works on any clothing item or bag that has a drawstring not stitched in."We purposely made our product the thinnest product we could and one that was still durable, so it could fit into a lot of different clothing," Sobecki said.With a product developed, the students began to prepare their pitch to their teacher, classmates, and judges for the "Startup Showcase" at District 214.
The showcase is a competition among six groups of students throughout the district enrolled in the entrepreneurship class.They get the chance to show off their hard work and convince judges their product is worth investment money, according to the district.The Hoodie Hoop group spent 10 hours a day preparing their showcase pitch. They practiced together putting together a pitch, PowerPoint presentation and even made a video demonstrating how Hoodie Hoop works."We didn't see it as just a class assignment," Sobecki said. "We saw it as a business."Another factor that helped the students develop their pitch was consumer interest that started before they started planning for the showcase. The group already had sold 65 Hoodie Hoops to family, friends and other students before the showcase, according to the group.They won an automatic spot to compete at the districtwide showcase after competing first against their classmates at Buffalo Grove High School."Hoodie Hoop did it because they have passion from day one," Roberts said.
"To me, that is an entrepreneur."The five judges at the district showcase included Margarita Geleske, executive director of INCubatoredu; Larry Moats, of Moats Office Properties; Joan Dubnicka, an entrepreneurship professor at Harper College; Mike Trotzke, an entrepreneur and investor; and Max Temkin, co-creator of the game Cards Against Humanity. After they made their pitch to the judges, Hoodie Hoop was announced the showcase winner and awarded $2,500.Afterward, Temkin even tweeted at Hoodie Hoop, a move that drove internet traffic from Temkin's thousands of Twitter followers and created exposure for the five Buffalo Grove High School students. Temkin is also offering Hoodie Hoop work space in his Chicago office. Another judge is offering the team pro-bono legal insurance, the students said.The students now have sold Hoodie Hoops more than 100 times to customers they didn't know beforehand. The group plans to use the $2,500 to develop their business, the students said.Member Thomas Shirley said all the tedious work they had to do to make the product paid off with the showcase win."