Prospective Clients
We go to great lengths to ensure that every potential client is met with only the finest ideas. If you would like to schedule a free one hour consultation with our creative director, please review and complete the following documents and fax them to us at (805) 786-4734.
Overview of Services Download a Web Feet Project Planner Have Questions? We have answers.
Client Login Area
Use the form to log into your special place.
Username:
Password:
Show / Hide Our Special Area for Clients


WFIM Blog: Posts Tagged ‘April’

What’s a Job Seeking Youngster To Do When California Teen Unemployment is a Whopping 33%?

by Blaire Kilbey

We all know it’s been tough economically for all sectors of the population.   But what is it like for a teenager, many who have never had a job to spice up a résumé or the opportunity collect glowing letters of recommendation?

Help and plenty of advice is out there. In April 2010, Cuesta College, EDD and the Business and Career One-Stop centers in San Luis Obispo County are hosting three Youth Job and Resource Fairs in San Luis Obispo, Paso Robles and Grover Beach.  The target age is 16-24.

Local employers will be on hand to offer advise on what they expect, how to fill out an application, what is appropriate interviewing attire and behavior (what do you do with that vibrating cell phone?). Other topics useful to youth, and available jobs and careers can also be researched.  Employers will answer questions to inspire, encourage, and build confidence during these competitive and sometimes daunting times.

The first Youth Job and Resource Fair is Wednesday, April 21, 2010 from 5-7 pm at the SLO Business and Career One-Stop on 880 Industrial Way, off of Broad across from the Graduate. (805.903.1434)

The next two are both on Wednesday, April 28, 2010 from 5-7 pm. In South County, the Grover Beach Business and Career One -Stop is at 1800 E. Grand (805.270.3100). In North County, the Paso Robles Business and Career One-Stop is at Cuesta College North Campus, 2800 Buena Vista (805.237.3014).

Youth are invited to learn about the wonderful resources for job seekers at the Business and Career One-Stop centers, get that confidence needed to grab that interview and enjoy light refreshments!  Please call the above numbers for further information and visit Career One-Stop at SLO-ONESTOP.NET.

Tax Day Discounts

It’s that time of year, tax time.  While many dread the IRS deadline, others find ways to celebrate.  Starbucks has combined Earth Day and Tax Day with their “Make a Difference and get free coffee” event.  For even more discounts, check out these 2010 Tax Day Freebies and Food Discounts courtesy of Associated Content.

Do you know of any freebies and discounts going on April 15, 2010?  If so, please let us know!

“April showers bring May flowers…”

by Sandy Baer

August is the only month without a holiday but April celebrates several beginning with All Fools Day on April 1. How did this rather odd tradition begin? After all most holidays commemorate a hero or religious events, not foolishness. The history of All Fools Day is as strange as the practice of playing tricks on friends and family.

There are conflicting explanations but the most widely accepted traces April Fool’s Day to 16th century France when in 1564 King Charles IX declared that his country was switching from the previously used Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar. Rather than observing the New Year around April, New Year’s Day shifted to January 1. But some people did not accept this change and it was these people who were mocked as fools for celebrating the New Year on the wrong date.

This was particularly true in rural France as news did not travel at today’s gigabyte speed and it might have been months or even years before everyone learned of the calendar change. These people became the butt of jokes. Uncertain as to why, a common one was to hook a cardboard fish to a person’s back. For uncertain reasons today, people in France who are fooled on April 1 are called “Poisson d’Avril”, which literally means the “April Fish”. When Napoleon married Marie-Louis of Austria on April 1, 1810, he earned the moniker “Poisson d’Avril”.

In Denmark just five years earlier, Hans Christian Anderson was born on April 1, 1805. He wrote more than 150 fairytales so if you are not inclined to pranks, read Cinderella to celebrate April. Another literary hero born in April (23/1564) was William Shakespeare if you prefer sonnets to fairytales. It is of note that Shakespeare died on his birthday in 1616. Famous Americans born in April include Washington Irving, Dorothea Dix, Henry Clay, Butch Cassidy, Thomas Jefferson, Clarence Darrow, and Babe Ruth as well as Emmylou Harris, Alec Baldwin, Wayne Newton, Collin Powell, David Letterman and Doris Day.

It was on April 3, 1860, that the first Pony Express rider left St. Joseph, MO with the mail but it was not until April 6, 1909, that Robert E. Perry and his party of explorers reached the North Pole. April appears to be a month for adventure as Paul Revere made his midnight ride to warn the Americans that the British were coming on April 18, 1775.

Not only is the second week of April designated as National Gardening Week, Earth Day is April 22. Senator Gaylord Nelson spearheaded a “national conservation tour” with President John F. Kennedy in the 1960’s to raise environmental issues to the political limelight. It was not until 1970 that a grassroots protest led by Nelson formally established “Earth Day”. Nelson first conceived the idea for “Earth Day” after visiting Santa Barbara and witnessing the devastation from a horrific oil spill off the Central Coast in 1969.

So celebrate April and plant a garden, clean up a beach and our world will be better every day. No fooling.