Find 19 listings related to Avon Sales Rep in Tulsa on YP.com. See reviews, photos, directions, phone numbers and more for Avon Sales Rep locations in Tulsa, OK. FestivalNet.com - Festival Industry Marketplace & Social Network: Avon Independent Sales Rep, Tulsa, OK.
McClendon earned a bachelor’s degree from the TU in 2004 and a master’s degree from Syracuse University. He is a member of the Black Law Students Association and has also volunteered for organizations that advocate for refugee issues and build communities across racial boundaries.
The scholarship is awarded based on academic achievement, financial need and commitment to studying law. Tulsa architect honored by trade publication Francis Wilmore, who oversees the Tulsa office of Lansing, Michigan-based ASL architecture and design, was recognized as part of design:retail magazine’s 40 Under 40 list.
The magazine honored 40 professional under the age of 40 as the “most promising future leaders” in the retail design industry. He will be featured in the magazine’s April/May issue and honored during a May 22 ceremony in New York. Compile C Program In Dosa.
During his 10-year career as a designer and architect, Wilmore worked with brands such as Coach, Michael Kors, Montblanc and Duty Free Americas. He is a graduate of Lawrence Technological University in Southfield, Michigan OU Law assistant dean nominated to fed bench Scott Palk, assistant dean of students for the University of Oklahoma College Of Law, was nominated to the federal bench to serve as a a U.S. District Court judge for the Western District of Oklahoma by President Donald Trump. The nomination is pending confirmation by the U.S. Palk joined the OU College of Law as assistant dean of students in 2011 after serving nearly 20 years as a state and federal prosecutor. He was assistant district attorney for Cleveland County. Palk was previously nominated in 2015 by President Obama but did not receive a full vote on the Senate floor.
Tulsan named among top-selling Avon reps Barbara Harrison of Tulsa has been named one of Avon’s top independent sales representatives and leaders across the United States. Harrison and more than 200 others honored will attend a trip to Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, to celebrate their success during the 2017 President’s Recognition Celebration that brings together the nation’s highest-performing Avon reps.
Betty Palm, Avon president of social selling in the U.S., noted that the accomplishment of this year’s top sellers reflects the steady growth of the direct-selling industry that driven by consumer preference for a more personalized and convenient shopping experience. Virginia College in Tulsa hosting Career Fair Virginia College in Tulsa will host a free Career Fair 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Tuesday at its at 5124 S. The fair will feature career development opportunities, refreshments, giveaways, campus tours and a resume writing workshop from 11 a.m. Attendees will be entered to win prizes such as a Chromebook and an Amazon gift card. The event is part of Virginia College parent company Education Corp. Of America’s national career fair events being held at 64 other locations throughout 17 states.
Skin Sade Mp3 Download. Arvest Central Mortgage recognized by Fannie Mae Arvest Central Mortgage Company, a subsidiary of Arvest Bank, was recognized recently by Fannie Mae as a Servicer Total Achievement and Rewards Performer for General Servicing. Per Fannie Mae, the STAR program supports the industry by establishing a transparent and formal framework to recognize Fannie Mae servicing partners for their competency, capacity and overall performance. This performance management framework supports a comparative program designed to gauge relative performance. The STAR Performer recognition is reserved for top-performing servicers in one or more of three categories: general servicing, solution delivery and timeline management. American Waste founder named to Hall of Fame Kenneth Burkett, founder and owner of Tulsa-based American Waste Control, was inducted into the National Waste and Recycling Association’s Hall of Fame during the WasteExpo Conference and Exhibition.
For the past 47 years, Burkett has served as a distinguished leader in the industry demonstrating immense commitment to the industry, its workers and the customers they serve. He founded the company in 1970 with a single truck that he drove and maintained himself. Today the company services over 65 percent of the Tulsa market and operates a fleet of more than 100 trucks that collect from 10,000 commercial customers and 30,000 residential customers. “Kenneth is a testament to the caliber of people in our industry,” said Kevin Kraushaar, interim CEO of NWRA. “He is a leader widely respected throughout our business for his ability to put others before himself. His passion for the people of this industry is unparalleled.” Burkett has been instrumental in implementing recycling to an area of the country that had the lowest recycling rates in the country. He was also one of the charter members of the NWRA Oklahoma chapter and has played a major role on numerous legislative actions in the time since.
He is a major sponsor of the Tulsa Christmas Parade and also made use of a stable that was on the property of the landfill he purchased to develop American Therapeutic Riding Center, an equine facility for the mentally and physically challenged that funded by company profits. Tulsa student’s artwork recognized at State Capitol Jose Antonio Gonzalez, a second-grader at Dual Language Academy, won third place in the the Oklahoma Energy Resources Board’s Well Site Safety Day Coloring Contest.
Gonzalez was one of only 21 students selected out of more than 3,000 entries from all across the state. As part of the OERB’s annual Well Site Safety Day, the winners from grades K-6 got the opportunity to share their original artwork, illustrating the dangers of playing around well sites, with their state legislators. Winners were recognized at an awards ceremony in the Capitol’s Blue Room. After the awards ceremony, the students were rewarded with a party at the OERB offices. The program was created in 1996 in response to a fatal accident involving young kids playing around a tank battery.
Since then, the OERB has developed free safety materials and videos that are given to schools all over the state. Cherokee Nation gives to volunteer fire departments The Cherokee Nation donated nearly half a million dollars to 131 rural volunteer fire departments during the tribe’s annual Volunteer Firefighter Ceremony at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa. The tribe donated each station a check for $3,500 to help with equipment, fuel or other items needed to protect lives and properties of families in rural northeastern Oklahoma. The $458,500 total donation is a record amount and is set aside in the tribe’s budget each year. “I believe the men and women who answer the call to be a firefighter deserve Cherokee Nation’s thanks and support. They are on call 24/7, 365 days a year, to ensure we remain safe,” Principal Chief Bill John Baker said.
“What they do is vital to our overall success in northeast Oklahoma. That’s why year after year, Cherokee Nation makes financial investments in rural volunteer fire departments so they can be better equipped to protect our families, our homes and our property.” Spring Valley Fire Department in Cherokee County and Disney Fire Department in Mayes County were both recognized as 2017 Volunteer Fire Department of the Year.
Center for Poets and Writers names new exec Oklahoma State University-Tulsa has selected Lindsey Claire Smith, OSU associate professor of English, as interim director of the Oklahoma Center for Poets and Writers, an organization aimed at celebrating Oklahoma’s literary heritage and examining the influence of writers from across the country. “I am excited and honored to have the opportunity to lead a program that has made such a positive impact on so many,” she said. “As interim director, I will continue the Center for Poets and Writers’ tradition of celebrating world-class authors and partnering with community organizations to provide opportunities for aspiring writers.” Smith’s area of expertise is Native American and Oklahoma literature as well as Native American studies and the arts.
She is editor of the American Indian Quarterly, a leading publication in interdisciplinary American Indian studies. Smith will balance her part-time role with the Center for Poets and Writers with her teaching duties in Tulsa and Stillwater. She has served as Faculty Fellow for Community Engagement and received special recognition for her work as founder of the Oklahoma Indigenous Studies Alliance, a partnership between OSU, the University of Tulsa and Philbrook Museum of Art. JA recognizes Cherokee Nation principal chief Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Bill John Baker was recognized for his efforts supporting Junior Achievement of Oklahoma at the 2017 Tulsa Tycoons: A Night of Monopoly. The annual event serves as Junior Achievement of Oklahoma’s largest fundraiser, supporting programs to foster work-readiness, entrepreneurship and financial literacy skills. The evening featured a group monopoly game, a mobile auction, a live auction, networking and stories highlighting JA’s impact.
$3.95 a month: The new cost for doing business in Tulsa. If you care about business and this community, it's a small price to pay to be in the know. For a limited time, get a digital subscription for just $3.95 a month. Baker was recognized as an Honorary Tycoon, along with Sheri Miksa, president/CEO of Mazzio’s, and Darton Zink, president/CEO of Zeeco.
Cherokee Nation has a longstanding partnership with Junior Achievement of Oklahoma and was the first tribe to set up a commercial space in JA BizTown, a kid-sized city teaching financial literacy and life lessons through hands-on application. The tribe also works closely with Cherokee Nation Foundation and Cherokee Nation Businesses to sponsor school trips to the Tulsa facility and bring JA programming into classrooms throughout northeast Oklahoma. OKFB, foundation works with FFA to feed hungry Oklahoma Farm Bureau and the Oklahoma Farming and Ranching Foundation partnerd with FFA chapters and Oklahoma Food Banks to help fight childhood hunger in Oklahoma.
A total of 226 FFA chapters donated to the Hunger Challenge this year, providing 1,015,764 protein sticks for the backpack program. Donations were raised at the 2016 Tulsa State Fair and Oklahoma Youth Expo in March. “Agriculture is the state’s second-leading industry, so it’s staggering to see hunger remain in our state,” said Monica Wilke, OKFB executive director. “As the state’s largest general farm organization, feeding every Oklahoman is our responsibility.
We’re honored to partner with Oklahoma FFA chapters in working toward a hunger-free Oklahoma.” The Beef for Backpacks and Pork for Packs program — a collaboration between local farmers, manufacturers and processors — provide protein sticks for the Food for Kids backpack program. This program supplies chronically hungry elementary school children with a backpack full of kid-friendly, non-perishable and nutritious food every Friday to sustain them over weekends and school holidays. Oklahoma Christian honors Don Millican Don Millican, chief financial officer for Kaiser-Francis Oil Co., received an honorary doctorate from Oklahoma Christian University and served as the university’s commencement speaker. Millican recently ended his 15-year tenure as chair of the school’s board of trustees. HoganTaylor names Scott Logan as wealth manager Disciplined Investments LLC, a registered investment adviser and subsidiary of HoganTaylor LLP, named Scott Logan as wealth manager. Logan, who has more than 20 years of experience as a financial adviser, specializes in portfolio management and holistic financial planning.
As the first wealth manager located in HoganTaylor’s Oklahoma City office, he will play an instrumental role in growing the Disciplined Investments practice in the central Oklahoma market. Logan previously owned and operated Asset Planning Solutions, a portfolio management and holistic financial planning practice that served small business owners, mid- to-upper level executives, and other individuals experiencing career or life transitions. He is a graduate of Vanderbilt University. OU Law’s Moot Court program No. 2 in nation The University of Oklahoma College of Law jumped 12 spots in the latest Blakely Advocacy Institute’s annual ranking of Moot Court Programs to No. 2 in the nation. This marks the fifth consecutive year the OU College of Law has been ranked in the top 20 schools in the country, with this year’s ranking representing the college’s highest placement in school history.
“We were thrilled to learn of this year’s Blakely Advocacy Institute’s ranking,” said OU Law Dean Joseph Harroz Jr. “At OU Law, we are committed to providing our students with a world-class legal education, and part of that includes exposing them to moot court competitions. Our students’ tenacity and drive to succeed is inspiring, and the faculty and alumni support we have for our competitions program is outstanding.” The No. 2 ranking qualifies the OU Law for the 2018 Kurth Tournament of Champions, which is reserved for the top 16 schools in the country to compete for the Moot Court National Championship. This year 98 OU Law students participated on 34 teams traveling across the country, and the college was also named a Top 20 Best Moot Court School of the Decade by National Jurist magazine. OU Law also holds the highest ranking ever achieved by an Oklahoma law school (U.S. News & World Report); is an eight-time Best Value Law School (National Jurist); and is No.
18 in the nation for first-time bar passage (U.S. News Academic Insights). Barbee Cookies to hold downtown grand opening recently opened its new location in the Brady District at 415 S. And will hold a grand opening at 10 a.m.
The company, which also has a location at 8393 S. Memorial Drive, will offer cookies and coffee from 7:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Owned by Kat Graham, the business will mark two years in south Tulsa in July.
About Avon Ind Sls Representative is located at the address 1310 N Lewis Pl in Tulsa, Oklahoma 74110. They can be contacted via phone at (918) 949-6134 for pricing, hours and directions. Avon Ind Sls Representative specializes in Birthdays, Cancer, Christmas. Avon Ind Sls Representative has an annual sales volume of 501K - 999,999.. Avon Ind Sls Representative provides Perms, Airbrush Tanning, Tanning to it's customers. For maps and directions to Avon Ind Sls Representative view the map to the right.
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