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We need TICKET SELLERS NOW!!!
START NOW!! FLEXIBLE HOURS!! HUGE $ POSSIBLE!!
WORK (PRETTY MUCH) WHEREVER YOU WANT.
INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS THIS WEEK AND WEEKEND, VARIOUS TIMES
PLEASE CALL OR E-MAIL (E-MAIL PREFERRED) RIGHT AWAY!
Mediator Matthew seeks teens (as long
as you're legally authorized to work in the United States and have your
parents' permission) who will promote this effort
and make some money. Promoters will receive $150 for every 50 tickets sold. For
every 50 tickets sold, in addition to the $150 total commission,
promoters get two free tickets to the event. Sell 100 tickets and you can bring yourself and three friends!
Prizes, including an iPad, can be earned as incentives!
Call or e-mail (contact information is above) ASAP!
All of Mediator Matthew's teen work is NO COST.
What (or who) should he take on next?
Maybe something for you!
Mediator Matthew regularly offers job references to those who assist even temporarily with his projects. SCHEDULE IS FLEXIBLE AND WORK HOURS CAN BEGIN IMMEDIATELY.
TO PARTICIPATE, please contact Mr. House by phone at 503-643-5284 or by e-mail at
If you are under 18, you will need written permission from a parent or guardian, and your parent or guardian will need to come with you to an interview.
MEDIATOR MATTHEW has been featured on television and radio more often than any full-time family mediator in the United States.
He has also published more newspaper articles (27) in more states (20)
in the last year than any full-time family mediator in the nation.
When Mediator Matthew feels passionate something, he
latches onto it and takes action. A few months ago, to help another
teen in a different state, he wrangled with a state agency, got the
Governor's office on the phone, called a state senator, talked to a
state representative, and finally spoke personally with a Superior Court
Judge -- all within the same half-hour.
When teen issues come to his attention, he makes
sure they get attention from the right people, right away. In the past
year, among other things, Mediator Matthew:
- Used two newspaper articles in back-to-back months in
a Midwestern state to criticize a judge's bad decision -- and ended up
making her so mad she called him personally to chew him out.
Apparently, taking responsibility for your actions doesn't always apply
to judges.
- Wrote two articles in the same Oregon newspaper to praise a newly-retired judge who did amazing things for Oregon teens.
- Successfully fought to keep a 17-year-old out of
juvenile detention and in a mentoring program he created, which resulted
in the teen preparing for the SAT and finishing high school, rather
than locked in a room playing cards for eight months.
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