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Salon Shows Tomorrow's Look Today by Terri Rimmer - originally published by The Clay Today, 1989 (under my maiden name)
MESERVES OWNERS, Loretta and Chris Meserves, seated, are Joined by shop manager, Photo by Dona Inmon Michelle Knaack, center, in their unique salon which gives you an image of a new look. Salon shows tomorrow’s look today By Tern Persico ~ Staff Writer ORANGE PARK — “I wish I could see it first” used to be what many people uttered under their breath as their hair stylist snipped away at their sacred locks of hair. Now with New Imaging Systems, a computer interactive video display system offered through New Imaging Industries, hair salon patrons can see themselves as a fiery redhead, sultry blonde or a bold brunette. The system, which has been on the market three years, is offered locally at Meserves International Salon, 5124 Blanding Blvd, the only Florida salon to offer the service. Meserves, owned by the husband and wife team of Chris and Loretta Meserve, bought the system f...
Press Teacher Jump Started Ambitions by Terri Rimmer - originally published under my maiden name Persico in The Camden County Tribune, 1991
Tomorrow about a hundred or so West Georgia College alumni will honor a journalism teacher, a former school paper advisor, a Newsweek magazine editor, and a brilliant teacher. Joe Cumming, my Mass Communications teacher, is retiring after years of teaching the magic of the written word to thousands of amateur college students who dreamt of that writing gig that would turn them into professionals and cast them into the lime light for all the world to read. Joe is not a straight-laced man in a suit and tie, throwing large words at you and overwhelming you with Ivy League language. He has a shock of white hair, wire-rimmed glasses, robust cheeks and a clown’s hapless smile that grins at nostalgia of the days of the penny press and "Citizen Kane." It’s hard to believe that the school will no longer have a Joe Cumming. After four years of watching him scrupulously and diligently help me capture the flavor and not only learn but grasp the idea of journalism ...

Proceeds from the book this poem was published in go toward cancer research.
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