Push the tab in the opposite direction so that it remains hidden when the paper is folded. Cut the shape of a heart around the tab. Be sure leave a part of the folded edge on the top part of each side of the heart so that the card will be able to open.
Cut out the form of a much smaller heart and write a message on it. Open the paper and you will see that the tab, which juts inward, is formed in two parts. Glue the bottom tip of the smaller heart onto the bottom part of the tab. Once the glue has dried, the card can be further decorated. When your recipient of choice opens the card, your message will pop out.
The Woodmoor Bakery across the street from Blair has a delicious selection of Valentine's Day treats.
Magnets perform a traditional Chinese ribbon dance.
The Renwick Gallery near McPherson Square
Nine Blair students were selected as 2004-2005 Presidential Scholars award candidates. These students represent half of all MCPS candidates, according to the MCPS Bulletin.
Warner Theater
Caribou Coffee near McPherson Square
The White House, just a short walk away from McPherson Square
Junior Kiran Belani (blue) and sophomore Anjali Parekh (green) perform Bhangra, a traditional Indian folk dance.
A celebratory balloon in the Hoover Fisher Flower shop in the Woodmoor Shopping Center.
Araminta Ross, born in Maryland around 1820, worked both as a house slave and a field worker for a family in Dorchester County. Ross was an advocate for slaves' rights and was even hit at one point by a brick while protecting a fellow field worker. As a result, Ross had to deal with a condition that sent her into bouts of deep sleep, presumably narcolepsy, for the rest of her life. In 1844, Ross married John Tubman and took his last name while changing her first to Harriet.
Ida B. Wells-Barnett was born Ida B. Wells in 1862 in Holly Springs, Mississippi. The oldest of eight children, Wells became a teacher to support her younger siblings after the death of her parents in 1880 from yellow fever. Despite her many obstacles, financial and racial, Wells finished her studies at Rust College and in 1888, became a teacher and anti-lynching activist in Tennessee. She became editor and co-owner of a local black newspaper called "The Free Speech and Headlight," and Wells utilized her editorial column to denounce the lynching of blacks and encourage the black people of Memphis to move west.
Firehook Bakery near Farragut West
Click here for more pictures from Farragut West.
Seniors Ana Karimi and David Crawford swing to the beat of "Sing, Sing, Sing."
In his book, "Crimes Against Nature," Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. demonstrates that he is the definition of a true patriot. While the Bush administration attempts to evoke patriotism by fighting terrorists, which evidently includes donning flight-suits to announce the end of Middle Eastern "conflicts" and alerting the public about frightening terror-alert colors, Kennedy focuses on a fundamental issue that citizens could actually exert control over: the environment.
Trace the form of a shirt onto a piece of construction paper and cut it out. Next, trace the shape of a pocket on a piece of construction paper and cut it out. Make sure the pocket is large enough to fit your "pocket pal."
Junior Brian Nieh sings "Ocean Avenue" by "Yellowcard."
CVS offers a wide selection of affordable Valentines.
A branch of Legal Sea Foods within walking distance of Farragut North
The Hoover Fisher Flower shop in the Woodmoor Shopping Center has beautiful flower arrangements.
The Ronald Reagan Building, one of the many beautiful structures near Federal Triangle
Ida B. Wells, anti-lynching advocate and a proponent of suffrage and civil rights.
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