#John William Milam
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On August 28, 1955, two white men named Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam abducted a 14-year-old Black boy named Emmett Till from his great-uncle’s home in Money, Mississippi. The men drove Emmett to a storage shed on Milam’s property in Drew, Mississippi, where they took turns torturing and beating him with a pistol, before forcing him to load a 74-pound fan into the back of their pick-up truck. The men then drove Emmett to the edge of the Tallahatchie River, ordered him to remove his clothes, and shot him in the head. Once the child was dead, Bryant and Milam chained the fan to his corpse and rolled it into the river.
Just over one week before, on August 20, Emmett had traveled by train from Chicago to Mississippi to spend two weeks visiting family. A few days into his visit, he and a group of friends and cousins went into a nearby store to buy candy; Emmett was later accused of acting “familiar” with the young white female storekeeper, Carolyn Bryant.
This was a dangerous allegation in the racial caste system of the Mississippi Delta, which was very different from Chicago and unfamiliar to young Emmett. Within a few days, word of the interaction reached Carolyn Bryant’s husband, Roy, and he enlisted his half-brother J.W. in the deadly violence that followed. Two young boys found Emmett Till’s mutilated and bloated body on August 31.
Devastated by the brutal murder and badly disfigured corpse, Emmett’s mother, Mamie Till Bradley, defiantly held an open-casket funeral in Chicago, where thousands gazed in horror at what was left of her son. To show the world the brutality Emmett had suffered, his mother also distributed a photograph of his corpse for publication in newspapers and magazines and later explained her motivation: “The whole nation had to bear witness to this.”
#history#white history#us history#am yisrael chai#jumblr#republicans#democrats#black history#Roy Bryant#Carolyn Bryant#John William Milam#J.W. Milam#Money#Mississippi#Money Mississippi#Drew#Drew Mississippi#Tallahatchie River#end the apartheid#american apartheid#apartheid#israeli apartheid#israel#palestine#civil rights#Chicago#Mississippi Delta#Mamie Till Bradley#Emmett Till#white men
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Officials say that if Carolyn Bryant Donham (now in her 80s) did recant, they cannot prosecute her for perjury because they don’t have the evidence she lied on the stand (this was a state case), and besides, the statute of limitations for a state perjury case ran in 1960. The statute of limitations also ran on whether she lied to the FBI in 2004 when they previously opened an investigation.
“However, in closing this matter without prosecution, the government does not take the position that the state court testimony the woman gave in 1955 was truthful or accurate,” authorities said. “There remains considerable doubt as to the credibility of her version of events, which is contradicted by others who were with Till at the time, including the account of a living witness.”
Attackers beat the 14-year-old Till to death, and weighed him in the Tallahatchie River with a 75-pound cotton gin fan tied to him with barbed wire. An all-white jury convicted Roy Bryant and half-brother John William Milam in a 1955 trial in Mississippi, but these two ended up confessing to kidnapping and murdering the teenager in a January 1956 report from Look magazine.
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LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
March 1, 2021
Heather Cox Richardson
This morning, conservative pundit William Kristol wrote in The Bulwark what a number of us have been saying for a while now, and it dovetails cleanly with the current Republican attempt to suppress voting.
Kristol warns that our democracy is in crisis. For the first time in our history, we have failed to have a peaceful transfer of power. The Republican Party launched a coup—which fortunately failed—and “now claims that the current administration is illegitimately elected, the result of massive, coordinated fraud. The logical extension of this position would seem to be that the American constitutional order deserving of our allegiance no longer exists.”
“So,” he notes, “we are at the edge of crisis, having repulsed one attempted authoritarian power grab and bracing for another.”
Claims that American democracy is on the ropes in the face of an authoritarian power grab raise accusations of partisanship… but in this case, the person making the claim is a conservative, who goes on to urge conservatives to join behind President Joe Biden to try to save democracy. Kristol warns that “a dangerous, anti-democratic faction” of the Republican Party “is not committed in any serious way to the truth, the rule of law, or the basic foundations of our liberal democracy.”
Kristol’s call is notable both because of his position on the right and because he warns that we are absolutely not in a moment of business-as-usual. Perhaps because it is impossible to imagine, we seem largely to have normalized that the former president of the United States refused to accept his loss in the 2020 election and enlisted a mob to try to overturn the results. Along with his supporters, he continues to insist that he won that election and that President Joe Biden is an illegitimate usurper.
This big lie threatens the survival of our democracy.
At the Conservative Political Action Committee (CPAC) conference this weekend in Orlando, Florida, Trump supporters doubled down on the lie that Biden stole the 2020 election. From a stage shaped like a piece of Nazi insignia, speakers raged that they were victims of “cancel culture” on the part of Big Tech and the left, which are allegedly trying to silence them. To restore fairness, they want to stop “voter fraud” and restore “election integrity,” and they want to force social media giants to let them say whatever they want on social media.
In the Washington Post, commentator Jennifer Rubin said the modern conservatives at CPAC had no policy but revenge, “resentment, cult worship and racism,” and no political goal but voter suppression. It is “the only means by which they seek to capture power in an increasingly diverse America,” she notes. A poll showed that “election integrity” was the issue most important to CPAC attendees, with 62% of them choosing it over “constitutional rights” (which got only 48%).
Trump himself packaged this lie in words that sounded much like the things he said before the January 6 insurrection. He claimed that he had won the election, that the election was “rigged,” and that it was “undeniable” that the rules of the election were “illegally changed”—although none of his many court challenges stuck. He attacked the Supreme Court in language that echoed the attacks on his vice president, Mike Pence, that had rioters searching him out to kill him. “They didn’t have the guts or the courage to make the right decision,” Trump said of the justices.
The purpose of this big lie is not only to reinforce Trump’s hold on the Republican Party, but also to delegitimize the Democratic victory. If Democrats cheat, it makes sense to prevent “voter fraud” by making it harder to vote. “We must pass comprehensive election reforms, and we must do it now,” Trump said.
Republican reforms, though, mean voter suppression. Currently, Republican legislators in 43 states have introduced more than 250 bills to restrict voting. They want to cut back early voting and restrict mail-in voting, limit citizen-led ballot initiatives, and continue to gerrymander congressional districts. Arizona is trying to make it possible for state legislatures, rather than voters, to choose the state’s presidential electors. Rather than try to draw voters to their party’s candidates by moderating their stances, they are trying to win power by keeping people from voting.
I cannot emphasize enough how dangerous this is. We have gone down this road before in America, in the South after 1876. The outcome was the end of democracy in the region and the establishment of a single, dominant party for generations. In those decades, a small body of men ruled their region without oversight and openly mocked the idea of justice before the law. A member of the jury that took only 67 minutes to acquit Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam for murdering 14-year-old Emmett Till in 1955 famously said, “We wouldn’t have taken so long if we hadn’t stopped to drink pop.” White men dominated women and their Black and Brown neighbors, but their gains were largely psychological, as the one-party system created instability that slowed down economic investment, while leaders ignored education and infrastructure.
Tomorrow, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in a lawsuit concerning Arizona election laws. The case is from 2016, when Democrats argued that two Arizona voting laws discriminated against Hispanic, Black, and Indigenous voters in violation of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which prohibits laws that hamper voting on the basis of race. The laws called for ballots cast in the wrong precinct to be thrown away and allowed only election officials, letter carriers, household family members, or caregivers to return someone else’s mail-in ballot. A violation could bring a $150,000 fine. The court’s decision in this case will have big implications for the legitimacy of the restrictions Republican legislatures are trying to enact now.
Meanwhile, Democrats are trying to shore up voting rights with H.R. 1, the For the People Act of 2021. This sweeping measure would make it easier to vote, curtail gerrymandering, make elections more secure, and reform the campaign finance system.
They are also proposing the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Act, H.R. 4, which would restore the parts of the Voting Rights Act the Supreme Court gutted in 2013 in the Shelby v. Holder decision, limiting changes to election laws that disproportionately affect people of color. After Shelby v. Holder, a number of states immediately enacted sweeping voter suppression laws that disproportionately hit minorities, the elderly, and the young, all populations perceived to vote Democratic.
Neither of these bills will pass the Senate unless the Democrats modify the filibuster rule, which permits Republicans to stop legislation unless it can muster not just a majority, but a supermajority of 60 votes.
Today the Senate Judiciary Committee voted in favor of Judge Merrick Garland for Attorney General. Garland is noted for supervising the prosecution of the men who bombed the Alfred P. Murrah federal building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in 1995, hoping to topple the federal government. In his opening remarks to the Senate Judiciary committee last week, Garland vowed that, if confirmed, he “will supervise the prosecution of white supremacists and others who stormed the Capitol on January 6—a heinous attack that sought to disrupt a cornerstone of our democracy: the peaceful transfer of power to a newly elected government.” He promised that he would follow where the investigation led, even if it went “upstream” to those who might not have been in the Capitol, but who nevertheless were participants in the insurrection.
The vote to move Garland’s nomination to the full Senate was 15 to 7, with Ben Sasse (R-NE), Mike Lee (R-UT), Josh Hawley (R-MO), Tom Cotton (R-AR), John Kennedy (R-LA), Ted Cruz (R-TX), and Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) all voting no.
With the exception of Sasse, all those voting no have signed on to the big lie.
—-
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
#Political 911#insurrection#Heather Cox Richardson#Letters From an American#corrupt GOP#criminal GOP#voting rights
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A Brief History of College Station, TX
Introduction
College Station, TX was first founded in 1876. The city was formally incorporated on April 17, 1938. The name College Station is derived from the fact that it is home to Texas A&M University. Before the mid-1800s, much of the area was rivaling Farm Road 60 and Texas State Highway 40, just west of the Brazos River. On January 16, 1838, Bryan named the town in honor of a friend. The Texas Congress formed Brazos County out of Milam County in 1841 and named Bryan as the seat of government. The roots of College Station date back to 1860 when the Houston and Texas Central Railway began to develop land in the area. This railroad was connected to Austin and Dallas around 1871
The city was formally incorporated on April 17, 1938. The name College Station is derived from the fact that it is home to Texas A&M University. College Station was formally incorporated on April 17, 1938. The name College Station is derived from the fact that it is home to Texas A&M University.
The city is the 9th largest city in Texas, with a population of around 102,000. Before the mid-1800s, much of the area was rivaling Farm Road 60 and Texas State Highway 40, just west of the Brazos River. The area was settled by farmers and ranchers who came from Fort Bend County in the mid-1830s. The Brazos River was a major waterway, so settlers established their homes on its banks. The first town was known as “College Station” since it was near an educational institution that later became Texas A&M University.
The area continued to grow until the Civil War erupted in 1860 when College Station residents began building fortifications to protect themselves from possible attacks by Union troops. During this time, many residents moved away or died during battles with Native Americans or other conflicts.
After Reconstruction ended in 1876, Congress created new laws regarding railroads and homesteading that allowed more people to move into the region: they could claim free land if they built houses within a specified distance of railroad tracks (usually within one mile). New settlements sprang up along existing railroads such as those that traveled through College Station to Fort Worth; these included Round Rock and Georgetown which were located farther north along these lines but also served people passing through on their way westward toward California gold fields after 1849 when gold was discovered at Sutter's Mill near Sacramento River into 1851
In 1838, John S. Bryan, a friend of the state governor, named the town in his honor. Bryan was incorporated in 1938 and became the Brazos County seat when it was formed out of Milam County six years later.
It is home to Texas A&M University (TAMU) and has become known as "the home of champions" because its sports teams have won more national championships than any other school in NCAA Division I history.
The roots of College Station date back to 1860 when the Houston and Texas Central Railway began to develop land in the area. This railroad was connected to Austin and Dallas around 1871. The railroad was built by John S. Bryan, father of William J. Bryan, who later became a politician and ran for president three times (1896, 1900, and 1908). The purpose of this railroad was to transport cotton from West Texas to markets in Houston and Galveston Bay until it was destroyed during the Civil War by Union troops in 1863.
The A&M College became a military institution in 1893 and remained one for almost 50 years until becoming a civilian university in 1963. The Texas A&M University, originally the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, was founded in 1876. It became a military institution in 1893 and remained one for almost 50 years until becoming a civilian university in 1963.
The growth of College Station has been spurred by several factors including its location on I-69 between Dallas and Houston; it is also within 30 miles (48 km) from three major airports: George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, William P. Hobby Airport in Houston and Easterwood Field (formerly known as Coulter Field) Airport near Bryan/College Station.
College Station is a great place to live. The city boasts a vibrant cultural history, thanks to the many museums, art galleries, and other attractions that can be found in College Station. Don't forget that there's plenty of nature in this city as well! This makes it easy for you to get away from the hustle and bustle of the city when you need some time to yourself.
College Station is also booming with development. With so much going on in terms of new construction projects and new businesses opening up all over town, there's always something exciting happening here at any given moment.
Conclusion
The city of College Station is a great place to live and raise a family. It offers all the amenities of larger cities with the small-town feel that so many people love. With plenty of opportunities for entertainment, education or just relaxing in nature, it's no wonder why so many people are drawn here each year. As we've seen throughout this article there's always been something special about this place and it's hard not to see why they keep coming back!
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TW: Graphic Image
This is what became of young Emmett Till, the 14 year old young man from Mississippi who was lynched by Roy Bryant and his half brother John William (JW Milam) on August 28th 1955 after Bryant overheard rumours that Till had wolf whistled and made physical advances as well as physical contact with Carolyn Bryant (Roy Bryant’s wife) Tills’ bloated and mutilated body was discovered three days later in the Tallahatchie River. He had also been shot in the head.
Bryant and Milam were found not guilty of kidnapping and murder in September of 1955 by an all white jury. In 1956 in an interview with ‘Look’ Magazine both men admitted to the crime. They served no jail time.
In 2008 Carolyn Bryant admitted to fabricating the events that occurred between herself and Till.
Yet, had we not believed the woman right off the bat, and had stood by the fact that you are innocent until proven guilty, and the burden of proof falls upon the accuser, young Emmet Till would not have had his life cut short.
#tw: graphic content#this is what current liberal views caused in the past#disgusting#subhuman#innocent until proven guilty
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David Anthony, Justin Beal & JD Ryder Siracusa
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Feb. 5, 2020: Obituaries
Dorothy Lewis, 100
Dorothy Plonk Lewis, 100, died the morning of Monday, February, 3, 2020, at the Joan & Howard Woltz Hospice Home, surrounded by her family.
Dorothy was born on April 12, 1919 to John Oates and Elvira Foust Plonk in Kings Mountain, NC. She graduated from Kings Mountain High School and Greensboro College. She taught for one year in Franklin, NC before attending the University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill where she graduated with a masters in Bio-Chemistry.
In 1944, she married Dr. Robert E. Lewis of Lumberton, NC. They moved to North Wilkesboro in 1946 where Bob was a surgeon. She was dedicated to serving her church and community as well as being a wife and mother.
In addition to her parents, Dorothy was preceded in death by her husband, Bob Lewis and her daughter, Patricia L. Johnston of North Wilkesboro, three sisters Mary Foust Plonk Weaver of Greensboro, Douglas Regina Plonk McElwee of North Wilkesboro and Maude Plonk Harper Patterson of Kings Mountain and a brother John O. Plonk, Jr. of Kings Mountain.
She is survived by her two daughters: Suzanne Tonski (Ernest) and her son Jacob Tonski (Sharon); Margaret Turner and her son Robert Turner (Poem) and daughter Anna Dooley (Chad); and her son Robert E Lewis, Jr. (Regina); as well as her grandchildren from her late daughter Patricia, Andy Johnston (Brooke), Mary Lewis Johnston, and Blaine Johnston (Melody). Her 9 great-grandchildren, Alex, Emmett, Geneva, Hannah, Reagan, Sebastian, Nick, Maggie, Kenzie have been a source of great joy to Dot.
A memorial service will be held Wednesday, February 5, 2020 at 2 p.m. at North Wilkesboro Presbyterian Church with a celebration of life to follow in the church fellowship hall.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to North Wilkesboro Presbyterian Church, the Joan & Howard Woltz Hospice Home in Dobson, NC or the charity of one's choice. To God be the Glory!
Betty Daniels, 83
Betty Jane Tidline Daniels, 83, passed away on February 1, 2020. She was born and raised in North Wilkesboro, NC to the late Helen Tidline.
The family will receive friends on Sunday, February 9, 2020 from 1-2 at First Baptist Church on 308 Main Street, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659. A Homegoing service will be held to celebrate her life following the receiving on February 9 at 2:00 at First Baptist Church with Rev. Albert Saunders officiating and Rev. James Ferguson Eulogist. Burial will be in Poplar Spring Baptist Church cemetery.
She was a graduate of Lincoln Heights and attended Winston-Salem State University. Betty was a strong, faithful, and caring woman of God. She had a passion for helping others especially children. She was a DayCare Teacher at Skyview Daycare Center for many years. She was a member of First Baptist Church where she served faithfully assisting with secretarial work at the Church, Sunday School Teacher, member of the Choir and Missionary Board.
She is preceded by her mother; Helen Tidline and four brothers; Bill Tidline, Tommy Tidline, Lonnie Tidline and Chester Tidline. She had one deceased sister and brother-in-law Elsie and Douglas Suddith.
Betty is survived by a daughter; Lynn (Roger) Dula of Newton, NC. , three sons; Nathan Daniels,Craig Daniels and Donnie (Pat) Daniels all of North Wilkesboro, NC, two sisters, Barbara (Claudius) Harris of Winston-Salem, NC and Doris (Robert) Anderson of Petersburg, VA, two surviving sisters-in-law; Mildred and Lottie Tidline, four grandchildren; Alex Dula, Aleshia Dula, Linda Ashford and Laura Cole and many nieces, nephews, aunts, uncles, cousins, and friends. Flowers will be accepted.
Terry Dishmon, Sr., 54
Terry Norman Dishmon, Sr., age 54, of North Wilkesboro, passed away Friday, January 31, 2020 at Forsyth Medical Center. He was born September 18, 1965 in Hartford County, Maryland to Perry Norman and Stella Price Dishmon. Terry enjoyed woodworking, golf and coaching. He was preceded in death by his father.
Surviving are his wife, Angela Dishmon; sons, Terry "T.J." Dishmon, Jr., Brandon Dishmon both of Norfolk, Virginia; his mother, Stella Dishmon Trent and spouse Ronnie of Roaring River; brother, Tommy Dishmon of Conover; sisters, Michelle Parsons and spouse David of Millers Creek, Dawn Riddle and spouse David of Utah; and step-mother, Wanda Dishmon of North Wilkesboro.
Funeral service will be held 2:00 p.m. Wednesday, February 5, 2020 at Miller Funeral Chapel with Rev. Claude Rhodes officiating. Burial will follow in Mountain Park Cemetery. The family will receive friends at Miller Funeral Service from 1:00 until 2:00 on Wednesday, prior to the service. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Camp Cole Foundation, PO Box 6377, Columbia, SC 29260. Miller Funeral Service is in charge of the arrangements.
Darrell Yates, 76
Darrell Thomas Yates, age 76, of North Wilkesboro, passed away Friday, January 31, 2020 at Wake Forest Baptist Health-Wilkes Regional. He was born January 15, 1944 in Ashe County to Lloyd Leonard and Josephine Wyatt Yates. Darrell enjoyed motorcycles, Harley Davidson Racing, fishing and hunting. He was preceded in death by his parents; brother, Clayton Yates and four infant siblings.
Surviving are his sister-in-law, Edna Yates of North Wilkesboro; niece, Janice Yates Dale of North Wilkesboro; great niece, Amanda Dale of Ronda; great great niece, Trinity Harris; great great nephew, Riley Harris.
Memorial service will be held 7:00 p.m. Thursday, February 6, 2020 at Miller Funeral Chapel. The family will receive friends at Miller Funeral Service from 6:00 until 7:00 on Thursday, prior to the service. Flowers will be accepted or memorials may be made to the donor's choice in Darrell's name. Miller Funeral Service is in charge of the arrangements.
Sandra Handy
Mrs. Sandra Lorraine Harless Handy, better known as Sandy passed away Friday, January 31, 2020 at Wake Forest Baptist-Wilkes Medical Center.
Funeral services were February 3, at Edgewood Baptist Church with Pastor Eddie Tharpe and Rev. Julius Blevins officiating. Burial was in the church cemetery.
Mrs. Handy was born in Wilkes County on June 15, 1950 to Billye "Bobbye" Faye Shumate Harless. She was retired from Tyson Foods. Mrs. Handy was a member of Edgewood Baptist Church.
She was preceded in death by her mother and a brother; Ronnie Harless.
Sandy is survived by a daughter; Robin Gregory and husband Will of Hamptonville, a grandson; Seth Gregory, a brother; Steve Harless and wife Debbie of Hays, a sister in law; Jan Harless of North Wilkesboro and her special nieces and nephews.
In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Ebenezer's Christian Children's Home PO Box 2777 North Wilkesboro, NC 28659.
Tracy Ferguson, 49
Ms. Tracy Lynn Ferguson, age 49 of Moravian Falls, passed away Friday, January 31, 2020 at Caldwell Hospice in Lenoir.
Funeral services were February 3, at Zion Hill Baptist Church with Rev. Tim Roten officiating. Burial was in the church cemetery.
Ms. Ferguson was born October 31, 1970 in Wilkes County to Eddie Carol Ferguson and Linda Steele Ferguson. She was an employee of Food Lion and a member of Zion Hill Baptist Church. Tracy was involved with the GA's and Youth Group of Zion Hill and while attending Wilkes Central High School was a member of the Band.
She was preceded in death by a her life partner; William Cutshaw and a son; Billy Ferguson.
Ms. Ferguson is survived by her parents; Eddie Carol Ferguson and Linda Steele Ferguson of Moravian Falls, a daughter; Brandy Mae Cutshaw and fiancée David Mason of Moravian Falls, two sons; Corey Ferguson and fiancée Amber Stinson of Moravian Falls and Travis Lee Cutshaw and friend Tyler Staley of North Wilkesboro and a grandson; William Camden Ferguson.
Flowers will be accepted or memorials may be made to Caldwell Hospice, Inc. 902 Kirkwood Street NW, Lenoir, NC 28645.
Pauline Milam, 77
Mrs. Pauline Miller Milam, age 77 of Millers Creek passed away Friday, January 31, 2020 at Wake Forest Baptist-Wilkes Medical Center.
Funeral services were February 4, v at Reins-Sturdivant Chapel with Rev. Mike Church officiating. Burial was in Mountlawn Memorial Park.
Mrs. Milam was born August 18, 1942 in McDowell County, WV to Paul Edward and Grace Idesa Whitaker Miller. She was a member of Cricket Baptist Church.
In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by her husband; Paul Franklin Milam, Sr.
She is survived by one son; Paul Franklin Milam, Jr. of Millers Creek, grandson; Dalton Milam of Millers Creek, two sisters; Geraldine Bumgarner and husband Roy of Wilkesboro, Rita Adams of Millers Creek and one brother; Gary Miller and wife Linda of Millers Creek.
In lieu of flowers memorials may be made to Wake Forest Baptist Care At-Home Hospice, 126 Executive Drive, Suite 110, Wilkesboro, NC 28697.
Charles Brunett, 66
Mr. Charles Timothy Brunett, 66, of Purlear, passed away on Thursday, January 30, 2020 at Wilkes Medical Center.
Charles was born on July 1, 1953 in Montgomery County Ohio to Edward James Burnett and Mary Margret Garrison Burnett.
Charles is preceded in death by his parents and brother, Jimmy Brunett.
Charles is survived by his wife of 47 years, Joni Brunett; daughter, Michelle Brunett of the home; son, TJ Brunett also of the home; 3 sisters, 1 brother and 2 grandchildrens, Kaleb Frazier and Haliegh Robinson all of Millers Creek.
No services are planned.
In lieu of flowers memorial donations may be given to Adams Funeral Home of Wilkes P.O. Box 396 Moravian Falls, NC 28654 to help with finally expenses.
Adams Funeral Home of Wilkes has the honor of serving the Brunett Family.
Willa Stanley, 76
Mrs. Willa Dean Stanley, 76, of North Wilkesboro, passed away on Wednesday, January 29, 2020 at Wilkes Medical Center.
Willa was born on June 28, 1943 in Wilkes County to Robert Parsons and Venie Webb Parson.
Willa is preceded in death by her parents, husband, Arnold Jean Stanley; daughter, Melissa Stanley Royal; son, Arnold Gene (Junior) Stanley and grandson Roger Wayne (George) Royal and sister, Betty Billings.
Willa is survived by her sons, Monty G Stanley, Robert (RC) Stanley and wife, Mellissa Stanley; daughter, Michelle Stanley; brother, Rex Parsons; significant other Charles Call, 13 grandchildren and 8 great grandchildren.
Willa Dean was a loving wife, mother and sister. She lived a great 76 years and the good Lord has called her home. She will be missed and loved by her Family.
A visitation was held February 1, at Adams Funeral Home of Wilkes Chapel, 2901 Moravian Falls Rd Moravian Falls. Burial will follow at a later date.
Adams Funeral Home of Wilkes has the honor of serving the Stanley Family.
Clayton Holloway, 74
Dr. Clayton Glenn Holloway, age 74, of Wilkesboro, passed away Tuesday, January 28, 2020 at Rose Glen Village. He was born September 2, 1945 in Wilkes County to Ira Glenn and Ethel McCurdy Holloway. He attended Lincoln Heights High School (class of 1963) and graduated from NC A&T State University in Greensboro with Bachelor of Science and Master of Arts degrees. He continued his education at Bowling Green State University in Ohio where he received his PhD in English in 1975. After receiving post-doctoral teaching fellowships via Fulbright (Department of Education) and the Lilly Foundation, Dr. Holloway began his professional teaching career as a counselor and instructor at NC A&T State University in Greensboro (until 1969) and Iowa State University (until 1972). He then obtained an assistant professorship in English at Appalachian State University and joined Hampton University in 1976 as an associate professor. By the time he retired from Hampton University, Dr. Holloway was an Old Dominion Distinguished Professor of Humanity and had served as a university trustee, a reviewer of proposals for the National Endowment for Capital Humanities, and an electoral for the Virginia Foundation for Humanities.
Dr. Holloway was an avid reader and prolific writer and often shared his pieces with friends and family. He was a member of the Modern Language Association, National Council of Teachers of English, College Language Association, Mid-Atlantic Writers Association, and Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Incorporated. His additional interests included walking, reviewing films,
traveling, and refinishing antiques, and he loved spending time with his family and would often leave without notice because he did not like formal goodbyes.
Dr. Holloway was preceded in death by his parents; brothers, Billy and Robert Holloway; sister, Sylvia Holloway; and half-sister, Myrtle Gore.
Surviving are his only daughter, Lynn Holloway of Hampton, Virginia; brothers, Thomas Holloway of Greensboro, Walter "Clyde" Holloway of Winston Salem; sisters, Lois Saner of Boomer, and Betty Carlton and spouse Julius Carlton of Moravian Falls; and a host of nieces, nephews, and greats.
Memorial service will be held at 1:00 pm Sunday, February 9, 2020 at Miller Funeral Chapel. A private burial will follow in Pleasant Hill Baptist Church Cemetery. The family will receive friends at Miller Funeral Service from 12:30-1:00 on Sunday prior to the service. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to The Ira and Ethel Holloway Scholarship Trust fund. Miller Funeral Service is in charge of the arrangements.
Brenda Roope, 75
Brenda Kay Church Roope, age 75, of Hays, passed away Tuesday, January 28, 2020 at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. Brenda was born December 10, 1944 in Wilkes County to Aries and Lillian Crysel Church. She was retired from Central Telephone Company after 30 years and a member of Union United Methodist Church. Brenda was preceded in death by her parents; brother, A.G. Church, Jr.; and grandson, Logan Tyler Perry.
Surviving are her husband, Walter Dean Roope; daughter, Gilda Nicole "Nikki" Church Holman of Wilkesboro; step-son, William "Will" Roope and spouse Donna of Hays; step-daughter, Deena Roope Wood and spouse Bryon of North Wilkesboro; grandchildren, Emily Nicole Perry of Millers Creek, Amber Leigh Perry of Wilkesboro, Brenda Hailey Holman of Oklahoma, Tim Roope of Hays, Katherine Williams of Charlotte, Taylor Wood and Ethan Wood both of North Wilkesboro; great grandchildren, Alayna Willis, Chloe Perry both of Millers Creek, sisters, Sylvia Church of North Wilkesboro, Libby Davis and spouse James of Wilkesboro, Vickie Johnson and spouse Kemp of Traphill, Fran Amburgey and spouse David of Kernersville; and sister-in-law, Sissie Church of Wilkesboro.
Funeral service was February 2, at Miller Funeral Chapel with Pastor Susan Taylor Pillsbury officiating. Entombment followed in Mountlawn Memorial Park Mausoleum. Flowers will be accepted or memorials may be made to Union United Methodist Church, 2257 Boone Trail, North Wilkesboro, NC 28659. Miller Funeral Service is in charge of the arrangements.
Willie Nelson, 88
Willie Winford Nelson, age 88, of North Wilkesboro, passed away, Tuesday, January 28, 2020 at his home. He was born February 8, 1931 in Ashe County to Millard and Ollie Royal Nelson. Mr. Nelson was a member and deacon of Antioch Baptist Church and US Army Veteran. He was preceded in death by his parents; sister, Lois Perry; half-sister, Grace Perry; brothers, Larry Nelson, Tommy Nelson and Buddy Nelson; half-brother, John Nelson.
Surviving are his wife, Kathryn Sloop Nelson; son, Jay Nelson and spouse Shonna of North Wilkesboro; grandchildren, Billy Nelson of Myrtle Beach, Jessica Prevette and spouse Michael of North Wilkesboro; great grandchildren, Alexis Peacock, Hailey Peacock, Cadence Prevette; great great granddaughter, Delilah Leftwich; brother, Dillard Nelson and spouse Linda of Moravian Falls; sisters, Nannie Perry of Cricket, Nancy Childress and spouse Jim of North Wilkesboro, Jimmy Nelson and spouse Linda of Grover, N.C.; several nieces and nephews.
Funeral service was February 1, at Miller Funeral Chapel with Brother Larry Adams and Rev. Homer Maltba officiating. Burial followed in Mountlawn Memorial Park. Flowers will be accepted. Miller Funeral Service is in charge of the arrangements.
Iva Ellis, 87
Mrs. Iva Lee Blevins Ellis, age 87 of Roaring River passed away Monday, January 27, 2020 at Hugh Chatham Memorial Hospital.
Funeral services were January 30, at Reins-Sturdivant Chapel with Rev. Roger Wagoner officiating. Burial was in Mountlawn Memorial Park.
Mrs. Ellis was born September 16, 1932 in Wilkes County to Lonnie Rufus and Ada Victoria Bell Blevins. She was a member of Christian Fellowship Mission Church.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband; Floyd Wintford Ellis, one sister; Virginia Bauguess and one brother; Rufus Blevins.
She is survived by a daughter; Judy West and husband Duane of Roaring River, four grandchildren; David Miller and wife Shelby of Hays, Derrick Miller and wife Ashley of Summerfield, Jessica Sale and husband Charlie of Ronda and Zach West and McKenzie Stokes of Roaring River, seven great grandchildren; Allison, Dylan and J.J. Miller, Callie Sale, Allen Stewart and wife Kristen, Brandon Stewart and Hailey Brittain and husband Jordon, two sisters; Vea Blevins and husband Ray of North Wilkesboro and Peggy Greene of Purlear.
Flowers will be accepted or memorials may be made to Christian Fellowship Mission, PO Box 127, McGrady, NC 28649.
McKinley Absher, 76
Mr. McKinley Wayne Absher, age 76, of Ferguson, passed away on Monday, January 27, 2020 at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center.
McKinley was born February 12, 1943, the son of the late McKinley William and Myrtle Reeves Absher.
He was a US Army veteran and a member of Boiling Springs Baptist Church in Purlear. He enjoyed music and fishing. He was a hard worker, having had many careers in his lifetime. He had worked in the construction industry before retirement.
Including his parents, he was preceded in death by his daughter, Laura Renee Triplett; sisters, "Jackie" Iva Nell Gainey, Bernice Parsons, Rosalee Church, Viola Campbell; brothers, Claude Absher, Charles Absher, Granville Absher and Martin Absher.
Those left to cherish his memory include: his wife, Ruby Ann Foster Absher, married 34 years, of the home; children, John Triplett (Andrea) of Ferguson, Matthew Triplett of Ferguson, Angie Cheek of Ferguson, Lynett Wooten (Kent) of Wilkesboro, Juanima Minton of Hays, Laytin Absher of the home, Martin Absher (Iris) of Purlear, Anita Swanson of Clayton, NC, Michael Absher of California; siblings, Ann Shephard, Claudeane Burch (Deane), Betty McGuire, Sallie Key , Brenda Williams; 29 grandchildren; as well as, many great grandchildren and great-great grandchildren.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to: Adams Funeral Home of Wilkes, P.O. Box 396, Moravian Falls, NC 28654 to help with final expenses.
The family conducted a Celebration of Life Service January 30, at Boiling Springs Baptist Church with full military honors by the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #1142. Pastor Joey Moore officiated.
The family will receive friends from 12:00-12:45 p.m. prior to the service.
Adams Funeral Home of Wilkes and cremation services is honored to be serving the Absher Family.
Donna Dillard, 60
Mrs. Donna Shumate Dillard, age 60 of Millers Creek passed away Sunday, January 26, 2020 at Wilkes Senior Village after a 3 year battle with cancer.
Memorial services were February 1, at Scenic Memorial Gardens Chapel with Rev. Benny Roten officiating.
Mrs. Dillard was born November 5, 1959 in Wilkes County to Leonard and Virgie Landreth Shumate.
In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by her husband; Roland Lane Dillard, four sisters; Faye Shumate, Sharon Pennington, Annie Dancy and Dreama Mae Shumate and two brothers; Tex Shumate and Roger Shumate.
She is survived by a daughter; Crystal Triplette and husband Lincoln of Millers Creek, a son; Allen Dillard and wife Amanda of Purlear, three grandchildren; Cody Dillard, Tripp Triplette and Eva Triplette, one sister; Kaye Feimster of North Wilkesboro and four brothers; Leonard Shumate, Jr. of North Wilkesboro, Gilbert Shumate of Lafolette, TN, David Shumate of Thurmond and Roy Shumate of North Wilkesboro.
Flowers will be accepted.
Patricia Foster, 79
Patricia (Pat) Clanton Foster, age 79, of Wilkesboro, passed away Sunday, January 26, 2020 at Accordius Health of Wilkesboro. She was born January 13, 1941 in Wilkes County to Henry Kerley and Mary Magalene Broyhill Clanton. Patricia was preceded in death by her parents; and her husband, Jesse (Pete) Foster; sisters, Frances C. Penley, Mary C. Pearson; brothers, David James Clanton and Thomas Richard Clanton.
Surviving are her son, Gene Summerlin; daughter, Lisa Pena Church; grandchildren, Mary P. Mahala and Luis Pena; four great grandchildren; step-daughter, Sarah Foster; step-son, Keith Foster; brothers, Henry Robert Clanton and wife Patsy of Moravian Falls, Jerry Wayne Clanton and wife Sherry of Hickory; sisters, JoAnn C. Broyhill of Lenoir, Nancy C. Clement and husband Kyle of Lenoir, Sonja C. Walker of Granite Falls.
Funeral service was January 30, at Miller Funeral Chapel with Chaplain Ken Boaz officiating. Burial followed in Scenic Memorial Gardens. Flowers will be accepted. Miller Funeral Service is in charge of the arrangements.
Archie Johnson, 80
Mr. Archie Kenneth "Kenny" Johnson, 80, of North Wilkesboro, passed away on Sunday, January 26, 2020.
Kenny was born on February 16, 1939 in Wilkes County to Charles Franklin Johnson and Lula Mae Cothern Johnson.
Kenny is preceded in death by his parents; brother, Burton Johnson; sister, Nelta Ingold.
Kenny is survived by his wife, Shelby H. Johnson; daughters, Teresa Ashlin of Oceanside CA, Tammy Wyatt and husband, David of Roaring River, Kendra Johnson of North Wilkesboro; sons, Kenny Johnson of Hays, Charles "Mousey" Johnson and wife, Kimberly of LasVegas NV, Kenny"Leroy" Johnson Jr. of North Wilkesboro; sisters, Alma Oakley and husband, Delano of Roaring River, Ada Sheet of North Wilkesboro, Glenda Sue Johnson of North Wilkesboro, Ruby Walsh and husband, Wade of North Wilkeboro,8 grandchildren and 8 great grandchildren.
The funeral service was January 31, at Davis Memorial Baptist Church with Rev. Bud Laws and Rev. Robert be officiating. Burial followed at Mountlawn Memorial Park.
Adams Funeral Home of Wilkes has the honor of serving the Johnson Family.
Wayne Lindley, 96
L. Wayne Lindley, age 96, passed away on January 25th at the Hospice Home in Burlington.
Wayne was born on April 5, 1923, in Alamance County to the late Ressa W. Lindley and Annie Thompson Lindley. He was married to Sarah Ferguson Lindley for over 75 years. He was an alumnus of High Point College and served in the United States Navy during WW II. He worked at Blue Cross Blue Shield NC for almost 42 years. He was a member of Mt. Olive Baptist Church, Pittsboro NC where he served in a number of leadership roles including deacon, treasurer and music director.
Wayne was preceded in death by his parents, four brothers and two sisters, son John W. Lindley, granddaughter Amy Lindley Wallace ; foster son Paul (Hank) Smith and foster daughter-in-law Jane Ingle Smith. He is survived by his wife Sarah Lindley of the home, foster son John Willardson and wife Ann of Wilkesboro NC; foster grandson Drew Willardson of Wilkesboro NC; daughter-in-law Trish Lindley of Graham; grandson Mark Lindley and wife Carrie of Mechanicsville VA ; foster daughter-in-law Dianne Cobb Smith of Mebane; foster granddaughter Elizabeth Smith Klutts and husband Gary of Browns Summit; foster grandson Matthew Smith and wife Katherine of Atlanta GA and nine great grandchildren, all of whom he loved dearly.
A graveside memorial service was January 30 at Mt. Olive Baptist Church.
The family requests that in lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Hospice and Palliative Care Center of Alamance-Caswell at 914 Chapel Hill Rd, Burlington NC 27215 or Mt Olive Baptist Church Memorial Association Endowment Fund at Mt. Olive Baptist Church, 5043 Mt. Olive Church Rd, Pittsboro NC 27312.
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Bulletproof Emmett Till Memorial Unveiled After Repeated Vandalism
TALLAHATCHIE COUNTY, Miss. ― Despite vandals’ repeated attempts to erase the memory of Emmett Till from this community, a new memorial has been erected in honor of the civil rights martyr. And this time, it’s stronger than ever.
Members of Till’s family gathered Saturday at Graball Landing, the spot where the 14-year-old’s brutalized body was pulled from the Tallahatchie River after his murder in 1955. Encircled by a vast cotton field and quintessential Mississippi flora, they watched as a new Till memorial was unveiled, this one 10 times heavier than the last, and made of bulletproof steel.
Till’s lynching, which occurred after a white woman accused him of harassing her outside of a Mississippi grocery store, is largely seen as the catalyst for the Civil Rights Movement.
“This marker answers the question as to what we do with our history,” said Reverend Willie Williams, co-director of the Emmett Till Memorial Commission, which advocated for the new marker. “Do we learn from it? Do we use it to help our society have greater respect for humanity? This answers that.”
Members of Till’s family, including his cousins Rev. Wheeler Parker — the last living witness of Till’s kidnapping ― and Ollie Gordon and her daughter Airickca Gordon-Taylor, were in attendance to christen the new marker. Unlike previous markers placed near the location, the new metallic, commemorative sign will be behind a gate and placed under the watch of surveillance cameras, according to the memorial commission.
In July, a photo circulated online showed three Ole Miss students cheerfully posing with rifles beside a bullet-riddled Emmett Till memorial. That sign and others drawing attention to Till’s killing have been frequent, literal targets for vandals wanting to obscure and destroy his legacy.
Courtesy ProPublica and the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting
From left to right, Ole Miss students Ben LeClere, John Howe, and Howell Logan posing with guns by the bullet-ridden plaque marking the place where the body of murdered civil rights icon Emmett Till was pulled from the Tallahatchie River. The photo was posted to LeClere’s Instagram account in March.
Jessie Jaynes-Diming, a civil rights tour guide and board member on the Emmett Till Memorial Commission, said the vandalism is an attempt by Mississippians to distance themselves from the state’s wretched, racist history and alleviate themselves of guilt.
“To desecrate the commemoration ― not only of a Black person, but of a 14-year-old boy ― is heartless,” she said. “And it’s their way of saying, ‘So what? I didn’t have anything to do with it. Why are y’all dredging this up?’”
In 1955, a white shopkeeper, Carolyn Bryant, accused Till of catcalling her and grabbing her outside of Bryant’s Grocery and Meat Market in Money, Mississippi. Days later, witnesses say Bryant’s husband, Roy, and his half-brother J.W. Milam kidnapped Till from his uncle’s home, then beat him, shot him in the head and threw his weighted body into the Tallahatchie River. A jury acquitted the two men that year after minutes of deliberation. Carolyn Bryant admitted decades later that her initial claims that Till harassed her were lies.
After Till’s swollen body was recovered from the river, his mother, Mamie, famously demanded an open-coffin wake at her son’s funeral to publicly show the brutality of racism in the United States.
RELATED COVERAGE
Outrage At Ole Miss Over White Students Posing With Bullet-Riddled Emmett Till Sign
New Emmett Till Memorial Will Be Made Bulletproof, Group Says
3 Mississippi Students Face Investigation After Posing With Guns At Emmett Till Sign
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Bulletproof Emmett Till Memorial Unveiled After Repeated Vandalism was originally posted by MetNews
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Dead MenTell No Tales
The following is a list of people who met an untimely death. The only common denominator was a relationship of some sort with the Clintons. Circumstantional or "dead men tell no tales"? You decide! Susanne Coleman, a Clinton law student, told a friend that she was expecting Bill Clinton's child. She was 7 months pregnant when she died of a gunshot wound in 1978. Sheriff Gene Mattthews was shot and killed in 1983 when he was looking into alleged drug activities of Bill Clinton at Mena, AR airport. Kevin Ives and Don Henry were 2 teenage boys that supposely had fallen asleep on a railroad track in Arkansas in 1987. It was later determined that the boys were killed prior to being placed on the tracks. The boys misfortune was that they stumbled on the drug running operation outside of Mena. These people died because they knew too much about the suspicious deaths of the two boys: Keith McKascle, Gregory Collins, Jeff Rhodes, James Milam, and Jordon Ketelson. Danny Casolaro, reporter investigating several Clinton scandals, was found dead with wrists cut in 1991, in the bathtub of his hotel room in West Virginia. C. Victor Raiser and son C. Victor Raiser II, fundraisers for "Clinton for President" campaign died when their private plane crashed in 1992 in Alaska. Gary Johnson, a neighbor of Jennifer Flowers, taped Clinton breaking into her apartment in 1992. He was later beaten and left for dead. The video was taken. Paula Grober, Clinton's attractive speech interpreter for the deaf, died in 1992 in a one-car accident. She traveled extensively with Clinton from 1978 until her death. On July 20, 1993, White House Counsel Vince Foster died under suspicious circumstances from a gunshot wound. Foster was critical of Clinton's Presidential Blind Trust, and was in control of files containing Clinton's shady dealings in Arkansas. Immdiately after Foster's death his office was ransacked and the files taken. James Bunch, influential Texan and a friend of Bill Clinton, died in 1993 from a gunshot wound similar to Vince Foster's. He was discovered to have kept records of many powerful people who visited prostitutes. Stanley Huggins, partner in a Memphis law firm, died in 1993 after his firm headed an investigation of Madison Guaranty S&L. His 300 page report has never been released. Bodyguards: William Barkley, Scott Reynolds, Brian Haney, and Tim Sabel died in a helicopter crash in 1992, in Virginia. Bodyguards: Major William Robertson, Colonel William Densberger, Colonel Robert Kelly and Crew Chief Gary Rhodes, all died in a helicopter crash in 1993, in Germany. Bodyguards: Steve Willis, Robert Williams, Conway Bebleu, and Todd McKeehan. All four died at the Branch Davidian assault at Waco. All had nearly identical wounds to the left temple, although they allegedly died in combat. John Wilson, former Washington DC Councilman, was found dead in 1993 from an apparent hanging "suicide", Wilson was ready to go public with incriminating information about Bill Clinton.
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June 19, 2019: In other news
WCC announces spring
2019 Semester President’s and Dean’s Lists
Wilkes Community College recognizes outstanding academic achievement of students through the President’s List and the Dean’s List each fall and spring semester. The students on the spring 2019 semester President’s and Dean’s lists are grouped by home county.
To qualify for the President’s List, full-time students must achieve a 4.0 grade point average, complete 12 or more semester hours of college-level courses (excluding credit by examination) and be awarded all “A’s.”
To qualify for the Dean’s List, full-time students must complete 12 or more semester hours of college-level courses (excluding credit by examination) and have a grade point average of 3.5 or higher, with no grade below a “B.”
Alexander County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: Bradley Peyton Anderson, Hiddenite; Tiffany Brooke Austin, Taylorsville;
Benjamin Carroll Bradburn, Hiddenite; Colt Lane Cline, Hiddenite; Casey Elaine Hefner, Taylorsville; Tanya Patricia Link, Taylorsville; Erin Faith Pinnix, Hiddenite; Ethan Ryan Sprinkle, Taylorsville; Savana Nhiawa Vang, Taylorsville.
Dean’s List: Summer Leann Adams, Hiddenite; Lillianna Gabrielle Carrigan, Taylorsville;
Kayla Craig, Taylorsville; Holden Kelley Fox, Taylorsville; Kasey Elizabeth Gwaltney, Taylorsville; Amanda Hallman, Taylorsville; Noah Jacob Hudler, Taylorsville; Archie Neal Johnson, Taylorsville; Alexis Marie Lingle, Taylorsville; Zackary Gordon Pearson, Taylorsville;
Aven Maverick Sheppard, Taylorsville; Madison Victoria Walker, Taylorsville.
Alleghany County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: Katelyn Davis, Sparta; Christopher Mark Johnson, Sparta; Sharon Blevins Lyons, Sparta; Joshua Grayson Moxley, Sparta; James Paul Phillips, Sparta; Samantha Roten, Sparta; Dania Brown Ruppard, Glade Valley; Holly Alexis Watkins, Sparta.
Dean’s List: Logan Patrick Billings, Sparta; Aaron Casey Brown, Piney Creek; Ashley Lynn Cornett , Sparta; Ryan Edward Dowell, Piney Creek; Morgan Elizabeth Jasso, Ennice; Keeli Malaya Moxley, Sparta; Jennifer Brooke Tracy, Glade Valley.
Ashe County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: Kaylee Madison Campbell , West Jefferson; Bethany Frances Council, Laurel Springs; Elizabeth Marie Goodman, West Jefferson; Kelsie Ann Goodman ,West Jefferson; Caleb Allen Harless, West Jefferson; Zachary James Holman, Warrensville; Sarah Elizabeth Houck, West Jefferson; Allison Johnson Keppel, Jefferson; Joshua Ryan Knapp, Lansing; Jacob Tyler Milam, Creston; Brandi Parrish, West Jefferson; Alec Chase Roland, West Jefferson; Tonya Sizemore Sheets, West Jefferson; Devin Ray Sullins, Jefferson; Elva Jacqulyn Swibold, West Jefferson; Kellie Jourdan Taylor, Jefferson; Mackenzie Kathleen Watson, Fleetwood.
Dean’s List: Hannah Sue Barker, Glendale Springs; Ethan Lane Cox, West Jefferson; Molly Mae Dawes, Jefferson; Christy Greene Denny, West Jefferson; Arianne Leigh Dillard, West Jefferson; Melissa Brown Edwards, West Jefferson; Hollie Michelle Harris, Jefferson; Wendy Rubi Hernandez, Warrensville; Samantha Paige Johnson, Creston; Jordan Ross Miller, Fleetwood; Amy Sienna Patrick, Creston; Karina Leal Rash, West Jefferson; John Clark Reavis, Fleetwood; Allison Diamond Roten, West Jefferson; Ethan Shrader, West Jefferson; Michelle Slaton, Lansing; Caroline Melina Trent, West Jefferson; Carolina Jennette Weinberger, West Jefferson; Bailey Laurell Witherspoon, Fleetwood; Kaitlyn Woods, Jefferson.
Burke County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: Jonathon Charles McManus, Morganton; Justin Ray Williams, Hildebran.
Dean’s List: Justin Lee Spurlin, Rutherford College.
Caldwell County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: Janie Nichole Coffey, Lenoir; Alana Grace Hamby, Lenoir.
Dean’s List: William Everett McRary, Lenoir; Dillon Andrew Don Norwood, Lenoir; Elijah Christian Smith, Lenoir; David William White, Lenoir.
Catawba County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: Graham Franklin Huffman , Conover; Adreanna White, Catawba.
Dean’s List: Sydney Grace Arnett, Hickory; Karter Michael Peek, Hickory.
Iredell County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: James Robert Alkema, Statesville; Nicole Lindsey Beltrami, Stony Point;
William Henry Chapman, Statesville; Robert Curtis Fox, Olin; Kacie Lian Greer, Statesville;
Edward Todd Johnson , Statesville; Timothy Jacob Williams, Statesville.
Dean’s List: Christina Hope Beltrami, Stony Point; Morgan Nicole Blevins, Statesville; Krista Danielle Childress, Statesville; Amy Rena Harmon, Union Grove; Brian Christopher Pekarek, Statesville; Jadyn Leigh Summers, Statesville; David James Williams, Union Grove; Austin Thomas Wooten, Statesville.
New Hanover County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: Lillieanne Bailey Eby, Castle Hayne.
Surry County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: James Harrison Burcham, State Road; Hannah Faith Gentry, Elkin; Bryson Alexander Davis Key, Ararat; Kourtney Danielle Merkel, State Road.
Dean’s List: Kyla Danyelle Anderson, Elkin; Matthew Paul Giuffre, Ararat; Abriella Michelle Jarvis, Elkin; Emily Hope Jones, State Road; Justin N. Leonard, Pilot Mountain; Anayeli Loa, Elkin; Brandon James McGrady, Elkin; Corbin M. Soots, Mount Airy; Michelle Kathleen Teague, Elkin; Cassidi Rae Wood, Elkin.
Watauga County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: Barry Craig Adams, Deep Gap; Hattie Cox, Deep Gap.
Dean’s List: Serlina Morales Francisco, Deep Gap; Carlos Sandoval, Boone.
Wilkes County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: Maghan Katrice Adams, Hays; Logan George Anderson, North Wilkesboro;
Scott Bryan Anderson, Wilkesboro; Ashley Lynn Bauguess, Millers Creek; Oliver Dean Bentley, Wilkesboro; Jarrett Reid Blevins, Millers Creek; Kaycee Danielle Brown, Millers Creek; Victoria Lane-Kaye Bullis, Wilkesboro; Dillon John Carlton, North Wilkesboro; Aidan Quinn Cecile, Wilkesboro; Jacob Hunter Chipman, Roaring River; Cassidy Noah Clack, North Wilkesboro; Jodie Lynn Coffey, Ferguson; Ruth Noel Crawford, Purlear; Victoria Beth Dockery, Millers Creek; Katie Gorich Duncan, Wilkesboro; Kristen Emily Farrington, North Wilkesboro;
Brian Keith Foster, Hays; Amanda Lynn Goforth, North Wilkesboro; Gabriel Griffin, Millers Creek; Keith Wayne Haynes, North Wilkesboro; Sara Elizabeth Jarvis, North Wilkesboro; Kacee Leann Johnson, North Wilkesboro; Kayla Leigh Johnson, McGrady; Amanda Lyn Jordan, Wilkesboro; James Allen Kerr, Moravian Falls; James Thomas King, Wilkesboro; Eric Karl Kohlmeier, Wilkesboro; Breanna Nichole Laws, North Wilkesboro; Ilse Limon-Garcia,
Moravian Falls; Eric Kent Lunsford, Boomer; Rebecca Bounds Matherly, Ferguson; Tonya Deneese McNeil, Traphill; Shabrina Denise McPherson, North Wilkesboro; Jessicah Ellen Mesa,
North Wilkesboro; Lisa Gail Mikeal, Wilkesboro; Zachary Nolan Miller, North Wilkesboro; Ashley Lynn Minton, Millers Creek; Jacob Benjamin Muller, Moravian Falls; Marchella Campbell Nance, Ronda; Sierra Nicole Nance, Wilkesboro; Nhung Thi Nguyen, North Wilkesboro; Sapphire Renee Nichols, North Wilkesboro; Samantha Amber Nickelson, Wilkesboro; Staley Elizabeth Parks, Wilkesboro; Haley Perez, Wilkesboro; Roger
Dale Queen, Millers Creek; Jason Orion Redding, Roaring River; Paiton Elise Roberts, North Wilkesboro; Brittany Eller Rutherford, North Wilkesboro; Janine Diane Severt, Wilkesboro;
Cassie Marie Shepard, North Wilkesboro; Amy L. Talley, North Wilkesboro; Trenton Grant Teague, North Wilkesboro; Jared Allan Vice, North Wilkesboro; Trendon Seth Wagoner, North Wilkesboro; Rachel Elizabeth Watkins, North Wilkesboro; Ashley Christine Watson, Ferguson;
Logan Avery Whisnant, Wilkesboro; Lexey Makayla Williams, Moravian Falls; Catherine Christine Yates, North Wilkesboro; Christopher Richard Zeidner, Wilkesboro.
Dean’s List: Brittany Nicole Anderson, North Wilkesboro; Karson Shae Anderson, Moravian Falls; Olivia Faith Anderson, Moravian Falls; Ryan Richardson Barrett, Wilkesboro; Megan Billings, Ferguson; Samuel Richard Blevins, North Wilkesboro; Charles Bryson Bowers, Millers Creek; Jesse Brown, Millers Creek; Dennis Wayne Buchler, North Wilkesboro; Caleb Allen Byrd, North Wilkesboro; Candace Leigh Call, North Wilkesboro; Kacie L. Cardwell, Millers Creek; Melissa Grace Cleary, North Wilkesboro; Tonya Golden Combs, Purlear; Devin Owen Courtner, North Wilkesboro; Brookelen Mercedes Cox, North Wilkesboro; Alexandria Taylor Cress, Wilkesboro; Breanna Lynn Dancy, North Wilkesboro; Hope Colette Davis, Wilkesboro;
Christopher Volant Dodd, North Wilkesboro; Gralan Brock Durham, Roaring River; Cole Grayson Elledge, North Wilkesboro; Lauren Alise Eller, North Wilkesboro; Nicole E. Eller, Wilkesboro; Hannah Dawn Ellis, Millers Creek; Charles Alexander Erhardt, North Wilkesboro; Lauren Renee Gaines, Wilkesboro; Raegan Leann Gragg, Millers Creek; Lola Mae Griffith, Ferguson; Mason Andrew Hartley, Wilkesboro; Tambrey C. Hauser, Wilkesboro; Aaron Matthew Haymore, North Wilkesboro; Andrew Dylan Holder-Walker, North Wilkesboro; Dustin Dean Holliman, Ferguson; Jonah Mark Horton, Wilkesboro; Madison Faith Huffman, Millers Creek; Madison Grace Jarvis, Purlear; Olivia Rebecca Jarvis, North Wilkesboro; Winston Blake Johnson, North Wilkesboro; Courtney Paige Key, Millers Creek; Noah Lee Krause, Wilkesboro; Thomas Jeffrey Lambert, North Wilkesboro; Tifanie Nicole Lamm, Roaring River; Sara Mari Lopez, Thurmond; David Trent Love, North Wilkesboro; Taylor Nicole Lowe, Moravian Falls; Jonathan Lugo-Parra, North Wilkesboro; Cynthia Esmeralda Maciel, North Wilkesboro; Devany Nataly Maldonado Garcia, Millers Creek; Keelee Jade McGlamery, Hays; Katheryn Nicole McGuire, North Wilkesboro; Ahlivia Shauntrisha McMillan, North Wilkesboro; Jason Allen McQuinn, Wilkesboro; Tanner Ian Medley, North Wilkesboro; Luis Carlos Mora, North Wilkesboro; Ashley Nichole Mullis, Roaring River; Bo Kimbol Mullis, Roaring River; Macy Taya Murphy, Moravian Falls; Emaleth Violet Myers, Boomer; Christopher Stephen Nardini, North Wilkesboro; Autumn Faith Nichols, North Wilkesboro; Matthew John Nielsen, North Wilkesboro; Alex Joe Parker, Wilkesboro; Timothy Ryan Pettyjohn, Ronda; Billy Jack Plowman, Millers Creek; Rosalee Joy Reavis, North Wilkesboro; Madison Elizabeth Faye Reeves, Millers Creek; Madeline Reese Roberts, North Wilkesboro ; Jacob Darren Roe, Wilkesboro; Rebekka Jonel Rollison, Moravian Falls; Neil Jacob Rotsheck, Millers Creek; Sara Stephanie Shinaman, Moravian Falls; Adam Paul Shoemaker, North Wilkesboro; Destiny Storm Smith, North Wilkesboro; Anna Maria Sotelo, Wilkesboro; Antonio Torres-De la Paz, Wilkesboro; Joshua Townsend, Ferguson; Karen Trinidad-Meza, North Wilkesboro; Mary Jane Boiser Vawter, McGrady; Emilee Michelle Waddell, Roaring River; Ronnie Easton Wagoner,
Roaring River; Caroline Elizabeth Walker, Moravian Falls; Jordan Mitchell Walker, North Wilkesboro; Harrison Wall, Wilkesboro; Travis Remington Wall, Wilkesboro; Kimberly Dawn
Watson Staley, Millers Creek; Samantha Jo Welborn, Ronda; Nicholas Ryan Whitley, Hays; Elizabeth Pearl Williams, Wilkesboro; Jacob Lee Wood, North Wilkesboro; Matthew Allen Woodie, Wilkesboro; Dustin Dean Holliman, Ferguson.
Yadkin County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
President’s List: Amanda D. Ford, Hamptonville; Austin Martin Gentle, Hamptonville; Shannon Jeanne Holden, Yadkinville; Jessica Lauren Rakes , Hamptonville ; Jeremy Ronald Salmons, Yadkinville.
Dean’s List: Brittany Melton Allred, Yadkinville; Kendra Nicole Davis, Jonesville; Victoria Marie Johnson , Boonville; Ryan Parks, Yadkinville.
Carroll County students qualifying for the spring 2019 semester
Dean’s List: Gabrielle Rose Ziems, Galax, Virginia.
Wilkes Community College, a member of the North Carolina Community College System, is a public, two-year, open-door institution serving the people of Wilkes, Ashe and Alleghany counties and beyond. Established in 1965, WCC continues to build on a strong history of meeting the educational needs and cultural interests of our students, community and workforce. WCC prepares learners for success in a dynamic world.
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Guide to local marketing for small businesses in Olmos Park city of san antonio
Ideas and solutions on marketing to local businesses strategies and tactics are best for local marketing campaigns to small business and restaurants, suitable for owner, consultant and agency near me especially if you're from stadium or city parks of John H Sterling Memorial, Charleston, Stockton, Indiana, Brown, San Diego, Garland, Brownsville, Hererra, Lindbergh, Hialeah, Hartford, Kennedy, Onslow, Sunset Hills, Collins Garden, Midland, Beaumont, Cary, Forge, Atlanta, Lee's Creek, Raleigh, West End, Navarro, Carlsbad, Roosevelt, Independence, Tuscaloosa, Buckeye, Sacramento, Lewisville, Fresno, College Station, Oxnard, E M Stevens, Brady, San Antonio Baseball Field - University of Texas, West Jordan, Dellcrest, Provo, Costa Mesa, Amarillo, Elizabeth, Ward, Holy Cross of San Antonio School Baseball Field, Rosedale, Madison, Mississippi, Corpus Christi, Vancouver, Baltimore, North Las Vegas, Buffalo, Nebraska, Schnabel, Martin Luther King, Randolph, Lincoln Barkmeyer, San Jose, Seeling, Edison, Glendale, Boise, Milam Square, J F Kennedy Memorial, Surprise, Winston–Salem, Fayetteville, Pasadena, Leon Creek Greenway, Espada, Oakhaven, Crockett Square, New Jersey, McAllen, San Antonio Softball Field - University of Texas, Pytel, Virginia, Pittman-Sullivan, Anaheim, Pershing, Dayton, North Charleston, Wichita, Mesquite, Miami Gardens, Indianapolis, Toledo, Lowell, Stamford, Chula Vista, Dawson Massacre Historical Monument, Chicago, Padre, Santa Maria, Fort Wayne, SBC Center, Michigan, Balcones Heights, Cornerstone Christian School Football Field and Track, Worcester, Palm Bay, Paterson, Ventura, Durham, Pickwell, Hutchins, Bakersfield, Lancaster, McAllister, Northwood, Windsor, Richmond, Augusta, Kentucky, Renton, Woodbridge, Panther Spring, Nelson W Wolff San Antonio Municipal, Fullerton, Palo Alto Terrace, Pomona, Lakeland, Simi Valley, El Monte, Brooks, Montgomery, La Villita, Denton, Texas, Salt Lake City, Northridge, Rochester, Kenwood, Cuellar, Strauss, Escondido, South San, Lexington, Austin, San Angelo, Milwaukee, Little Rock, Anchorage, Arkansas, Cincinnati, Romana, Clearwater, Texas Military Institute, South Side Lions, Chattanooga, Reno, Billings, Joliet, Vidaurri, New Hampshire, Centeno, Huntsville, Lang Field, Santa Ana, Walker Ranch Heritage, Tallahassee, Jacksonville, Cambridge, Overland Park, California, Lockwood, Commanders House, Oakland, Lafayette, Kallison, Rockford, Allentown, Pletz County, Davie, Long Beach, Glen Oaks, St. Louis, San Mateo, Gilbert, Hugo Lenzt, Lackland Terrace, Yturri-Edmunds Historic, Converse, Concepcion, Tulsa, Inglewood, Utah, Kansas City, League City, Norfolk, Coral Springs, Las Cruces, Akron, San Antonio Botanical Garden, Division, Kansas, Athens, Olympia, Mahncke, Oklahoma City, Berkeley, Garza, Miramar, Los Angeles, Ohio, Las Vegas, Lakewood, Concord, Gainesville, Thornton, Baton Rouge, Hemisfair, Mobile, Pearland, Denver, Frech Creek, Copernicus, Abilene, North Dakota, Visalia, Corona, West Palm Beach, Elgin, Southcross, Gustafson - Northside, Montana, Friesenhahn, King William, Salem, McKinney, Oklahoma, Levi Strauss, Kingsborough, Aurora, Scottsdale, Orlando, Alamo, Houston, Birmingham, Cedar Rapids, Waterbury, Ann Arbor, Rittiman Creek, Westminster, San Francisco, Alexandria, Millers Pond, South Bend, Harry B Orem, San Juan Brady, Elmendorf Lake, Irving, Tempe, Vallejo, South San Pedro, Acme, Kirby, Louisiana, Westwood Village, Clovis, Hampton, Victorville, Morrill, Harlandale, Warren, Santa Clara, New Orleans, Antonian, Murrieta, Detroit, Moreno Valley, Springfield, San Antonio Missions National Historical, Fort Collins, Woodlawn, Harmony Hills Community, Peoria, Seattle, Pittsburgh, Albuquerque, Northwest Little League - Senior, Chapman-Cowles Fountain and Sculpture, Rancho Cucamonga, Plano, Plaza de las Islas, West Valley City, Boston, Palo Alto, South Dakota, Villa Coronado, Mission Concepcion, Torrance, Cleveland, Connecticut, Salinas, Colorado, Saint Timothy, Pembroke Pines, Allen, San Antonio, Fort Lauderdale, Nashville, Salado, Clinton, Northeast Preserve, Pearsall, Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church Athletic Field, Naperville, Stillman, Live Oak, Grand Rapids, Santa Rosa, Rialto, E M Stevens Field, Manchester, Fontana, V J Keefe, Phoenix, Judson, Washington, Blossom, Saint Paul, Ojeda, Madison Square, Gilbert Garza, Jackson, Eugene, Waco, Evansville, Iowa, Olathe, Columbia, Fremont, Amistad, Dignowity, Sandy Springs, Oceanside, Newport News, Arvada, Yonkers, Holy Cross, Clarksville, North Carolina, Norman, Irvine, Louisville, New York, Tobin, Fairfield, Minnesota, Southwest, Roseville, Broken Arrow, Father Timothy Benavides, Huntington Beach
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The Original Karens: From Emmett Till’s Accuser To The White Woman Who Sparked The Tulsa Massacre
Written by Clay Cane
In this current climate of protests and demands for justice, the entitled and indignant white women known as “Karens” appear to be falling apart.
From Amy Cooper, whose over dramatic 911 call on a birdwatching Black man blew up in her face, to Lisa Alexander, who was shocked to discover that no one needs her permission to write “Black Lives Matter” in chalk on their own property, Karens are in a rage. Not even a camera in their face will stop their toxic entitlement, which has led to a string of viral sensations.
When thinking of the country’s experiences with white supremacist violence, the discussions are typically centered around men. However, white women have historically been at the helm of this terror, using their tears and imaginary delicateness as ammunition for victim hood and ultimately destroying lives or at its worst, taking one.
Once upon a time, even the slightest hint that white womanhood may be in danger resulted in the lynching of Black children or a thriving town full of Black families being burned to the ground.
Here are some of the most horrific stories of Karens going wild before the term came into existence.
Sarah Page
There has been a lot of talk around Tulsa, Oklahoma due to this month's 99th anniversary of the tragic race massacre that took place there in 1921. Many people may not know the race massacre began with a 17-year-old named Sarah Page.
Page was an elevator operator in what was called the Drexel Building in downtown Tulsa. On May 30, 1921, reportedly, Dick Rowland, a 19-year-old Black shoe shiner, was getting on the elevator to use a segregated bathroom on a higher floor. He allegedly tripped when entering the elevator, accidentally grabbed Page's arm and she reacted by screaming. Rowland fled but the police were called. The next day, Rowland was arrested and word spread that a Black man assaulted a white woman.
According to the 2001 Tulsa Race Riot Commission Report via The Washington Post, Rowland was accused of assaulting Page “on a public elevator in broad daylight."
Within 18 hours, the Greenwood district of Tulsa, also known as Black Wall Street, was annihilated. In 1921, The New York Times described the massacre as “one of the most disastrous race wars ever visited upon an American city.”
No one knows what happened to Sarah Page or Dick Rowland after the massacre.
Fannie Taylor
On January 1, 1923, 22-year-old Fannie Taylor began screaming outside of her home. A neighbor rushed to the distressed white woman only to find her beaten and bruised, yelling for her baby. Miss Fannie claimed a Black man broke into her home and attacked her. The neighbor searched her house to find the baby safe and no signs of a break in.
Rumors quickly spread that Taylor was raped and robbed by a Black man. Taylor’s husband, James Taylor, gathered a group of men to find the imaginary criminal, even calling on the Klu Klux Klan for assistance.
A pack of 400 terrorists headed to the neighboring area, an affluent Black town in Rosewood, Florida, accusing any Black man they could of the crime. Fannie’s fraudulent tears was the excuse these envious hellions needed to purge out their rage.
Their first victim was Sam Carter, a local blacksmith, who was tortured and hung. They eventually began looking for a man named Jesse Hunter, who they claimed was an escaped convict.
The Black residents of Rosewood fought back but there were many casualties, including Sarah Carrier, a woman who did Fannie Taylor’s laundry. She was shot in the head, according to History.com. Her son Sylvester Carrier was also fatally shot.
The race massacre lasted for a week, burning Rosewood to the ground and killing countless Black people.
As for Fannie Taylor, she reportedly had an affair with a white man who beat her, which is why she had been found abused that night. She thought it was better to accuse a Black man of assault then to take accountability for her own actions.
The 1997 film Rosewood, directed by the late John Singleton, depicted the massacre.
See the clip below of actress Catherine Kellner as Fannie Taylor.
Eleanor Strubing
In December of 1940, Eleanor Strubing, a wealthy white woman in Connecticut accused her 31-year-old Black chauffeur, Joseph Spell, of raping her four times and throwing her into a river. Spell was arrested within hours and immediately sent to jail to wait for trial.
The New York Times famously ran a story with the headline, "Mrs. J.K. Strubing Is Kidnapped And Hurled Off Bridge by Butler; WOMAN KIDNAPPED; HURLED OFF BRIDGE." The article claimed he “confessed after 16 hours" of questioning.
Spell was facing 30 years in prison.
Thankfully, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and its head lawyer, Thurgood Marshall, represented Spell. Marshall and his co-counsel proved evidence that Strubing lied. She, in fact, had consensual sex with Spell and jumped in the river because she was terrified that she might become pregnant from their affair. In her mind, the only option was to accuse Spell of rape in order to justify a possible pregnancy.
An all-white jury found Joseph Spell not guilty, which was shocking for the time. Nonetheless, if this accusation would have been made in the South, Joseph Spell certainly would have died by public lynching.
Wil Haygood, the author of Showdown: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court Nomination That Changed America, wrote about the ruling, "It was a miracle. But Thurgood Marshall trafficked in miracles.”
Strubing, whose father was an investment banker and the former governor of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, suffered no punishment for lying under oath. Her husband, John K. Strubing, died in 1961 and she remarried to John W. Barclay. Stribing died at 92 years old in 2000.
Joseph Spell moved to East Orange, New Jersey after the trial. It’s not clear when he passed away.
The 2017 movie Thurgood was based on the Joseph Spell trial. See the clip below of Kate Hudson as Eleanor Strubing.
Carolyn Bryant
In August of 1955, 21-year-old Carolyn Bryant accused 14-year-old Emmett Till of touching her and whistling at her in a store (he reportedly had a lisp and was unable to whistle.) Till, who was visiting from Chicago, was in Mississippi for the summer spending time with family. Within hours, he was kidnapped from his uncle’s home. The child was tortured, mutilated and thrown into the Tallahatchie River. His naked body was weighed down with a fan blade.
Carolyn’s husband, Roy Bryant and her brother-in-law J.W. Milam, the terrorists who lynched Till, were found not guilty by an all-white jury.
In the 2017 book The Blood of Emmett Till by Timothy Tyson, Carolyn Bryant admitted to lying and claimed that she actually didn’t remember what happened that day in the store.
She is still alive today, living in Mississippi at 86 years old. Emmett Till would have been 79 years old on July 25 if it wasn’t for Carolyn Bryant.
The 65th anniversary of his death is August 28.
Victoria Price and Ruby Bates
Before The Central Park Five in 1989, which would become the Exonerated Five in 2002, there was the Scottsboro Boys in 1932.
On Mach 25, 1931, a group of Black and white teenagers were riding freight trains looking for work, which was common during the Great Depression. The white teens wanted the Black teens off the train and a fight broke out. The white teens attempted to forcibly throw the Black teens from the train. In defending themselves, the Black teenagers instead kicked the white teens off the locomotive.
The angry white teens went to a local sheriff who demanded the train be stopped.
Nine Black teens were removed, ages 13 to 19. However, two white women, Victoria Price and Ruby Bates, were also on the train and spent their time wrongfully accusing several of the Black boys of rape.
Similar to the Exonerated Five, that one accusation stole the innocence of nine Black children.
The teens were jailed in Scottsboro, Alabama: Haywood Patterson, 18; Clarence Norris, 19: Charlie Weems, 19; brothers Andy Wright, 19 and Leroy Wright, 13; Olin Montgomery, who was nearly blind, 17; Ozie Powell, 16; Eugene Williams, 13, and Willie Roberson, 16, who could barely walk due to severe syphilis.
The all-white and all-male jury trial was over in a matter of days and all of them — except 13-year-old Leroy Wright — were found guilty of rape and given the death penalty. There was no evidence of course since Bates couldn’t identify the men she claimed raped her.
The NAACP and the International Labor Defense (ILD), the legal wing of the American Communist Party, joined the case. By November 1932, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the Scottsboro defendants had been denied the right to counsel. Shortly after, Ruby Bates admitted she lied.
Nonetheless, the back and forth with the courts continued for years.
By 1936, Haywood Patterson was convicted of rape and sentenced to 75 years. In 1948, he escaped from prison and made it to Michigan. The governor refused to extradite him to Alabama. By 1951, Patterson was convicted of manslaughter after a barroom brawl. In 1952, he died of cancer. He was 39 years old.
In July of 1937, Clarence Norris was eventually convicted of rape and sentenced to life in prison. He was paroled in 1946 and moved north, where he married and had children. His autobiography, The Last of the Scottsboro Boys was released in 1979. He passed away in 1989 at 76 years old.
In July of 1937, Andrew Wright was convicted of rape and sentenced to 99 years. He was released in 1950 at 38 years old. Charlie Weems was also convicted of rape and paroled in 1943. He spent the rest of his life in Atlanta. It’s not clear when or if Wright and Weems have passed away.
Ozie Powell’s rape charges were dropped but he pled guilty to assaulting a deputy, which happened while in custody. He was released from prison in 1946. After spending four years on death row as adults, all charges against Willie Roberson, Olen Montgomery, Eugene Williams, and Leroy Wright were dropped.
It is not known how or when Willie Roberson, Olen Montgomery, Eugene Williams, or Ozie Powell died.
After being released, Leroy Wright, the youngest, went on a national lecture tour and then joined the Army. In 1959, according to PBS, Wright accused his wife of having an affair, fatally shot her and then committed suicide. He was 41 years old.
As for Victoria Price and Ruby Bates, Price never recanted her testimony and died in 1982 at 77 years old. Bates had the privilege of going on a speaking tour, bizarrely, for the International Labor Defense (ILD), which defended the Scottboro Boys. She claimed to have lied because she was "excited and frightened by the ruling class of Scottsboro." Bates died in 1976.
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Guide to local marketing for small businesses in Olmos Park city of san antonio
Ideas and solutions on marketing to local businesses strategies and tactics are best for local marketing campaigns to small business and restaurants, suitable for owner, consultant and agency near me especially if you're from stadium or city parks of John H Sterling Memorial, Charleston, Stockton, Indiana, Brown, San Diego, Garland, Brownsville, Hererra, Lindbergh, Hialeah, Hartford, Kennedy, Onslow, Sunset Hills, Collins Garden, Midland, Beaumont, Cary, Forge, Atlanta, Lee's Creek, Raleigh, West End, Navarro, Carlsbad, Roosevelt, Independence, Tuscaloosa, Buckeye, Sacramento, Lewisville, Fresno, College Station, Oxnard, E M Stevens, Brady, San Antonio Baseball Field - University of Texas, West Jordan, Dellcrest, Provo, Costa Mesa, Amarillo, Elizabeth, Ward, Holy Cross of San Antonio School Baseball Field, Rosedale, Madison, Mississippi, Corpus Christi, Vancouver, Baltimore, North Las Vegas, Buffalo, Nebraska, Schnabel, Martin Luther King, Randolph, Lincoln Barkmeyer, San Jose, Seeling, Edison, Glendale, Boise, Milam Square, J F Kennedy Memorial, Surprise, Winston–Salem, Fayetteville, Pasadena, Leon Creek Greenway, Espada, Oakhaven, Crockett Square, New Jersey, McAllen, San Antonio Softball Field - University of Texas, Pytel, Virginia, Pittman-Sullivan, Anaheim, Pershing, Dayton, North Charleston, Wichita, Mesquite, Miami Gardens, Indianapolis, Toledo, Lowell, Stamford, Chula Vista, Dawson Massacre Historical Monument, Chicago, Padre, Santa Maria, Fort Wayne, SBC Center, Michigan, Balcones Heights, Cornerstone Christian School Football Field and Track, Worcester, Palm Bay, Paterson, Ventura, Durham, Pickwell, Hutchins, Bakersfield, Lancaster, McAllister, Northwood, Windsor, Richmond, Augusta, Kentucky, Renton, Woodbridge, Panther Spring, Nelson W Wolff San Antonio Municipal, Fullerton, Palo Alto Terrace, Pomona, Lakeland, Simi Valley, El Monte, Brooks, Montgomery, La Villita, Denton, Texas, Salt Lake City, Northridge, Rochester, Kenwood, Cuellar, Strauss, Escondido, South San, Lexington, Austin, San Angelo, Milwaukee, Little Rock, Anchorage, Arkansas, Cincinnati, Romana, Clearwater, Texas Military Institute, South Side Lions, Chattanooga, Reno, Billings, Joliet, Vidaurri, New Hampshire, Centeno, Huntsville, Lang Field, Santa Ana, Walker Ranch Heritage, Tallahassee, Jacksonville, Cambridge, Overland Park, California, Lockwood, Commanders House, Oakland, Lafayette, Kallison, Rockford, Allentown, Pletz County, Davie, Long Beach, Glen Oaks, St. Louis, San Mateo, Gilbert, Hugo Lenzt, Lackland Terrace, Yturri-Edmunds Historic, Converse, Concepcion, Tulsa, Inglewood, Utah, Kansas City, League City, Norfolk, Coral Springs, Las Cruces, Akron, San Antonio Botanical Garden, Division, Kansas, Athens, Olympia, Mahncke, Oklahoma City, Berkeley, Garza, Miramar, Los Angeles, Ohio, Las Vegas, Lakewood, Concord, Gainesville, Thornton, Baton Rouge, Hemisfair, Mobile, Pearland, Denver, Frech Creek, Copernicus, Abilene, North Dakota, Visalia, Corona, West Palm Beach, Elgin, Southcross, Gustafson - Northside, Montana, Friesenhahn, King William, Salem, McKinney, Oklahoma, Levi Strauss, Kingsborough, Aurora, Scottsdale, Orlando, Alamo, Houston, Birmingham, Cedar Rapids, Waterbury, Ann Arbor, Rittiman Creek, Westminster, San Francisco, Alexandria, Millers Pond, South Bend, Harry B Orem, San Juan Brady, Elmendorf Lake, Irving, Tempe, Vallejo, South San Pedro, Acme, Kirby, Louisiana, Westwood Village, Clovis, Hampton, Victorville, Morrill, Harlandale, Warren, Santa Clara, New Orleans, Antonian, Murrieta, Detroit, Moreno Valley, Springfield, San Antonio Missions National Historical, Fort Collins, Woodlawn, Harmony Hills Community, Peoria, Seattle, Pittsburgh, Albuquerque, Northwest Little League - Senior, Chapman-Cowles Fountain and Sculpture, Rancho Cucamonga, Plano, Plaza de las Islas, West Valley City, Boston, Palo Alto, South Dakota, Villa Coronado, Mission Concepcion, Torrance, Cleveland, Connecticut, Salinas, Colorado, Saint Timothy, Pembroke Pines, Allen, San Antonio, Fort Lauderdale, Nashville, Salado, Clinton, Northeast Preserve, Pearsall, Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church Athletic Field, Naperville, Stillman, Live Oak, Grand Rapids, Santa Rosa, Rialto, E M Stevens Field, Manchester, Fontana, V J Keefe, Phoenix, Judson, Washington, Blossom, Saint Paul, Ojeda, Madison Square, Gilbert Garza, Jackson, Eugene, Waco, Evansville, Iowa, Olathe, Columbia, Fremont, Amistad, Dignowity, Sandy Springs, Oceanside, Newport News, Arvada, Yonkers, Holy Cross, Clarksville, North Carolina, Norman, Irvine, Louisville, New York, Tobin, Fairfield, Minnesota, Southwest, Roseville, Broken Arrow, Father Timothy Benavides, Huntington Beach
local marketing ideas for small business
#local#online#marketing#agency#for#small#businesses#ideas#restaurants#business#solutions#strategies#and#tactics
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Guide to local marketing for small businesses in Olmos Park city of san antonio
Ideas and solutions on marketing to local businesses strategies and tactics are best for local marketing campaigns to small business and restaurants, suitable for owner, consultant and agency near me especially if you're from stadium or city parks of John H Sterling Memorial, Charleston, Stockton, Indiana, Brown, San Diego, Garland, Brownsville, Hererra, Lindbergh, Hialeah, Hartford, Kennedy, Onslow, Sunset Hills, Collins Garden, Midland, Beaumont, Cary, Forge, Atlanta, Lee's Creek, Raleigh, West End, Navarro, Carlsbad, Roosevelt, Independence, Tuscaloosa, Buckeye, Sacramento, Lewisville, Fresno, College Station, Oxnard, E M Stevens, Brady, San Antonio Baseball Field - University of Texas, West Jordan, Dellcrest, Provo, Costa Mesa, Amarillo, Elizabeth, Ward, Holy Cross of San Antonio School Baseball Field, Rosedale, Madison, Mississippi, Corpus Christi, Vancouver, Baltimore, North Las Vegas, Buffalo, Nebraska, Schnabel, Martin Luther King, Randolph, Lincoln Barkmeyer, San Jose, Seeling, Edison, Glendale, Boise, Milam Square, J F Kennedy Memorial, Surprise, Winston–Salem, Fayetteville, Pasadena, Leon Creek Greenway, Espada, Oakhaven, Crockett Square, New Jersey, McAllen, San Antonio Softball Field - University of Texas, Pytel, Virginia, Pittman-Sullivan, Anaheim, Pershing, Dayton, North Charleston, Wichita, Mesquite, Miami Gardens, Indianapolis, Toledo, Lowell, Stamford, Chula Vista, Dawson Massacre Historical Monument, Chicago, Padre, Santa Maria, Fort Wayne, SBC Center, Michigan, Balcones Heights, Cornerstone Christian School Football Field and Track, Worcester, Palm Bay, Paterson, Ventura, Durham, Pickwell, Hutchins, Bakersfield, Lancaster, McAllister, Northwood, Windsor, Richmond, Augusta, Kentucky, Renton, Woodbridge, Panther Spring, Nelson W Wolff San Antonio Municipal, Fullerton, Palo Alto Terrace, Pomona, Lakeland, Simi Valley, El Monte, Brooks, Montgomery, La Villita, Denton, Texas, Salt Lake City, Northridge, Rochester, Kenwood, Cuellar, Strauss, Escondido, South San, Lexington, Austin, San Angelo, Milwaukee, Little Rock, Anchorage, Arkansas, Cincinnati, Romana, Clearwater, Texas Military Institute, South Side Lions, Chattanooga, Reno, Billings, Joliet, Vidaurri, New Hampshire, Centeno, Huntsville, Lang Field, Santa Ana, Walker Ranch Heritage, Tallahassee, Jacksonville, Cambridge, Overland Park, California, Lockwood, Commanders House, Oakland, Lafayette, Kallison, Rockford, Allentown, Pletz County, Davie, Long Beach, Glen Oaks, St. Louis, San Mateo, Gilbert, Hugo Lenzt, Lackland Terrace, Yturri-Edmunds Historic, Converse, Concepcion, Tulsa, Inglewood, Utah, Kansas City, League City, Norfolk, Coral Springs, Las Cruces, Akron, San Antonio Botanical Garden, Division, Kansas, Athens, Olympia, Mahncke, Oklahoma City, Berkeley, Garza, Miramar, Los Angeles, Ohio, Las Vegas, Lakewood, Concord, Gainesville, Thornton, Baton Rouge, Hemisfair, Mobile, Pearland, Denver, Frech Creek, Copernicus, Abilene, North Dakota, Visalia, Corona, West Palm Beach, Elgin, Southcross, Gustafson - Northside, Montana, Friesenhahn, King William, Salem, McKinney, Oklahoma, Levi Strauss, Kingsborough, Aurora, Scottsdale, Orlando, Alamo, Houston, Birmingham, Cedar Rapids, Waterbury, Ann Arbor, Rittiman Creek, Westminster, San Francisco, Alexandria, Millers Pond, South Bend, Harry B Orem, San Juan Brady, Elmendorf Lake, Irving, Tempe, Vallejo, South San Pedro, Acme, Kirby, Louisiana, Westwood Village, Clovis, Hampton, Victorville, Morrill, Harlandale, Warren, Santa Clara, New Orleans, Antonian, Murrieta, Detroit, Moreno Valley, Springfield, San Antonio Missions National Historical, Fort Collins, Woodlawn, Harmony Hills Community, Peoria, Seattle, Pittsburgh, Albuquerque, Northwest Little League - Senior, Chapman-Cowles Fountain and Sculpture, Rancho Cucamonga, Plano, Plaza de las Islas, West Valley City, Boston, Palo Alto, South Dakota, Villa Coronado, Mission Concepcion, Torrance, Cleveland, Connecticut, Salinas, Colorado, Saint Timothy, Pembroke Pines, Allen, San Antonio, Fort Lauderdale, Nashville, Salado, Clinton, Northeast Preserve, Pearsall, Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church Athletic Field, Naperville, Stillman, Live Oak, Grand Rapids, Santa Rosa, Rialto, E M Stevens Field, Manchester, Fontana, V J Keefe, Phoenix, Judson, Washington, Blossom, Saint Paul, Ojeda, Madison Square, Gilbert Garza, Jackson, Eugene, Waco, Evansville, Iowa, Olathe, Columbia, Fremont, Amistad, Dignowity, Sandy Springs, Oceanside, Newport News, Arvada, Yonkers, Holy Cross, Clarksville, North Carolina, Norman, Irvine, Louisville, New York, Tobin, Fairfield, Minnesota, Southwest, Roseville, Broken Arrow, Father Timothy Benavides, Huntington Beach
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Guide to local marketing for small businesses in Olmos Park city of san antonio
Ideas and solutions on marketing to local businesses strategies and tactics are best for local marketing campaigns to small business and restaurants, suitable for owner, consultant and agency near me especially if you're from stadium or city parks of John H Sterling Memorial, Charleston, Stockton, Indiana, Brown, San Diego, Garland, Brownsville, Hererra, Lindbergh, Hialeah, Hartford, Kennedy, Onslow, Sunset Hills, Collins Garden, Midland, Beaumont, Cary, Forge, Atlanta, Lee's Creek, Raleigh, West End, Navarro, Carlsbad, Roosevelt, Independence, Tuscaloosa, Buckeye, Sacramento, Lewisville, Fresno, College Station, Oxnard, E M Stevens, Brady, San Antonio Baseball Field - University of Texas, West Jordan, Dellcrest, Provo, Costa Mesa, Amarillo, Elizabeth, Ward, Holy Cross of San Antonio School Baseball Field, Rosedale, Madison, Mississippi, Corpus Christi, Vancouver, Baltimore, North Las Vegas, Buffalo, Nebraska, Schnabel, Martin Luther King, Randolph, Lincoln Barkmeyer, San Jose, Seeling, Edison, Glendale, Boise, Milam Square, J F Kennedy Memorial, Surprise, Winston–Salem, Fayetteville, Pasadena, Leon Creek Greenway, Espada, Oakhaven, Crockett Square, New Jersey, McAllen, San Antonio Softball Field - University of Texas, Pytel, Virginia, Pittman-Sullivan, Anaheim, Pershing, Dayton, North Charleston, Wichita, Mesquite, Miami Gardens, Indianapolis, Toledo, Lowell, Stamford, Chula Vista, Dawson Massacre Historical Monument, Chicago, Padre, Santa Maria, Fort Wayne, SBC Center, Michigan, Balcones Heights, Cornerstone Christian School Football Field and Track, Worcester, Palm Bay, Paterson, Ventura, Durham, Pickwell, Hutchins, Bakersfield, Lancaster, McAllister, Northwood, Windsor, Richmond, Augusta, Kentucky, Renton, Woodbridge, Panther Spring, Nelson W Wolff San Antonio Municipal, Fullerton, Palo Alto Terrace, Pomona, Lakeland, Simi Valley, El Monte, Brooks, Montgomery, La Villita, Denton, Texas, Salt Lake City, Northridge, Rochester, Kenwood, Cuellar, Strauss, Escondido, South San, Lexington, Austin, San Angelo, Milwaukee, Little Rock, Anchorage, Arkansas, Cincinnati, Romana, Clearwater, Texas Military Institute, South Side Lions, Chattanooga, Reno, Billings, Joliet, Vidaurri, New Hampshire, Centeno, Huntsville, Lang Field, Santa Ana, Walker Ranch Heritage, Tallahassee, Jacksonville, Cambridge, Overland Park, California, Lockwood, Commanders House, Oakland, Lafayette, Kallison, Rockford, Allentown, Pletz County, Davie, Long Beach, Glen Oaks, St. Louis, San Mateo, Gilbert, Hugo Lenzt, Lackland Terrace, Yturri-Edmunds Historic, Converse, Concepcion, Tulsa, Inglewood, Utah, Kansas City, League City, Norfolk, Coral Springs, Las Cruces, Akron, San Antonio Botanical Garden, Division, Kansas, Athens, Olympia, Mahncke, Oklahoma City, Berkeley, Garza, Miramar, Los Angeles, Ohio, Las Vegas, Lakewood, Concord, Gainesville, Thornton, Baton Rouge, Hemisfair, Mobile, Pearland, Denver, Frech Creek, Copernicus, Abilene, North Dakota, Visalia, Corona, West Palm Beach, Elgin, Southcross, Gustafson - Northside, Montana, Friesenhahn, King William, Salem, McKinney, Oklahoma, Levi Strauss, Kingsborough, Aurora, Scottsdale, Orlando, Alamo, Houston, Birmingham, Cedar Rapids, Waterbury, Ann Arbor, Rittiman Creek, Westminster, San Francisco, Alexandria, Millers Pond, South Bend, Harry B Orem, San Juan Brady, Elmendorf Lake, Irving, Tempe, Vallejo, South San Pedro, Acme, Kirby, Louisiana, Westwood Village, Clovis, Hampton, Victorville, Morrill, Harlandale, Warren, Santa Clara, New Orleans, Antonian, Murrieta, Detroit, Moreno Valley, Springfield, San Antonio Missions National Historical, Fort Collins, Woodlawn, Harmony Hills Community, Peoria, Seattle, Pittsburgh, Albuquerque, Northwest Little League - Senior, Chapman-Cowles Fountain and Sculpture, Rancho Cucamonga, Plano, Plaza de las Islas, West Valley City, Boston, Palo Alto, South Dakota, Villa Coronado, Mission Concepcion, Torrance, Cleveland, Connecticut, Salinas, Colorado, Saint Timothy, Pembroke Pines, Allen, San Antonio, Fort Lauderdale, Nashville, Salado, Clinton, Northeast Preserve, Pearsall, Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church Athletic Field, Naperville, Stillman, Live Oak, Grand Rapids, Santa Rosa, Rialto, E M Stevens Field, Manchester, Fontana, V J Keefe, Phoenix, Judson, Washington, Blossom, Saint Paul, Ojeda, Madison Square, Gilbert Garza, Jackson, Eugene, Waco, Evansville, Iowa, Olathe, Columbia, Fremont, Amistad, Dignowity, Sandy Springs, Oceanside, Newport News, Arvada, Yonkers, Holy Cross, Clarksville, North Carolina, Norman, Irvine, Louisville, New York, Tobin, Fairfield, Minnesota, Southwest, Roseville, Broken Arrow, Father Timothy Benavides, Huntington Beach
local business marketing services
#local#online#marketing#agency#for#small#businesses#ideas#restaurants#business#solutions#strategies#and#tactics
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Guide to local marketing for small businesses in Olmos Park city of san antonio
Ideas and solutions on marketing to local businesses strategies and tactics are best for local marketing campaigns to small business and restaurants, suitable for owner, consultant and agency near me especially if you're from stadium or city parks of John H Sterling Memorial, Charleston, Stockton, Indiana, Brown, San Diego, Garland, Brownsville, Hererra, Lindbergh, Hialeah, Hartford, Kennedy, Onslow, Sunset Hills, Collins Garden, Midland, Beaumont, Cary, Forge, Atlanta, Lee's Creek, Raleigh, West End, Navarro, Carlsbad, Roosevelt, Independence, Tuscaloosa, Buckeye, Sacramento, Lewisville, Fresno, College Station, Oxnard, E M Stevens, Brady, San Antonio Baseball Field - University of Texas, West Jordan, Dellcrest, Provo, Costa Mesa, Amarillo, Elizabeth, Ward, Holy Cross of San Antonio School Baseball Field, Rosedale, Madison, Mississippi, Corpus Christi, Vancouver, Baltimore, North Las Vegas, Buffalo, Nebraska, Schnabel, Martin Luther King, Randolph, Lincoln Barkmeyer, San Jose, Seeling, Edison, Glendale, Boise, Milam Square, J F Kennedy Memorial, Surprise, Winston–Salem, Fayetteville, Pasadena, Leon Creek Greenway, Espada, Oakhaven, Crockett Square, New Jersey, McAllen, San Antonio Softball Field - University of Texas, Pytel, Virginia, Pittman-Sullivan, Anaheim, Pershing, Dayton, North Charleston, Wichita, Mesquite, Miami Gardens, Indianapolis, Toledo, Lowell, Stamford, Chula Vista, Dawson Massacre Historical Monument, Chicago, Padre, Santa Maria, Fort Wayne, SBC Center, Michigan, Balcones Heights, Cornerstone Christian School Football Field and Track, Worcester, Palm Bay, Paterson, Ventura, Durham, Pickwell, Hutchins, Bakersfield, Lancaster, McAllister, Northwood, Windsor, Richmond, Augusta, Kentucky, Renton, Woodbridge, Panther Spring, Nelson W Wolff San Antonio Municipal, Fullerton, Palo Alto Terrace, Pomona, Lakeland, Simi Valley, El Monte, Brooks, Montgomery, La Villita, Denton, Texas, Salt Lake City, Northridge, Rochester, Kenwood, Cuellar, Strauss, Escondido, South San, Lexington, Austin, San Angelo, Milwaukee, Little Rock, Anchorage, Arkansas, Cincinnati, Romana, Clearwater, Texas Military Institute, South Side Lions, Chattanooga, Reno, Billings, Joliet, Vidaurri, New Hampshire, Centeno, Huntsville, Lang Field, Santa Ana, Walker Ranch Heritage, Tallahassee, Jacksonville, Cambridge, Overland Park, California, Lockwood, Commanders House, Oakland, Lafayette, Kallison, Rockford, Allentown, Pletz County, Davie, Long Beach, Glen Oaks, St. Louis, San Mateo, Gilbert, Hugo Lenzt, Lackland Terrace, Yturri-Edmunds Historic, Converse, Concepcion, Tulsa, Inglewood, Utah, Kansas City, League City, Norfolk, Coral Springs, Las Cruces, Akron, San Antonio Botanical Garden, Division, Kansas, Athens, Olympia, Mahncke, Oklahoma City, Berkeley, Garza, Miramar, Los Angeles, Ohio, Las Vegas, Lakewood, Concord, Gainesville, Thornton, Baton Rouge, Hemisfair, Mobile, Pearland, Denver, Frech Creek, Copernicus, Abilene, North Dakota, Visalia, Corona, West Palm Beach, Elgin, Southcross, Gustafson - Northside, Montana, Friesenhahn, King William, Salem, McKinney, Oklahoma, Levi Strauss, Kingsborough, Aurora, Scottsdale, Orlando, Alamo, Houston, Birmingham, Cedar Rapids, Waterbury, Ann Arbor, Rittiman Creek, Westminster, San Francisco, Alexandria, Millers Pond, South Bend, Harry B Orem, San Juan Brady, Elmendorf Lake, Irving, Tempe, Vallejo, South San Pedro, Acme, Kirby, Louisiana, Westwood Village, Clovis, Hampton, Victorville, Morrill, Harlandale, Warren, Santa Clara, New Orleans, Antonian, Murrieta, Detroit, Moreno Valley, Springfield, San Antonio Missions National Historical, Fort Collins, Woodlawn, Harmony Hills Community, Peoria, Seattle, Pittsburgh, Albuquerque, Northwest Little League - Senior, Chapman-Cowles Fountain and Sculpture, Rancho Cucamonga, Plano, Plaza de las Islas, West Valley City, Boston, Palo Alto, South Dakota, Villa Coronado, Mission Concepcion, Torrance, Cleveland, Connecticut, Salinas, Colorado, Saint Timothy, Pembroke Pines, Allen, San Antonio, Fort Lauderdale, Nashville, Salado, Clinton, Northeast Preserve, Pearsall, Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church Athletic Field, Naperville, Stillman, Live Oak, Grand Rapids, Santa Rosa, Rialto, E M Stevens Field, Manchester, Fontana, V J Keefe, Phoenix, Judson, Washington, Blossom, Saint Paul, Ojeda, Madison Square, Gilbert Garza, Jackson, Eugene, Waco, Evansville, Iowa, Olathe, Columbia, Fremont, Amistad, Dignowity, Sandy Springs, Oceanside, Newport News, Arvada, Yonkers, Holy Cross, Clarksville, North Carolina, Norman, Irvine, Louisville, New York, Tobin, Fairfield, Minnesota, Southwest, Roseville, Broken Arrow, Father Timothy Benavides, Huntington Beach
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