#The Elizabeth Freeman Center
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A year of Texas court chaos: Inside the fall of a powerhouse Houston bankruptcy judge
Usually confident to the point of coming across self-righteous, Houston Bankruptcy Judge David Jones’ voice quivered as he stated repeatedly, “I don’t know. I don’t know. I don’t know what is going to happen next. I just don’t know.”
The chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit had just published notice that it was investigating possible misconduct by Judge Jones over allegations that he had been involved in a multi-year secret romance with a former bankruptcy partner, Elizabeth Freeman, at Jackson Walker.
The Dallas-based firm had been paid more than $20 million — fees often approved by Judge Jones — for its role in dozens of high-profile bankruptcies in which Jones served as judge or mediator.
“I’m going to send a letter tomorrow announcing that I am resigning,” Jones told The Texas Lawbook in an interview one year ago Tuesday.
“I didn’t think my personal life was anyone’s business. We never discussed cases. It never impacted a single decision I made. But I guess I have to resign. I have no idea what I am going to do next.”
Jones, who handled more large corporate bankruptcies from 2019 to 2023 — including North Texas-based companies such as Neiman Marcus and J.C. Penney — than any other judge in the U.S., officially resigned Oct. 15, 2023.
The 365 days since have been pure chaos in the Houston bankruptcy courts, which is one of the three busiest courts in the nation for business bankruptcies.
“The whole thing is a mess, a complete fiasco,” said Royal Furgeson, the former dean at the University of North Texas at Dallas College of Law.
“The stress that Judge Jones and this situation has created for his fellow judges and for the lawyers and law firms is tremendous. The future of some excellent Texas lawyers and law firms is at risk. And it all could have been easily prevented by some simple disclosures and recusals.”
The fallout during the past 12 months has been intense, including:
The U.S. Trustee, the federal watchdog over bankruptcy proceedings, is seeking to force Jackson Walker to return between $18 million to $22 million in legal fees it was paid in 33 different bankruptcy cases involving Freeman in which Jones was either the judge or the mediator.
The case is scheduled to go to trial Dec. 16.
The U.S. Justice Department has opened a criminal investigation into the matter, ordering many of the lawyers and Houston federal court officials involved to preserve their records.
As a result, Jones took the Fifth Amendment against self-incrimination when asked about his relationship with Freeman during a deposition earlier this month.
Two federal lawsuits brought by creditors in cases handled by Judge Jones and that involved Freeman accuse the judge, Freeman, Jackson Walker and the law firm Kirkland & Ellis of a conspiracy to favor debtors at the expense of creditors and to funnel tens of millions of dollars in legal fees to the defendants.
Two investment firms, Fidelity and Apollo Global Management, filed court documents three months ago in Sanchez Energy’s bankruptcy claiming they would not have accepted a 2020 settlement agreement pushed by Judge Jones, who mediated the dispute in which Freeman was a lawyer for the debtor, Sanchez, which is now called Mesquite Energy.
The two lenders want to participate in the claw back of fees against Jackson Walker.
And just three weeks ago, Houston Bankruptcy Judge Marvin Isgur, whom Jones has described as his mentor and best friend, referred Jackson Walker to a federal district judge to consider disciplinary action for ethical breaches that Judge Isgur said “defiled the very temple of justice” by not disclosing the relationship between Freeman and Jones years earlier.
“What we have here is a scandal of epic proportions, all brought about by failures to disclose,” Nancy Rapoport, former dean of the University of Houston Law Center and a bankruptcy law expert, wrote in a law review article for Emory University’s Bankruptcy Law Developments Journal.
“Judge Jones absolutely should have recused himself from cases involving Ms. Freeman. Ms. Freeman should have disclosed the relationship, and she shouldn’t have appeared in cases assigned to her romantic partner. Jackson Walker should have disclosed the relationship once it became aware of it (and it should have done more than take Ms. Freeman’s word for it that the relationship had ended).”
“It’s hard to avoid the conjecture that the lawyers who should have disclosed chose not to do so at least in part because of the financial and strategic benefits of being employed in those cases,” wrote Rapoport, who is now a law professor at the University of Nevada Las Vegas.
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Dallas lawyer Randy Johnston, an expert on legal ethics, said that “the facts in this case are devastating.”
“What happened here are almost certainly clear ethical violations and breach of fiduciary duties by the judge, the lawyers and Jackson Walker,” Johnston said.
“If I was a Jackson Walker lawyer right now, I would need a change of underwear.”
Multiple efforts to seek comments from Jackson Walker, Judge Jones and Freeman were unsuccessful.
Jones has argued that he has judicial immunity from all legal claims.
Jackson Walker has claimed that Freeman lied to them about her relationship with the judge and that it did nothing wrong.
Jackson Walker has also argued that if the U.S. Trustee or attorneys in that office knew of the relationship before it was publicly reported and failed to act, it cannot now try to claw back Jackson Walker’s legal fees.
Legal experts say the questions in nearly all of the related cases come down to this:
When did the lawyers know about the relationship between Jones and Freeman, and what, if anything, did they do about it?
The entire scandal came to light when Michael Van Deelen, who owned 30,000 shares of McDermott stock when the company filed for bankruptcy in 2020, filed a lawsuit last October accusing Judge Jones and Freeman of having a secret relationship.
He accused the defendants of a “sprawling tapestry of ethical lapses” that led to his stock being worthless and Jackson Walker and Kirkland — debtor’s counsel for McDermott — of profiting millions of dollars from the alleged conspiracy.
He’s claiming mental anguish and financial loss.
The case was transferred to Western District of Texas Chief District Judge Alia Moses, who dismissed the lawsuit in August on grounds that Van Deelen did not have legal standing.
“None of the foregoing discussion redeems Jones’ misconduct,” Chief Judge Moses wrote.
“The Jones-Freeman relationship presented a glaring appearance of impropriety. Whether through hubris, greed, or profound dereliction of duty, Jones flouted these statutory and ethical requirements by presiding over dozens of cases from which he was obviously disqualified.”
In September, Judge Isgur dealt Jackson Walker a potentially devastating blow when he signed a five-page finding of facts that stated,
“It appears that Jackson Walker breached its own ethical duties after it learned of the relationship. Breaches by the firm itself defiled the very temple of justice.”
“Throughout, it is apparent that Jackson Walker concluded that it had no duty of candor to this court,” Judge Isgur wrote, in referring the case to the chief judge of the Southern District of Texas for possible sanctions against the firm and its lawyers.
“It is intolerable that Jackson Walker protected the Jackson Walker firm to the exclusion of its inherent professional responsibilities.”
Southern District of Texas Chief Judge Randy Crane has appointed U.S. District Judge Lee Rosenthal to handle the ethics inquiry.
“There is no question but that the entire Southern District bench is under scrutiny on how it handles this,” said University of Texas law professor Jay Westbrook.
“It is hard to know how far this goes, but it is well within Judge Rosenthal’s reach to suspend or even disbar specific lawyers from practicing law in the Southern District, which would be potentially devastating for Jackson Walker.”
“I believe there is going to be some disciplinary measures taken,” he noted.
Johnston, the Dallas lawyer, agrees.
“There is no question that the rules of ethics require the judge, the lawyer and the firm to disclose this relationship or recuse themselves, and none did,” he said.
“I cannot imagine that the State Bar of Texas is not going to be investigating and bringing its own disciplinary proceedings.”
Furgeson, who is also a retired federal judge, said it is difficult to understand “how it could all go this sideways” for Jones, Freeman and Jackson Walker.
“Judge Jones must have just had a blind spot,” Furgeson said.
“I don’t know why it did not occur to him that he was in so much jeopardy here. It is all very sad.”
At a glance
Key developments in the Southern District of Texas bankruptcy court scandal
2011: David Jones leaves Houston law firm Porter Hedges after 19 years as a corporate bankruptcy lawyer to become a bankruptcy judge in the Southern District of Texas. Jones later hires Porter Hedges bankruptcy associate Elizabeth Freeman as his law clerk.
2012: Jones and Freeman each file for divorce.
2015: Jones is selected chief bankruptcy judge for the SDTX.
2016: Jones begins implementing a series of substantive reforms to create a special two-judge panel in the SDTX to handle the biggest and most complicated corporate restructurings, to provide parties increased access to court officials and to make procedures more transparent and predictable. The idea is to create a structure to convince larger businesses to file their complex bankruptcies and restructuring in Texas instead of New York or Delaware.
2018: Freeman leaves the employ of Jones and the SDTX to join Jackson Walker as a lawyer in its bankruptcy practice. She is promoted to equity partner Jan. 1, 2021.
2018: Kirkland & Ellis, widely regarded as the nation’s leading corporate bankruptcy law firm, chooses Dallas-based Jackson Walker to be its primary local counsel in more than 40 large business bankruptcies filed in Texas.
March 2020: The Covid-19 pandemic hits. Stay-at-home orders are implemented. Business revenues plummet. Oil and gas prices collapse. Scores of large businesses, including Neiman Marcus, J.C. Penney Company and CEC Entertainment (parent company of Chuck E. Cheese), file for bankruptcy protection in Houston. The Texas Lawbook publishes an article crediting Jones with saving the business bankruptcy law practice in Texas.
March 6, 2021: Jackson Walker receives a tip that Freeman is in a romantic relationship with Jones. Freeman confirms prior relationship with Jones but denies a current relationship.
March 8, 2021: Jackson Walker informs Jones of the allegation.
Feb. 1, 2022: A Jackson Walker partner learns that Jones-Freeman relationship is ongoing.
March 29, 2022: A Jackson Walker partner confronts Freeman, who admits the relationship is active.
December 2022: Freeman leaves Jackson Walker to start her own law firm.
Oct. 4, 2023: Michael Van Deelen, a shareholder who lost everything in the McDermott International bankruptcy handled by Jones, files a federal fraud and breach of fiduciary duties lawsuit accusing Jones and Freeman of being involved in a secret romantic relationship. Jackson Walker and Kirkland & Ellis are subsequently added as defendants in the conspiracy allegation.
Oct. 5, 2023: In an interview with The Texas Lawbook, Jones acknowledges the relationship with Freeman, saying he kept it private because he “thought it was no one’s business.” He also claims the relationship had no impact on any official decisions he made.
Oct. 13, 2023: Fifth Circuit Chief Judge Priscilla Richman announces the court was conducting an ethics probe into allegations against Jones, stating that he “ran roughshod over several canons of the Code of Conduct for U.S. Judges.”
Oct. 15, 2023: Jones resigns.
Nov. 3, 2023: U.S. Trustee announces 26 bankruptcy cases tainted by Jones’ relationship with Freeman. That number has now grown to 33 cases. The Trustee states it may demand Freeman’s old law firm, Jackson Walker, pay back millions of dollars it was paid in legal fees in those cases.
Nov. 13, 2023: Jackson Walker claims Freeman misled the firm about her relationship with Jones.
March 4, 2024: U.S. Trustee files official documents seeking to claw back at least $18 million in legal fees paid to Jackson Walker, claiming the firm acted in “bad faith.”
March 8: Jackson Walker claims there that there is zero evidence that any bankruptcy decisions were impacted by Jones’s relationship with Freeman.
March 24: Jackson Walker files in court an internal firm memo from 2021 showing that Freeman lied to firm leaders about her relationship with Jones.
July 11: Jones files a motion to dismiss, claiming he had judicial immunity for all his official acts and duties.
July 18: SDTX Chief Judge Eduardo Rodriguez swears in former Weil Gotshal partner Alfredo Perez as Houston’s newest bankruptcy judge, replacing Jones.
Aug. 15: Two investment firms, Fidelity and Apollo Global Management, file documents in the Sanchez Energy bankruptcy claiming they would not have accepted a 2020 settlement agreement pushed by Jones, who mediated the dispute in which Freeman was a lawyer for Sanchez, which is now called Mesquite Energy. The two lenders say the settlement agreement cost them hundreds of millions of dollars, and they want to participate in the claw back of fees against Jackson Walker.
Aug. 16: Western District of Texas Chief District Judge Alia Moses dismisses lawsuit brought by Van Deelen, ruling that he does not have legal standing to bring the lawsuit. But she described the conduct of Jones, Freeman and Jackson Walker as “egregious.” The judge states that, “Litigants should not have to wonder whether the judge overseeing their case stands to gain from ruling against them: but in Jones’s courtroom, they did.”
Sept. 20: SDTX Bankruptcy Judge Marvin Isgur, stating that Jackson Walker “breached its own ethical duties” and “defiled the very temple of justice” when it hid the romantic relationship between Jones and Freeman, refers the matter to SDTX Chief Judge Randy Crane for possible disciplinary proceedings against Jackson Walker lawyers. Chief Judge Crane assigns the disciplinary inquiry to U.S. District judge Lee Rosenthal of Houston. In a five-page memo, Isgur states that Jackson Walker partners knew about Freeman’s relationship with Jones in 2021 but made no disclosures to its clients or opposing counsel as required.
Sept. 24: Kirkland files its first Chapter 11 for a debtor in the SDTX since Judge Jones’ resignation but uses Bracewell — not Jackson Walker — as local counsel in the Vertex Energy bankruptcy.
Oct. 11: SDTX complex bankruptcy case manager Albert Alonzo, who worked for Jones for nearly a decade, tells the U.S. Trustee during a deposition that he knew about the Jones-Freeman relationship before it became public in October 2023.
Dec. 16: The U.S. Trustee’s case seeking a claw back of legal fees against Jackson Walker is scheduled to start trial.
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Taylor Mansion-Lakehurst
193 Bratenahl Rd.
Bratenahl , OH
James and Elizabeth Fitch purchased 55-acres from George and Hanna Freeman on February 13, 1852. The estate was named “Brookwood” and consisted of their home plus five outbuildings. Henry and Eliza Clark acquired 20 acres on the Fitch property's western portion on June 24, 1862. They built a country place at the foot of Doan Street (East 105th Street then Bratenahl Road) in 1862. It included an ornate Federal Italianate style mansion, a carriage house, stables, and even a water tower. The landscape featured a winding driveway through a wooded area, vast green spaces, and lush gardens. The house included gaily striped awnings and vaguely Italianate ornamentation. Frederick and Mary Louise Kinsman acquired the estate from Eliza Clark on May 10, 1896. Joseph Marvin acquired the property on June 18, 1888.
Frank and Sarah Robison acquired the twenty-acre property on November 8, 1893. They demolished the Clark home to make room to build their new home. The grand view of the lake from three sides of the house likely closed the deal. The estate, including a thirty-four room home, a water tower, a carriage house, and a stable, was among the largest in the area. California privet hedges planted in front of the carriage house and stable and along the lake's bank gave the name Villa Hedges. The gracious home, with its beautiful gardens, provided an ideal setting for entertaining friends and associates.
Sophia Strong Taylor acquired Villa Hedges on October 19, 1915. The estate had been reduced to 19 acres but was still the largest parcel of property in the area. Mrs. Taylor razed the Robison home and commissioned Charles Sumner Schneider to design her 26-room home completed in 1918. Lakehurst was an elegant example of Georgian Revival architecture accented with Neo-Adamesque ornamentation. The façade contained seven bays with double-hung six-over-six windows and departed from symmetry with the substitution of a sizeable round-head window in one bay to illuminate a staircase and the addition of a cameo window in another bay. The doorway on the south elevation contained a six-panel door with tracery fanlight and half-length sidelights. Sophia Taylor constructed an enormous lily pond, a peacock house, and excellent docking facilities. White peacocks roamed her eighteen-acre lawn.
Edward Francis Hoban, sixth Catholic bishop of Cleveland, acquired Lakehurst on July 7, 1943, through the efforts of Eleanor Strong, Sophia Taylor’s sister-in-law, after the property had languished for seven years. The Bishop added a chapel connected to the west elevation of the main house. The chapel had stained-glass windows from 18th century France, a multi-colored marble floor laid in a geometric pattern, paneled walls painted with floral motifs, and a ceiling mural above the altar. Hoban also constructed a one-hole golf course to indulge his love for playing golf. Bishop Clarence G. Issenmann was transferred to Cleveland and lived on the estate after Bishop Hoban became ill.
Sea Gull Inc., represented by attorney Donald D. Smith, acquired the property from James Hickey, Cleveland's bishop, on February 9, 1978. Smith, one of eight bidders, planned to put together a group to finance the remainder to develop the area possibly into a townhouse complex. Lakehurst was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on July 10, 1986. John J. Carney and Betty Jane Kazen acquired the estate from Sea Gull Inc. on December 28, 1987.
Carney and architect Robert Corna made a presentation to preserve the Lakehurst mansion by making it a party center and adding a swimming pool and tennis courts for the use of all residents. The plan had duplex townhouses placed in a staggered arrangement, many with a lake view. The plan also included a seven-story mid-rise building situated next to the mansion for 161 living units. The Planning Commission rejected the plan. John Ferchill and Mike Fratello submitted approved plans for a Lakehurst Planned Residential Development in 1998. The mansion renovation cost proved to be prohibitive, and they demolished the historic mansion in 1999, transforming Lakehurst into a gated community (Lakehurst Drive) of 18 single-family homes off Bratenahl Road in Bratenahl, Ohio. The Taylor Mansion is still listed on the National Register of Historic Places and has not yet been removed, despite its destruction.
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Price: [price_with_discount] (as of [price_update_date] - Details) [ad_1] In The Queer Games Avant-Garde, Bonnie Ruberg presents twenty interviews with twenty-two queer video game developers whose radical, experimental, vibrant, and deeply queer work is driving a momentous shift in the medium of video games. Speaking with insight and candor about their creative practices as well as their politics and passions, these influential and innovative game makers tell stories about their lives and inspirations, the challenges they face, and the ways they understand their places within the wider terrain of video game culture. Their insights go beyond typical conversations about LGBTQ representation in video games or how to improve “diversity” in digital media. Instead, they explore queer game-making practices, the politics of queer independent video games, how queerness can be expressed as an aesthetic practice, the influence of feminist art on their work, and the future of queer video games and technology. These engaging conversations offer a portrait of an influential community that is subverting and redefining the medium of video games by placing queerness front and center. Interviewees: Ryan Rose Aceae, Avery Alder, Jimmy Andrews, Santo Aveiro-Ojeda, Aevee Bee, Tonia B******, Mattie Brice, Nicky Case, Naomi Clark, Mo Cohen, Heather Flowers, Nina Freeman, Jerome Hagen, Kat Jones, Jess Marcotte, Andi McClure, Llaura McGee, Seanna Musgrave, Liz Ryerson, Elizabeth Sampat, Loren Schmidt, Sarah Schoemann, Dietrich Squinkifer, Kara Stone, Emilia Yang, Robert Yang Publisher : Duke University Press (20 March 2020) Language : English Paperback : 288 pages ISBN-10 : 1478006587 ISBN-13 : 978-1478006589 Item Weight : 408 g Dimensions : 15.24 x 2.03 x 22.86 cm Country of Origin : India [ad_2]
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my year in books
read/goal: 50/50
top 10:
How Much of These Hills is Gold, C. Pam Zhang: In my opinion, a contemporary classic. Weaves Chinese myth with stories of the American Gold Rush. Beautiful prose and valuable takeaways re: family, truth, and gender.
A Little Devil in America: Notes on Black Performance, Hanif Abdurraqib: Essay upon essay of mind-plowing poetics and storytelling. Hanif's version of Baldwin's Devil Finds Work. A wide swath of topics from blackface to spades to magic.
Writers & Lovers, Lily King: Came to me at the exact right (or wrong?) time, just when my father passed away. A keenly-observed novel about grief and persona that is something like if Sweetbitter met Normal People.
How to Write an Autobiographical Novel, Alexander Chee: Inspired me to get over myself and just start writing again. The essay on roses absolutely floored me.
Lose Your Mother: A Journey Along the Atlantic Slave Route, Saidiya Hartman: Hard to stomach, but necessary. Foundational for the way I am thinking about neo-slave narratives and speculative historical fiction.
Seek You: A Journey Through American Loneliness, Kristen Radtke: The minute I read this, I added it to the syllabus for my class on women in isolation. Part graphic novel, part longform essay, part research paper, and wholly extraordinary.
The Sonic Color Line: Race and the Cultural Politics of Listening, Jennifer Lynn Stoever: This one's just for me. The burning core at the center of my reading list and the inspiration and model for my scholarship.
The Street, Ann Petry: Read it because of the book above, but an absolute banger of a book. Devastating ending. Would be extraordinary taught alongside Native Son.
The Fifth Season, N.K. Jemisin: This book has everything. Polyamory. Earth-bending. An alien creature frozen inside a giant piece of rock in the middle of the ocean. Love this woman, love seeing Blackness-as-default in sci-fi novels.
Fun Home, Alison Bechdel: You read it in high school for a good reason. A true exemplar of the genre and a fascinating way to teach non-chronological storytelling.
rest below the cut
Camera Lucida, Roland Barthes
The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, V.E. Schwab
Brothers & Keepers, John Edgar Wideman
Bunk: The True Story of Hoaxes, Hucksters, Humbug, Plagiarists, Forgeries, and Phonies, Kevin Young
Ninth House, Leigh Bardugo
House of Earth and Blood, Sarah J. Maas
Children of Virtue and Vengeance, Tomi Adeyemi
Emergence of Cinematic Time: Modernity, Contingency, the Archive, Mary Ann Doane
An American Sunrise, Joy Harjo
Nabokov's Favorite Word is Mauve: What the Numbers Reveal About the Classics, Bestsellers, and Our Own Writing, Ben Blatt
Rule of Wolves, Leigh Bardugo
The Lightning Thief, Rick Riordan
Savage Preservation: The Ethnographic Origins of Modern Media Technology, Brian Hochman
The Obelisk Gate, N.K. Jemisin
The Stone Sky, N.K. Jemisin
People We Meet on Vacation, Emily Henry
The Gentleman's Guide to Vice & Virtue, Mackenzi Lee
The Yellow Wallpaper, Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Legendborn, Tracy Deonn
Josh & Hazel's Guide to Not Dating, Christina Lauren
In Cold Blood, Truman Capote
The Race of Sound: Listening, Timbre, and Vocality in African American Music, Nina Sun Eidsheim
One Last Stop, Casey McQuiston
One to Watch, Kate Stayman-London
Time Binds: Queer Temporalities, Queer Histories, Elizabeth Freeman
Gideon the Ninth, Tamsyn Muir
Echo and Narcissus: Women's Voices in Classical Hollywood Cinema, Amy Lawrence
An Extraordinary Union, Alyssa Cole
It Ends With Us, Colleen Hoover
Harrow the Ninth, Tamsyn Muir
Algorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce Racism, Safiya Noble
Listening in: Radio and the American Imagination, Susan J. Douglass
How to Fail at Flirting, Denise Williams
The Flat-Share, Beth O'Leary
Radio Voices: American Broadcasting, 1922-1952, Michele Hilmes
Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art, Scott McCloud
The Souls of Black Folk, W.E.B. Du Bois
The Love Hypothesis, Ali Hazelwood
The Road Trip, Beth O'Leary
We Ride Upon Sticks, Quan Barry
#reading list#reading recommendations#of foolish and wise#what i read#2021 books#2021 reads#bookworm#bookish#bookblr#bibliophile#bibliolifestyle
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24/7 Dance Convention, Atlanta, GA: RESULTS
High Scores by Age:
Sidekick Solo
1st: Charlotte Brayman-’Wonderful World’
2nd: Emersyn Lawson-’Beautiful Things’
2nd: Khylie Wilkerson-’Proud Mary’
3rd: Audrey Mikkelson-’Shake the Room’
4th: Brenna Ferrell-’Showstopper’
Mini Solo
1st: Mia Clark-’Dem Beats’
1st: Carrigan Paylor-’Orange Colored Sky’
2nd: Elizabeth Scott Lanier-’Bitter Earth’
2nd: Kaylee Schwamb-’See Me Now’
3rd: Ashley Otano-’Dark Matter’
3rd: AnaKate Danner-’Malfunction’
3rd: Ella Barnes-’Nobody’s Watching’
3rd: Layla Karadchy-’Tomorrow’
4th: Jasmine Pando-’Amelia’
4th: Georgia Beth Peters-’Come Together’
4th: Allie Plott-’Fire’
4th: Savy Luetchtefeld-’Sound of Silence’
5th: Lauren Fenton-’Boogie Shoes’
5th: Cora Wunder-’Faith’
5th: Rudie Bolton-’Still Don’t Know My Name’
6th: Isabella Shortridge-’In This Shirt’
7th: Bella Smith-’Against The Music’
7th: Sami Nix-’Bridges’
7th: Rose Mangan-’Make Someone Happy’
7th: Ruby Wilkes Petty-’Once Upon Another Time’
8th: Alessandra Gauger-’Morning’
9th: Kenzie Wagoner-’Recharge’
9th: Laila Taylor-’Riot Rhythm’
10th: Belle Brining-’Ain’t to proud to beg’
10th: Malea Moore-’Big Time’
10th: Gabi Brown-’Brown Skin Girl’
10th: Sydney Lawrence-’Everybody Wants To Rule the World’
10th: Lyrah Atkins-’Keep It Moving’
10th: Vivian Liu-’Opportunity’
10th: Channing Jones-’Tight Rope’
Junior Solo
1st: Giselle Gandarilla-’All Human Beings’
2nd: Nicholas Moreno-’Blue Lips’
2nd: Emme James Anderson-’Resume’
3rd: Mia Doyle-’Designated Harmony’
3rd: Brinkley Pittman-’Gravity’
3rd: Belle Richardson-’Seven Birds’
3rd: Leila Winker-’Takt’
4th: Addison Bradley-’Dynamite’
4th: Maddie Shaw-’Final Goodbye’
4th: Caroline Powell-’How Rare’
4th: McGowan Howell-’Resurface’
4th: Maely Weaver-’Staggered In a Configuration’
4th: Cadence Lyles-’Warrior Queen’
5th: Amanda Fenton-’Devil In Disguise’
5th: Emma Martin-’Dreams’
5th: Leah Midgett-’Mirror Mirror’
5th: Morgan Belyeu-’Older’
5th: Vanessa Johnson-’Over The Rainbow’
6th: Kaden Brown-’Resolution’
7th: Mollie Mikkelson-’Goodbye Yellow Brick Road’
7th: Gracie Elder-’No More Tears’
7th: Sloane Dawson-’TEA’
7th: Scarlett Liu-’Unaccompanied’
7th: Sydney Martin-’Vibeology’
8th: Isabella Burdo-’Dance, Dance, Dance’
8th: Estella Guzman-’No Contamination’
8th: Alora Freeman-’Sing to the Moon’
9th: Lila Jane Meadows-’Friend Like Me’
9th: Ever Martin-’Long Time Traveler’
9th: Ensley King-’Ruby Blue’
9th: Gracie Hawkins-’Smokestacks’
10th: MacKenzie Meissner-’Be Strong’
10th: Kinsleigh Gullette-’Despicable’
10th: Pierce Bevans-’Float’
10th: Stella Adamson-’Gamzatti Variation��
10th: Sophia Bell-’Waving Through A Window’
10th: Taylor Dillard-’Way Down We Go’
Teen Solo
1st: Brady Farrar-’Once More’
2nd: Oliver Keane-’Electric Pulse’
2nd: Georgia Greene-’Warning’
3rd: Preslie Rosamond-’Possibly Maybe’
3rd: Sophie Garcia-’Warrior’
4th: Emma Vaughan-’Tango’
5th: Camille Pepper-’1,000 Faces’
5th: Savannah Manning-’Line Thickness’
6th: Emery Sousley-’Birds of Paradise’
6th: Addy Beckham-’Fame’
6th: Natalie Bumgarner-’Lullaby’
6th: Angelina Brennan-’Woman’
7th: Loren Puchalski-’All The Time’
7th: Nika Nosova-’Epiphany’
7th: Sydney Jones-’Raise Your Voice’
7th: Jackson Smoak-’The Longest Time’
8th: Abigail McKinney-’Shout’
8th: Haley Midgett-’Smile to Me’
8th: Callaghan Johnson-Untitled’
9th: Hadley Snell-’Like This’
10th: Emmy Fuller-’Be Be Your Love’
10th: Tierney Denny-Lybbert-’Lean Back’
10th: Sophie Hunsicker-’Take Flight’
10th: Kayleigh Atterton-’Wild Is The Wind’
Senior Solo
1st: Xavier logan-’Self Memoria’
2nd: Thiago Pacheco-’I’m Naturally Platinum’
3rd: Lily Sledge-’My One and Only’
3rd: Kayleigh Everhart-’Thunderstruck’
4th: Grace Robinson-’Always;
4th: Wysdem Ceaser-’Blades’
4th: Niya Smith-’Down2Ride’
4th: Seth Gibson-’Identity’
5th: Chloe Jeffcoat-’As For The Fall’
5th: Dai Boyd-’Try A Little Tenderness’
6th: Alexandra Jinglov-’Action Reaction’
6th: Maika Takemoto-’Changes’
6th: Bella Mills-’Everywhere, Still’
6th: Shaeleigh Person-’Mine’
6th: Christian Butts-’Ohm Sweet Ohm’
6th: Brittany Willard-’Unchained Melody’
6th: Javon Moore-’Visions’
7th: Tristin Edsel-’And So It Goes’
7th: Belle Mason-’Drones’
7th: Saleya James-’Fix You’
7th: Lily Thompson-’Foolish Games’
7th: Savannah Folding-’Heart Shaped Birthmark’
7th: Kirsten Brown-’Trainwreck’
7th: Ella Samellas-’Without You’
8th: CJ Parker-’A Letter From France’
8th: Bailey Cerio-’Free Falling’
8th: Mallory McCormick-’Rose’
8th: Chloe Barr-’Still Light’
8th: Jalen Scriven-’TIME’
9th: Jasmyn Hopper-’Another Lifetime’
9th: Raven Rutledge-’A Pale’
9th: Sydney Scott-’Forsaken’
9th: Katelyn Midgett-’Georgia’
9th: Morgen Watkins-’Gonna Love Me’
9th: Ryin Corcoran-’Red Dust’
9th: Sophie Hooker-’We’ll Meet Again’
9th: Hannah Rivers-’Will You Ever Return’
10th: Blair Southerland-’Desperation’
10th: Izzie Bringle-’Hush’
Sidekick Duo/Trio
1st: West Main Studios-’Colors Of the Wind’
2nd: To The Pointe-’Wildside’
Mini Duo/Trio
1st: Carolina Collective Dance-’It’s Quiet Uptown’
2nd: Gretchen Greene School of Dance-’Loves Me Like A Rock’
3rd: Carolina Collective Dance-’Proud’
3rd: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’To Build A Home’
Junior Duo/Trio
1st: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Even The Sun’
2nd: Milele Academy-’Fiyah Speak’
3rd: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Nothing We Can Do’
Teen Duo/Trio
1st: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Let Me Follow’
2nd: Milele Academy-’Down We Go’
2nd: The Royal Dance Academy-’Grieving’
3rd: Great Gig Dance Co-’Canon In D’
Senior Duo/Trio
1st: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Addictive’
1st: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Verlust’
2nd: Milele Academy-’Darkest Hour’
3rd: Studio 413-’Black Flies’
Sidekick Group
1st: Studio Powers-’Big Love, Small Moments’
Mini Group
1st: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Daisies’
2nd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Bones’
3rd: The Southern Strutt-’Hey Hi Hello’
3rd: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’The Moment’
3rd: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Wepa’
Junior Group
1st: The Southern Strutt-’A Young Mind’s Thoughts’
1st: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Made of Stone’
1st: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’The Swan’
2nd: Studio Powers-’Cry Me A River’
3rd: Milele Academy-’Save a Horse’
Teen Group
1st: Milele Academy-’Close Up’
1st: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Slack Jaw’
1st: Studio 413-’Social Media Overload’
1st: Gretchen Greene School of Dance-’Wooden Hymnal In C’
2nd: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’He’s A Dream’
3rd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Shaken Lung’
Senior Group
1st: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’I’m Delighted’
2nd: Rhythm Dance Center-’What A Girl Wants’
3rd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Dying of Thirst’
Sidekick Line
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Mr Piano Man’
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Rainbow Brite’
2nd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Besties’
3rd: The Southern Strutt-’Dump Him’
3rd: The Southern Strutt-’Reflections’
Mini Line
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Fergalicious’
2nd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Brown Skin Girl’
2nd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Found A Good One’
3rd: The Southern Strutt-’As Good As It Gets’
3rd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Back At It’
Junior Line
1st: The Southern Strutt-’This Place About to Blow’
2nd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Dance Apocalyptic’
2nd: The Southern Strutt-’I Will Leave The Light On’
3rd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Genesis’
3rd: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Kill The Lights’
Teen Line
1st: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Lay Them Before Me’
2nd: Studio 413-’Hold On Tight’
3rd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Midnight Street’
Senior Line
1st: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Sunny Side of the Street’
2nd: The Southern Strutt-’Charlie Boy’
2nd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Deep Fried Flavor’
2nd: Great Gig Dance Co-’I’d Love to Change The World’
2nd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Layla’
2nd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Matter’
3rd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Full Bloom’
3rd: Studio 413-’Rumors’
Sidekick Extended Line
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Flying Solo’
Mini Extended Line
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Fly Kicks’
2nd: The Southern Strutt-’Wonderland’
3rd: Rhythm Dance Center-’The Happy Disco Show’
3rd: The Southern Strutt-’Yacht Club Cuties’
Junior Extended Line
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Foot On The Gas’
2nd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Walk It Out’
3rd: Studio 413-’Girl Boss’
Teen Extended Line
1st: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Work’
2nd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Earthquake’
2nd: The Southern Strutt-’The Wave’
3rd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Angels’
3rd: The Southern Strutt-’XR2′
Senior Extended Line
1st: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’The Reception’
2nd: The Southern Strutt-’Here Comes The Boom’
Sidekick Production
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Chewy Chewy’
Mini Production
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Yacht Club Cuties’
Junior Production
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Ski-A-Rhythmdale’
2nd: Studio 413-’Electricity’
Teen Production
1st: exonerated
2nd: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Southern Hospitality’
3rd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Bay 2 the A’
High Scores by Performance Division:
Sidekick Jazz
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Chewy Chewy’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’Rainbow Brite’ 3rd: The Southern Strutt-’Dump Him’
Sidekick Hip-Hop
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Besties’
Sidekick Tap
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Mr Piano Man’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’ABC’ 3rd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Shout’
Sidekick Contemporary
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Flying Solo’
Sidekick Lyrical
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Reflections’ 2nd: Studio Powers-’Big Love, Small Moments’
Mini Jazz
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Fergalicious’ 2nd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Brown Skin Girl’ 3rd: Rhythm Dance Center-’The Happy Disco Show’
Mini Ballet
1st: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Concerto In D’
Mini Hip-Hop
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Fly Kicks’ 2nd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Found A Good One’ 3rd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Back At It’
Mini Tap
1st: The Southern Strutt-’As Good As It Gets’ 2nd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Love Shack’ 3rd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Jitterbug’
Mini Contemporary
1st: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Daisies’ 2nd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Bones’ 3rd: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’The Moment’
Mini Lyrical
1st: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’3000 Miles’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’Fly Me To The Moon’ 3rd: Studio 413-’Helium’
Mini Musical Theatre
1st: The Southern Strutt-’Wonderland’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’Yacht Club Cuties’ 3rd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Little Shop of Horrors’
Junior Jazz
1st: The Southern Strutt-’This Place About to Blow’ 2nd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Dance Apocalyptic’ 2nd: Studio 413-’Electricity’ 3rd: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Kill The Lights’ 3rd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Genesis’
Junior Ballet
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Violin Fantastique’
Junior Hip-Hop
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Foot On The Gas’ 2nd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Walk It Out’ 3rd: Studio 413-’Girl Boss’
Junior Tap
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Sussudio’ 1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Here Comes The Sun’ 2nd: Studio 413-’Into the Night’ 3rd: Great Gig Dance Co-’Tiny Dancer’
Junior Contemporary
1st: The Southern Strutt-’I Will Leave The Light On’ 2nd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’The Swan’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’A Young Mind’s Thoughts’ 3rd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Off The Rails’
Junior Lyrical
1st: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Made of Stone’ 2nd: Gretchen Greene School of Dance-’Daisies’ 3rd: Gretchen Greene School of Dance-’Firework’
Junior Musical Theatre
1st: The Southern Strutt-’First Day Fruge’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’The Gospel Truth’ 3rd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Zero to Hero’
Junior Acro
1st: The WHEREHOUSE-’Day-O’
Junior Specialty
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Ski-A-Rhythmdale’ 2nd: Gretchen Greene School of Dance-’Grease!’
Teen Jazz
1st: The Southern Strutt-’XR2′ 1st: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’I Hope My Life’ 2nd: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Shake’ 3rd: Studio 413-’Body Language’ 3rd: The Southern Strutt-’Kick It’
Teen Hip-Hop
1st: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Work’ 2nd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Earthquake’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’The Wave’ 3rd: Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Southern Hospitality’
Teen Tap
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Rock Your Body’ 2nd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Hook’ 3rd: Gretchen Greene School of Dance-’Wooden Hymnal In C’ 3rd: Studio 413-’Gold Watch’ 3rd: The Southern Strutt-’Gold Watch’
Teen Contemporary
1st: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Exonerated’ 2nd: Studio 413-’Hold On Tight’ 3rd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Embrace the World’
Teen Lyrical
1st: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Midnight Street’ 2nd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Angels’ 3rd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’This Particular Dream’
Teen Musical Theatre
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Groundhog Day’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’Beetlejuice’ 3rd: Heather Wayne’s Dance Company-’Too Darn Hot’
Teen Acro
1st: Gretchen Greene School of Dance-’Oceans’ 2nd: Studio Powers-’Area 51′
Teen Specialty
1st: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Lay Them Before Me’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’Book of Love’ 3rd: Gretchen Greene School of Dance-’Hip Hip Chin Chin’ 3rd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Born to Be Alive’
Senior Jazz
1st: Studio 413-’Rumors’ 2nd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Human Nature’ 3rd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Saved By The DJ’
Senior Ballet
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Recomposed’
Senior Hip-Hop
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’Deep Fried Flavor’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’Here Comes The Boom’ 3rd: North Georgia Dance and Music Factory-’Power’
Senior Tap
1st: Rhythm Dance Center-’What A Girl Wants’ 2nd: Great Gig Dance Co-’I’d Love to Change The World’ 2nd: Rhythm Dance Center-’Layla’ 3rd: Great Gig Dance Co-’Faith’
Senior Contemporary
1st: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’I’m Delighted’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’Charlie Boy’ 2nd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Dying of Thirst’ 3rd: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Full Bloom’
Senior Lyrical
1st: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Matter’ 2nd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Tides of Lamentation’ 3rd: Dothan School of Dance-’It’s All Coming Back to Me’
Senior Musical Theatre
1st: Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Sunny Side of the Street’ 2nd: The Southern Strutt-’Too Darn Hot’ 3rd: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Might As Well Be’
Senior Specialty
1st: Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’The Reception’
11 O’Clock:
Sidekick
Studio Powers-’DANCE’
The Southern Strutt-’Flying Solo’
Rhythm Dance Center-’Besties’
Mini
Studio 413-’Helium’
West Main Studios-’Spiders’
Milele Academy-’Move Your Body’
Studio Powers-’Iconology’
Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Bones’
Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Daisies’
Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Found A Good One’
Rhythm Dance Center-’Fly Kicks’
The Southern Strutt-’Fergalicious’
Junior
Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Dance Apocalyptic’
Studio 413-’Girl Boss’
Rhythm Dance Center-’Foot On The Gas’
The Southern Strutt-’This Place About to Blow’
Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Kill The Lights’
Milele Academy-’Missy’
Studio Powers-’Cry Me A River’
Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Made of Stone’
Teen
The Southern Strutt-’The Wave’
Gretchen Greene School of Dance-’Hip Hip Chin Chin’
Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Exonerated’
Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’Lay Them Before Me’
Oconee Youth School of Performance-’Poppin Party’
The WHEREHOUSE-’Changes’
Studio Powers-’Stand Up’
Milele Academy-’Close Up’
Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Southern Hospitality’
Studio 413-’Hold On Tight’
Rhythm Dance Center-’Earthquake’
Senior
Dothan School of Dance-’You’ll Never Walk Alone’
Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’The Reception’
Rhythm Dance Center-’What A Girl Wants’
Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Sunny Side of the Street’
The Southern Strutt-’Charlie Boy’
Great Gig Dance Co-’I’d Love to Change The World’
Studio 413-’Rumors’
Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Exile’
Milele Academy-’Get It’
Gretchen Greene School of Dance-’Bitter’
Heather Wayne’s Dance Company-’Old Skin’
Smitty’s Performing Arts Center-’Where Is The Love’
Studio Showcase:
Milele Academy-’Close Up’
West Main Studio-’E R’
Variations Dance Studio-’Through The Cracks’
Upstate Carolina Dance Center-’Exile’
The WHEREHOUSE-’Changes’
The Southern Strutt-’Charlie Boy’
Studio Powers-’Stand Up’
Studio 413-’Rumors’
Rhythm Dance Center-’Earthquake’
Oconee Youth School of Performance-’Poppin Party’
North Georgia Dance and Music Factory-’Tap Dat’
Heather Wayne’s Dance Company-’Old Skin’
Gretchen Greene School of Dance-’Hip Hip Chin Chin’
Great Gig Dance Co-’I’d Love to Change The World’
Dancemakers of Atlanta-’Exonerated’
Columbia City Jazz Conservatory-’The Reception’
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How We Can Help
Though survivors can share common feelings of fear, anger and hurt, everyone’s situation is different. We believe that victims/survivors of violence know their situation best. We know that each person who calls us may have a different need.
We will not tell you what to do. We will give you information. We will offer concrete help. We will be ready, whenever and as often as you need us, but it is you who decides what you want and how to proceed.
We serve adults and children, of any gender or gender identity, age, race, ethnicity, ability, sexual orientation, or income level.
Here are some of the ways we can help.
Our services are free, confidential, and available in any language.
We have:
24/7 Hotline – a toll-free hotline, (866) 401-2425, that you can call anytime of the day or night for support, counseling, advocacy, shelter, or just to talk.
Response to hospitals or police stations – counselors available 24/7 to help those who need to flee violence. We can meet you at hospitals or police stations following an attack to provide help and support.
Emergency services – including shelter, food, transportation and safe phones, to help you get and stay safe.
Emergency shelter – we have a secure, home-like shelter, and if our shelter is full, we will find you emergency shelter until we can develop an appropriate plan.
Pet foster care – a “SafePet” program with Berkshire Humane Society to provide foster care for pets if violence has interrupted your care of them and they need safety.
Counseling – free and confidential counseling in individual and group settings to help you heal from harm of violence, and to understand that it is not your fault and you are not alone.
Safety planning – to help you be safer or to help you get to safety.
Advocacy – to help you get services you need, including income support and medical care, education and training, legal help, help with your bills, housing that is safe and affordable, and protections so you can keep your job or stay in school.
Court advocates – staff in the Probate Court and in the district courts in North Adams and Great Barrington to help with restraining orders and to talk about your situation and what can help.
Counselors who work specifically with immigrants – we have counselors with special training and experience in immigration issues.
LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, and queer) services – including LGBTQ counselors and LGBTQ support groups. Visit www.elizabethfreemancenter.org/rainbow for more info.
Supervised visitation program – with Berkshire County Sheriff’s Deputies, to keep children and survivors safe during visitation when there is a history of family violence.
We have offices in North Adams, Great Barrington and Pittsfield. We have staff in the Pittsfield Police Department, the Adams Police Department, and Berkshire County Kids’ Place. We have staff that go to other shelters. We can meet people in safe locations almost anywhere in Berkshire County.
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Shakespeare & Company Announces Berkshire Beneficiaries and Updated Casting for "Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley"
Shakespeare & Company Announces Berkshire Beneficiaries and Updated Casting for “Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley”
(Lenox, MA) – In the spirit of the holidays, Shakespeare & Company announces four Berkshire beneficiaries for Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley, written by Lauren Gunderson and Margot Melcon, directed by Producing Associate Ariel Bock. Post-show collections from each performance will benefit a different local organization, including The Elizabeth Freeman Center, Pittsfield Boys & Girls Club,…
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#Allyn Burrows#Andrew Morehouse#Ariel Bock#Cloteal Horne#David Joseph#Elayne P. Bernstein Theatre#Hospice Care in the Berkshires#Lauren Gunderson#Lenox MA#Lydia Barnett-Mulligan#Madeleine Rose Maggio#Margot Melcon#Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley#Pittsfield Boys & Girls Club#Rory Hammond#Ryan Winkles#Rylan Morsbach#Shakespeare and Company#Shakespeare Company#The Elizabeth Freeman Center#The Food Bank of Western Massachusetts#Zoe Laiz
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Spring 2019 Honor List
NATCHITOCHES – One thousand forty-three undergraduates were named to Northwestern State University’s Honor List for the Spring 2019 semester. Students on the Honor List must be enrolled full-time and have a grade point average of between 3.0 and 3.49. Students listed by hometown are as follows.
Abbeville – Annemarie Broussard, MaKayla Lewis, Zabrinia Spates;
Aimwell – Jonathan Poole;
Alexandria – Markeyla Anderson, Gavin Arabie, Sharenthia Chew, Angel Christophe, Josyf Das Neves, Joshua Dorsey, Alexis Flowers, Kelvina Ford, Zuleika Fountain, Vanity Givens, Kyle Guillory, Khloe Jasper, Whitney Joffrion, Gustov Johnson, Martavius King, Ashley Koestler, Kasey Lacombe, Taylar Lee, Kelli Leone, Jimmie Magee, Dean Mayeux, Jason McDaniel, Jalyn Mcneal, Ashley Mitchell, John O’Dell, Madison Ogorek, Tiffany Ore, Sadae Polk, Alyssa Rivers, Mart Sampson, Brandy Sayer, Shakera Shorts, Kizzy Slaughter, Kiaijah Thomas, Hailey Urena, Jenna Wade, Alysha Walker, Aalyiah Williams;
Amelia – Renwick McPherson;
Anacoco – Rachel Fournier, Angela Guy, Andrea Halladay, Tristan Harvey, Madeleine Hensley, Aaron Norris, Jason Ortiz, Ireland Slocum, Amanda Sorg, Tyler Stephens, Emily Williams, Rhonda Perry,
Arlington, Texas -- Mariah Denson, Devin Gipson, O’Shea Jackson;
Arnaudville – Macey Boyd, Bailey Dautreuil, Maddison Janice;
Athens – Jacob Ellis;
Atlanta – Ashley Mitchell, Jackson Teal, Jamie Wagley;
Aurora, Colorado – William Mccullough;
Avondale – Mikala Clark;
Bastrop – Alisha Bolton;
Baton Rouge – Jordan Hall, Melvin Hudson;
Belcher – Loriann Long;
Boyce – Lane Robinson
Baker – Devante George, Cherish Netter;
Ball – Angel Chavez, Christopher Constance, Bryan Sayes, Vanessa Toney, Alice Wilson;
Bastrop – Allenicia Arbet;
Baton Rouge – Mark Alexander, Chloe Castello, Ricky Chatman, Shelby Christian, Briyonna Collins, Madison Harris, Mckane Kinchen, Griffin Lundin, Cydni Millican, Rachel Monsour, Katie Pham, James Steelman, Jharon Whitfield;
Beacon Falls, Connecticut – Stacey Brown;
Bedford, Texas – Katina Booker;
Belle Chasse – Hayley Barbazon, Denim Reeves;
Belmont – Kelly Bass, Ashley Hill;
Bentley – Heather Jones,
Benton – Bryanna Cooper, Steven Gardner, Milla Gonzales, Grayson Isom, Colby Ponder, Blaine Reeder, Hannah Schott, Jackson Mathews, Megan Russell;
Bermuda – Michael Vienne;
Bienville – Sarah Macynski;
Big Spring, Texas – Kristin Wilson;
Birmingham, Alabama – Emma Wallace;
Bogalusa – Amanda Crawford, Taylor Johnson;
Bossier City – Yetunde Adegbovega, Austin Averitt, Abigail Castillo, Kendall Corkern, Cameron Davis, Daniel Dial, Kimberly Eloby, Ri’Kaela England, Khairig Frost, Hannah Gaspard, Margaret Gates, Jacob Guest, Tangy Heilbling, Ashlynn Henderson, Jordan Hunter, Shane Kaiser, Alyssa Kidd, Seth Lowery, Jordan Markle, Rebecca Markle, Jennifer Martinez, Rance Mason, Coby McGee, Alexa Montgomery, Yuridia Olea, Sabri Parks, Shelby Peebles, Brittani Phillips, Rachael Pierce, Cierra Rachal, Litzy Rivera, Gabriela Rodriguez, Madison Rowland, Rheagan Rowland, Dakota Schudalla, Makayla Strother, Trevor Tackett, Kellie Toms, Bobby Trichel, Madalyn Watson, Pamula Whicker, Elizabeth Zanca, Nour Zeidan;
Boutte – Jose Del Rio;
Boyce – Savanna Budnik, Timothy Glass, Kaitlyn Miller, Jessie Turner, Julia Watson;
Brownsboro, Texas – Brice Borgeson;
Buffalo, New York – LeTerrance Reed;
Bunkie – Izola Williams;
Bush – Serena Bonnette;
Calhoun – Marissa Barentine;
Campti – Paige Cason, Damarte Fisher, Kourtney Horton, Malachi Lester, Pepper Lloyd, Madison McLaren;
Canton, Texas – Tiffany Cayson, Jack Dyre;
Cape Coral, Florida – Karleigh Acosta;
Carencro – Malik Babin, Chaney Dodge, Harold Williams;
Cartagena, Colombia – Samantha Arellano Chavz, Edwin Castro Frias, Jalima Dias, Miledys Jiminez Vasquez, Daniel Racero Rocha, Gabriela Forero Salcedo, Sadoc Silva Calderon;
Cartagena Bolivar, Colombia – Alejandro Dager Carrasquilla;
Castor – Loxlie Dodd, Hogan Nealy;
Center, Texas – John Harrington;
Chalmette – Isaiah Carpenter, Gabriel Ernest, Sara Mendoza;
Chatham – Jonathan Gill;
Cincinnati, Ohio – Terry Brewer;
Clarence – Quintarous Coleman, Kimberly Reliford;
Clinton – Arianna Parrish;
Cloutierville – Alexia Gistarb;
Colfax – Camren Bell, Kensey Knight, Paidin Luneau, Kaitlyn Slalyter, Ontavius Williams;
Colorado Springs, Colorado – Sarah Wagner;
Columbia – Jackson McCann;
Columbus, Mississippi – William Taylor;
Converse – Zachary Faircloth, Nicolas Farmer, Victoria Gasper, Wade Hicks, Jared Jagneaux, Skyler Laroux, Ashley Sims, Delia Smith, Triston Waldon;
Coppell, Texas – Jada Freeman;
Cottonport – Jacob Harris, Joneshia Jacobs, Christine Lemoine;
Coushatta – Journi Brown, Faith Cason, La’Zaria Clark, Jon Hester, Tawanda Johnson, Amey Sepulvado;
Covington – Madison Blanks, Sarah Shiflett, Jennifer Vo;
Coyolilla Veracruz, Mexico – Guadalupe de Jesus Mendez Zaragoza;
Crowley – Mc’Kayleen Milson;
Cullen – D’Agurelle Epps;
Cut Off – Zachary Breaux, Kaelyn Musgrave;
Dallas – Nadia Carney;
De Berry, Texas – Sarah Britt;
DeQuincy – Hayden Robertson;
DeRidder – Carson Brown, Lauren Callis, Maygin Chesson, Sheridan Douglas, Sarah Fulford, Katherine Goodman, Michelle Green, Alexis Holland, Elliott Jones, Ethel Jones, Jordan Mack-McNair, Presley Phelps, Richard-Jayson Puzon, Morgan Smith, Heather Sorton, Madison Tilley, Tyler Wright, Airiuna Satchell;
Delhi – KeDiejah Cooper;
Denham Springs – Samantha Burgess, Joni Burlew, Caleb Callender, Zyneshia Jennings;
Deville – Emily Bonial, Courtney DeVille, Amy Henderson, Ashtyn Knapp, Karlee Littleton, Morgan McCrory, Caleb Rhodes, Marcia Rogers, Garrett Sellers;
Dodson – Nolan Griffin, Brendan Thomas;
Donaldsonville – Jermaine Collier, Natalie Landry;
Doyle – Mackensie Ulrich;
Doyline – Carmesia Russell;
Dry Prong – Ethan Lewis, Shian Murrell, Lindsey Weatherford, Ashley Webb;
Dubach – Oilvia Hancock, Kayla Loyd;
Dubberly – Audrie Dison;
Duson – Alexandra Broussard, Desmond Prejean;
Edmond, Oklahoma – Ravon Nero;
Elizabeth – Hannah LaCaze;
Elmer – Victoria Coleman
Elton – Maia Lacomb;
Eunice – Tanner Thibodeaux, Emily Deshotel;
Falfurrias, Texas – Marco Arevalo;
Farmerville – Adrianna Loyd, Jalissa Loyd;
Fayetteville, Arkansas – Cody Coleman;
Ferriday – Dalenesha Wimley;
Fisher – Hayden Courtney;
Flatwoods – Lindsey Willis;
Florien – Katelynn Alford, Danielle Anthony, Gabrielle Bryant, Braelyn Calhoun, Magon Lester, Ashton Remedies, Jordan Weldon;
Flower Mound, Texas – Randall Ruffner;
Folsom – Monique Basse, Shaylee Laird;
Forest Hill – Adrianne Dore;
Forney, Texas – Kaymi Wheeler;
Fort Polk – Brittany Chadwick, Mara Eifolla, Jayla Hart, Andrea Marquez, Madison Popp, Amanda. Ridenhour, Shiela May Tabonares, Whitney Tipton, Kiara Turner, TeKweena Wilson, Alexie Sarabia;
Fort Riley, Kansas – Breanna Bryan;
Fort Worth, Texas – Charles Gregory Meade;
Franklin – Zachary McEndree;
Franklinton – Randy Garza, Brittany Sanders;
Frierson – Mason Barnes;
Frisco, Texas – Hallie McCarroll;
Geisman – Rylee Leglue;
Guin, Alabama – Taylor Porter;
Garland, Texas – Joseph Goodson, Kobe Poole, Nia Randall;
Geismar – Elijah John-Baptiste;
Georgetown – Kaleb Hudson;
Glenmora – Reagan Humphries, Abbie Johnson, Kerstyn Johnson;
Gloster – Caitlyn Burford, Paris Gillum;
Goldonna – Brianna Calhoun;
Gonzales – Julie Breaux, Chaquera Caldwell, Ashlyn Chenevert;
Grand Cane – Sandra Kimble, Ciana Mcintyre, Emily Miller;
Grand Isle – Abigail Frazier;
Grand Prairie, Texas – Stephen Garrett;
Greenwell Springs – Morgan Bellot;
Greenwood – Leah Evans, Tamera Harris, Trenton Starks;
Gretna – Braxton Brown, Leroy Holmes, Nadia Johnson, Michael Wilson;
Gueydan – Hannah Sedatol;
Hackberry – Lexie Stine;
Hahnville – Cierra Puryear, Colin Vedros;
Hammond – Kaylon Wiloughby;
Harlengen – Frances Knight;
Harvey – Destiny Johnson;
Haughton – Deitric Alexander, Shakayla Bell, Katelynn Edwards, Anitra Fayad, Camry Heath, Kylee Jackson, Timothy Newell, Angie Nguyen, Makenezie Rains, Licentra Randolph, Bailee Rattanachai, Kaylee Sanford, Joshua Steele, Megan Tilley, Laura Waldroup, Katherine Weeks, Kacie Wilkinson, Chases Woltz, India Wright;
Haynesville – Jmarquiez Robinson, Sabrina Sowell, Michael Turner, Allysa Dodds;
Heflin – Kendall Brunson, Simiuna Cook, Kyle Smith;
Henderson – Andrew Blackmon;
Hessmer – Daren Dauzat;
Hineston – Victoria Carroll;
Homer – Francene Ferguson, Keyana Mccoy, Mariah West;
Hornbeck – Lane Alford, Ariel Rodgers;
Houma -- Courtney Chancellor, Rhiannon Dean, Venessa McKinley;
Houston – Rafael Bonilla, Jennifer Hitt, Casey Irvin, Natashia Jackson;
Humble, Texas – Toiquisha Johnson, Furquan Shorts;
Independence – Maria Thomas-Alfaro, Chloe Whiddon;
Iowa – Keiona Guy;
Jasper, Texas – Linsey Guthrie;
Jeanerette – David Blakesley;
Jefferson – Emily Ricalde;
Jena – Tiara Brown, Braegan Burlew, Candace Decker, Madison Erwin, Jasmine Furlow, Chelsea Redd, Tyler Thomas;
Jennings – Destiny Brown, Anayah Joseph;
Jonesboro – Ashlyn Gaines, JaVonna Lawrence, Alex Toms;
Kaplan – Chris Hebert;
Katy, Texas – Brittnay Cecil, Floyd Turner;
Keatchie – Sarah Plaisance;
Keithville – Germany Jones, Shelby Loftin, Cara Lorenen, Maya Porter;
Kenner – Emily Bennett, Willie Soniat, Parul Sharma;
Kentwood – Iris Travis;
Kernen – Antonia Blattner;
Kinder – Teralyn Plumber;
Konarskie, Poland – Elzbieta Iwaniuk;
Labadieville – Jacellynn LeBlanc, Logan Simoneaux;
Lacombe – Amy Schneider;
Lafayette – Taylor Aucoin, Ashanti Alfred, LaToya Bellard, Emma Burlet, Jared Dore, Reagan Guillory, Jacob Hawkins, Qualantre Jackson, Michele Kramer, JaKayle Lee, Paul Martin, Skylar Mccoy, Robert Middleton, Sarah Palmintier, Aishwarya Patel, Tylar Senegal, John Touchet, Ireland Williams, China Young;
Lafitte – Helen Kassahun;
Lake Charles – Landon Dore, Camren Green, Joel Moreaux, Jordan Mulsow, Destany Washington;
LaPlace – Caitlyn Turnbull;
Las Vegas, Nevada – Caitlin Schweighart;
Le Mars, Iowa – Shannon Smith;
League City, Texas – Lacee Savage, Blake Tessitore;
Leander – Karissa Boswell;
Lebeau – Sharissa Tanner;
Lecompte – Logan Cheek;
Leesville – Dakota Abrams, Cecilia Alfaya, Kimberly Alwell, Jebediah Barrett, Hailey Brantley, Kaylee Buby, Victoria Butler, Anthony Cantrell, Charlotte Cassin, Joseph Cryer, Cameron Davis, Marlee Dowden, Payton Gordy, Caleb Hillman, Hanna Johnson, Zachary Keeton, Lauren Kreyenbuhl, Mahala Lewis, Christina Lluvera, Gerard Lord, Brianna Maricle, Billy McGhee, Amy McKellar, Ashley McKellar, Kaitlyn Pajinag, Chloe Rouleau, Destiny Sanders, Cesar Santos, Dalton Schulte, Erin Schwartz, Megan Trask, Tabitha Vasquez, Marissa Weldon, Lana West, Cheyene Wise, Mikayla Zills;
Lena – Dillon Guin, Courtnee Hamberlin, Cortland Smith;
Lettsworth – Landon Benton;
Little Elm, Texas – Daniel Larin;
Little Rock, Arkansas – Whitney Jinks;
Livingston – Jay Gentry-Pace;
Livonia – Ryann Bizette, Shanyia Haynes;
Lockport – Malaina Falgout;
Logansport – Rebecca Tomlin, Shelby Woods, Kendoyle Cox;
Loranger – Cambree Bailey;
Lubbock, Texas – Miranda Stroud;
Mansfield – Tremeon Allen, Latyeauna Goodwin, Nicolette Hogan, Canessia Johnson, Demetric Preston, Madylin Sullivan, Kyah Wilson,
Madisonville – Zoe Almaraz, Bailey Perrilloux;
Mandeville -- Mya Holmes, Jalen Willis;
Many – Jocelyn Cannon, Patrick Colston, Sarah Cross, Timothy Early, Sydni Easley, Kyle Elliott, Tiarra Frazier, Brittney Garcie, Moses Gonzales, Jessie Johnson, Clayton Kelley, Lathan Meyers, Darion Miller, Matthew Peace, Andrew Penfield, Tanner Rains, Madison Rutherford, Aubrey Sepulvado, Mallary Veuleman;
Maringouin – Laura Scronce;
Marksville – Regan Balius, Nichole Dauzat, Leah Dupuy, Kayle Gaspard, Olivia Johnson, Victoria Lucas;
Marrero – Kelsey Brooks, Lius Escobar;
Marshall, Texas – Alexis Balbuena, Abagale Godrey;
Marthaville – Dylan Daniels, Veronica James, Thomas Lirette;
Meraux – Sophie Stechmann;
Merryville – Kyleah Franks;
Mesquite, Texas – Eric Renova, Curtis Williams;
Metairie – Kathryn Bancroft, Madysen Norra;
Midland, Texas – Channing Burleson;
Minden – Erin Dotson, Layla Easley, Abby Greene, Karasha Harris, Kiara Jenkins, Donna Law, Asata Sylvas, Jorge Zaldivar;
Missouri City, Texas – Cayla Jones;
Monroe – Demonta Brown, Kennedy Butler, Jansen Chisley, Kiara Drumgo, Taylor Edwards, Jaronda Griffin, Prettyunje Hunter, Diamond Knox-Jackson, Ashley Murphy, Keldrick Ward;
Montegut – Stephanie Cohen;
Monterey – Rebecca Womack;
Montgomery – Tabatha Bowlin, Payton Carroll, Gerald Chelette, Hailee Skains, Laryn Graves;
Monticello, Arkansas – Kamilah Kelley;
Mora – Gracy Rowell;
Moreauville – Reginea Alexander, Ashley Dunnam;
Natchitoches – Jeremy Aaron, Cass Arnold, Aaron Averett, Thomas Balthazar, Adam Barnes, Blake Bechtel, Terrius Bell, Kacy Bonds, Matthew Brown, Charles Bouchie, Santaurus Burr,Ladiamond Burrell, Dominitra Charles, Kaleb Chesser, Lane Clevenger, Jessica Coleman, Kaia Collins, Christian Cunningham, Sean Day, Moises Florez-Perez, Hannah Forsythe, Eric Fredieu, Abbie Garner, Peyton Graham, Denetria Green, Pamela Gross, Thomas Hadzeriga, Jalen Hall, Jasmine Hall, Samantha Hall, Deshon Hayes, Jett Hayes, Saul Hernandez, David Holmes, Jasmine Howard, Kanika Irchirl, Rachel Jeane, Emily Johnson, Karlee Laurence, Robert Lee, Emily Leone, Christopher Lewis, Helen-Lois Mancil, Wesley Manuel, Savannah Maricle, Brooklyn Martin, Tyler McCain, Lamarr McGaskey, Kristin McQuillin, Joshua Minor, Jair Morelos Castilla, Jakori Morris, Katelyn Murphy, Tori Neitte, Matthew Nelson, Donovan Ohnoutka, Christian Owens, Leilani Padilla, Kenneth Penrod, Eryn Percle, Veronica Pikes, Kenneth Poleman, Katherine Rachal, Michael Raymond, Jeffrey Remo, Devin Reyes, Kayla Rokett, Taylor Rutledge, Shelbi Ryan, Jalon Sangster, Chandler Sarpy, Gabrielle Scarborough, Natalie Sers, Anna Sibley, Athena Smith, Blake Teekell, Joseph Thibodaux, Margaret Thompson, Lantz Vercher, Elizabeth Vienne, Garrett Vienne, Huey Virece, Laurin Waldrip, Jacob Ware, Brianna Watermolen, Anna Waxley, Emma-Leigh Webster, Ellen Wells, Deondra White, Nicholas Wiggins, Leah Wilkins, Shavon Williams,
Natchez – Victoria Bradford, James Rougeou, Lauren Seawood;
Navasota, Texas – Shelton Eppler;
New Iberia – Mia Bashay, Dainell Ledet, Alex Romero;
New Llano – Deja Castille, Laura Cowell, Kendra Jones, Earnesta Riggins, Gabriel Vargas, Caden Wheeler;
New Milford, Connecticut – Lisa Rosenberg;
New Orleans – Demetrius Boulieu, Nyasha Brown, Damon Carter, Jeron Duplantier, Darlene Fairley, Matthew Gonzales, Omar Hall, RyShaneka Kirsh, Maxwell Martello, Phallon Robinson, Jonae Skinner, Rishard Winford;
Newellton – Chasity Glasspoole;
Noble – Shelby Etheridge, Tiffany McMillion, Krista Rivers, Thomas Rivers;
North Richland Hills, Texas – Cody Germany;
North York, Ontario – Alexander Comanita;
Oak Ridge – Kelly Futch;
Oakdale – Clayton Ashworth, JaQuanda Evins, Dylan Hamblin, Destani Johnson;
Olla – Morgan Barbo, Amanda Fenoli, Savannah Kirl;
Omro, Wisconsin – Jason Kralovetz;
Opelousas – Keylee Boone, Jordan Brisco, Kenya Gradnigo, Kayla Pitre, Lashante Richard, Kallie Zeringue;
Paris, Texas – Cody Vorwerk;
Pelican – Tyler Howard;
Pensacola, Florida – Mallory McClain;
Pierre Part – Blaise Crochet;
Pineville – Savannah Hope Andries, Melissa Barnhill, April Cain, Erika Carter, Korey Cleveland, Luke Conway, Sydney Duhon, Selena Ferguson, Ameera Ghannam, Ollie Gossett, Leia Graham, Megan Jacks, Trey Joseph, Ethan Lachney, Brooke Leger, Rodney Lonix, Sierra Matney, Sonya McClellan, Autumn McSwain, Abby Nichols, James Perry, Hannah Pusateri, Christina Rachal, Amaria Sapp, Elizabeth Shuler, Laikyn Slusher, Robert Tabor, Emily Wiley, Sarah-Elizabeth Wilkes;
Pitkin – Braydon Doyle, Jayce Doyle, Jessica Jones;
Plain Dealing – Nicholas Cason;
Plano, Texas – Asher Van Meter;
Plaucheville – Alexis Casarez;
Pleasant Hill – Makenzi Patrik;
Pollock – Krystal Bennett, Sarah Hunt, Dalton Kopp, Allyssa Zemp;
Ponchatoula – Keyadda Brim, Kaitlyn Hawkins;
Pontotoc, Mississippi – Elizabeth Murrah;
Port Allen – Evan Daigle, Kaleb Gauthier;
Port Barre – Danielle Schexnayder, Kristen Sonnier;
Prairieville – Hannah Beason, Donesha Blount, Lauren Breaux, Claire Credeur, Kristen Prettelt, Lysia Varisco, Elllise Vice, Brady Wilson, Faith Wilson;
Pride – Ashlyn Johnson;
Princeton – Katelyn Nattin, Ariell Shield;
Provencal – Taylor Craft;
Puyallup, Washington – Aine Oh;
Quitman – Cindy Crawford;
Raceland – Emily Adams;
Ragley – Katherine Greenmun;
Rayne – Bishop Breaux;
Reno, Nevada – Sydney Oren;
Richardson, Texas – Riley Cantrell;
Richfield, Minnesota – Leah Barnes;
Richmond, Texas – Ebonie Francis;
Ridgecrest – Melissa Kelly;
Ringgold – McKenzie Davidson, Autumn McCoy, Olivia Prado;
River Ridge – Rachel Chimeno;
Robeline – Chad Berly, Patricia Goodwin, Hannah Hennigan, Kristal Lachney, Kacy Morae, Ember O’Bannon, Laura Olguin, Morgan Rachal, Hannah Schoth;
Rosepine -- Emilee Johnson;
Ruston – Paul Bryant, Tekiren Evans, Jalen Garrison, Seth Hartsfield, Christopher Letendre, Aujani Richburg;
St. Amant – Larson Fontenot;
St. Bernard – Ashlie Kieff, Emily Snyder;
St. Francisville – Emeria Jones;
St. Martinville – Belinda Alexander, Jacoby Fontenette, Destiny Simon, Maleik White, Cassandra Zenon;
St. Rose – Crystal Jones;
Saline – Makayla Jackson, Isabella Jones, Malayna Poche, Aaron Savell;
San Antonio, Texas – Matthew Aguilera, Anthony Renteria;
Sarepta – Katie Ingle;
Scott – Hannah Durgin, Tayla Soileau;
Shreveport – Aubrey Allen, Katelynn Benge, Frances Boggs, Leta Broome, Makayla Bryant, Shatericka Christor, Kesherion Collins, Naterria Davis, Reonia Davis, Hailey Deaton, Miya Douglas, Daja Easter, Deadrian Egans, Meghan Fry, Cassidy Giddens, Savon Gipson, Ellen Grappe, MIzzani Grigsby, Lindsey Hagan, Adrianne Hampton, Katelyn Householder, Shelby Hunter, Jazzmine Jackson, John Jefferson, Drake Johnson, Korynthia Johnson, Zachary Johnson, Nathan Jones, Summer Jones, Alicia King, Lauren Lee, Samantha Lyons, Tiffany Mack, Caitlyn Malloy, Christopher Markham, Andria Mason, Ashley Mason, Tifphany McClinton, Rici McDonald, Claire McMillan, Samantha Metoyer, Najah Mitchell, Brittney Nicleso-Rayfus, Megan Osborn, Tara Pair, Tierry Perry, Christina Peterson, Kalyn Phillips, Hayden Pilcher, Sierra Prelow, Shelby Reddy, Grayson Roberts, Jalisa Roberts, Savonya Robinson, Madelyn Ruiz, Amanda Rushing, Breanna Samuel, Angelica Satcher, Shermaine Shorter, Jackiesha Simmons, Ciara Sipes, Richard Sloan, Kendria Smith, Jessica Sowers, Jamie Stewart, Somer Stratton, Lindsey Stroud, Khalil Sumlin, Destini Sweet, Hailey Thomas, Anne Tibbit, Katerina Vargas, Khamaria Vaughn, De’Andra Washington, Lakayla Whitaker, Gaylin White, Jamisa Williams, Lajayda Williams, Tre’Darius Williams, Kristy Wilson, India Wright;
Sibley – Madison Mouser;
Sieper – Emily George;
Simmesport – Lexi Gremillion, Elise Normand;
Simpson – Katelynn Martin;
Slidell – Terran Cole, Noah Glass, Tristan Johnson, Rachel Reed, Maci Walgamotte, Thomas Garner;
Sondheimer – Anna Marsh;
Springfield – Tyler Pigott;
Sterlington – Catherine Trichell;
Stonewall – Bessie Cable, Dawson Cranford, Emma Delafield, Emmy Hinds, Robert McAllen, Mackenzie Panther, Maguire Parker, Heather Schiller, Tehya McDonald, Chassidy Sutton;
Sugar Land, Texas – Jake Gore;
Sulphur – Andrew Stephens;
Sunset – Zachary Linville, Lauren Pope;
Tallahassee, Florida – Edward Clarke;
Tallulah – Anna Boney;
Taylor, Texas – Jake English;
Texarkana, Texas – Daphne Hammett, Kristin McDuffie, Jasmine Neal;
Thibodaux – Beth Olin, Cierra Winch
Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania – Brianna Morosco;
Tomball, Texas – Natalee Henry;
Toms River, New Jersey – Jacqueline Manza;
Toronto, Ontario – Rhea Verma;
Trout – Makayla King, Haley Lisenby, Kalee Mcguffee, Andrea Walters;
Troy, New York – Kasey Whitmore;
Tupelo, Mississippi – Bailey Griffin;
Ville Platte – Gabrielle Chapman, Nicholas Blood, Andrea Bradley;
Vinton – Shae Cramer, Toby Stanley, Alayna Zaunbrecher;
Violet – Callie Maschmeyer;
Vivian – Kaylee Scott, Chase Lewis;
Vossburg, Mississippi – Chequira Bonner;
Walker – Madison Arnold;
Walworth, New York – Devonne Seelig;
Washington – Kyeishia Evans, Catherine Stevens;
Waskom, Texas – Blakely Canfield, Zink Kiper, Laken Thompson;
Welsh – Autumn Hanks;
West Helena, Arkansas – Brittani Arana;
West Monroe – Abigail Beck, Austin Dodson, Brianna Fife, Kennedy Ford, Allison Freeman, Aubrey Gamble, Jasmyn Johnson, Eva Sanford, Madison Shidiskis, Melissa Taylor, Christopher Wynn;
Westwego – Tja’h Edwards;
Wilmington, Delaware – Amy Bourett;
Winnfield – Annalise Austin, Harli Austin, Rhonda Duff, Kara Grantadams, Rakeen Williams, Caroline Womack;
Winnsboro – A’Lexus Johnson;
Woodworth – Lexus Weston;
Youngsville – Devin Forestier, Devyn Shores, Sophia Toranto;
Zachary – Laney Davis;
Zwolle – Kierstyn Cartinez, Dayton Craig, Trenton Malmay, Ariana Martinez, Treveon Perry, Autumn Wyatt.
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The New York Review of Books
With a worldwide circulation of over 135,000, The New York Review of Books has established itself, in Esquire‘s words, as “the premier literary-intellectual magazine in the English language.” The New York Review began during the New York publishing strike of 1963, when its founding editors, Robert Silvers and Barbara Epstein, and their friends, decided to create a new kind of magazine—one in which the most interesting and qualified minds of our time would discuss current books and issues in depth. Just as importantly, it was determined that the Review should be an independent publication; it began life as an independent editorial voice and it remains independent today.
The New York Review’s early issues included articles by such writers as W.H. Auden, Elizabeth Hardwick, Hannah Arendt, Edmund Wilson, Susan Sontag, Robert Penn Warren, Lilian Hellman, Norman Mailer, Gore Vidal, Saul Bellow, Robert Lowell, Truman Capote, William Styron, and Mary McCarthy. The public responded by buying up practically all the copies printed and writing thousands of letters to demand that The New York Review continue publication. And Robert Silvers and Barbara Epstein continued as co-editors of the Review until Barbara’s death in 2006 and Robert’s death in 2017.
Within a short time, The New York Times was writing that The New York Review “has succeeded brilliantly,” The New Statesman hailed its founding as “of more cultural import than the opening of Lincoln Center,” and the great English art historian Kenneth Clark observed, “I have never known such a high standard of reviewing.” The unprecedented and enthusiastic response was indicative of how badly America needed a literary and critical journal based on the assumption that the discussion of important books was itself an indispensable literary activity.
From the 1960s into the 21st Century, The New York Review of Books has posed the questions in the debate on American life, culture, and politics. It is the journal where Mary McCarthy reported on the Vietnam War from Saigon and Hanoi; Edmund Wilson challenged Vladimir Nabokov’s translations; Hannah Arendt published her reflections on violence; Ralph Nader published his “manifesto” for consumer justice; I.F. Stone investigated the lies of Watergate; Susan Sontag challenged the claims of modern photography; Jean-Paul Sartre, at 70, described his writing and politics, and how he felt about his blindness; Elizabeth Hardwick addressed the issues of women and writing; Gore Vidal hilariously lampooned bestsellers, Howard Hughes, Teddy Roosevelt, and the Reagans; Felix Rohatyn made the case for a national industrial policy in an influential series of articles; Peter G. Peterson showed why the present Social Security program can’t last; Joan Didion described, in a firsthand account, the situation in El Salvador; McGeorge Bundy, George Kennan, and Lewis Thomas outlined the nuclear threat; Nadine Gordimer and Bishop Desmond Tutu wrote from South Africa on the conflict over apartheid; Vaclav Havel published his reflections from the Czech underground; Timothy Garton Ash reported on the new Eastern Europe; Mark Danner reported on torture from the CIA black sites; Ronald Dworkin wrote of how George W. Bush’s two Supreme Court appointees have created an unbreakable phalanx bent on remaking constitutional law; Freeman Dyson described the scientist as rebel; David Cole revealed how the Bush Justice Department allowed America to become a nation that disappeared and tortured suspects; articles by Paul Krugman, George Soros, Joseph Stiglitz, and Jeff Madrick explained America’s failing economy; Tom Powers described the George W. Bush administration’s fundamental shift from diplomacy to military action; Martin Filler wrote on the many makers of modern architecture; and where Bill Moyers described the threat to the environment presented by Evangelical Christians. It is the journal where the most important issues are discussed by writers who are themselves a major force in world literature and thought.
Every two weeks, these and other writers publish essays and reviews of books and the arts, including music, theater, dance, and film—from Woody Allen’s Manhattan to Kurosawa’s version of King Lear. What has made The New York Review successful, according to The New York Times, is its “stubborn refusal to treat books, or the theatre and movies, for that matter, as categories of entertainment to be indulged in when the working day is done.”
The New York Times further described the Review as “one of the most influential and admired journals of its kind, attracting a high-powered roster of writers” and The Chicago Tribune said the Review is “one of the few venues in American life that takes ideas seriously. And it pays readers the ultimate compliment of assuming that we do too.” Look inside and see for yourself.
Daily inspiration. Discover more photos at http://justforbooks.tumblr.com
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NETFLİXTEKİ IMDB PUANI 8.0 ÜSTÜ İLK 30 DİZİ
NETFLİXTEKİ IMDB PUANI 8.0 ÜSTÜ İLK 30 DİZİ
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1. Breaking Bad
(2008–2013)
49 min | Crime, Drama, Thriller
9,5 9
A high school chemistry teacher diagnosed with inoperable lung cancer turns to manufacturing and selling methamphetamine in order to secure his family's future.
Stars: Bryan Cranston, Aaron Paul, Anna Gunn, Betsy Brandt
Votes: 1.139.188
2. Sherlock
(2010– )
88 min | Crime, Drama, Mystery
9,2 10
A modern update finds the famous sleuth and his doctor partner solving crime in 21st century London.
Stars: Benedict Cumberbatch, Martin Freeman, Una Stubbs, Rupert Graves
Votes: 672.954
3. Avatar: Son Hava Bükücü
(2003–2008)
23 min | Animation, Action, Adventure
9,2 Rate
In a war-torn world of elemental magic, a young boy reawakens to undertake a dangerous mystic quest to fulfill his destiny as the Avatar, and bring peace to the world.
Stars: Dee Bradley Baker, Zach Tyler, Mae Whitman, Jack De Sena
Votes: 179.269
4. Kara Ayna
(2011– )
60 min | Drama, Sci-Fi, Thriller
8,9 10
An anthology series exploring a twisted, high-tech world where humanity's greatest innovations and darkest instincts collide.
Stars: Daniel Lapaine, Hannah John-Kamen, Michaela Coel, Beatrice Robertson-Jones
Votes: 269.348
5. Tuhaf Seyler
(2016– )
51 min | Drama, Fantasy, Horror
8,9 Rate
When a young boy disappears, his mother, a police chief, and his friends must confront terrifying forces in order to get him back.
Stars: Millie Bobby Brown, Finn Wolfhard, Winona Ryder, David Harbour
Votes: 538.354
6. House of Cards
(2013–2018)
51 min | Drama
8,9 9
A Congressman works with his equally conniving wife to exact revenge on the people who betrayed him.
Stars: Kevin Spacey, Michel Gill, Robin Wright, Kate Mara
Votes: 416.835
7. The Haunting of Hill House
(2018– )
50 min | Drama, Horror, Mystery
8,8 Rate
Flashing between past and present, a fractured family confronts haunting memories of their old home and the terrifying events that drove them from it.
Stars: Michiel Huisman, Carla Gugino, Henry Thomas, Elizabeth Reaser
Votes: 84.587
8. Peaky Blinders
(2013– )
60 min | Crime, Drama
8,8 Rate
A gangster family epic set in 1919 Birmingham, England; centered on a gang who sew razor blades in the peaks of their caps, and their fierce boss Tommy Shelby.
Stars: Helen McCrory, Cillian Murphy, Paul Anderson, Sophie Rundle
Votes: 164.225
9. Narcos
(2015–2017)
49 min | Biography, Crime, Drama
8,8 7
A chronicled look at the criminal exploits of Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar, as well as the many other drug kingpins who plagued the country through the years.
Stars: Pedro Pascal, Wagner Moura, Boyd Holbrook, Alberto Ammann
Votes: 273.239
10. Daredevil
(2015–2018)
54 min | Action, Crime, Drama
8,7 Rate
A blind lawyer by day, vigilante by night. Matt Murdock fights the crime of New York as Daredevil.
Stars: Charlie Cox, Vincent D'Onofrio, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson
Votes: 314.323
11. Dexter
(2006–2013)
53 min | Crime, Drama, Mystery
8,7 Rate
By day, mild-mannered Dexter is a blood-spatter analyst for the Miami police. But at night, he is a serial killer who only targets other murderers.
Stars: Michael C. Hall, Jennifer Carpenter, David Zayas, James Remar
Votes: 582.566
12. Vikingler
(2013– )
44 min | Action, Adventure, Drama
8,6 Rate
Vikings transports us to the brutal and mysterious world of Ragnar Lothbrok, a Viking warrior and farmer who yearns to explore - and raid - the distant shores across the ocean.
Stars: Gustaf Skarsgård, Katheryn Winnick, Alexander Ludwig, Travis Fimmel
Votes: 313.556
13. Suits
(2011– )
44 min | Comedy, Drama
8,6 Rate
On the run from a drug deal gone bad, Mike Ross, a brilliant college dropout, finds himself a job working with Harvey Specter, one of New York City's best lawyers.
Stars: Gabriel Macht, Patrick J. Adams, Meghan Markle, Sarah Rafferty
Votes: 314.575
14. La casa de papel
(2017– )
15+ | 70 min | Action, Crime, Mystery
8,6 Rate
A group of very peculiar robbers assault the Factory of Moneda and Timbre to carry out the most perfect robbery in the history of Spain and take home 2.4 billion euros.
Stars: Úrsula Corberó, Itziar Ituño, Álvaro Morte, Alba Flores
Votes: 104.577
15. The Punisher
(2017– )
53 min | Action, Adventure, Crime
8,6 Rate
After the murder of his family, Marine veteran Frank Castle becomes the vigilante known as "The Punisher," with only one goal in mind: to avenge them.
Stars: Jon Bernthal, Amber Rose Revah, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Ben Barnes
Votes: 118.094
16. Mindhunter
(2017– )
60 min | Crime, Drama, Thriller
8,6 Rate
Set in the late 1970s, two FBI agents are tasked with interviewing serial killers to solve open cases.
Stars: Jonathan Groff, Holt McCallany, Anna Torv, Hannah Gross
Votes: 104.505
17. Dark
(2017– )
60 min | Crime, Drama, Mystery
8,6 Rate
A family saga with a supernatural twist, set in a German town, where the disappearance of two young children exposes the relationships among four families.
Stars: Oliver Masucci, Karoline Eichhorn, Jördis Triebel, Louis Hofmann
Votes: 87.320
18. Line of Duty
(2012– )
60 min | Crime, Drama, Mystery
8,6 Rate
DS Steve Arnott is transferred to the police anti-corruption unit after the death of a man in a mistaken shooting during a counter-terrorist operation.
Stars: Martin Compston, Vicky McClure, Adrian Dunbar, Craig Parkinson
Votes: 14.922
19. Luther
(2010–2019)
60 min | Crime, Drama, Mystery
8,5 Rate
DCI John Luther is a near-genius murder detective whose brilliant mind can't always save him from the dangerous violence of his passions.
Stars: Idris Elba, Dermot Crowley, Michael Smiley, Warren Brown
Votes: 95.648
20. Happy Valley
(2014– )
58 min | Crime, Drama
8,5 Rate
Catherine Cawood is the sergeant on duty when flustered and nervous accountant Kevin Weatherill comes into her West Yorkshire station to report a crime.
Stars: Sarah Lancashire, Siobhan Finneran, Shane Zaza, Charlie Murphy
Votes: 25.355
21. Ozark
(2017– )
60 min | Crime, Drama, Thriller
8,4 Rate
A financial adviser drags his family from Chicago to the Missouri Ozarks, where he must launder $500 million in five years to appease a drug boss.
Stars: Jason Bateman, Laura Linney, Julia Garner, Sofia Hublitz
Votes: 92.715
22. The Expanse
(2015– )
60 min | Drama, Mystery, Sci-Fi
8,4 Rate
A police detective in the asteroid belt, the first officer of an interplanetary ice freighter and an earth-bound United Nations executive slowly discover a vast conspiracy that threatens the Earth's rebellious colony on the asteroid belt.
Stars: Steven Strait, Cas Anvar, Dominique Tipper, Wes Chatham
Votes: 62.249
23. The Last Kingdom
(2015– )
60 min | Action, Drama, History
8,3 Rate
The year is 872, and many of the separate kingdoms of what we now know as England have fallen to the invading Danes, leaving the great kingdom of Wessex standing alone and defiant under the... See full summary »
Stars: Alexander Dreymon, Ian Hart, David Dawson, Eliza Butterworth
Votes: 44.430
24. Hakan: Muhafiz
(2018– )
15+ | 40 min | Action, Fantasy, Sci-Fi
8,3 7
Given mystical powers by a talismanic keepsake, a young man embarks on a quest to fight shadowy forces and solve a mystery from his past.
Stars: Çagatay Ulusoy, Ayça Aysin Turan, Hazar Ergüçlü, Okan Yalabik
Votes: 8.569
25. Broadchurch
(2013–2017)
48 min | Crime, Drama, Mystery
8,3 Rate
The murder of a young boy in a small coastal town brings a media frenzy, which threatens to tear the community apart.
Stars: David Tennant, Olivia Colman, Jodie Whittaker, Andrew Buchan
Votes: 68.712
26. Bodyguard
(2018– )
60 min | Crime, Drama, Thriller
8,2 Rate
A contemporary thriller featuring the Royalty and Specialist Protection Branch of London's Metropolitan Police Service.
Stars: Richard Madden, Sophie Rundle, Vincent Franklin, Ash Tandon
Votes: 38.592
27. Manhunt: Unabomber
(2017– )
60 min | Crime, Drama
8,2 Rate
An in-depth look at how an FBI profiler helped track down the terrorist Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber.
Stars: Sam Worthington, Jeremy Bobb, Ben Weber, Chris Noth
Votes: 30.959
28. The Blacklist
(2013– )
43 min | Crime, Drama, Mystery
8,1 Rate
A new FBI profiler, Elizabeth Keen, has her entire life uprooted when a mysterious criminal, Raymond Reddington, who has eluded capture for decades, turns himself in and insists on speaking only to her.
Stars: James Spader, Megan Boone, Diego Klattenhoff, Ryan Eggold
Votes: 147.930
29. Jessica Jones
(2015– )
56 min | Action, Crime, Drama
8,1 Rate
Following the tragic end of her brief superhero career, Jessica Jones tries to rebuild her life as a private investigator, dealing with cases involving people with remarkable abilities in New York City.
Stars: Krysten Ritter, Rachael Taylor, Eka Darville, Carrie-Anne Moss
Votes: 165.189
30. River
(2015)
60 min | Crime, Drama, Mystery
8,1 Rate
John River is a brilliant police inspector whose genius lies side-by-side with the fragility of his mind. He is a man haunted by the murder victims whose cases he must lay to rest.
Stars: Stellan Skarsgård, Nicola Walker, Lesley Manville, Eddie Marsan
Votes: 14.985
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2019 Arkansas Times Academic All-Stars Nominees
Listed by their hometowns. Here are the students nominated to be Academic All-Stars. They are listed by their hometowns as indicated by mailing addresses. ALMA EMILY FOWLER Mulberry High School BAY JACOB HARLEY OSTER Bay High School BEARDEN CASSIDY CLEMENS Bearden High School GARRETT MCWHORTER Bearden High School BEEBE TAYLOR DWAYNE BOYCE Beebe High School JOLEY MARIE MITCHELL Rose Bud High School MARIANNA KERSEY RICHEY Beebe High School BEE BRANCH ANDREA DE TOUR Arkansas Virtual Academy High School BENTON JULIANNA DEMI SORVILLO Bauxite High School KAYLA M. TREASITTI Glen Rose High School BENTONVILLE KENDRA RISENER Haas Hall Academy ANGEL SOTERO Bentonville West High School JESSICA YIN Bentonville West High School BERRYVILLE ALEX RUBEN MALDONADO-LOPEZ Berryville High School AMBER NICOLE VEACH Berryville High School BISMARCK LAUREN ELIZABETH CORLEY Bismarck High School BLACK ROCK PAIGE LEANN PENN Hillcrest High School BLYTHEVILLE CHANDLER SPROUSE Gosnell High School SHAKIAH WILLIAMS Blytheville High School BONNERDALE HANNAH DIGGS Centerpoint High School BOONEVILLE JUSTIN RONGEY Magazine High School BRINKLEY KEVON MALOID DILLWORTH Brinkley High School EMILY ANN TAYLOR Brinkley High School BRUNO LANE BOGLE Valley Springs High School BRYANT SYDNEY ELAINE BOWMAN Bryant High School HARRISON BENNETT DOWNS Bryant High School CABOT ZHENG HUI ZHANG Cabot High School CAVE CITY KENDALL TOWNSLEY Cave City High School CENTER RIDGE SOPHIA FRANCESCA ISELY Nemo Vista High School CLARKSVILLE BRADLEY SCOTT BUCK Johnson County Westside High School CLINTON JACOB ALLEN BURROUGHS South Side High School CONWAY MARY KATHERINE FREYALDENHOVEN Conway High School KENDON CRAIG MOLINE Conway High School CORNING CAROLINE GOODMAN Corning High School CROSSETT DAILEY MARIE CHAVIS Crossett High School BRYCE RICHARD MOON Crossett High School DAMASCUS CLAIRE ELIZABETH DREWRY South Side High School DES ARC LINDSEY NICOLE REIDHAR Des Arc High School DEWITT RACHEL DANIELS DeWitt High School ZONTRAY KENDALL DeWitt High School DONALDSON DYLAN JASHUN CLAYTON Bismarck High School DOVER Ethan Seth Owen Jacobs Dover High School EUREKA SPRINGS KAYDEN ECKMAN Eureka Springs High School EVANSVILLE JESSICA ANN GOLDMAN Lincoln High School FARMINGTON NICHOLAS JAMES ERICKSON Farmington High School REAGAN SIERRA WHITE Farmington High School FAYETTEVILLE CHLOE AUGUST BOWEN Springdale High School SOPHIE FERNANDO Haas Hall Academy JEREMIA LO Fayetteville High School HAMAAD MEHAL Haas Hall Academy SPENCER LEE WALKER Fayetteville High School FISHER ANNA CHAPLAIN Harrisburg College and Career Prep FORT SMITH JOHN TYLER FREENY Southside High School MADISON ISABELLA RENEE MARSH Southside High School GOSNELL KAYLEE JO MILLER Gosnell High School GREENBRIER MADELYN RENEE JAMESON Greenbrier High School CALEB WADE TAPLEY Greenbrier High School GREENWOOD JULIA KATHLEEN BRIXEY Greenwood High School TYLER LAWRENCE MERREIGHN Greenwood High School GREERS FERRY FAITH MARIE BIRMINGHAM West Side High School HAMBURG NIGEL LEWIS Hamburg High School BRENDA FAITH O'FALLON Hamburg High School HARRISON GRACE ESTELLE BRANDT Harrison High School BLAKE JOHN WILLIAM WHITMER Harrison High School HAZEN ROSS TIMOTHY HARPER Hazen High School HICKORY PLAINS JEREMIAH DESHONE WILLIAMS Des Arc High School HIGDEN NATHANIEL WYATT SMITH West Side High School HORATIO GRACE ELIZABETH HARRIS Horatio High School HOT SPRINGS RHETT BARRETT Cutter Morning Star High School FAITH ELIZABETH CARNIE Lake Hamilton High School JORDAN C. ERICKSON Lake Hamilton High School EMMA KIRSTEN FERGUSON Lakeside High School THOMAS IAN HOLLIS Lakeside High School ANTHONY ALEXANDER REITER Hot Springs High School MICAH TRAVIS Mountain Pine High School HUTTIG NASTAJAE ALIYAH ALDERSON Strong High School JACKSONVILLE BASIA YVONNE BROWN Jacksonville High School GERALD ANTONIO DONOHUE Jacksonville High School JONESBORO OPHIE COPELIN Nettleton High School JETT JACKSON Harrisburg College and Career Prep ISABELLE FLORENCE JONES The Academies at Jonesboro High School JOSHUA MILNES Nettleton High School ANNA ELISE OPPENHEIM Bay High School NIKKOLETTE AMANDA PERKINS Brookland High School SEAN A. ROADES Valley View High School KALLEN SMITH Brookland High School TRACY N. TANNER Valley View High School LEACHVILLE HALLIE ELIZABETH BROWN Buffalo Island Central High School KYLE BRADLEY THRASHER Buffalo Island Central High School LITTLE ROCK MOHAMMED ABUELEM Pulaski Academy MILLER CLARK BACON eStem High School NATHAN THOMAS BARBER The Academies at Jonesboro High School CAROLINE BLANSCET Little Rock Christian Academy ANA ABARCA CHAVEZ Hall High School REBECCA SUSAN DIXON Parkview Arts and Science Magnet High School SARAH J. DOUGLASS Joe T. Robinson High School SULLIVAN WALTER FITZ Catholic High School for Boys CELIA KRETH Episcopal Collegiate School FELIPE MORALES OSORIO Parkview Arts and Science Magnet High School CLAUDIA CATHERINE SMITH eStem High School ETHAN STRAUSS Episcopal Collegiate School LUKE WEINER Little Rock Christian Academy MICHELLE XU Little Rock Central High School RAMY YOUSEF Little Rock Central High School MCCRORY CHRISTIAN LITTLE McCrory High School MABELVALE HALEY AMBER STANTON LISA Academy West High School MAGAZINE EMILY STATON Magazine High School MAMMOTH SPRING DEVON CRAY Mammoth Spring High School MARION WESLEY JAMES BARRETT Marion High School MORGAN BRADFORD WHITED Marion High School MAUMELLE GARRETT MICHAEL BAKANOVIC Maumelle High School CHAD BOYD Maumelle Charter High School GENRIETTA CHURBANOVA Pulaski Academy LINCOLN MOSES Maumelle Charter High School VICTORIA ORTEGA Maumelle High School MAYFLOWER HAYDYN HUDNALL Mayflower High School MULBERRY JARRET CHAMBERS Mulberry High School NEWPORT NOAH BLAKE RABY Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts NORTH LITTLE ROCK SOPHIA LYNN CHIER Mount St. Mary Academy CHASE CHRISTIAN MOHR-MCELROY North Little Rock Center of Excellence Charter KATHERINE RAMIREZ North Little Rock High School CARRE'LLA SADLER North Little Rock High School IOAN BROWN SANDERS North Little Rock High School OZARK AUTUMN PAIGE FLAHERTY Johnson County Westside High School PARAGOULD EMMA FARMER Marmaduke High School MICHALA ANN MCPHINK Paragould High School JACKSON CHANDLER PARKER Paragould High School MADISON SHEA ROBINSON Greene County Tech High School PARON JOHN MATTHEW HOWARD Joe T. Robinson High School PEA RIDGE HALLEY LASTER Pea Ridge High School ALEC ANDREW MEREDITH Pea Ridge High School PINE BLUFF MORGAN EDWARDS Watson Chapel High School A'DARIUS LEE Watson Chapel High School PINEVILLE KENLEE KAY KILLIAN Calico Rock High School PLUMERVILLE GARRETT R. HENDRIX Morrilton High School POWHATAN CREEDEN JAMES RICHEY Hillcrest High School RAVENDEN SPRINGS EMILY CHEYENNE LUFFMAN Sloan-Hendrix High School REYNO CHANDLER CONYERS Corning High School RISON JUSTIN JACOBS Rison High School MACY RATLIFF Rison High School ROGERS ALISHA AJAY CHATLANI Rogers High School MORGAN DIBASILIO Rogers Heritage High School SIDRA NADEEM Rogers New Technology High School NATHAN POWELL SKINNER Rogers High School ADAM RYSZARD SIWIEC Rogers Heritage High School ROSE BUD CARSON DAVID LUCENA Rose Bud High School ROYAL ANASTACIA GLASCO Mountain Pine High School RUSSELLVILLE KAYLEE FREEMAN Hector High School SEARCY JACKSON TANNER BENIGHT Searcy High School LAUREN ELIZABETH BROWN Searcy High School SHERIDAN LAINEY FAITH HILL Sheridan High School LOGAN JAMES INGRAM Sheridan High School SHERWOOD TIMOTHY NATHANIEL ESPEJO Sylvan Hills High School CHASE MARIE SWINTON Sylvan Hills High School SILOAM SPRINGS CHRISTINE NICOLE HONN Siloam Springs High School OLIVER MONROE REID Siloam Springs High School SMACKOVER ROBERT THOMAS DIXON Smackover High School KAYLEIGH AMANDA YEAGER Smackover High School SPRINGDALE EDUARDO AGUILAR Springdale High School SPRINGFIELD CAROLYN HOPE HOPKINS Morrilton High School STUTTGART MARY SALLAH JIA Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts TRUMANN ZACHARY DAVID BURCHFIELD Trumann High School WALNUT RIDGE DEVIN FOSTER SMITH Greene County Tech High School WARD JESSICA DAWN VAUGHN Cabot High School WHITE HALL JUSTIN ROBERT DADY White Hall High School WINSLOW JOSEPH ANDREW TAYLOR Lincoln High School WYNNE KYRA LIANE DOBSON Wynne High School JACKSON CHARLES GEORGE Wynne High School 2019 Arkansas Times Academic All-Stars Nominees
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Cate Blanchett is "totally and utterly blown away" by the Chaplin Award -
Cate Blanchett is “totally and utterly blown away” by the Chaplin Award –
On Monday night, Cate Blanchett became the second youngest film to win the Chaplin Award at Lincoln Center, joining Alfred Hitchcock, Billy Wilder, Federico Fellini, Elizabeth Taylor, Martin Scorsese, Diane Seaton Poe and Mary Keaton. . Streisand, Robert Redford, Morgan Freeman, Robert De Niro, Helen Mirren and her co-worker Charlie Chaplin. And while Blanchett won two Oscars and worked with…
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Film Lifetime Achievement Award Winners for 2018/19
Here is this season’s lifetime achievement honorees.
Academy Awards: Cicely Tyson, Lalo Schifrin, Marvin Levy, Frank Marshall and Kathleen Kennedy
Golden Globes: Jeff Bridges and Carol Burnett
BAFTA Awards: Thelma Schoonmaker, Elizabeth Karlsen and Stephen Woolley
SAG Awards: Alan Alda
American Film Institute: Denzel Washington
Venice Film Festival: David Cronenberg, Zhang Yimou and Vanessa Redgrave
Berlin Film Festival: Charlotte Rampling and Arthur Cohn
Cannes Film Festival: Alain Delon
Cesar Awards: Robert Redford
Kennedy Center Honors: Philip Glass
Zurich Film Festival: Donald Sutherland and Judi Dench
Twin Cities Film Festival: Steve Zahn
San Sebastian International Film Festival: Judi Dench, Hirokazu Kore-eda and Danny Devito
Camerimage: Witold Sobociński (R.I.P.)
Rome Film Festival: Martin Scorsese and Isabelle Huppert
Maine International Film Festival: Dominique Sanda
Odessa international Film Festival: Jacqueline Bisset
Locarno Film Festival: Bruno Dumont
Rose d’Or Awards: Joanna Lumley
SAG-AFTRA Foundation: Marsha Hunt, Norman Lloyd, June Lockhart, Barbara Perry, Harrison Ford and Lady Gaga
Antalya Film Festival: Ferzan Özpetek, Cem Yılmaz and Bela Tarr
Iran Cinema Celebration: Dariush Mehrjui
Australian International Movie Convention: Bryan Brown
Deauville Film Festival: Morgan Freeman
Toronto Film Festival: Harry Belafonte
Ulster Tatler Awards: Ciaran Hinds
Ischia Global Film and Music Festival: Quincy Jones
Comic-Con Lifetime Achievement Award: Nichelle Nichols
California Independent Film Festival: Doug Jones
Emile Awards: Clare Kitson
Heartland Film Festival: Hal Linden
St. Louis International Film Festival: John Goodman
El Gouna Film Festival: Sylvester Stallone
Haifa Film Festival: Zbigniew Preisner
Cinema Audio Society: Steven Spielberg
Asian World Film Festival: Lisa Lu
Lumière Festival: Jane Fonda
European Film Awards: Ralph Fiennes, Costa-Gravas and Carmen Maura
Critics Choice Awards: Michael Moore
Ojai Film Festival: Malcolm McDowell and Ellen Kuras
Hridaynath Award: Khayyam
Stockholm International Film Festival: Gunnel Lindblom and Mary Harron
Art Directors Guild Awards: Jeannine Oppewall, Ed Verreaux, William F. Matthews and James Fiorito
Los Angeles Film Critics Association: Hayao Miyazaki
Heartland International Film Festival: Gale Ann Hurd
Arpa International Film Festival: Ed Asner and Edward James Olmos
Videocitta Festival: Ennio Morricone
Animafest: Suzan Pitt
Beaufort Film Society: Paul Sorvino
Chicago International Film Festival: William Friedkin
Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival: Gary Ross
Screen Producers Australia Awards: Michael McMahon
Hollywood Film Awards: Nicole Kidman
Equity Lifetime Achievement Award: Julia Blake and Terry Norris
International Film Festival Of India: Dan Wolman
Top Mexican Fest: Spike Lee and Terry Gilliam
Malatya Film Festival: Şener Şen, Perran Kutman and Osman Sınav
NYC Horror Film Festival: Tony Todd
Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival: Liv Ullmann and Ivars Seleckis
Society of Camera Operators: Harrison Ford
Palm Springs Women in Film & Television: Beverly D’Angelo and Kaye Ballard
Toronto Film Critics Association Award: Tantoo Cardinal
Bette Davis Lifetime Achievement Award: Michael Douglas
Director’s Guild Award: Don Mischer
Make-Up Artists and Hair Stylists Guild Awards: Susan Cabral-Ebert and Robert Louis Stevenson
Annie Awards: Andrea Romano, Ralph Eggleston and Frank Braxton (posthumously)
American Society of Cinematographers: Robert Richardson and Jeff Jur
Women in Film and TV: Juliet Stevenson
Nigerian Film Corporation: Femi Odugbem
International Film Festival of Kerala: Majid Majidi
London Film Critics Awards: Pedro Almodovar
Zuma Film Festival: Femi Odugbemi
AARP's Movies for Grownups Awards: Shirley MacLaine
West Bengal Film Journalist Association: Buddhadeb Dasgupta
ICG Publicists Awards: Jamie Lee Curtis
Capri Legend Award: Nick Nolte
L.A. Italia Fest: Franco Nero and Andy Garcia
British Film Institute: Olivia Colman
Canadian Screen Awards: The Kids In The Hall, Deepa Mehta and Mary Walsh
Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards: Colm Feore and Sandra Oh
#dannyreviews#lifetime achievement award#cicely tyson#lalo schifrin#david cronenberg#vanessa redgrave#Donald Sutherland#steve zahn#judi dench#danny devito#Martin Scorsese#Harrison Ford#lady gaga#morgan freeman#harry belafonte#ciaran hinds#quincy jones#nichelle nichols#sylvester stallone#zbigniew preisner#john goodman#hal linden#alan alda#ralph fiennes#hayao miyazaki#ennio morricone#terry gilliam#nicole kidman#liv ullmann#robert redford
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FALSE:: INACCURACY: UNSUPPORTED ENCODING
Estudió fotografía en la Escuela de Artes y Oficios de Wuppertal en Renania del Norte-Westfalia y los continúo en la Escuela de fotografía del Estado de Baviera en Múnich. He is largely looked at to be a trailblazer of photography as well as a prominent leader of the record of cinema. First off I wished to thank for this task, I have actually used it as base for my 2nd year uni job I have almost complete this job and also for the uni requiremnts I have to produced PCB as well as electrical power source in order to produce everything in one device, additionally I have included an additional setting to present quick message as my girl demand it haha.
Sí tienen en común disadvantage los daguerrotipos el tratarse de positivos directos, siendo por tanto imágenes únicas. I ran Testdisk on one dividing (much smaller measurements one) and turned the hard drive to standard. Georges Ricard-Cordingley, pintor francés nacido 1873 en Lyon que constantemente buscó un contacto authentic disadvantage el mundo del mar Jim Cagey hand-delivered the character to Recuperation Works-- he failed to would like to jeopardize it receiving shed in the email. Just about one hundred solo events were had during her life time both in South Africa and Europe. Sometimes the time label is correct when it looks at that arrow style factor, yet typically it is wrong. Originally outlawed in the Soviet Union, the book has two identical stories: the tale of Expert as well as Margarita and also the account of Jesus Christ's ultimate times as composed due to the Expert. There are actually no delectable limitless flavors (flavours) of coffee buddy. Sus mejores frescos fueron una serie histórica pintada en las paredes y el techo de Los Angeles Rental property Farnese en Caprarola, construida para el cardenal Alessandro Farnese, para Los Angeles cual Zuccari también diseñó una gran cantidad de ricas decoraciones en eliminate de estuco al estilo de Giulio Romano y otra alumnos de Raphael. St. Elizabeth Healthcare, Kalfas's former company, revealed in mid January that it aimed to execute Hazelden's clinically assisted treatment educational program in its own rehab facilities all over Northerly Kentucky. However I remembered a dining establishment because area where you might obtain a great little steak at the same time. Böcklin es conocido por felicia-excercises-blog.info sus cinco versiones (pintadas entre 1880 y 1886) de Los angeles isla de los muertos, que evoca en parte el Cementerio Inglés de Florence, cerca de su estudio y donde su hija bebé María había sido enterrada. And with about 90 percent of centers grounded in the guideline of sobriety, that means drug addicts are systematically refused access to Suboxone and various other man-made opioids. Medical clinics that distributed pain relievers proliferated along with only the loosest of buffers, till a latest teamed up federal-state clampdown crushed a number of the alleged tablet mills." As the opioid pain medications became rare, a more affordable opioid began to take over the market-- heroin. " Me enamoré de la fotografía cuando siendo una niña, desde el primer momento que vi a mi papá revelando imágenes en su cuarto oscuro. Greetings Markus, I have actually only posted the motorist for the more mature type display screens to my google.com code web page.
Pronto, otras publicaciones bien establecidas comenzaron a reconocer el trabajo de Rolston, como Harper's Market, Trend, Vanity Fair, W, GQ, Esquire, Cosmopolitan,: The Oprah Magazine y The New york city Moments. Utilizando tan sólo un dedo, un iPad Air y la aplicación Procreate, el artista Kyle Lambert ha pintado este retrato fotorrealista del actor Morgan Freeman, basado en una fotografían authentic de Scott Gries. It was actually composed by DOCTOR Nora Volkow, director of the U.S. National Principle on Substance Abuse-- which assisted investigation Suboxone prior to it got FDA commendation in 2002-- alongside CDC Director Frieden and pair of others. I had wrongly formatted a 1.0 TUBERCULOSIS exterior SATA drive as a vibrant hard drive under Microsoft window XP. When my XP computer plunged, Succeed 7 64 bits can not check out the hard drive.
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[ID: screenshots of various book covers. The titles and authors of these books are listed down below:
Far off Metal River, by Emilie Cameron
Under Osman’s Tree, by Alan Mikhail
Ranching, Endangered Species, and Urbanization in the Southwest, by Nathan Freeman Sayre
Do Glaciers Listen? by Julie Cruikshank
Wetlands in a Dry Land, by Emily O’Gorman
Demonic Grounds: Black Women and the Cartographies of Struggle, by Katherine McKittrick
Plant Horror: Approaches to the Monstrous Vegetal in Fiction and Film, edited by Dawn Keetley and Angela Tenga
The Death of Asylum: Hidden Geographies of the Enforcement Archipelago, by Alison Mountz
Shells on a Desert Shore, by Cathy Moser Marlett
Colonial Cataclysms, Bradley Skopyk
Animal Places, edited by Jacob Bull, Tora Holmberg, and Cecilia Asberg
Pests in the City, by Dawn Day Biehler
Saguaro Cactus, by David Yetman, Alberto Burquez, Kevin Hultine, and Michael Sanderson
Seeds of Control, by David Fedman
Wastelanding, by Traci Brynne Voyles
The Lost Land of Lemuria, by Sumathi Ramaswamy
Hinterland, by Phil A. Neel
The Tanoak Tree, by Frederica Bowcutt
Ghostly Matters, by Avery F. Gordon
Sweetness and Power, by Sidney W. Mintz
Imperial San Francisco, by Gray Brechin
Rubber and the Making of Vietnam, by Michitake Aso
Caribbean Literature and the Environment, edited by Elizabeth M. DeLoughrey, Renee K. Gosson, and George B. Handley
Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer
Prison Land, by Bretty Story
The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries, by W. Y. Evans-Wentz
Contemporary Archipelagic Thinking, edited by Michelle Stephens and Yolanda Martinez-San Miguel
The Great Cacti, by David Yetman
Law and Disorder in the Postcolony, edited by Jean Comaroff and John L. Comaroff
Big Water, edited by Jacob Blanc and Frederico Freitas
Vita: Life in a Zone of Social Abandonment, by Joao Biehl
Obeah and Other Powers, by Maarit Forde, edited by Diana Paton
Sami Media and Indigenous Agency in the Arctic North, by Coppelie Cocq and Thomas A. Dubois
Consuming Ivory, by Alexandra Celia Kelly
Landscapes of Fear, by Yi-Fu Tuan
Inland Fishes of the Greater Southwest, by W. L. Minckley and Paul C. Marsh
The Animal in Ottoman Egypt, by Alan Mikhail
The Extractive Zone, by Macarena Gomez-Barris
The Platypus and the Mermaid, by Harriet Ritvo
An Ecology of Knowledge, by Micha Rahder
Decoloninzing “Prehistory”, edited by Gesa Mackenthun and Christen Mucher
Gothic Animals, edited by Ruth Heholt and Melissa Edmundson
Tropical Freedom, by Ikuko Asaka
Radical Botany, by Natania Meeker and Antonia Szabari
Centering Animals in Latin American History, edited by Martha Few and Seb Tortorici
Unfreezing the Arctic, by Andrew Stuhl
Trash Animals, edited by Kelsi Nagy and Phillip David Johnson III
Singing the Turtles to Sea, by Gary Paul Nabhan
Images of Animals, by Eileen Crist
The Earth on Show, by Ralph O-Connor
No Species Is an Island, by Theodore H. Fleming
Walking the Clouds, edited by Grace L. Dillon
Non-places, by Marc Auge
Imperial Debris, edited by Ann Laura Stoler
The Herds Shot Round the World, by Rebecca J. H. Woods
The Retreat of the Elephants, by Mark Elvin
Implosions/Explosions, edited by Neil Brenner
We are the Ocean, by Epeli Hau’ofa
Green Imperialism, by Richard H. Grove
Gathering Moss, by Robin Wall Kimmerer
Tidalectics, edited by Stefanie Hessler
Mountain Islands and Desert Seas, by Frederick R. Ghelbach
A Billion Black Anthropecenes or None, by Kathryn Yusoff
Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet, edited by Anna Tsing, Heather Swanson, Elaine Gan, Nils Bubandt
Environments of Empire, edited by Ulrike Kirchberger and Brett M Bennett
Reptiles of the Northwest, by Alan St. John
Whale Show, by Chie Sakakibara
The Mushroom at the End of the World, by Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing
End ID]
do you have any book recommendations about geography/ecology?
hello. hmm, sure. thanks for trusting me enough to ask; don’t trust me too much, though. i'm always learning and criticizing my past/previous perspectives, but there are still some "classic" books that i'd recommend. something i say often, though: i actually spend much more time reading essays and journal articles, rather than full-length books (especially since so much of the best decolonial viewpoints, Indigenous and non-Western perspectives, and newer/fresher geographical thought and "critical geography" takes are being actively revised/discussed in these newer forums without having to appease popular or profit-oriented press/publishing companies).
the subjects that i read about: human relationships with other-than-human creatures; extinction; environmental history of empires, imperialism, colonization; traditional ecological knowledge; resistance, fugitivity, and carceral geography; eerie, weird, and uncanny ecology; regional geography, specific microhabitats, endemic species; Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Plantationocene; ruins, ruination, haunting, trauma, and emotional geography; reptiles/amphibians; temperate rainforest and deserts; Pleistocene fauna and Paleolithic/ancient anthropogenic environmental change; islands, the sea, Oceanic worldviews, archipelagic thinking, solidarity across islands/regions; frontiers, borderlands, hinterlands, sacrifice zones, wastelanding, social abandonment, and extraction zones; Indigenous geography/ontology; decolonization
generally, i don't distinguish much of a difference between the subjects of geography/ecology -- or human and other-than-human environments -- since lifeforms and places and (cosmo)politics are all so entangled. anyway, here are some books involving a bit more geography and human ecology (the last time i was asked for recommendations, i focused a bit more on ecology and other-than-human environments, which i'll also re-post below these newer recs):
and then, i'll say again that essays and journal articles are often a great source for some of my favorite authors (though of course none of them are perfect; they can be problematique in their own ways): Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert; Elizabeth DeLoughrey; Paulo Tavares; Anna Boswell; Achille Mbembe; Hugo Reinert; Tim Edensor; Anna Tsing; Frantz Fanon; Robin Wall Kimmerer; Kyle Whyte; Kathryn Yusoff; Iyko Day; Audra Simpson; Ann Laura Stoler; Pedro Neves Marques
so here are the books i've previously recommended:
hope some of these are interesting.
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INDY Daily: Durham's Primary Election Results • A Bill for Survivors of Contaminated Water at Camp Lejeune • Congressional Candidate Charles Graham, a Dem, Voted for HB 2
It’s Wednesday, October 6
Thank you to our sponsor this week, NC Theatre. Book your tickets now to see the "9 to 5" The Musical, starring Lauren Kennedy, Ryah Nixon, Ben Davis, and Raleigh's very own IRA DAVID WOOD III. 9 to 5 is an outrageous, 1980s era revenge story of friendship and female empowerment.
Good morning, readers.
Following yesterday's primary, in which 20,033 ballots were cast out of a total 199,955 registered voters, we now have our top two contenders in each of Durham's municipal races—that is, the candidates who will appear on Durham voters' ballots in the general election on November 2.
Here are the results of the primary for the mayoral race and the Wards I and II races (the candidates who will face off in November are bolded) according to the N.C. Board of Elections website. *
Mayor
Elaine O'Neal: 13,586 votes (67.96 percent)
Javiera Caballero: 4,925 votes (24.63 percent)
Jahnmaud Lane: 589 votes (2.95 percent)
Rebecca Harvard Barnes: 346 votes (1.73 percent)
Sabrina (Bree) Davis: 225 votes (1.13 percent)
Daryl Quick: 211 votes (1.06 percent)
Charlitta Burruss: 110 votes (0.55 percent)
Ward I
DeDreana Freeman: 13,468 votes (69.61 percent)
Marion T. Johnson: 5,189 votes (26.82 percent)
Elizabeth Takla: 401 votes (2.07 percent)
Waldo Fenner: 289 votes (1.49 percent)
Ward II
Mark-Anthony Middleton: 16,255 votes (85.91 percent)
Sylvester Williams: 1,718 votes (9.08 percent)
Robert L. Curtis, Jr.: 947 votes (5.01 percent)
*Ward III
Only two candidates, AJ Williams and Leonardo Williams, filed to run in Ward III; they will appear on the ballot in November.
Early voting for the general election in Durham, Orange, and Wake County municipal races begins October 14. Make a plan to register and vote! Send along any questions you may have about how to do either.
We'll be updating our 2021 voting guide this week with candidate questionnaires and, for Orange County races, endorsements, so be sure to check for that content.
And we have a new paper out on stands today—grab a paper, or you can read all of our stories on our website.
Thanks for reading and have a great Wednesday!
Like the INDY Daily? Share it with your friends and ask them to subscribe!
The INDY Daily is made possible by the INDY Press Club, which is helping us keep fearless, independent local journalism viable in the Triangle.
[Judge Elaine O'Neal won the most votes in Durham's mayoral primary. She will run in the general election against Javiera Caballero November 2.]
Orange County
Campaign signs are going missing in Orange County. According to North Carolina Law, stealing, defacing, vandalizing, or unlawfully removing political signs is a Class 3 misdemeanor, though the infraction is rarely prosecuted.
The Town of Chapel Hill's Public Safety Task Force, formed after the murder of George Floyd, gave its recommendations. The top five are to increase community collaborations, expand existing policing alternatives, increase affordable housing opportunities, restructure 911, and fund the Street Outreach, Harm Reduction and Deflection program.
UNC-CH's African Studies Center recently received a $500,000 grant from the Oak Foundation for a proposal to create a digital platform for elementary school students to learn about modern-day Africa.
Durham
Here are some scenes from the march for reproductive freedom in Durham this weekend.
A Durham woman says she is in danger of losing her house after a local car dealership tore up her credit from running illegal loan inquiries.
A portion of North Roxboro Street is closed due to a water main break.
[A new bill would allow survivors of contaminated tap water at Camp Lejeune to sue the U.S. government for damages.]
Wake
Raleigh's City Council approved a text change yesterday for above-curb, all ages and abilities bike lanes for all of the city's avenue cross sections.
N.C. + Elsewhere
A new bill in Congress would allow survivors exposed to contaminated water at Camp Lejeune to sue the federal government for damages. But its passage remains uncertain.
N.C. Rep. Charles Graham, a Democrat, just launched a congressional campaign for the District 9 seat with a powerful video, but could his voting record, including a vote for HB 2 in 2016, come back to haunt him?
Johnston County's Board of Commissioners released $7.9 million in funds to Johnston County Schools after the school board agreed to ban teaching Critical Race Theory.
Why won't North Carolina's Department of Public Safety comply with an intersex, transgender inmate's request to transfer to a women's correctional facility?
Statewide COVID-19 by the numbers: Tuesday, October 5
2,703 New lab-confirmed cases (1,413.605 total; seven-day average trending down)
2,705 Current hospitalizations reported (seven-day average trending down; 16,812 total deaths, +93 over Monday)
28,979 Completed tests (18 million total; most recent positive rate was 9.4 percent)
11,237,949 Total vaccinations administered; 54 percent of total population fully vaccinated; 65 percent of 18 years+ fully vaccinated. (State data not updated daily)
Eat. Drink. Do.
Get out and about in the Triangle today. Got an Eat.Drink.Do Idea? Email us at [email protected]
Eat The News & Observer's ranking burgers—weigh in!
Drink Visit Aunt Ginny at Bar Virgile.
Do Check out Comedy Night Under the Stars at James Joyce Pub and Restaurant starting at 8.
Today's weather
Partly cloudy with highs in the mid-80s.
Song of the day
Here in Your Arms — Hellogoodbye The California pop-rock band headlines Motorco tonight at 8 p.m. with Amyrah opening.
— Jane Porter— Send me an email | Find me on Twitter
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