#americus
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knightscanfeeltoo · 3 months ago
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I wonder if there are any More "Nameless NPCs" in Dark Souls that may or may not have Names like Oscar of Astora...
(I learned about Amerix/Americus from a Tumblr Post btw...)
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unteriors · 1 year ago
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Ridge Street, Americus, Georgia.
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kfvarela · 10 months ago
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gwmac · 2 years ago
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Navigating the Not-so-Peachy: The 21 Worst Cities to Live in Georgia, 2023"
Introduction Life is a mosaic of decisions, with one of the most significant being the choice of where to call home. Our previous article illuminated the “Top 10 Best Cities to Live in Georgia, 2023,” but we understand that knowing where not to settle can be equally crucial. This inspired us to delve into the less illustrious side of Georgia’s cities, and in the spirit of comprehensive…
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andrewpcannon · 2 months ago
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Holiday Show Schedule! Come see us in person!
We’ve been participating in local craft markets here since 2022. Each year, our pieces and prices get better. With all the rising prices, I’m happy to say that our prices have gotten lower even though quality has gotten better. This year at our booth, you’ll find items like: Cutting Boards starting at $28 Coaster Sets starting at $24 Tables starting at $100 Earrings by Kati starting at $5 a…
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knightscanfeeltoo · 3 months ago
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Oh hey, Americus' Face looks like how I imagine Anri's Face would look like if they have Hair...
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(nope i will not use any gender pronouns for the OTHER elite knight from dark souls 3 and just ignore uncle oscar...)
I have discovered what might just be the most unheard of character in the entire Dark Souls trilogy. I don't say this lightly lol.
Meet... Knight "Amerix" (騎士アメリクス), or rather Americus. And despite the name, she is a woman!
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And this is not a name I pulled out of thin air, either. It was already mentioned on the Dark Souls wiki's trivia section for the Forest Hunter Knight... I checked and indeed, this name is actually used for Japanese wikis of Dark Souls, such as this one here [x]
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Technically, there's two forest hunters who use this exact same base, but only one of them is named Americus, and it's the one that doesn't respawn... and she seems to specifically be the one that stands close to Pharis (who was confirmed to be the Forest Hunter by this same Japanese guide). And in fact, she also does not respawn after being defeated once!
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Here's her without the helmet too, for good measure. She is cute.
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katyspersonal · 7 days ago
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oldsardens · 8 months ago
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Americus Long - Untitled, abstract composition
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reasoningdaily · 1 year ago
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StoryCorps: Leesburg Stockade Girls Recall Time As Civil Rights-Era Prisoners : NPR
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Taken in 2016, (left to right) Emmarene Kaigler-Streeter, Carol Barner-Seay, Shirley Green-Reese and Diane Bowens stand outside the stockade building in Leesburg, Ga., where they were jailed in 1963.
The day Martin Luther King Jr. gave his landmark "I Have a Dream" speech in August 1963, a lesser known moment in civil rights history was unfolding in southern Georgia.
More than a dozen African-American girls, ages 12 to 15, were being held in a small, Civil War-era stockade set up by law enforcement in Leesburg, Ga., as a makeshift jail.
Though they were never charged with a crime, the girls had been arrested for challenging segregation in demonstrations in nearby Americus, Ga. For about two months, the girls slept on concrete floors; there was no working toilet or shower. There were minimal food and water deliveries each day.
"The place was worse than filthy," recalled Carol Barner-Seay at StoryCorps in 2016.
Barner-Seay, who's now 68, had been imprisoned there along with Shirley Green-Reese, Diane Bowens and Emmarene Kaigler-Streeter. At StoryCorps, the four women recounted their time together in the stockade.
"Being in a place like that, I didn't feel like we was human," Shirley Green-Reese, now 70, said.
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In August 1963, African-American girls were held in a Georgia stockade after being arrested for demonstrating segregation. Left to right: Melinda Jones Williams (13), Laura Ruff Saunders (13), Mattie Crittenden Reese, Pearl Brown, Carol Barner Seay (12), Annie Ragin Laster (14), Willie Smith Davis (15), Shirley Green (14), and Billie Jo Thornton Allen (13). Sitting on the floor: Verna Hollis (15).
Bowens, who's 68, was especially concerned about one of the girls, Verna Hollis. "I was scared Verna was going to die. If she ate, it would just come right back up."
Hollis didn't know that she was pregnant at the time. "We didn't know because we were children," Green-Reese said.
Looking back, Barner-Seay remembered Hollis' strength. "If she complained to anybody, it was under her breath to God, but we never heard it," she said.
Hollis' son, Joseph Jones III, is now 54 years old. A year before Hollis died in 2017, she recorded a StoryCorps interview with him, reflecting on those months she'd been jailed as a teen.
"I was scared and mad that you could treat a human being like they treated us," said Hollis, then 68. "We both could have died in there."
Jones told his mom he, too, was inspired by her strength. "I'm proud of that, and I try to live from that," he said.
'This is us'
The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee eventually learned where the girls were and sent photographer Danny Lyon to the stockade to photograph them. When Lyon's photographs documenting their squalid living conditions were published, the girls were released.
When Green-Reese went back home, she says she didn't feel welcomed. "When we got out of that stockade, my classmates and my teachers never asked me where I was coming from," she said. "I felt like I didn't fit in, so after high school, I left the area and moved forward."
She took a job with a library in Savannah, Ga. In the archives at work one day, she saw for the first time one of Lyon's photos of the imprisoned girls, including herself, behind bars at the stockade.
"I said, 'This is us.' "
But Green-Reese didn't share the photo with her coworkers. "I didn't want them to know I was in that jail," she said.
It wasn't until 2015 that the women who had been imprisoned in the stockade got together to discuss their time there.
Bowens says she doesn't do well in confined spaces. "Today, when I got in this elevator, I was about to have a heart attack," she said in 2016. "I just don't want to be closed in, and I don't want to be in the dark."
In the StoryCorps podcast, Emmarene Kaigler-Streeter shared what she'd tell the men who locked her up: that she feels sorry for them. "Because they were not looking at us as children," she said. "They were not looking in the hearts. All they were looking at was the fact that we were black."
Green-Reese says the experience is in her "fibers."
"And I still don't like to talk about it," she said, "but this is a part of all of our lives forever."
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poebrey · 2 years ago
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love that the two times I’ve seen James Frain play an adoptive father are to Michael Burnham in Star Trek Discovery and Walmart baby Americus in Where the Heart Is
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taxi-davis · 1 year ago
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business4u · 1 month ago
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Packing and Boxing Services in Thomasville
Our professional packing and boxing services in Thomasville, GA, ensure your belongings are protected during your move. We use high-quality materials and expert packing techniques to safeguard fragile items and bulky furniture, making your relocation as safe and smooth as possible.
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kfvarela · 1 year ago
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albinofetus · 3 months ago
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Americus' birthday cake, "Where The Heart Is" (2000)
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spookyfoxdreamer · 4 months ago
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brewscoop · 4 months ago
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Discover the mesmerizing world of Americus Glassblowing History! Join us in celebrating stunning glass art and savoring local craft beers. Get a sneak peek into the creative process and meet talented artists from around the nation. Don't miss out on the chance to support local breweries and enjoy community vibes. Check out the full scoop on Brew Scoop!
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