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brandonraykirk · 2 years
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Poem: "Old Abraham" (1996)
Old Abraham: Historic Sycamore Tree in #Barboursville #WV #Appalachia #poets #poetry #writing #history #wvhistory #CivilWar
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lovingpromise · 6 months
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Დ ▫ Jennifer Walters
BASICS.
Full Name | Jennifer Susan Walters Nickname | She-Hulk, Jen, Jenny, Shulkie Birthday | Pending (1985) Age | 38 Gender | Cis Female (She/Her) Orientation | Pansexual Nationality | American Ethnicity | Caucasian Species | Human, Hulk Language | English, American Sign Language Occupation | Lawyer, Avenger, Temp Fantastic Four
PHYSICAL.
Eye Color | Brown (Jen), Green (She-Hulk) Hair Color | Dark Brown (Jen), Dark Green (She-Hulk) Height | 5' 4" (Jen), 6'7" (She-Hulk) Skin Markings | N/A Face Claims | Tatiana Maslany
MEDICAL.
Mental | Body dysmorphia. Jennifer deals a great deal with a lack of self-esteem in her appearance. As Jennifer Walters she does not feel beautiful. The first time Jennifer became She-Hulk, she fell in love with the way she looked and the confidence she felt. It was the first time she had ever felt right in her own skin. Go figure that it took getting exposed to radiation and becoming an almost seven-foot-tall glamazon to do it. If she could, Jennifer would prefer to live out her life forever in the form of She-Hulk. Physical | Gamma Radiation Mutation. Phobias | Pending. Eyesight | 20/20 Vices | Pending.
CHARACTER.
Zodiac | Pending. Alignment | Chaotic Good Strengths | Pending. Weaknesses | Pending. Skills | Extensive Law Knowledge, Self-Defense (Judo + Boxing), Acrobatic. Abilities | Transformation into a Hulk, Superhuman Strength + Durability, Super Speed, Agility, and Stamina, Regenerative Healing Factor, Radiation Immunity, Fourth Wall Awareness.
BACKGROUND.
Birthplace | Los Angeles, California Current Home | Verse Dependent Headcanons | Links will be here
This version of Jen is a heavy blend of both her 616 and MCU counterparts, leaning more heavily into 616 Jen.
Jennifer was born in Los Angeles to Sheriff Morris Walters and Elaine Walters.
As a child, she was very meek and lacked confidence in herself. Unable to connect with her fellow peers, companionship came in the form of her older cousin Bruce when he came to visit. He would take her to the local library, where he would read to her. Since she was an only child he was like a sibling to her and even as they grew older she continued to care for him as such.
She went to UCLA for college, graduated with two degrees and in the top ten percent summa cum laude, and was awarded the order of the coif. Afterward, she would begin practicing law as a Deputy District Attorney at the LA County District Attorney's Office.
She was a driving force in building a case against a man by the name of Nicholas Trask, a crime boss operating out of LA for years. Her father, now retired by this time, had crossed paths with him on multiple occasions but was never able to get any charges to stick. People warned Jennifer of the dangers of trying to go after Trask, but she kept pushing, hoping to put him behind bars and see justice served.
Jennifer was able to secure a key witness, but despite her better efforts, the man was murdered before he could testify. Angry, Jennifer confronted Trask directly and promised him that she wouldn't stop until he was behind bars. Trask replied with a subtle threat of his own and people around Jen worried for her safety.
Coincidentally, Bruce came to LA to visit. (Jen's mother had called and asked him to keep an eye on her for a bit). He suggested she take some time off and go on a road trip with him. Though she saw through the reason for this, Jen hadn't seen much of Bruce in years and so agreed to go.
During the drive, however, they were run off the road by another car (later realized to be hitmen hired by Trask) and ended up tumbling down a hill in a bad accident. Both she and Bruce were injured, but Jennifer woke up first. She pulled her cousin out of the car, some of his blood spilling into an open wound before he began to come to and warn her to keep away.
Due to the trauma of the car crash, Bruce seemed to be having a hard time keeping control of his alter ego and told her to run. Having not seen his unstable transformation up close and also still being disoriented from the crash, a scared Jennifer did as she was told.
She wound up lost in the forest for hours, dirty and with no shoes. Eventually, she came across a bar and wandered towards it. A few women helped clean her up and allowed her to borrow their phone. She called her Bruce, who thankfully had gained control and returned to himself and let him know her location.
While waiting for him, Jennifer realized that she was being watched and a group of men came up to her. At first, she simply thought that they were just hitting on her because she was an easy target, until one of them pointed a gun at her. They revealed that they were sent by Trask, and were surprised to see that she had survived the car crash.
Jennifer tried to reason with them, but the gun went off and she felt the bullet pierce her chest. To the surprise of both the men and herself, she stayed standing, instead beginning to transform. Her features began to take on a green color and she felt as if she were growing taller. All that she remembered after that was letting out a monstrous scream and the look of horror on the men's faces before everything went black.
When she came to the next day, Jennifer found herself in Bruce's Beach House in Mexico. It was there that Bruce explained her new condition and tried to help her get a grasp of her new abilities. Unlike when Bruce first became the Hulk, they realized that (despite her blacking out during her first transformation) Jennifer was able to retain a lot more self-control in her Hulk form.
Bruce trained her, monitoring their differences and her stability. Jennifer at first wanted Bruce to fix her, fearing her new form, but quickly came to like it. The more she trained in her Hulk form, the more confident she felt. It was a feeling she had never felt before in her own skin.
As their training sessions progressed, Jennifer found herself spending less and less time out of her Hulk form. Bruce noticed and expressed concern, but Jennifer brushed him off. Jen's newfound confidence was beginning to become overconfidence. She began to ask Bruce when she would be able to go back to her life in LA and got upset when he explained that it wouldn't be a good idea to ever go back.
Jennifer did not like that answer. She felt that the fact that she could freely transform between her human and Hulk form meant that she would be safe to return to society. Bruce disagreed. This led to an argument where the two would end up fighting in their Hulk forms, Jen insisting she was leaving and Bruce trying to get her to stay.
Jennifer said a few hurtful things as only a family member could and their fight ended with them accidentally destroying the bar that Bruce and Tony had built together. Feeling terrible, Jennifer helped him rebuild it and they had a calmer conversation.
Bruce still did not think that it was a good idea for her to go back to LA, but respected that she was an adult that could make her own decisions. Jennifer apologized for what she had said to them in their fight and he saw her off, letting her that he was the only one that understood what she would be going through and to not be afraid to call him if she needed him.
Back in LA, Jennifer tried to continue on as if the recent events hadn't happened. The only people she told were her mother and father and her good friend (and coworker) Nikki Ramos. Months passed with no incident and Jennifer tried to focus on her job. Talks started forming around Jennifer potentially being looked at to be promoted to a District Attorney.
Unfortunately for Jen, an incident in the courtroom during one of her closing testimonies would reveal her Hulk form to the world and throw her into the spotlight.
She was fired from her job at the DA's office for liability reasons.
Eventually, she was offered a job at GLK&H under their Superhuman Law Division. At first, she didn't want to take it, feeling that they simply wanted to exploit the image of She-Hulk... but she quickly realized that she could do a lot of good representing the Superhuman population.
When not fighting crime in the courtroom, Jen is outright crime on the streets.
RELATIONSHIPS.
Mother | Elaine Ann Walters, nee Banner Father | William Morris Walters Siblings | Bruce Banner (Cousin, Older Brother Figure) Other Family | Brian Banner (Uncle), Rebecca Banner (Aunt-in-Law), Tucker (Uncle), Ched (Cousin), Skaar (First Cousin Once-Removed) Significant Other | John Jameson "Johnny" (Husband or Ex-Husband), Verse Dependent Children | N/A Pets | N/A
VERSES.
Verse Name | Pending.
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janjoycesmitz · 1 year
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Helen Frankenthaler (American, 1928-2011)
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐👑
Essence MulberryDate:
1977
Color woodcut from four blocks on tan Japanese paper
Image/sheet: 100.7 × 46.5 cm
printed by John Hutcheson and Kenneth Tyler (American, born 1931)
Helen Frankenthaler (1928-2011), whose career spanned six decades, has long been recognized as one of the great American artists of the twentieth century. She was eminent among the second generation of postwar American abstract painters and is widely credited for playing a pivotal role in the transition from Abstract Expressionism to Color Field painting. Through her invention of the soak-stain technique, she expanded the possibilities of abstract painting, while at times referencing figuration and landscape in unique ways. She produced a body of work whose impact on contemporary art has been profound and continues to grow.
 
Frankenthaler was born on December 12, 1928, and raised in New York City. She attended the Dalton School, where she received her earliest art instruction from Rufino Tamayo. In 1949 she graduated from Bennington College, Vermont, where she was a student of Paul Feeley. She later studied briefly with Hans Hofmann.
 
Frankenthaler’s professional exhibition career began in 1950, when Adolph Gottlieb selected her painting Beach (1950) for inclusion in the exhibition titled Fifteen Unknowns: Selected by Artists of the Kootz Gallery. Her first solo exhibition was presented in 1951, at New York’s Tibor de Nagy Gallery, and that year she was also included in the landmark exhibition 9th St. Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture.
 
In 1952 Frankenthaler created Mountains and Sea, a breakthrough painting of American abstraction for which she poured thinned paint directly onto raw, unprimed canvas laid on the studio floor, working from all sides to create floating fields of translucent color. Mountains and Sea was immediately influential for the artists who formed the Color Field school of painting, notable among them Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland.
 
As early as 1959, Frankenthaler began to be a regular presence in major international exhibitions. She won first prize at the Premiere Biennale de Paris that year, and in 1966 she represented the United States in the 33rd Venice Biennale, alongside Ellsworth Kelly, Roy Lichtenstein, and Jules Olitski. She had her first major museum exhibition in 1960, at New York’s Jewish Museum, and her second, in 1969, at the Whitney Museum of American Art, followed by an international tour.
 
Frankenthaler experimented tirelessly throughout her long career. In addition to producing unique paintings on canvas and paper, she worked in a wide range of media, including ceramics, sculpture, tapestry, and especially printmaking. Hers was a significant voice in the mid-century “print renaissance” among American abstract painters, and she is particularly renowned for her woodcuts. She continued working productively through the opening years of this century.
Frankenthaler’s distinguished, prolific career has been the subject of numerous monographic museum exhibitions. The Jewish Museum and Whitney Museum shows were succeeded by a major retrospective initiated by the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth that traveled to The Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Detroit Institute of Arts, MI (1989); and those devoted to works on paper and prints organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. (1993), among others.
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beardedmrbean · 1 year
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A 21-year-old New Jersey man allegedly forced a female student at Fairleigh Dickinson University into a dorm room, where he sexually assaulted her at knifepoint “over a number of hours,” officials said.
Jayshawn Moore, of Jersey City, was arrested Tuesday in connection with what Morris County Prosecutor Robert Carroll described as an act of domestic violence on Sunday.
The suspect “forced an adult female victim known to him into a dormitory room on the campus of Fairleigh Dickinson University in Florham Park,” Carroll said in a statement.
“Once inside the room, it is alleged that he threatened the victim verbally and with a knife, and that he assaulted her physically and sexually over a number of hours,” he added.
Moore, who is not affiliated with the school, and the alleged victim knew each other, officials said.
According to the Florham Park police, the student was attacked after spending the weekend with her family.
“The suspect surprised the victim outside of her dorm room and physically forced her into the same where he held her hostage for several hours, threatened her with a knife, strangled her, as well as physically and sexually assaulted her,” police said on Facebook.
“This investigation was brought to a swift and successful conclusion, thus removing a vicious predator from the general population,” police added.
Moore was charged with two counts of first-degree kidnapping; four counts of first-degree aggravated sexual assault; second-degree aggravated assault; second-degree burglary; third-degree terroristic threats; third-degree possession of a weapon for unlawful purposes; and fourth-degree unlawful possession of a weapon.
“The University is deeply concerned and saddened about the recently reported incident of domestic violence on our campus,” university spokeswoman Dina Schipper told NJ.com.
“We take any form of violence seriously and are committed to providing a safe and supportive environment for all members of our community,” she said.
Schipper stressed that the assault was an isolated incident and that there is no ongoing threat at the university.
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shadows-over-sunn · 2 years
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📼My name is Charlotte Morris me and my assistant-
📹Assistant!?
📼I'm recording!- me and my partner Jeremy Lawrence are here to record the paranormal-
📹not paranormal, just mysteries.
📼 the PARANORMAL events going on in our hometown of Sunn, in north county !?=>"!,@_!/÷. Tonight we are investigating dog murders
📹give me that Charlie *scuffle* me and Charlie are investigating the disappearance of dogs from Stately Drive. Because we have nothing to do during our winter break from Community College. We will be using this to record any leads, information and/or discoveries we make. *off sound* I'm only doing this cause I don't want my dog to be caught up in it. *on sound* recording end 9:42 pm.
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theultimatefan · 12 days
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Luciano Named Sixth Caldwell University Baseball Coach
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Nick Luciano, who has served as assistant coach for four seasons, has been promoted to Caldwell University Baseball Head Coach, it was announced today by Mark A. Corino, Assistant Vice President and Director of Athletics. Luciano replaces Hasani Whitfield '05, who resigned to focus on other opportunities in the baseball industry after six years at the helm of the Cougars.
Luciano brings a wealth of experience to his new role. In addition to helping the Cougars reach the CACC North Division Championship Game in his first year on the Cougars sidelines, he has served as third base coach for the past two seasons, including 2023 when the squad earned its most wins in more than a decade.
"I am beyond excited to continue the growth this program has made in such a short amount of time under Coach Whitfield," said Luciano, who becomes the sixth head coach in the program's 28-year history. "I want to thank him for bringing me in and giving me the opportunity at Caldwell University. I would also like to thank the Athletic Department for making this a smooth transition from assistant coach to head coach. We are ready to get to work and build on the foundation that has been set here."
Prior to becoming the assistant coach at Caldwell, Luciano spent two years with County College of Morris as the recruiting coordinator and hitting coach. In 2019, the Titans captured the Garden State Athletic conference title. The program saw multiple All-Region and Conference players with one All-American under the assistance of Coach Luciano. The 2019 Titans would go on to break the majority of their previously held offensive records and being among the national leaders offensively in the NJCAA, posting a team batting average of .323 with 389 runs, 496 hits, 791 total bases, 62 home runs, and .932 OBP in a 49-game span.
Luciano was previously an assistant for Whitehouse Post 284 for two seasons where Post 284 captured two district championships and a New Jersey state final runner-up. He was also the Head Coach of the ABCCL Gamers, a summer collegiate league in New Jersey, for two years, winning the North Division in 2020, his first season at the helm and the ABCCL Championship in 2021.
“Coach Luciano is prepared and ready to continue the growth and success of our program," added Whitfield. "His journey as a former player into a current coach has been special to watch and experience personally. I look forward to watching him lead this program and more importantly my Alma Mater.”
Luciano played collegiately at Union County College for Jon Lewis, where he would earn All-Region accolades and then transfer to finish his baseball career at Queens College, where he played for former Caldwell Head Baseball Coach Chris Reardon.
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stephleb · 19 days
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Open Your Future: A Complete Guide to CNA Certification in New Jersey
Meta Title: Unlock Your Future: A⁢ Complete Guide to CNA Certification in New ‍Jersey
Meta ⁢Description: Looking to become a⁣ Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) in New Jersey? This comprehensive⁢ guide covers everything you‌ need⁢ to know about CNA certification, including requirements, training programs, and ‌job opportunities in the Garden State.
Introduction
Becoming a Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) ⁢is a rewarding career path‍ that offers‍ the⁣ opportunity ‍to make a positive⁢ difference in the ‌lives⁤ of patients. If you’re looking to start your ​CNA journey in ⁢New Jersey, this ‍guide ⁣will provide you with all the information you need⁢ to know about obtaining your certification and ‍kickstarting your career in ⁤the healthcare field.
Requirements ⁢for CNA Certification in New⁢ Jersey
To become a‌ CNA in New Jersey, you ‍must meet certain requirements set by the state’s Department of‍ Health. Here are‌ the key requirements:
– Must be at least 18 ‌years old – High‍ school diploma or GED -⁢ Successful completion of a state-approved CNA​ training program – Passing ⁣the Nurse Aide Competency Evaluation (NACE) exam
Training Programs⁢ in New Jersey
There are numerous training programs available in New Jersey to⁤ help you prepare for the NACE exam⁤ and gain ⁤the⁢ necessary skills to excel as a CNA. Some ​of the top CNA training⁤ programs in New Jersey include:
– American Red Cross CNA Training​ Program – County College of Morris CNA Program – Essex County College CNA Training -⁤ Bergen Community College CNA Certification⁢ Program
Benefits of Becoming a CNA in New Jersey
Becoming a‍ CNA in⁢ New⁣ Jersey offers a variety of benefits, including:
– Job stability ‌and⁣ growth opportunities in the healthcare field – Competitive salary and benefits – Flexible work ‍hours and shifts – Opportunity to make a positive impact on patients’ ‍lives
Practical Tips for Obtaining⁣ CNA Certification in New Jersey
Here are‍ some⁢ practical tips to help you successfully obtain your CNA‍ certification ​in New ‍Jersey:
– Research and compare different CNA training programs to find the best fit for⁢ your⁣ needs – Study diligently for‌ the NACE exam to increase your chances of passing – Gain hands-on experience through internships or volunteer ⁣work in healthcare settings – Stay updated on the latest‌ trends and developments in the healthcare industry
Case‌ Study: Maria’s Journey⁤ to Becoming a CNA in New Jersey
Maria always had a passion for helping others and decided to pursue‌ a career as a ‍CNA‍ in New Jersey. She enrolled ‌in a state-approved training program, studied rigorously for the NACE exam, and passed with flying colors. Now, Maria is working as a CNA in⁢ a local hospital, where she provides compassionate care to ⁣patients and makes a ‍meaningful impact on their lives every ‌day.
Conclusion
Becoming a Certified⁣ Nursing Assistant in New Jersey⁣ is a fulfilling and rewarding⁢ career choice‍ that offers countless opportunities for personal and professional growth. By following the​ steps outlined in this guide, you can‌ unlock‍ your future as a ⁣CNA and‍ embark ​on a ⁣successful career in⁣ the healthcare field. Remember, with dedication, hard work, and⁤ a passion ‍for ⁢helping others, you can achieve your dreams of becoming a ​CNA in the ‌Garden State.
By:​ [Your Name]
References: – https://www.njconsumeraffairs.gov/hhh/Pages/FAQs.aspx – ⁣https://www.nursinglicensure.org/certified-nursing-assistant/new-jersey.html
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https://cnatrainingcentral.com/open-your-future-a-complete-guide-to-cna-certification-in-new-jersey/
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stubobnumbers · 1 month
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CFB Promotion and Relegation - The Big East
Big East Tier One - The Big East (FBS): Louisville Cincinnati West Virginia Penn State Pittsburgh Syracuse Rutgers Boston College Connecticut
Big East Tier Two - Conference USA (FBS): Marshall Temple Villanova Albany Buffalo Stony Brook Massachusetts Rhode Island New Hampshire Maine
Big East Tier Three - Coastal Athletic Association (FCS): Central Connecticut State Merrimack College Monmouth (NJ.) Long Island University Marist College Wagner College Duquesne University Robert Morris (PA.) St. Francis (PA.) Bryant University
Big East Tier Four - Patriot League (FCS): Georgetown Holy Cross Stonehill College Colgate University Fordham University Bucknell Lafayette College Lehigh University Mercyhurst University
Big East Tier Five - Atlantic Football Association (D2): Sacred Heart University Southern Connecticut State Western Connecticut State University Post University U. of New Haven American International College Assumption University Bentley University Franklin Pierce University Saint Anselm College
Big East Tier Six - Eastern Football Association (D2): Pace University College Of New Jersey Fairleigh Dickinson-Florham Kean University Montclair State Rowan University William Paterson U. Trinity College – Connecticut Wesleyan University
Big East Tier Seven - Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference (D2): Slippery Rock University Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania California University of Pennsylvania Clarion University of Pennsylvania East Stroudsburg University of Pennsylvania Edinboro University Gannon University Indiana University of Pennsylvania Kutztown University of Pennsylvania Lincoln University Pennsylvania
Big East Tier Eight - Keystone Football League (D2): Lock Haven University Millersville University of Pennsylvania Seton Hill University Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania West Chester University of Pennsylvania Allegheny College Carnegie Mellon University Albright College Alvernia University Gettysburg College
Big East Tier Nine - West Virginia Conference (D2): Alderson Broaddus University Bethany College – West Virginia Bluefield State College Concord University Fairmont State University Glenville State University Shepherd University University of Charleston West Liberty University West Virginia State University West Virginia Wesleyan College Wheeling University
Big East Tier Ten - Northeast Football Alliance (D3): Bates College Bowdoin College Colby College Husson University Maine Maritime U. of New England (ME.) Plymouth State Salve Regina University
Big East Tier Eleven - Little East Conference (D3): US Coast Guard Academy US Merchant Marine Academy Vermont State – Castleton Middlebury College Norwich University Massachusetts Maritime SUNY Maritime College Amherst College Anna Maria College Curry College
Big East Tier Twelve - Eastern Football Association (D3): Bridgewater State University Fitchburg State University Framingham State Dean College Endicott College Umass-Dartmouth Springfield College MIT Nichols College Tufts University
Big East Tier Thirteen - Northern Small Colleges Coalition (D3): Western New England U. Westfield State Williams College Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) Worcester State Alfred University Alfred State Buffalo State University Hamilton College Hartwick College
Big East Tier Fourteen - Empire Football Alliance (D3): Brockport State Cortland State Hilbert College Hobart College Ithaca College Rensselaer Polytech – RPI St. John Fisher College St. Lawrence University SUNY Morrisville Union College – New York
Big East Tier Fifteen - Northeast Conference (D3): U. of Rochester Utica University ASA College – New York Erie CC Hudson Valley CC Monroe College – New Rochelle Nassau CC Sussex County CC College Of Mount Saint Vincent
Big East Tier Sixteen - Small Pennsylvania Schools Conference (D3): Delaware Valley University Dickinson College Eastern University Franklin & Marshall College Geneva College Grove City College Juniata College Keystone College King's College – Pennsylvania Lebanon Valley College
Big East Tier Seventeen - Pennsylvania Football Alliance (D3): Lycoming College Misericordia University Moravian University Muhlenberg College Saint Vincent College – Pennsylvania Susquehanna University Thiel College Ursinus College Washington & Jefferson College Waynesburg University
Big East Tier Eighteen - Eastern Football Coalition (D3): Westminster College – Pennsylvania Widener University Wilkes University Lackawanna College Thaddeus Stevens College of Technology New England College Williamson College of the Trades
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laurencna · 1 month
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The Top CNA Schools in New Jersey: Your Path to a Rewarding Career Starts Here!
Meta Title: The Top CNA Schools in New ​Jersey: Your Path to a Rewarding Career Starts ‍Here!
Meta Description: Looking to kickstart⁤ your career as a Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) in New Jersey? Discover the top CNA schools in the state ⁤that will help⁤ you achieve your career goals.⁤
Are you considering a career as a Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) in New Jersey? Becoming a CNA can be a‍ rewarding and‍ fulfilling career choice, offering the opportunity⁣ to make a real difference in the lives of⁤ patients and their families. However, in⁣ order to embark on this career path, you’ll need to undergo‍ proper ⁣training and education from reputable CNA schools.
In this article, we’ll explore the⁤ top CNA schools in New Jersey that will provide you⁤ with the knowledge and skills‌ needed⁢ to excel‍ in this field. Whether you’re a recent high school graduate looking to ⁣start your healthcare career or a seasoned professional ‌seeking a new opportunity, ⁤these schools offer comprehensive CNA programs to suit your needs.
### Benefits of Becoming a CNA
Before⁤ we delve into the top ‌CNA schools in New Jersey, let’s first discuss the benefits of pursuing⁤ a⁣ career as a ⁢Certified Nursing Assistant:
– High ⁢demand: The healthcare industry is always‌ in need of CNAs,‍ making it a secure and stable career choice. – Job satisfaction: ​As a CNA, you’ll have the opportunity to provide hands-on care to patients and make a⁤ positive impact on their well-being. – Career​ advancement: Becoming a CNA can be a ​stepping stone to furthering your career in healthcare, with opportunities to pursue advanced roles ⁣such as Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) or Registered Nurse (RN).
### Top⁣ CNA‌ Schools in New Jersey
Here are⁣ some of the top​ CNA schools in New Jersey that you may consider for​ your training:
1. **Bergen Community College** – Location: Paramus,​ NJ ⁤ – ‌Program: Certified Nurse ​Aide (CNA) Training⁣ Program – Duration: 90 hours – Description: Bergen Community College offers a ⁢comprehensive CNA training program that covers ⁤essential topics such as basic‍ nursing skills, patient care, and medical terminology.​ The program includes both classroom instruction and hands-on clinical experience.
2. **County College of Morris** ⁢ – Location: Randolph, NJ ⁤ – Program:​ Nurse Aide Training Program – Duration: 90 ‌hours ⁣- Description: County College of Morris provides a rigorous CNA training program that ‍prepares students for entry-level⁤ positions⁣ in long-term care facilities, hospitals, ⁤and home healthcare settings. The program includes instruction in vital‌ signs, infection​ control,​ and patient hygiene.
3. **Middlesex County College** – Location:⁢ Edison, NJ ‍ – Program: Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) Program ⁢ – Duration: 90 hours – Description: Middlesex County College offers a hands-on CNA program that covers a‌ wide range of topics, including communication skills, ethics in healthcare,⁣ and legal issues. Students will also ⁢gain⁤ practical experience through clinical rotations in healthcare facilities.
**WordPress Table Styling for CNA Schools Comparison:**
| ‍School Name ​ | Location | Program ‌ ⁢ ​ ⁣ | Duration | Description⁤ ​ ‍ ⁢ ​ ​ ‌ ‍⁣ ​ ⁤ ​ ‌ ‌ ⁤ ⁣ ⁣ ‌ ⁣ ⁢ ⁤ ‌ | |————————-|—————|————————|———-|————————————————————————————————————————| | Bergen Community College| Paramus, NJ | Certified Nurse‌ Aide | 90 hours | Comprehensive training⁣ program with classroom instruction and hands-on experience. ​ ‍ ⁤ ‌ ‌ | |⁣ County College⁤ of Morris| ‍Randolph, NJ ‌ | Nurse​ Aide Training ​ | 90 hours | ‌Rigorous program preparing students‍ for⁤ entry-level ⁣positions in various healthcare settings. ⁣ ⁢ | | Middlesex County College| Edison, NJ |⁤ Certified Nurse​ Aide | 90 hours | Hands-on program covering communication skills, ethics, and legal issues, with​ clinical rotations in‍ healthcare facilities |
### ⁢Tips​ for‌ Choosing the Right CNA ‍School
When selecting a⁢ CNA school⁣ in New Jersey, consider the following factors:
– Accreditation: ⁤Ensure that the ‌school is accredited by the ​Department of Health ‌or another relevant governing body. – Curriculum: Look for ‍a program that covers all essential topics and provides‍ hands-on clinical experience. – Reputation: Research the school’s reputation and success rate of its graduates in obtaining CNA certification. – ​Cost: Compare tuition fees and financial aid options to find a program⁢ that fits your budget.
### Conclusion
Embarking on a career as‌ a Certified Nursing‍ Assistant in ⁣New ⁢Jersey⁤ can open doors to a world of opportunities in the healthcare industry. By choosing one of the top ‌CNA schools mentioned above, you’ll receive the training and education needed to excel in this rewarding field. Remember‍ to ⁣carefully consider your ⁣options, do thorough research, and select a ⁢school that aligns with your career goals. ‍Your path to a fulfilling and​ rewarding CNA career starts⁤ here!
youtube
https://trainingcna.org/the-top-cna-schools-in-new-jersey-your-path-to-a-rewarding-career-starts-here/
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lboogie1906 · 2 months
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Pastor Dr. Herman ‘Skip’ Mason, Jr. (July 14, 1962) was born in Atlanta to Herman Mason and Deloris Hughes is a pastor, archivist, author, and educator.
He serves as senior pastor of West Mitchell Christian Methodist Episcopal Church in Atlanta. He serves as the Director of Library Service and Assistant Professor of African-American History and Religion at Voorhees College
He has served as professor of history, college archivist, director and dean of students, and vice president of student services at Morris Brown College and Morehouse College. He currently serves as the director of library services and assistant professor of African American history and religion at Voorhees College.
He has authored numerous books, including Black Atlanta in the Roaring Twenties, Black Entertainment in Atlanta, African American Life in DeKalb County, Black American Series: East Point, Georgia, and Politics, Law and Civil Rights in Atlanta. He has also curated major exhibitions, including the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Centennial Exhibition; Crowns and Gowns: The Legacy of the Homecoming Queen; and Hidden Treasures: Black Photographers in Atlanta.
He earned a BA at Morris Brown College. He earned an MA in Library and information science with a concentration in African American studies and archives/museum management at Clark Atlanta University. He obtained an M.Div and a D.Min from the Interdenominational Theological Center.
He served as the 33rd general president of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity and as a member of the National Board of Directors of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Foundation. He is a member of numerous fraternal, social, and civic organizations, including Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity and St. James Lodge No 24/Prince Hall.
He is the founder of Skip Mason Vanishing Black Atlanta Facebook Page and Book Club. He is the father of a daughter and a son. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence #sigmapiphi #alphaphialpha
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stephenjaymorrisblog · 6 months
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Toxic Shock
The Assassin of Mediocrity
Book Review
Stephen Jay Morris
4/2/2024
©Scientific Morality.
Recorded history must be correct and precise. Otherwise, why bother to study it? There are thousands of years of lives that existed before you were born. Some people don’t care about the past. Then, there are the curious and those who want to change history to fit their political or religious biases. My generation has received the most criticism from authors who want to discredit every rebellious generation that ever lived in the towns and cities across the USA. From the Beatniks of the 50’s, to the Hippies/Yippies of the 60’s and 70’s, all the way to the Punks of the 80’s. Most of that has come primarily from reactionary conservatives. A lot of suckers believed the propaganda and stereotypes that the political right wing utilized in their books, so as to mischaracterize the culture rebels and artists of those times. I’m not even going to mention their names. All of it was to say that the so-called woke and Left are evil.
This book, the subject of my review, is crucial within the rank and file of the cultural revolutions of the past. It sets the record straight about the punk movement. Critics who stereotyped leftists as lazy bums who lived off government programs and bought pot with their welfare checks blatantly lied.
There is what’s known as the Anarchist work ethic. One subject of that ethic is this book’s author, Bill Sassenberger. He was a Yippie who became a supporter of garage bands and the punk culture. He went from being homeless in 1977 and working in various low paying jobs, like being an apple picker in Washington state. He drove an ice cream truck in Orange County. Somehow, he ended up in Pomona, California and took over a headshop, converted it into a record shop/clothing shop, and sold fanzines for the “Blank Generation.” It got to the point where he released records on his own independent label.
This book is anchored throughout by reminiscences of his beloved wife, Julianna, and her fight to recover from a debilitating stroke. I recall meeting her casually, but never really got to know her. Bill writes about her in detail and in admiration. I’m sorry that I never got to know her.
The original punks were art school drops-out in Hollywood, California. They were elitists creeps. However, the punk scene eventually spread to suburbia, which energized the scene in the 80’s. Kids were starting bands left and right. Bill nurtured the suburban movement by putting on concerts and releasing records. He even had his own radio show on a college radio station.
In this book there is never a dull moment. Bill’s story includes the shakers and the movers of the punk scene. It’s part autobiographical, part travel log. It contains American history, suspense, compassion, and music. Bill clearly describes his moments with the trials and tribulations of a Baby Boomer. Perseverance became the order of the day. He struggled with poverty, crime, reprobates, the mentally ill, and a sick wife. Fortunately for all, he lived to write about it.
Bill’s writing style is unlike that of Jack Kerouac, with the lyrical poetic props that permeate the novel, “On the Road.” On the contrary, Bill’s style is comprehensible and gets to the point. His recollections are a light-hearted romp through experiences and other anecdotes.
The book is filled with historic photos, band fliers, and fantastic artwork, all of which is printed on glossy paper stock. I must protest, though: my failing eyesight struggled with the small font. Luckily, my trusty reading glasses served me well. Also, Bill includes comments about his book by people he knew.
I hope to Buddha that more books like this are produced. I have a friend named David Spaner who is writing a book about the Yippies. He is a Canadian living in Vancouver. No publishing date has materialized. I do hope he gets published. We need more books about the New Left, starting with the 60’s. Bill’s book is the first shot into the 1980’s American suburban youth atmosphere.
This book was so compelling! I finished it in just four days. I hope “Toxic Shock” by Bill Sassenberger, becomes an underground success.
Buy this book!  If you value history like I do.
For more info on this book, go to:
toxicshockrecords.com
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southjerseyweb · 10 months
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NJ expands Some College, No Degree initiative - NJBIZ
The second cohort includes: County College of Morris, Rowan College of South Jersey, Montclair State University, Ramapo College of New Jersey and …
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ausetkmt · 1 year
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NEWCOMB — Back in 2004, a mysterious collection of photos anonymously appeared at the Adirondack Experience, a museum in Blue Mountain Lake. They were taken in 1932 and show a dead, Black man tied to a toboggan surrounded by three white men.
Doreen Alessi-Holmes, the museum’s collections manager, said she was speechless when she first saw the photos.
“It’s very troubling to look at the propped up corpse of a human and people just sort of standing around like ‘yeah, sure, take our photo with this trophy,’ and I don’t know that that’s what they were thinking, but that is how it plays today when you look at those photographs,” said Alessi-Holmes.
Now the museum is trying to unravel the mystery behind those photos and is partnering with a Black artist to bear witness to what really happened back in 1932.
Alessi-Holmes helped determine the general location where the Black man was killed, a place that can be accessed by an old logging road in the central Adirondacks near Newcomb.
On a warm, late summer day, Alessi-Holmes and her husband Shane Holmes, a licensed outdoor guide and IT specialist for the Adirondack Experience, led artist Keith Morris Washington down the logging road.
Washington is an artist and professor at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design whose work includes landscape paintings and portraits. More recently, Washington’s work has explored Black identity in America, using art to highlight the violence that Black people have faced over the centuries.
For one project, titled “Within our Gates,” Washington paints landscapes of lynching sites around the US. It’s what brought him here, to the Adirondacks.
“For me, part of this is to go to the places to bear witness, because it really is, for me, about honoring the memories of the victims,” said Washington.
In this case, the victim was a Black man who encountered two white men in these woods in March 1932. According to historical records, they went their separate ways, but the two men reported the Black man to the police. A few days later a larger group tracked him down, a gunfight ensued, and the Black man was killed.
As Alessi-Holmes walked down the logging road, she pointed out features in the landscape, obstacles the man must have had to endure while he was being tracked down by the group of white men.
“As we’re moving forward keep your eyes on that ridge ahead of us because that is the Dunbrook Range and it’s an intimidatingly high and steep mountain and I just can’t imagine climbing up over that in the winter.”
[image4:right:50%]Washington will paint this landscape, but not the violence that occurred here. His pieces focus more on the natural features of the place, the beautiful and sublime aspects of it. He uses a series of “squiggle marks” to paint lush green grasses, tall trees, and wispy, blue skies.
His artistic process is more a tribute to life than to death. “Even when I’m painting, I’m not thinking about the tragic nature of the person’s life,” said Washington, “but really trying to think about the ways in which I’m honoring the person’s life and documenting their history.”
Another person who’s been working to document the history of what happened in these woods is Eliza Jane Darling, an anthropology professor and former public historian for Hamilton County.
“This is the history of our region and we need to understand what happened and we certainly need to establish facts,” said Darling, “but in the second place, I think there is a question of social justice and justice for this man.”
Darling has poured over the police and coroner’s reports, piecing together what really happened over those few days in March. She’s also read articles about the manhunt and the man’s death, which made national news at the time.
Darling said the sensationalized media back then is similar to the racist stereotypes Black people still face to this day.
“The headlines that this made could have been taken from today’s headlines, they really could have,” said Darling. “You know, the over-estimation of the man’s threat, the dehumanization involved in calling him a ‘wild man,’ the fact that his body was left exposed, the fact that someone called the police when there didn’t appear to be any crime having been committed.”
Darling wrote two articles for Adirondack Daily Enterprise in 2021 (part 1 and part 2), laying out what she learned about the killing. According to records, the man is buried in nearby North Creek. Darling hopes one day to determine the identity of the man.
Near the end of the old logging road, Alessi-Holmes pointed out something fluttering atop some wildflowers. “There’s an American beauty butterfly over there right now and it’s on a plant that’s locally called pearly everlast.”
The Adirondacks are a place of deep wilderness and a lot of beauty, but they’re also a place where prejudice and racism still exist. Artist Keith Morris Washington said that is still evident here today.
“As I was driving in yesterday, I saw a New York license plate and a Confederate plate underneath it,” Washington explained. “It’s just like, yeah, you can’t get away from that kind of ignorance, I’ll put it that way kindly.”
At the end of the road, Washington stopped to take a few photos and reflect on the experience.
“As I was walking to this place I was, in a sort of broad way, thinking about the victim and sending my thoughts to make a great painting for this person who we don’t know their name yet, even, so there’s a bit of a solemness to it,” said Washington.
Washington’s goal is to make a “beautiful painting of a location that has a tragic history to it.” The Adirondack Experience will have the option to buy the piece and add it to its collection, putting more of the Adirondack’s history on display.
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janjoycesmitz · 1 year
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❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐👑
HELEN FRANKENTHALER (1928-2011)
Cameo
woodcut in colors, on gray-pink TGL handmade paper, 1980
and some details from the print
Helen Frankenthaler (1928-2011), whose career spanned six decades, has long been recognized as one of the great American artists of the twentieth century. She was eminent among the second generation of postwar American abstract painters and is widely credited for playing a pivotal role in the transition from Abstract Expressionism to Color Field painting. Through her invention of the soak-stain technique, she expanded the possibilities of abstract painting, while at times referencing figuration and landscape in unique ways. She produced a body of work whose impact on contemporary art has been profound and continues to grow.
 
Frankenthaler was born on December 12, 1928, and raised in New York City. She attended the Dalton School, where she received her earliest art instruction from Rufino Tamayo. In 1949 she graduated from Bennington College, Vermont, where she was a student of Paul Feeley. She later studied briefly with Hans Hofmann.
 
Frankenthaler’s professional exhibition career began in 1950, when Adolph Gottlieb selected her painting Beach (1950) for inclusion in the exhibition titled Fifteen Unknowns: Selected by Artists of the Kootz Gallery. Her first solo exhibition was presented in 1951, at New York’s Tibor de Nagy Gallery, and that year she was also included in the landmark exhibition 9th St. Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture.
 
In 1952 Frankenthaler created Mountains and Sea, a breakthrough painting of American abstraction for which she poured thinned paint directly onto raw, unprimed canvas laid on the studio floor, working from all sides to create floating fields of translucent color. Mountains and Sea was immediately influential for the artists who formed the Color Field school of painting, notable among them Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland.
 
As early as 1959, Frankenthaler began to be a regular presence in major international exhibitions. She won first prize at the Premiere Biennale de Paris that year, and in 1966 she represented the United States in the 33rd Venice Biennale, alongside Ellsworth Kelly, Roy Lichtenstein, and Jules Olitski. She had her first major museum exhibition in 1960, at New York’s Jewish Museum, and her second, in 1969, at the Whitney Museum of American Art, followed by an international tour.
 
Frankenthaler experimented tirelessly throughout her long career. In addition to producing unique paintings on canvas and paper, she worked in a wide range of media, including ceramics, sculpture, tapestry, and especially printmaking. Hers was a significant voice in the mid-century “print renaissance” among American abstract painters, and she is particularly renowned for her woodcuts. She continued working productively through the opening years of this century.
Frankenthaler’s distinguished, prolific career has been the subject of numerous monographic museum exhibitions. The Jewish Museum and Whitney Museum shows were succeeded by a major retrospective initiated by the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth that traveled to The Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Detroit Institute of Arts, MI (1989); and those devoted to works on paper and prints organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. (1993), among others.
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Markeaton Street Gallery - an overview
Markeaton Street gallery, otherwise known as Msg., is a gallery space curated by Dr. Gemma Marmalade and Elisha-Mai Gascoigne (myself).  It exhibits a permanent collection and a changing exhibition programmes of contemporary art at the Markeaton Campus at University of Derby.  Msg. opened it’s doors for the first time to the public as part of FORMAT festival in March 2023, it held 5 exhibitions on the ground and first floor showcasing work from a wide variety of artists.  
How love lives in two places -
How love lives in two places is a multi- and trans-disciplinary exhibition of over thirty artists describing the experimental boundaries of both photography and place. With a title extracted from the poetry of Clark County's Poet Laureate, Angela M. Brommel, How love lives in two places is a visual dialogue between Derby, UK and Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. Students and faculty of the University of Derby School of Arts have worked together with their counterparts at Nevada State College Office for the Arts, alongside friendships made with seminal and emerging artists residing and working in the Las Vegas Valley. The partnership fostered between both institutions is supported by the generous patronage of James Stanford and Lynn Morris. 
The official launch opened at 6pm on the 17th March and included a performance from Gemma Marmalade at 6:30, followed by speeches shortly after.  It stayed open until 21st April which was an extended opening due to popular demand and footfall we had throughout the gallery being open. How Love Lives in Two Places  was a great opening for Markeaton Street gallery as it was something that was close to home for both myself and Gemma and engaged a wider audience due to our very special and well respected guests from Las Vegas: American artist James Stanford, Senior Advisor & Executive Director for the Arts at Nevada State College as well as being Clark County Poet Laureate Angela M. Brommel, and PR Manager Laura Henkel. 
During the summer of 2022, I was fortunate enough to be able to go across to Las Vegas to work alongside Nevada State College staff and students.  Whilst out there we worked as a collective to produce an exhibition dedicated to the work we’d made based on what it feels like to be home.  Due to the participants of the trip being from a variety of different media based works creating an amazing collection of work from all different medians.  
My work within How love lives in two places - 
The work that I created was a dedication to stereographic photography which is a popular form of photography in the 19th century. It used a special camera where photographers would take two nearly identical images which once they were printed side by side, would appear as a three dimensional image when viewed through a set of special lenses called a stereoscope. The stereoscopes go back all the way to 1830s however, it wasn’t until the Great Exhibition of 1851 that a practical method of publishing stereo images were introduced to the public.  In typical use, stereoscopic images would be viewed as parlour entertainment. In an era before films or television, families would experience what it was like to see distant landmarks or exotic landscapes by passing around the stereoscope. Stereo cards were often sold in numbered sets, so consumers could easily buy a series of views related to a particular theme. Some photographs that might be impressive when shot with a normal camera can seem thrilling, if not terrifying, when viewed with the full stereoscopic effect. Alexander Gardner used a stereoscopic camera when he took his classic photographs at Antietam during the Civil War.  
While Sir Charles Wheatstone first described stereoscopic lens, it was Sir David Brewster who further developed the idea in 1849. The production of the stereograph entailed making two images with almost alike similarity, usually pictured by two cameras placed 2.5 inches apart to simulate the position of the human eye. They were then mounted by the positive prints side by side laterally on a stiff backing. The two images were brought together by the effort of the human brain to create an illusion of three dimensionality. 
One thing I noticed about Las Vegas was how strong the sun was compared to the UK.  Along with this, naturally, the landscapes are different too as the climates are polar opposites. I wanted to incorporate both of these things within my work but mainly show how different the landscapes changed within such a short period of time.  After monitoring the climates, I chose to have a 2-hour time period for my project as it had a better chance of showing exactly how the landscapes move due to the weather climates, I chose 12:30pm and 2:30pm. Because the project is about things that remind us of home, I decided to make my work into postcard sizes to symbolise the postcards you would send home when you go a great distance away from what you associate to be home. 
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forgottenwells · 1 year
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I don't feel free in this state and country after speaking out and facing retaliations a patient, not employee, but patient and also witness to my own crime, from the Office of Civil Rights, the Joint commission of Accreditation, OR Medical Board, Legacy Good Samaritan Hospital and the Patient Relations, OR Health Authority, Portland Police Bureau, Victim Rights Law Center, District Attorney Office for Multnomah County when it was MY BODY.
For over 4 year, Portland Police Bureau has left and said there are no witnesses when I know there Are. I filed appeal to the independent police citizen review board, sent letter to Oprah Winfrey, Joe Rogan, Hamilton Morris, and Judge Rose Marie Aquilina with my scripture of the shit at this Hospital ER in NW Portland OR. no one go there r go here and then really be aware. request your medical too because they cherry pick nd they leave out all anything they could be liable for or any abujse they left out of the documents which became part of my case when I was the victim I was treated worse than a fucking piece of shit rapist a rapist. no criminal because we're all human should be treated like shit worse than anything. and this hospital did it! this hospital omitted a very violent crime. im not an attorney so this is not the place where I am going to go and beat them for EVERYTHING they committed and not only they put a human BODY in seclusion in the DARK the dark, but they also didn't mention it. it's where mentioned in the records EXCEPT: when dr . GRAY yes that is the dr who no lawyer rn, but SHE, "patient remains in seclusion." How do you read that?
we will talk about the reality the basic facts of this circumstance at another time in a. different post because this was torture, past my first amendment in a lot of ways, if I would have died, they would have lied, just as exemplified by the fact, yes fact, they left their torment nd torture out of the medical records out the room 8. no mention of neglect, abuse, screaming, crying, pissing, spitting, k pooping, flapping, signing asl, crying, not moving, staring at camera for a long time,
if I would have died they would have covered it up just like they covered up criminal abuse on a victim. complete victim abuse. this dr. I reported her to or medical board. I am writing to her medical school alumni college where she graduated bc I a am actually ormt here. I am from sd, ca where she went to uc sd medical school. wrong girl dr. gray. so privileged. so entitled. for every baby I have, I want my medical expenses paid for the trauma, drama, exploitation you have dragged me under the umbrella. the red umbrella.
I am pursuing a case, alone, but no matter what, there are damages here, for fraud to the government on a Crime Victim on top of that, this is Federal, a Victim,
I have contacted European Countries as well about this,
and I will be contacting the middle east and more of the military about this situation.
I took the ASVAB waiting for my case, not revealing my speech during the assault, k was prepared to have victory from this BT case and move forward and become a true survivor skilled and practiced in repetition and resiliency. but the case was dismissed, so, I became a dishwasher. Thank you Tara Gardner for dismissing a 22 month Rape 1 case with sexual abuse dropped out int he prior hearings. I have no respect for you except the fact you speak monotone, you dress and wear your hair well, but after that grand jury you sure suckered and then at the hearing with the judge where he said so no one was with her in the room when she did na ungloved dan swab kit? and I looked at the da supervisor witness advocate sitting beside me I could not believe this shit and then the supervisor said its ok. I couldn't believe it. another ! hting int his case ! omg. did you fuck up there too.
tara Gardner provided an argument in front of the judge but also in front of th erapist woman 2 where she said during a hearing he wanted to be free for the covid opportunity freeing prisoners awaiting trials (he never had one he never di one this so unconstitutional cuz there are witnesses too) she provided argument of of course another case where victims mother wrote a letter for her daughter as to why her daughter's predator should not be released. then th judge said to tara gardener, that has nothing to do with his case.
I was thinking the EXACT same thing, literally, in every way. this is why it's important for the lady at the collective who has the kids in her workshop next to NOMQAN2 to testify and be a witness but PPB said there are no witnesses. When u asked them what did you do to find witnesses? they responded: we canvased the building. we canvased. I asked what does that mean? they said we passed out our business cards.
I know MRSW SKeisblah this her alias so I truly don't give f, the other guy down the hall, the other guy who they know who they are 666 and then the manager who I am pressing and suing this collective in the big scheme of things for damages for posting a UNIQUE EVICTION notice only art studio following the assault. a hand written eviction noti3e for EVERYONE to see. I am suing this city for fa, ages I whope more people ill get onboard and hep me and so we can donate back ro the comity like organizations such as Portland Street Response, Open Signal, roseehaven, places which Matter. PPB lied to me. I ave put so much work into what they said and tried to 0uash back for their own libration. We all take time, but I came fast I came quick I told that mother fucker I will shoot you like isis but a bitch is going to shoot you
there are no video tapes the cameras are for monitoring only patient relations stated in his response letter to my "grievance" letter or whatever
I CARE A LOT MOVE
GIRL IN THE BASEMENT MOVIE
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