April Corrigan is a popular 17 year old who seems to have it all. But one day her life changes for completly. Her father has been working undercover FBI who his boss has been smuggling drugs. A hit man has been hired to silence him and made threats against his family. T he FBI moved the corrigan family to ahotel where they must stay there without making any contact. April couldnt handle it so she send a letter to his boyfriend and accidently gives information to the hit man to find the family. Jim the family's bodyguard saves them but dies. Then the family enters the Witness Security Program and is relocated to Grove City, Florida. The family doent andle the situation very good. April decides that she is going back to Norwood Virginia and goes
Best selling author, Michelle McNamara, wrote some of the greatest crime novels of our time, but few people knew about her secret life. Michelle had her own private drug den filled with a variety of prescription and illegal drugs.
It’s a noun, it’s a verb, it’s McClurg! If the river is famous to the fish, McClurg is famous (perhaps infamous) to the liver. “Meet me at McClurg,” or “I’ve been McClurged”... there are a lot of associations with the dining hall, but the last thing anyone seems to think of is C. V. McClurg, for whom the caf was named. When you Google “C.V. McClurg: images” you get some pictures of desks, a book by someone named Emma McClurg, and a picture of Ferris Bueller. So who was the elusive Mr. McClurg?”
Sean McCarty. That name may not be a household name, well it's not yet. Sean McCarty has played baseball since the beginning of his time. Starting with t-ball when he was six, the next year he joined the club team run by WYCO, while it was coach pitch and machine pitch, it was a big step up from hitting off a tee.Their team was one of the youngest at WYCO.
Since the 1820s, the Aiken Rhett House remains to be one of the most grandiose houses to visit in Charleston. Until 1975 when the Charleston History Museum purchased the house and converted it into a house museum, the Aiken Rhett house remained in the family line for 142 years. The house was first built and owned by John Robinson, a Charleston merchant. Due to a financial crisis, Mr. Robinson sold the house to William Aiken Sr., an Irish immigrant and successful merchant, in 1827. When Mr. Aiken died of an unfortunate carriage accident, his son, William Aiken Jr. who was a very prosperous businessman and rice planter as well as a politician and governor of South Carolina, was bequeathed the house. He and his wife made three main changes to
A young F. Carl Mahoney was off to Witchita Falls County in Texas. He enlisted in the Vietnam War. To then become a medical corpsman in the US Air Force. After 3 months of basic training in northwestnorthwest Texas (a barren desert, ) this man receivedreceived orders to report for medic duty in England. In Suffolk, England there was no combat, only lots of suffering and families in need.
Ryan Coomber is a five-year-old boy who lives in Saskatchewan; every day bullies taunt Ryan on his half an hour bus ride home from junior kindergarten in Assiniboia, which is 40 kilometers away. There have been multiple occurrences on the bus where Ryan has had bullies pick on him numerous times without reason; older children steal Ryan’s backpack and try to pull off his prosthetic leg which he lost in a lawnmower accident when he was 3; “A lot of kids beat me up. Lots of big kids,” Ryan said, which hearing this breaks his dad’s heart. Robert Coomber (Ryan’s father) spoke to the parents to resolve the issues on the bus. Currently, he thought it was all over until a thirteen-year-old boy punched defenceless Ryan in the face and giving him a
Reba Nell McEntire is a legendary country singer. She grew up in the small town of McAlester, Oklahoma, and is now a star in Nashville, Tennessee. She is still going strong at the age of sixty. Reba was born on March 28, 1955. Her profession is being a country singer and an actor. She is married and has one child.
Camryn Chabeli Aleman Caylor is the blessed 17 year old daughter of Seth and Monika Caylor. Camryn was born on April 6,2000, in Corpus Christi Texas. She is the Great Granddaughter of the late Mrs.Agnes Horn, local civil rights activist and a founding member of the American G.I. Forum. She is the Granddaughter of Keno and Mary Aleman, Melissa and Henry Berger and the late Tiddle Caylor. Camryn is a role model to her two younger brothers Rylan and Landon. She attended Ella Barnes Elementary where she was a member of the dance team. She attended Bishop Garriga Middle School and was captain of the cheerleading squad and played golf. Currently, she is a Senior at Roy Miller High School. Camryn is a cheerleader and member of the varsity golf team. In addition, she has been a member of Miller High School Key Club, the 2018 class council, and is a member of the National Hispanic
Meghan Coleen Weger was born on October 19th, 1979 in Tucson, Arizona. In the years afterwards she was followed by two younger brothers Aubrey Charles Weger, and Andrew Peter Weger. After a short stop in Long Island, New York she spent the rest of her childhood growing up in Glenview, IL. She met her maid of honor Molly Carpenter the first day of first grade at Henking Elementary school.
On September 8th, 2016 Keely Meagan, a 55-year old woman from Oregon, parked on the edge of Interstate 5 to because she saw that police officers had stopped a black driver. She claims that she was concerned about the driver’s safety due to the violence police officers have employed towards black people nationwide. She parked very close to an exit and was compromising the safety of everyone, but she refused orders to leave. On February 9th, she went to trial and was convicted for interfering with a police officer nevertheless, she was not charged with any punishments. The judge ruled that he didn’t consider her actions a case of civil disobedience, but praised the activist for her empathy.
Unfortunately, in our time of an opioid epidemic, people will do anything to feed their irrepressible drug habit, which is why it isn't surprising, and head-shakingly sad, to hear that a woman faked cancer to feed hers. The really surprising part? She's married to a police officer, and he didn't catch on for almost four years.
Mildred Cohn was born in the Bronx on July 12, 1913, during a time when isolationism and nationalism were at its peak. Cohn’s parents were childhood sweethearts who immigrated to the United States in 1907. Her father was a Jew who left Russia on the eve of the Russian Revolution, and it could be said that Cohn took after him in his ingenuity. Once he crossed the Atlantic, Cohn’s father first entered rabbinical school, then began work in a tailor shop. While working in the tailor shop, he invented a machine that cut cloth extremely efficiently, which led to a crucial promotion to partner. This innovation led to him being promoted as parter and with his increased salary, Cohn’s father was able to move his family out of their decrepit apartment in the Bronx to a Yiddish-speaking cooperative.
When people think of Oklahoma, they usually think about flatlands and waving wheat. The thought of terrorism would never come into mind. This is exactly what the people of Oklahoma City would’ve been thinking if asked about terrorism. Sadly, on the day of April 19, 1995, Oklahoma and the nation was shocked as the unthinkable happened. The rest of the world stood still, and watched as people were rushed from the building. Families received information about their loved ones, and soon learned that they were no longer living. Parents were also sickened by the fact that their children would never be able to go to daycare again. As for the man in charge of this operation, his slow but authorized death was watched by families and friends of the victims. The rest of the nation should’ve been able to view this great punishment along with the families who were affected.
It was in 1973, that a young, brazen and ostentatious Donald Trump, met one of New York’s most notorious attorney: Roy Cohn, whose name was synonymous with the rise of manipulative political power acts. Roy was known to be a ruthless prosecutor who had mastered control over all the loopholes in the law and had become the premier practitioner of hardball deal making, offering his help to defend even the mafia networks. Cohn became a business mentor and nearly a second father to Trump. Trump first hired Cohn to sue the federal government. The allegations that Trump faced had accused him of renting his prime apartments only to White people thereby showing a racial bias. This was clearly against the fair housing act which the congress had passed.
Through Lonergans method we are asked to challenge our old views and to be able to go past memories or events that bring you grief. Through revision of our thoughts lonergan teaches us to learn new insights on subjects we have already visited. Through this method we are asked to view our own lives and see past the surface. We should be able to find deeper meaning in events that brought us grief one day. Instead of revisiting our memories and feeling grief we should learn to live past these memories. When we do we will no longer spin in a Circle, but roll. This is what Lonergan is calling us to do. To revise those memories that make us spin in a Circle of grief. New perspectives and insights will allow us to grow.