It’s no secret that if the Calaveras High School girls’ basketball team wants to repeat as Mother Lode League champions, senior Kate Lumley will need to lead the charge. In her last two games, Lumley showed why she is one of the top players in the area. In a 54-44 win over Florin, Lumley scored 23 points, with nine of them coming from downtown. She pulled down 11 boards, had four steals, two assists and two blocked shots. And in a 43-41 loss to Wood, Lumley had another double-double with 23 points, 10 boards, two blocks and one steal. In the loss, she hit a career-high five 3-pointers. “Last week was the best I’ve ever played in my basketball career,” Lumley said. “I wanted to go out there to prove myself to my coach and my teammates, and
Small scored 10 points and grabbed 10 boards for her second double-double of the season. She added four blocks and four steals. Doty added 13 points on a 4-for-5 mark from downtown.
Kirkendoll added his third double-double of the season and his ninth of his career with 16 points and 14 rebounds. He was 1-for-4 from beyond the arc, saving the best for last on the buzzer beater. Kirkendoll narrowly missed double-digit assists, adding seven against
For more than 100 years, Jane Harrod’s family set aside a corner of their farm
poems deal with a variety of themes – life, love, loss and pain along with the
Part of their success can be contributed to junior forward, Devin Williams. For the second season in a row, Williams has posted double-doubles in the first three games. Tonight, he scored 23 points and tallied 10 rebounds. He has proved his toughness and attention to the game.
QJ Peterson was the only Keydet in double-figure scoring with 17 points. Julian Eleby added nine.
“It’s a great confidence boost to start the year off with a good finish and get the ball rolling early,” he said. “We know we can show up
We were killing the Scrubs and there was no need for me to even play anymore. Coach Shamy put some new players in the game. It wasn’t long before the game ended and we were shaking hands with the other team. Franklin’s coach patted me on my back. He knew I completely dominated his team. When you looked at the scoreboard, it looked like a massacre took place at the high school that day. We completely murdered the other team. It was fun though. All of the hard work in practice paid off. And I had a great game as an added bonus. I realized that game, that I just need to have fun when I’m playing. That’s one thing I learned that day; I play my best when I’m having fun. And, being the chef that I am, I definitely had fun filleting Franklin’s whole team that
Clybourne Park, a neighborhood full of all whites. That was until the Younger family changed that. The Youngers always lived in a two bedroom apartment, which is small being that there are 5 members of the family. They have always thought that all life held for them was that apartment and the crappy jobs they have, they never expected to own their own house. That was until papa died and mama (Lena) received his life insurance check, a check that was worth 10,000. Lena then made the decision to buy them a house located in Clybourne Park. Moving into this house is going to be a good thing, especially for Travis, because it will give the family more space, they will receive happiness, and it will help them make their dreams come true.
Rowley would use an array of post moves on the interior, while shooting 10 percentage points higher than his season average from the free throw line. His 18 points tied Vermont's Kurt Steidl for the game high, while his 11 rebounds led all players.
Canadian Fiction Blackboard Post Two In Margaret Laurence’s short story, The Loons, the birds’ presence and cries are indicative of the effects European colonialism has had on Aboriginal life. Vanessa and her father sit and listen to the loons out on the lake, where their haunting songs are described as “voices [belonging] to a world separated by aeons from our neat world of summer cottages and the lighted lamps of home.” (Course Reader 33) Vanessa’s father, in response to the sounds, states that “They must have sounded just like that before any person ever set foot here.” (33) The loons, in their peaceful existence before outsiders, represent the world of Aboriginals before settlers arrived.
About two centuries ago, Mary Elizabeth of Kilmallock told news reporter, Diane Jennings, about the six-centuries-old psychotic leprechaun her and her friends accidently released. Elizabeth’s story went viral around town for months, no one knew whether to believe it or to believe she was psychotic herself. She was new around town. Her father, Henry Hickem, had just helped her buy a new house in Kilmallock, Ireland. Both Elizabeth and her friends had just finished college at the time and were going to live in the new house. Elizabeth never pictured her first day living in her new house to turn into the most frightening day of her life.
Luffy was basically dragging S/O down the street, towards the entrance of the festival. He had a huge smile on his face, well his girlfriend had a nervous smile. Crowded places were not S/O’s thing but being with Luffy made her feel a whole lot better. As they stood in line to get in, she tightened her grip on his hand. Making the captain look up at her, worried that something was wrong but her reassuring smile waved away his worry. Once they got in, Luffy went straight for the rides. After a couple of crazy ones, S/O managed to get him to sit down and have something for lunch. It wasn’t the best food and it was super jacked up in prices but it was the only thing to eat around here. Once the both of them were done eating then S/O got him to
According to Hutchison (2013), life course perspective “looks at how chronological age, relationships, common life transitions, and social change shape people’s lives from conception to death,” (p. 383). In order to understand a person’s life path, it is important to look at event history; the order of significant events, experiences, and transitions in a person’s life from conception to death, taking into consideration how culture and social institutions have shaped the arrangement of individual lives (Hutchison, 2013).
Her secret is guessed by her boss, Dr. Ravi Chakrabarti. Gradually, Ravi becomes Liv's friend and confidant, and as a scientist, he is intrigued with Liv's condition. Whenever she eats a victim's brain, Liv temporarily inherits some of their personality traits. She also experiences flashbacks which often give her clues about the murder. Those visions can be generally triggered by sights (events or objects) or sounds (repeated sentences). Liv uses this new ability to help the Seattle Police Department solve crimes, passing herself off as a psychic consultant, while Ravi works to develop a cure for Liv's affliction in hopes that one day she will resume her former life.