In the end, the final decision came down to family. What school had what Enai White thought was most like the family atmosphere he was about to leave at Imhotep Charter?
The sport of football has the same bloodlines, and the evidence is present in the class of 2022. These recruits have familiar last names and skills that resemble their famous fathers, uncles, and grandfathers.
A ghostly white bicycle, attached to a fence along the Lake Shawnee Trail, honors the memory of Paula Lucas.
Lucas was 54 when she died in 2007 after she and another cyclist collided on a steep hill nearby in the 2900 block of S.E. 45th.
That Ghost Bike is among six the Kaw Valley Bicycle Club has placed at sites in Shawnee County where cyclists died in collisions between 1977 and 2016.
This week s History Guy video at CJOnline focuses on the Ghost Bikes, which serve as roadside memorials while also reminding cyclists and motorists of potential danger.
The first Ghost Bike was placed in 2002 in San Francisco.
Robert Arnold ‘Bob,’ ‘Bobby’ Taylor Jr.
CHARLESTON, S.C. Robert Arnold “Bob,” “Bobby” Taylor Jr., 62, died Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2018. He was born March 28, 1956, in Wilmington, North Carolina.
He graduated from John T. Hoggard High School with the Class of 1974. He obtained a Bachelor of Science Degree in Forestry from North Carolina State University with the Class of 1979. While attending NCSU, he became president of FarmHouse International Fraternity, motto: “Builder of Men.” He earned his Master’s Degree in Administration from Western Kentucky University in 1980.
Bob’s strong management and leadership skills were evident throughout his lifetime. He began in 1981 to 1984 with Roadway as an inbound terminal manager, and then as account sales manager for Gelco from 1984 to 1985. A long career with PepsiCo followed from 1985 to 1997. Bob earned several promotions with PepsiCo, advancing to vice president of procurement, New York. His final corporate endeavor