Takeaways from Tallahassee â Cookies for breakfast? Yes, please.
Cookies for breakfast? Yes, please.
I donât typically eat chocolate chip cookies for breakfast, but I couldnât resist the scrumptious treat calling my name from the display case at the new
La Florida Coffee & Wine. Lest you judge, I also devoured a breakfast sandwich and soothing latte while sitting under a yellow outdoor umbrella.
La Florida Coffee & Wine, which had its grand opening on March 8, is a downtown oasis in the former Starbucks on Kleman Plaza. With a bright, breezy interior and outdoor tables, it works as a meeting place or a relaxing spot to linger over a soothing cup of coffee in the a.m. or after work, a glass of wine.
BOGATA â New municipal Judge Alex Davidson has never left his hometown because he wants to help it thrive.
âI have deep roots in this part of the world,â Davidson said. âI was born here, I was raised here, I was educated here, and I will likely die here. I love this part of the world.
âI hope to implement and provide positivity to our community. Bogata, despite any perceived flaws, is a great small town. If I have an opportunity to give back to the city that raised me, then I will do everything in my power to provide constructive and positive change. Itâs the least I can do.â
Majority of HCPS students will return to part-time in-person learning Feb. 1
Hendersonville Times-News
Henderson County Public Schools pre-K through third-grade students will return to school in-person full-time, known as Plan A, on Feb. 1 and grades 4-12 will still attend remotely part-time, known as Plan B.
The changes were Superintendent John Bryant s recommendation to the School Board during a meeting held Monday.
The board voted 6-1 with member Stacey Caskey casting a no vote for plan A for pre-K through third grade and plan B for sixth through 12th grades. Fourth- and fifth-graders returning under plan B was unanimously approved.
The board agreed that fourth- and fifth-grade special education students - those who are under Individualized Education Plans - also need to start in-person learning again as soon as possible. Some of them will come back under plan B on Feb. 1.
Abstract
This essay gives a brief overview of the events of 26-27 August 1883, when the volcanic island of Krakatoa in Indonesia exploded; it generated tsunamis which killed over 36,000 people, was heard 3,000 miles away, and produced measurable changes in sea level and air pressure across the world. The essay then discusses the findings of the Royal Society’s Report on Krakatoa, and the reports in the periodical press of lurid sunsets resulting from Krakatoa’s dust moving through the atmosphere. It closes by examining literature inspired by Krakatoa, including a letter by Gerard Manley Hopkins, a poem by Alfred Tennyson, and novels by R. M. Ballantyne and M. P. Shiel.