Bottom Line: For Sharon native’s company, tougher tortilla chips come nachorally
Modified: 3/13/2021 11:01:49 PM
Some Upper Valley kids go on to make good.
Zack Gazzaniga has gone on to make tortilla chips.
(To be clear, the two are not mutually exclusive.)
The former Sharon Eagle Scout Troop 205 is the Zack in
Zack’s Mighty Organic Tortilla Chips, which he spent two years developing, introduced last year and now sells at the Hanover Co-op and hundreds of other stores around the country.
Gazzaniga says tortilla chips were always his “favorite food” but he grew annoyed that store-bought tortilla chips break easily when dug into a bowl of guacamole. Plus, they taste kinda flat.
John Lewis in 2006
In 2018, John Lewis shared this message on social media:
“Do not get lost in a sea of despair. Be hopeful, be optimistic. Our struggle is not the struggle of a day, a week, a month, or a year, it is the struggle of a lifetime. Never, ever be afraid to make some noise and get in good trouble, necessary trouble.”
From his days fighting segregation in the American South to his time in the U.S. House of Representatives, Lewis was not afraid to make some good noise and get into “Good Trouble.” That two-word phrase became his motto, and he lived it every day.
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Remembering Bruce Carver Boynton, anti-segregation fighter and Freedom Ride inspiration December 21, 2020 2:19 PM CDT By Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II And Elliott Smith
At left, Bruce Carver Boynton in a recent photo. At right, an NAACP Freedom Bus in 1961. | AP and Florida State Archives
On Dec. 20, 1958, exactly 62 years ago, a young law student on his way home for the holiday break was on the brink of setting the country one step forward towards racial equality. His arrest on misdemeanor charges in a racially charged case resulted two years later in a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision outlawing segregation in public transportation. Bruce Carver Boynton, the student and plaintiff in