Arizona father takes final laps in memorial race after wife and son were killed in car crash
Mother and son, Tish and Aden Morris, lost their lives in a crash outside of Payson on April 16. Author: Jen Wahl Updated: 1:25 AM EDT April 25, 2021
QUEEN CREEK, Ariz. There was a different tone in the dust, the speed and the lights shining over Adobe Mountain Speedway on Saturday night.
A memorial race took place for a mother and son, who lost their lives in a deadly crash just days ago.
The special race was dedicated by Tony Morris, Aden Morris s dad and Tish Morris s husband.
Dad takes final laps in memorial race after wife and son were killed in car crash 12news.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 12news.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A teenager gifted in sports.
Three lives with deep roots to the community came to a tragic intersection Friday on the twisted two-lane road between Payson and Pine â prompting an outpouring of grief on social media. Georgia Burnside and Tish and Aden Morris died in a multi-vehicle accident around 8:30 p.m. Friday, April 16 on State Route 87 just north of the East Verde Estates turnoff.
Read more about the details of the accident on page 11.
âThree people died on that road between Payson and Pine last night and the town is crushed,â said Kathy Norton Coassolo Lovetro, who monitors a community Facebook page. âThey were local citizens of our sweet town, and now they are dead. Where am I going with this, hell, I donât know. I just feel so bad for the families and friends who are suffering and for the fact that in a heartbeat, lives can end, and lives can change.â
Lawyers smoke cigars, drink wine during Zoom hearings; litigants appear from hair salon or while driving
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What happened to decorum? Clients and some lawyers are appearing in Zoom hearings doing things that wouldn’t happen in court, the Louisville Courier Journal reports. Dress becomes more informal. Lawyers or litigants have a drink. The setting is a bed or even a hair salon. The background gives too much away. The mute button isn’t on.
The Louisville Courier Journal published its story after a lawyer appeared as a kitten during a Zoom hearing while he struggled to remove the filter. “The bloopers and blunders of virtual hearings have provided comic relief during an otherwise bleak and dismal year,” the newspaper reports, citing an article in the Louisville Bar Association newsletter Bar Briefs.