He saved my life : Community remembers fallen Chandler Officer Christopher Farrar
Chandler Police Officer Christopher Farrar was killed in the line of duty by a suspect driving a stolen vehicle on Friday, police say. Author: Adriana Loya (12NEWS) Updated: 7:25 PM MST April 30, 2021
CHANDLER, Ariz. Chandler Police Officer Christopher Farrar served his community for 18 years before he was killed in the line of duty by a suspect driving a stolen vehicle on Friday, police said.
During his time at the department, Farrar held multiple roles, including his involvement with the patrol division and the bicycle team. Within the last year, he was also assigned to a K-9 unit.
I owe it all to him Chandler man says fallen Officer Farrar saved his life
A Chandler couple is heartbroken after learning of the death of Officer Christopher Farrar who they say was there for them in a time of need.
and last updated 2021-05-01 11:56:29-04
CHANDLER, AZ â A Chandler man said Friday that Chandler Police Officer Chris Farrar saved his life four years ago.
Donald Shaw said he was at his Chandler home on April 26, 2017 when he went into cardiac arrest. His wife Marji called 911, and Officer Farrar who was nearby- responded first. They told ABC15 Farrar administered CPR before paramedics got there.
Published April 30, 2021 at 4:00 AM CDT Listen • 5:18 Baby Washington
Baby Washington grew up in Harlem and became a noted R&B solo singer for Neptune Records with hits like “The Time” and then “That’s How Heartaches are Made” for Sue Records. But she started her career as a girl group singer, with the Hearts and the Jaynetts. Baby shared with me stories from the road and the stage including a pivotal moment that occurred backstage with the Hearts.
Baby Washington: We were at the Apollo Theater, and we saw our contract, and we went back to the manager to get an increase in our pay, and we were fired. So the band that worked with the Hearts, they asked me did I want to sing and work with them, which I did. I was working with them, and then they mentioned the man that owned Neptune Records–
Officials: Vermont ruling on religious school tuition raises questions
Modified: 4/28/2021 9:00:25 PM
When the Vermont Supreme Court ruled in 1999 that public funding couldn’t be used for religious worship or education but could be used for secular classes at religious schools, it left school districts in a bind.
Local school boards and administrators in districts that pay tuition to schools had no yardstick with which to gauge whether payments to a religious school would be funding religion or education. Districts made decisions on their own, with some paying tuition to religious schools and others drawing a bright line.
Last week’s decision by the Vermont State Board of Education requiring three school districts to pay tuition to religious schools, a matter that’s also the subject of litigation in federal court, doesn’t make things any clearer, according to school officials in two of the districts, both of them in the Upper Valley.
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