17-year-old from Greensboro top of his class aspires to be environmental scientist
Kaleb Glenn aspires to become an environmental scientist, financial advisor or own his own business. The high school senior is 3rd in his class and holds a 4.2 GPA. Author: Terrence Jefferies (WFMY News 2) Published: 9:57 PM EST December 12, 2020 Updated: 9:57 PM EST December 12, 2020
GREENSBORO, N.C. 17-year-old Kaleb Glenn has set his sights on becoming an environmental scientist, financial advisor or owning his own business.
According to the Middle College at NC A&T State University, the high school senior is ranked 3rd in his class at the school where he holds a 4.2 grade point average.
New York Liberty Bell survives fire that gutted historic East Village church
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The Bittersweet Tale of a Diner, a Toy Shop and a Changing New York
One is expanding. One is closing. But not all is lost.
Pamela Pier, the owner of Dinosaur Hill, has worked next to Tom Birchard, left, and his son Jason, right, the owners of Veselka, since 1983.Credit.James Estrin/The New York Times
By Linda Dyett
Dec. 11, 2020
Over time, certain city blocks become niche shopping and dining hubs, destinations that are quintessentially New York, marked by local history and personalities, while defining the broader neighborhood.
Consider the southeast corner of Second Avenue and East Ninth Street in the East Village in Manhattan. There, an unassuming oblong building has long been home to two neighborhood stalwarts: the whimsical toy shop Dinosaur Hill and its next-door neighbor, the Ukrainian restaurant Veselka.
Fire Guts Historic Church Home to New York’s Liberty Bell By Luis Andres Henao | December 10, 2020
A historic church in lower Manhattan that houses New York’s Liberty Bell and whose congregation dates to the city’s earliest days was gutted by a massive fire that sent flames shooting through the roof.
The Middle Collegiate Church in the East Village burned before dawn after a fire spread from a five-story vacant building adjacent to the church around 5 a.m. Flames shot from the roof and the church’s stately front window glowed from the conflagration inside.
“We are devastated. We are gutted like our building is gutted; our hearts are crushed like our doors are crushed,” said the Rev. Jacqueline J. Lewis. “But we know how to be the church, and we know that God is God, yesterday, today and tomorrow.”