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ETHS student-built house gets a new home
Project gives students hands-on learning and helps increase Evanston s supply of affordable housing.
The first floor of the house leaves ETHS this morning.
Moving to a new house can be stressful. Packing up all of your worldly possessions and taking them somewhere else is nerve-racking.
Now, imagine moving the whole house. That’s what was done this morning, as a home built by Evanston Township High School students was moved by flatbed truck from the high school, down several streets with a police escort, and then gingerly lifted by crane onto its new location, a formerly-vacant lot on Emerson Street near Darrow.
Margaret TaylorThursday 3 June 2021
In the wake of Black Lives Matter protests and the George Floyd murder trial, serious questions are being asked about how to deal with deep-seated racial disparities throughout society, including the justice system and the legal profession.
No sector of society has been left untouched by the global reckoning that followed the racially motivated killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin last May. As the Black Lives Matter movement mobilised to call out discrimination in all its forms the legal profession was forced to address its own record on racial diversity and inclusion. In the UK, a flurry of firms signed up to Rare’s Race Fairness Commitment while their counterparts in the US got together to form the Law Firm Antiracism Alliance ‘to better use the law as a vehicle for change that benefits communities of color and to promote racial equity in the law’.
In April, former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted of the murder and manslaughter of George Floyd, who was Black. Floyd was arrested by Chauvin and three other officers in May 2020, on suspicion of trying to use a fake $20 bill.
USDA ARS
The spotted lanternfly can kill a plant outright or leave it so damaged it can no longer produce fruit. And it loves grapevines. The deadly insect can kill a plant outright or leave it so damaged it can no longer produce fruit.
The drumbeat about spotted lanternfly started elsewhere but is getting louder for grape growers in the West who, in all probability, will eventually have to face that same music.
Myriad publications continue to tell of the destruction possible. “Spotted Lanternfly is Moving West (South, and Sometimes North and East)” writes WineBusiness.com. “How Can We Keep Spotted Lanternfly Out of California?” is a headline from the California Department of Food and Agriculture.