May 10, 2021 at 4:20 pm by Emma Demorest
Emma Demorest/ Daily Nexus
Many tragedies have befallen campus since itâs abandonment a year ago, but none greater than the plight of the Library Chair. Known across UCSB as places to possibly sit, the library chairs currently face near extinction due to the lack of farts they used to sustain on a daily basis pre-pandemic.Â
As is known, a single Davidson chair withstands roughly 50-213 farts per day, thus the sudden quarantine last Spring proved especially difficult, and left many chairs to experience sudden withdrawals. At this time, researchers are unsure of how functional the Davidson chairs will be after many months of disuse and, more significantly, the lack of farts sustained.Â
CinemaBlend
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Any Stephen King fan will tell you that the true horror in his stories comes from the audienceâs connection with the characters and the desire not to see harm befall them â but that being said, the author is remarkably talented when it comes to imagining the âharmâ part of that equation, and it has inspired a great number of filmmakers to do the same. To be blunt, in the wide variety of King adaptations, we have seen characters meet some bitter and terrible ends that audiences wouldnât wish upon their worst enemy.
But in that specific history, who arguably got it the worst? Itâs a difficult question when you consider how high the body count is going back to 1976, but upon deep reflection I think I have managed to determine the list of the most horrific Stephen King movie deaths. Strap in, and prepare for a desensitizing adventure through cinematic history.
Montgomery, Alabama: Confronting America’s painful past at the Legacy Museum, along the U.S. Civil Rights Trail
Updated Apr 01, 2021;
Posted Apr 01, 2021
Victims of lynching in Ohio are listed on a steel box at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama.
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I pause when I get to a block representing Ohio.
Ohio had lynchings? I did not know. I should have known.
It was one of many things I learned on a recent visit to Montgomery , a major destination on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail, and home to the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, which opened in 2018 to recognize more than 4,000 victims of lynchings in the U.S.