At The Farm, we are proponents, protectors, and preservationists of the lost art of connection—the human and natural kinds. It ties the community and land together while guiding our approach
This summer middle and high school students from virtually any community, including home-schooled students, can join the excitement of summer enrichment programs from the team at Lake Michigan Catholic Schools. LMC continues to foster a passion for hands-on, experiential learning by offering several new project-based summer enrichment opportunities open to all students in Southwest Michigan. LMC Middle/High School Principal James White says, "We want to encourage a love for learning," and adds, "It's exciting to acquire new skills and gain new knowledge, especially in an innovative educational environment. Whether you attend Lake Michigan Catholic or not, we are offering all students in our community the opportunity to bring learning to life through our summer enrichment programs." Middle and high school summer enrichment programs are open to all public, private and homeschooled students in Southwest Michigan. The programs include: The Cracked Egg (June 7 –
PLAIN TWP Cracked Egg Cafe is still in its soft opening phase, but business has been so good it ran out of one week s supply of food in two days.
Restaurant owner and founder Zack Manley said he s been overwhelmed by the flood of customers at the new 3110 Whipple Ave. NW location following the recent opening. It s a record-setting open for us for a soft open, he said of Cracked Egg Cafe, which also has locations in South Carolina, Georgia and Daytona Beach, Florida. And it s been absolutely insane.
Drawing customers have been both standard and unconventional breakfast selections scrambled eggs and chipped chop ham, pancake sandwiches and homemade grits with chopped ribeye as well as lunch items, including grilled peanut butter-and-jelly sandwiches and turkey-and-bacon clubs.
1. AUTOMATIC STAY
1.1 Covered Activities
1.1.a The debtor violated numerous state court orders in actions
to recover amounts he misappropriated. The state court held him in
contempt and imposed monetary sanctions and ordered him to stop
managing property he did not own and to turnover proceeds from the
illegal management. The debtor filed his bankruptcy petition the
day before a state court hearing on sentencing the debtor to jail
for contempt. Section 362(a) stays any prepetition action or
proceeding against the debtor, but section 362(b)(4) excepts from
the stay any action by a governmental unit to enforce its police or
regulatory power.” The exception applies when the
Legion Auxiliary opens Pantry at the Post
Twin Lakes Area veterans, active duty servicemen, National Guardsmen or Reservists facing food insecurity now have a new food pantry to turn to for assistance.
Pantry at the Post, organized and operated by the Alley-White American Legion Auxiliary Unit 52 in Mountain Home, opened its doors on March 6. It is located inside the Alley-White American Legion Post 52, located at 717 Market Street, and is open from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. on Saturdays.
American Legion membership is not required to participate in the food pantry program, but participation is limited to veterans and military families.