Stay updated with breaking news from பென் அஂடர்வுட். Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
People are completely dissatisfied Caroline Paul Doyle (no relation to Eliza Paul), graduated in 2006. She was so proud of her alma mater that she has donated every year since and last year served as a booster during the Blues Unite campaign, urging her classmates to donate. “The school wasn t able to find a single person from my class to serve as a booster,” Doyle said, adding that she did not donate this year. Last year, 17 members of her class donated, this year, only six. The school has averaged some 300 students between grades 9-12. This year, 268 students signed contracts for the 2021-22 year, according to a school newsletter. ....
Adam Hendrix A massive pot of around 300,000 sat in the middle between small blind Ben Underwood and big blind Adam Hendrix. The board read and Hendrix was facing an all-in shove worth about 280,000. He was deep in the tank. According to Ryan Laplante, Underwood had limp-raised to 31,000 and then barreled 35,000 on the flop and 100,000 on the turn before cramming the river. Hendrix alternately cracked his knuckles, studied the ceiling, and peered at Underwood for clues. Lee Markholt wandered over to sweat from a neighboring table. You guys are playing big pots over here, he observed. You know wherever I go, the action is, Chino Rheem said from Seat 1. ....
Adam Hendrix The final 34 contenders have emerged in the Wynn Spring Classic $3,500 Championship, and three players have paced well ahead of the others to position themselves for the best chance at the $391K first-place prize. Tops in the counts is Adam Hendrix, who looked destined to lap the rest of the field after an incredibly hot start to the day. Hendrix began his rampage a few levels in versus fellow big stack Ben Underwood, when Hendrix made a huge call for stacks with a weak full house â trips were on the board â and was shown a bluff. He then cracked the aces of Matt Bond with a set of eights and was off to the races with 350 big blinds. ....
Flowers left for a father. (Photo by DON EMMERT/AFP via Getty Images) The day after my dad died unexpectedly of a heart attack at age 60, I found myself in a nearby funeral home, staring at the handwritten, folded letter I’d written for my dad as a polite funeral director discussed options with me and my wife. Did we want jewelry made with my dad’s fingerprint on it, an upgraded casket for his cremation, or a selection of candles with his face on them? I want to know how much this will cost, was the terribly practical thought I kept returning to. I hadn’t had time to process my dad’s sudden death, sixteen years after my mom died from a stroke. I’d had a single blurry day to come to terms with my dad’s death and take responsibility as his only surviving next of kin, with no parents, grandparents, or siblings to help me out. ....
Solar Power Cuts Energy Bills, But Few Low-Income People Have Access Joey Ramirez (left) and Taran Stone (right) with Solarcity install solar modules on the roof of a Long Beach home owned by Michelle Gerdes. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times) It was about a decade ago that Boston resident Natalie Jones first began to dream of putting solar panels on her roof. She was amazed, she said, that there was a technology that could help people save money and improve the environment at the same time, and she wanted to be part of it. At the time, however, home solar was something only the affluent could afford. A modest 5-kilowatt system would have topped $30,000 in 2011, according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Within a few years, prices had fallen and solar companies were making aggressive sales pitches in her neighborhood. Still, the numbers didn’t work for Jones, who was a full-time student working as an educator in a women’s homeless shelter. ....