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Wanted by High Point Enterprise.;
Page: A4Photo
Subjects: Foster, Cheryl Denise.; King, Jaquan Malik.; Brown, Gustav Sidney.; Collins, David Jr.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Police reports. by High Point Enterprise.;
Page: A3-4.
Subjects: Foster, Cheryl Denise.; Price, Derek Scott.; Bowman, Rose Anna.; Brown, Jeremy Lee.; Peele, Rona Lee.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Police report. by High Point Enterprise.;
Page: A3-5.
Subjects: Autwell, Phillip John.; Hamilton, Jamarus Jaquis.; Crawford, Joseph Christopher.; Foster, Cheryl Denise.; Johnson, Montrose Elaine.; Perry, Katherine Ashley.; Greene, Robert Darrell.; Jacobs, Gina Nichold.; Duley, Cedtoria S.; Hairston, Tyrece Edward.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Seventeenth annual luncheon shines bright in pink. by High Point Enterprise.;
Page & column:C6-1.
Subjects: Smith, Kevin.; Forrest, Janet.; Squires, Danny.; Stroud, Michelle.; Smith, Diana.; Williams, Debbie.; Williams, Dale.; Carter, Jason.; Mills, Karen.; Chinnasami, Bernard.; Hayworth, David.; Wood, Bert.; Van Landingham, Tina.; Bridgman, Emilee.; Hoekstra, Sheryl.; Hoekstra, Jim.; Potter, Denise.; Marshall, Lisa.; King, Carol.; Oakley, Sarah.; Hall, Cheryl.; Sledge, Beverly.; Bostian, Linn.; Morgan, Jeff.; Harrell, Choco.; Fisher, Joe.; Cochran, Matt.; Witcher, Doug.; Hayworth, David.; Wiggin, Royals.; Coggin, Dot.; Foster, Louise.; Wake Forest Baptist Health High Point (N.C.) Medical Center; Ralph Lauren Corp. (High Point, N.C.); Healing Angels of Kay Miller.; Pennybyrn at Maryfield (High Point, N.C.); Breast Cancer.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Police beat by High Point Enterprise.;
Page: A3
Subjects: Gaskins, Everette Justin Javon.; Williams, Carenna Ruth.; Simmons, Kendrick Terrel.; Smith, Kristian Danielle.; Wilson, Montesques Ontario.; Moore, Desmond Jirezz.; Marco, Donald, Jr.; Foster, Lance Hunter.; Ford, Dexter, Jr.; Kelsey, Jeremy Daniel.; McDowell, Jacob Ryan.; Woodson, Demetrus Samuel.; Diggs, James Kenneth.; Keane, Cheryl Menell.; Khan, Farkh Naz.; Hooker, Amanda Kristin.; Dowdy, Charlie.; Mayfield, Andre Decole.; Breeze, Denise.; Dye, Willie Gregory Jr.; Harris, Adidas Obrian Dwayne.; Wingate, Kevin Careen.; Lackey, Shirell Nicole.; Jones, Casey Dale.; Henderson, Bobby Ray.; Wal-Mart.; TD Auto Store.; Harris-Teeter.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Abortion / by Thompson, Tamara,editor of compilation.(CARDINAL)688227;
A compendium of opinion on the issue of abortion, including moral justification, women's health, and width of access.Includes bibliographical references (pages 201-217) and index.Chapter 1. What is the current landscape of the abortion debate? Overview: abortion remains an emotionally and politically charged issue / Cheryl Wetzstein -- Roe vs. Wade at forty: most oppose overturning abortion decision / David Masci -- Women seek abortions for a variety of complex reasons / M. Antonia Biggs, Heather Gould, and Diana Greene Foster -- The modern personhood movement--what is it? / National Personhood Alliance -- Personhood for eggs would have dangerous consequences / Kaili Joy Gray -- Legal abortion faces renewed challenges and restrictions / Lyle Denniston -- Young people will shape the future of abortion access / Kate Sheppard. Chapter 2: Can abortion be morally justified? Yes: abortion can be morally justified. Safe and legal abortion is a human right / Center for Reproductive Rights -- Most Americans believe rape and incest justify abortion / The Associated Press -- Severe fetal defects justify late-term abortion / Jennifer Massoni -- No: abortion cannot be morally justified. Abortion can never be morally justified / American Life League -- The rights of a woman do not outweigh the rights of a child / AbortionFacts.com -- Late-term abortion is infanticide / Mary L. Davenport -- Chapter 3: Is abortion harmful to women and society? Yes: abortion is harmful to women and society. Abortion violates human rights / Ward Ricker -- For communities of color, abortion is genocide / Abort73.com -- No: abortion is not harmful to women and society. Safe and legal abortion benefits public health / Jodi Jacobson -- Groundbreaking new study: what happens to women who can't get abortions / Kathleen Geier -- Abortion does not increase mental health problems for women / Denis Campbell -- Chapter 4: Should access to abortion be restricted? Overview: access to abortion varies widely from state to state / Alina Salganicoff, Adara Beamesderfer, and Nisha Kurani -- Yes: access to abortion should be restricted. Abortion should be banned, regardless of the circumstances / Patrick Johnston -- Parental consent laws protect teens / Teresa S. Collett -- Conscience laws are essential to protect health-care providers' beliefs / Joxel Garcia and Terry Michael Rauch II -- No: access to abortion should not be restricted. Abortion can save a woman's life / National Women's Law Center -- Denying abortion revictimizes women who have been raped / Tara Culp-Ressler -- Conscience laws deprive women of vital health-care services / Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux.
Subjects: Young adult literature.; Young adult literature.; Abortion;
Available copies: 4 / Total copies: 5
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Engaging Appalachia : a guidebook for building capacity and sustainability / by Fletcher, Rebecca Adkins,editor.(CARDINAL)350289; Long, Rebecca-Eli,editor.; Schumann, William R.,editor.;
Includes bibliographical references and index.Introduction: Collaborating toward sustainability / Rebecca Adkins Fletcher, Rebecca-Eli Long, and William Schumann -- 1. Saving Appalachian gardens and stories: growing community and sustainability through seeds and art / Chris Dockery, Karrie Ann Fadroski, and Rosann Kent -- 2. Bringing back the forest: university outreach, community engagement, and partnerships for the reforestation of coal mines in Appalachia / Patrick N. Angel. Christopher D. Barton, Geoffrey W. Bell, Theresa L. Burris, and Sarah L. Hall -- 3. Wealth and poverty in the Little Cities of Black Diamonds: navigating community-university partnership in Southeast Ohio / Robert Frank, Diana Marvel, Rachel Terman, and John Winnenberg -- 4. Collaborating for conservation: monitoring the hemlock woolly adelgid in the Allegheny National Forest / Jonathan Heck, Sarah Johnson, Bethany Kier, and Denise A. Piechnik -- 5. Documenting the past to sustain the future: Appalachian Teaching Project in Unicoi County, Tennessee / Rebecca Adkins Fletcher, Johnny Lynch, and Ron R. Roach -- 6. Roots with wings: Oral history project in Floyd County, Virginia / Mary Dickerson, Barry Hollandsworth, Kathleen Ingoldsby, Angela Myers, Catherine Pauley, and Melinda Bollar Wagner -- 7. Breaking the chains of addiction through university, nonprofit and community partnerships: the story of Pollen8 / Louis Gaunch and Cheryl Laws -- 8. Students leading the way to social change: engaging students in applied sociological research in Eastern Kentucky / Dylan C. Burns, J. Jared Friesen, James N. Maples, Stephanie M. McSpirit, Shaunna L. Scott -- 9. Town and gown collaborations in Southwest Virginia post-coal communities: Clinch River Valley Initiative and Radford University economic diversification efforts / Theresa L. Burriss, Kasey Campbell, and Caroline Leggett -- 10. GIS mapping of legacy oil and gas wells / Matthew M. Kropf and Devin Weis -- 11. Appalachia abroad : reflections on long-term engagement in rural Wales / Geraint Roberts, William Schumann, and Bruce E. Stewart -- Conclusion -- Epilogue: Community-based research in Appalachia / Rebecca Adkins Fletcher, Rebecca-Eli Long, and William Schumann."Inclusive campus-community collaborations provide critical opportunities to build community capacity-defined as a community's ability to jointly respond to challenges and opportunities-and sustainability. Through case studies from across all three subregions of Appalachia from Georgia to Pennsylvania, Engaging Appalachia: A Guidebook for Building Capacity and Sustainability offers diverse perspectives and guidance for promoting social change through campus-community relationships from faculty, community members, and student contributors. This volume explores strategies for creating more inclusive and sustainable partnerships through the arts, humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. In representing diverse areas, environments, and issues, three relatable themes emerge within a practice viewpoint that is scalable to communities beyond Appalachia: fostering student leadership, asset-building, and needs fulfillment within community engagement. Engaging Appalachia presents collaborative approaches to regional community engagement and offers important lessons in place-based methods for achieving sustainable and just development. Written with practicality in mind, this guidebook embraces hard-earned experiences from decades of work in Appalachia and sets forth new models for building community resilience in a changing world"--
Subjects: Community development; Sustainable development; Social change;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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