ReportWire

Tag: Human Interest

  • Gulf Harbors family build back home, all while fighting another battle

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    NEW PORT RICHEY, Fla. — As many gather with family to celebrate the holidays, there are still homeowners continuing the recovery process after the hurricane season.


    What You Need To Know

    • Homeowners in the Gulf Harbors community are still building back their homes after the hurricane season
    • For one family, building back their home has been all the more exhausting, considering they are fighting another battle
    • Ralph Cramton was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia cancer three and a half years ago, being told he had six months to a year and a half to live
    • Despite having to rebuild his home, despite his cancer diagnosis, Cramton remains positive through it all


    In the Gulf Harbors community, some could be seen working on Christmas Eve. A task that actually has some feeling thankful.

    Trekking through the cluttered halls of his home, Ralph Cramton and his wife tidy up. The Cramton’s home, like many in Gulf Harbors, was impacted by hurricanes Helene and Milton.

    For almost 40 years, they have called the neighborhood home. This last hurricane season, however, was unlike any they had experienced before. Leaving them with quite a bit of work to do.

    “It is pretty tedious,” said Cramton.

    All the more exhausting when you realize there is another battle being fought.

    “I’m not supposed to be here, not supposed to feel good, but I do and I thank God for that,” Cramton said.

    Cramton was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia cancer three and a half years ago. He was told he had six months to a year and a half to live.

    “It’s amazing, even to me, that I have the energy to even do this work because most times, if you have AML, you can’t do this kind of stuff,” he said. “You can’t handle the dust, you don’t have the energy, it changes your life.”

    On top of building back his home, Cramton is still balancing a job. Working from home, he says, as a software engineer. Now, with a little more work to do.

    “I just got the permit earlier this week. I put in the insulation already and I’m going to do the dry wall and put that in.”

    Despite having to rebuild his home, despite his cancer diagnosis, Cramton remains positive with a laugh and a smile through it all.

    “I’m blessed, I’ve always been blessed,” he says. “There are people who suffer far more than I can ever imagine, even with the things we’ve gone through. I have nothing to be upset about. I’m thankful. I’m just thankful that I can do it.”

    Thankful to still have their home and thankful for their lives. Cramton says he hopes he and his wife will be able to return to their home in two to three weeks’ time.

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    Calvin Lewis

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  • Local holiday happenings across Tampa Bay

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    BY

    Spectrum News Staff

    Tampa

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Celebrate holidays around the world at EPCOT International Holiday Festival

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    ORLANDO, Fla. — Festive sounds, sights, and experiences are taking over EPCOT for the EPCOT International Festival of the Holidays.

    This annual event features holiday kitchens with seasonal recipes from around the globe. Most of these items differ from EPCOT’s other festivals.

    In addition, EPCOT has rolled out new merch, décor, and interactive displays and entertainment.

    One young man visiting the festival from Austin, Texas, said the magic of Disney is what keeps him coming back.

    “It’s the everlasting magic of Disney that keeps me around,” Ian James said. “I want to feel like I’m 5 all the time that I’m here — running around like I’m a kid with my little ears on and my lollipop. It’s the best time.”

    Storytellers are sprinkled throughout World Showcase, from the Italy Pavilion to France and Japan, introducing guests to holiday traditions celebrated around the world.

    EPCOT International Festival of the Holidays runs through Dec. 30.

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    Allison Walker

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  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens to host living research collection

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    SARASOTA, Fla. — These flowers are cotton-ball shaped with dozens of long thin hairs hanging down.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Orchid Show 2024: PURPLE! 
    • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    •  1534 Mound St., Sarasota 
    • 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. / Thanksgiving hours: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.


    They seem like a live version of a Dr. Suess creation, though its scientific name is Bulbophyllum Medusai — the Medusa Orchid.

    “And all that means this is kind of like the hairs of Medusa, that Greek mythological creature,” said Angel Lara, one of the talented plant professional caring for orchids for two decades (Lara said his 40-year tenured co-worker is the real star).

    The Medusa Orchid hangs in a sea of purple ones at the Marie Selby Botanical Gardens.

    It’s the “Orchid Show 2024: PURPLE!”

    This summer, Time Magazine included this Sarasota spot in its annual list of the world’s greatest places.

    You may see hundreds of orchids in their show, but there are more than 20,000 plants in their living research collection.

    And Lara keeps a special little greenhouse within the larger greenhouse — to show miniature and rare orchids from the research collection.

    “It’s basically like the jewels of the rainforest,” said Lara. “These guys have been within like our collections for 20, 30 years sometime.”

    It’s a collection growing, just as the gardens’ new homes are planned for the plants — a hurricane resilient greenhouse complex by 2027.

    Founded in 1973, Marie Selby Botanical Gardens is the only botanical garden in the world dedicated to the display and study of epiphytic orchids, bromeliads, gesneriads and ferns, and other tropical plants.

    The Gardens are comprised of two locations — the 15-acre downtown Sarasota campus, home to orchid show — and the 30-acre Historic Spanish Point Campus.

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    Virginia Johnson

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  • Mitchell County looking for fix to wastewater issues after Helene

    Mitchell County looking for fix to wastewater issues after Helene

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    SPRUCE PINE, N.C. — It was a sight that was hard to believe. The lower half of Spruce Pine, North Carolina, was completely underwater.

    Water from the North Toe River consumed the downtown area on Sept. 27, decimating the western North Carolina downtown in a way council member Wayne Peight said they never expected.


    What You Need To Know

    • Helene ravaged Mitchell County in western N.C.    
    • The county’s wastewater treatment facility was under 30 feet of water at one point during the storm
    • Engineers say it could take up to four years to fully replace the system
    • Currently, the county has temporary wastewater treatment stations to help find a solution as they rebuild.


    “We had a nice long rain shower, a little bit of a lull,” Peight said. “And then Helene came in with a vengeance. And so it really did catch a lot of people by surprise.”

    Peight says it’s not uncommon for this part of the mountains to see lots of rain. So, with every big storm, they did their usual work to prepare.

    “We moved everything up to the 2004 and 2002 water lines, marks on the wall,” Peight said. “Because we were in a flood plain with our facilities, garages and those, those, those couple of instances, I believe it was Ian and Francis, maybe, the water marks had come to a certain level. Everything got moved above that, for the night. And everybody went home to weather it out.”

    But the next morning, when he looked outside, Peight says he knew the town would be in trouble.

    “I’m sitting in my kitchen, and I have a row of 100-foot tall pine trees on my back property line,” Peight said. “And I’m watching them go pop, pop, pop. And I said, ‘Honey, this is going to be crazy.’”

    Hours later, Peight got down to what used to be the maintenance facility.

    “All of our inventory of pipe fittings, pipe saws and all of the specialized equipment. It’s all gone,” Peight said. “Our sweeper truck for street sweeping, it’s gone.”

    Now, it’s just a pile of mangled metal sitting on the river’s edge.

    “It makes you feel pretty small,” Peight said. “It’s quite something to have watched with your eyes.” 

    But what is even more worrisome for Peight was the damage to the infrastructure across the county.

    “A lot of people don’t know this, but Mitchell County was the only county in this storm that was completely, 100% incommunicado in the sense that there was absolutely no electricity in any homes across the entire county,” Peight said. “There wasn’t a single electric company that had any clients that were receiving service. Of the 43 cell towers that we have, I think there were three that were still standing.”

    And it wasn’t just roads or bridges destroyed. The wastewater pipes that run along the rivers and creeks were ripped out of the ground as the storm barreled through the mountain community.

    “All along this stream, you can see pipes of all kinds coming into the stream,” Peight said. “I mean, most of these cases, they were connected and formed infrastructure that went to the main, to the main pipes.”

    Peight says there are 80 miles of pipes that fuse together their water infrastructure, most of which are designed to run along the flattest areas. And that’s closer to the river.

    “We just happened to have a river that is the conduit for everything,” Peight said.

    So when the river and creeks expanded, knocking down trees and caving in creek banks, the modern infrastructure came with it.

    “We had a ton of electric lines down along the river,” Peight said. “All of the transformers are gone. You know, most of our communication, most of our water and sewer infrastructure is just not there. A lot of it’s just not there.”  

    It left the people who live here without basic necessities immediately after the storm. And county crews scrambled to get things up and running.

    “The first 10 days, no one had water in our house,” Peight said. “Just to be very clear, the maintenance team’s response was, first, water, get fresh water. The homes people need to be able to flush. People need to be able to shower, all of these things. And so that was the first objective. But pursuant to that very, very quickly behind that, we have an issue of, of where the water is going to go.”

    Peight says during Helene rushing water overflowed every creek, stream and river in the county. 

    Downtown Spruce Pine was one of the hardest hit areas.

    More than 30 feet of water rushed down the river, engulfing buildings, including the county’s wastewater treatment plant.

    “This wastewater treatment facility processes 630,000 gallons a day, or 1,000 gallons of wastewater a day,” Peight said. “And currently none of it’s being treated. So we feel like it’s an emergency.”

    The rush of the water also ripped apart everything in its path, even along the smaller creeks and streams.

    “It was really surreal to watch all of that. It is obviously the worst thing I’d ever seen,” Peight said. “And so it was quite surreal to watch that whole thing happen.”

    That included at the county’s main wastewater treatment facility in Spruce Pine. Peight says the Army Corps of Engineers deemed the facility a total loss.

    “The only thing that is still operating that we assume will still operate as it should is our large bio tank up the top here,” Peight said. “The rest of it is wrapped around the corner of the river here in small buildings and small tanks.”

    According to Peight, engineers have told the county it will take up to four years to get things fully operational at the wastewater treatment plant again.

    But waiting for it to be rebuilt is not an option, as the wastewater continues to seep into their rivers and streams.

    “Some of us are very conscientious about what happens with wastewater,” Peight said. “We like to swim in this river. I wouldn’t want my dogs drinking this water. So, yes, I mean, I care about my kids, I care about animals, I care about my neighbor’s animals.”

    Until they have a permanent fix, the town is planning for alternative solutions.

    “We’re talking about mobile wastewater systems,” Peight said. “Bring it in and send it up on a truck and get it started working.”

    The county has received two temporary mobile wastewater systems, which need to be installed. In the meantime, Peight says what’s been truly inspiring is seeing the entire community come together to find solutions.

    “The community response here has made me incredibly proud to be part of this community,” Peight said. “This has been a very, very eye-opening experience across the board about what it means to be a neighbor.” 

    Still, Peight says the temporary wastewater systems aren’t the final solution. And they can’t wait for the community to come up with the funds to fully replace their system.

    “We’re putting in multiple big asks to try and get this back to where we can at least prepare for putting a new system in,” Peight said.

    He hopes with the help of federal and state resources, they will continue to push forward.

    “It’s all hands on deck. Go as fast as you can, make quick decisions,” Peight said. “But make smart ones because no community wants to be saddled with $120 million of debt with no backing.”

    To make sure their rivers, streams and community stay pristine for future generations.

    “So we’re absolutely 100% behind getting this fix as quick as possible,” Peight said. “There’s no other option.”

    Peight says they hope to have the two mobile wastewater systems set up in the next few weeks. Those two temporary systems will help offset the loss of their wastewater treatment facility as they rebuild.

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    Courtney Davis

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  • Dragon Age: The Veilguard Is Divisive, Call Of Duty’s Launcher Sucks, And More Of The Week’s Top Takes

    Dragon Age: The Veilguard Is Divisive, Call Of Duty’s Launcher Sucks, And More Of The Week’s Top Takes

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    Image: BioWare

    Today, October 28, reviews went live for Dragon Age: The Veilguard. I reviewed it here at Kotaku, and despite being jaded toward the series for the better part of a decade, I really loved the long-awaited fourth entry. Right now it sits at a strong 84 on review aggregate site Metacritic, which is about in line with where these games typically land. The original Dragon Age: Origins sits at an 86, with Inquisition, the series’ third entry, landing close by at 84. Meanwhile, Dragon Age II, probably the most divisive game in the series, sits at 79. As much as I loved my time with The Veilguard, I knew it would elicit some pretty divergent reactions from folks. There are 10s and there are some more middling scores. You can even find some folks straight-up saying they “do not recommend” the game, like YouTuber Skill Up does while discussing all his problems with BioWare’s latest entry. But what’s the issue? What are folks so split on? Well, everything, it sounds like. – Kenneth Shepard Read More

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    Kotaku Staff

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  • Pasco mail carrier helps baby choking on Halloween candy

    Pasco mail carrier helps baby choking on Halloween candy

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    PASCO COUNTY, Fla. — A Pasco County postal worker is being hailed as a Halloween hero. It comes after she jumped into action to help a child choking on a piece of candy. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Pasco County mail carrier Kandi Young is being praised for her actions in helping an 18-month-old who was choking on a piece of Halloween candy
    • Young was heading back to the office after finishing her route on Oct. 31 when she saw the child’s mother, Morgan Osborne, standing in the road calling for help
    • Osborne said her three-year-old gave the candy to her younger child after a trunk-or-treat event
    • Young’s supervisor tells us she’s been nominated for the Postmaster General Heroes’ Program for her actions


    “Honestly, it’s almost surreal, because I was not at all thinking. It just was pure drive. I wanted to make sure that baby was safe,” said Kandi Young, a rural part-time flexible mail carrier.

    Young was heading back to the Trinity Carrier Annex after finishing her mail route on Oct. 31. At the same time, Morgan Osborne, of Moon Lake, was leaving a trunk-or-treat event at her daughters’ school. Neither woman knew they were about to find themselves in the middle of a real life Halloween horror.

    “She wasn’t breathing. She was actually foaming at the mouth,” said Young.

    “She 100% turned purple,” said Osborne. “It was the scariest thing that ever happened to me.”

    Osborne’s three-year-old daughter had given a WarHeads candy to her 18-month-old, and she was choking.

    “I pulled her out of the car. I started screaming, freaking out. I’ve never freaked out this bad in my whole, entire life,” Osborne said.

    It happened at the intersection of Little Road. and Plathe Road in New Port Richey. 

    “All I see is a postal truck fly around the corner,” Osborne said.

    “She was yelling, and I believe she was screaming, ‘My baby!’” said Young.

    Young took the girl and performed the Heimlich maneuver.

    “I threw that candy — I don’t even know where it’s at — and I just hugged the baby, and I was holding her to me,” she said. “I could hear her gasping for breath when she finally was able to.”

    She said her quick thinking was part instinct — she’s a mom to two girls as well — and part training.

    “When my youngest was born in 2020, she had a disorder that caused her to be in the NICU for 13 days,” Young said. “For babies to come out of the NICU, to ‘graduate’, as they say, you have to, as a parent, have CPR and Heimlich maneuver training.”

    After handing the baby over to Osborne, it was right back to work.

    “I went back so I could get the mail in on time, since we’re also in the middle of an election and we have ballots,” said Young.

    “We did get to text each other, and I did let her know how grateful I am for her. Honestly, she saved my child’s life,” Osborne said.

    Osborne said her daughter was examined by paramedics after the incident and is doing well.

    Young’s supervisor, Allen Milletics, said he nominated her for the Postmaster General Heroes’ Program. According to USPS’s website, it honors postal workers who go above and beyond to help their communities.

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    Sarah Blazonis

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  • Polk mother of three beats cancer with support her three pillars

    Polk mother of three beats cancer with support her three pillars

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    WINTER HAVEN, Fla. — In today’s Pursuit Unlimited story, we look at how faith can play a significant role in recovering from illness.

    A Polk County mom of three is telling her story of how she overcame a cancer diagnosis with support from her community, a place she finds comfort in and a little help from above.


    What You Need To Know

    • Kate Sauers, a mother of three, battled Lymphoma cancer and beat it over the last year 
    • Kate relied on her community, her faith, and the Carol Jenkins Barnett United Way Children’s Resource Center
    • She now teaches a Learning with Littles mommy class at Immanuel Lutheran Church and School in Winter Haven


    Kate Sauers gets emotional recalling her journey in the last year and a half.

    “This picture is really special because this is at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa,” Sauers said.

    She met with a Lymphoma specialist who told her exactly what she needed to hear.

    “And we saw a specialist there who had specialized in Lymphoma, and he said you are done, you’re in complete remission. There isn’t cancer there.”

    Before that, doctors diagnosed her on her daughter’s third birthday.

    Sauers is now cancer free, and she is relishing her mommy time.

    She teaches a Learning with Littles class at Immanuel Lutheran Church and School in Winter Haven.

    Her husband is the pastor there.

    Sauers credits her village which helped her get through the challenges.

    “I just think moms need a tribe of people,” she said. “Sometimes mommy is lonely, sometimes it’s hard.”

    Ashley Wilson is a part of Kate’s tribe and told us why it helps in uncertain times.

    “Having that tribe or that village to be that sounding board,” Wilson said. “Oh, my kid’s doing this, is that okay? Like, what should we be doing and how should we be handling this?”

    Most of all, Sauers leaned into her faith.

    “I felt like God wanted me to be here still and that I had a purpose with these kiddos and that’s part of what kept me going,” said Sauers.

    For her sense of self, this mommy also relied on a safe space.

    “I didn’t tell people right away that I had cancer and so I was wearing a wig, and it was just nice to have a place to go where I could be just Kate the mom,” she said.

    That is at the Carol Jenkins Barnett United Way Children’s Resource Center in Lakeland.

    The Center helps families with early childhood development classes.

    And it is a place Saures considers helped her be the best mommy, despite her condition.

    “This has really given me the opportunity to do that when I was diagnosed with cancer, during cancer time and now.”

    Where she has found healing in faith, community, and knowledge. 

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    Roy De Jesus

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  • The Consequences Of Dragon Age: The Veilguard’s Biggest Early Decision, Explained

    The Consequences Of Dragon Age: The Veilguard’s Biggest Early Decision, Explained

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    Screenshot: BioWare / Kotaku

    Many of Dragon Age: The Veilguard’s choices are personal and focus on your team’s relationships and life paths. However, one of the big, world-changing ones comes early on, shortly after you recruit Davrin, the Grey Warden companion. Right now, you might be staring at a choice between helping either the Tevinter city of Minrathous or Treviso, the home base of the Antivan Crows, from coordinated dragon attacks. If you’re unsure of what decision to make and want to know what the results of each option are, we’re here to lay them out for you.

    Image for article titled The Consequences Of Dragon Age: The Veilguard's Biggest Early Decision, Explained

    This choice has an impact on your party and your faction allies, as both the Tevinter mage Neve and the Antivan assassin Lucanis are from the affected cities. You’re essentially making a choice on which city and faction will be in a better position to help you when the time comes, and putting Neve or Lucanis on a specific path in their stories and even combat roles. Here’s the rundown of the consequences.

    • The person you don’t help will temporarily leave the party
    • When they return, they will be considered “hardened,” which locks out parts of their skill tree and makes it harder to progress their relationship without higher approval throughout the game
    • You will lose some choice in Neve and Lucanis’ personal storylines, and they will be forced to go down one direction because of the circumstances
    • The city you don’t save will be blighted, altering quest lines and dialogue, and cutting off access to the local faction’s shop
    • The Shadow Dragons or Antivan Crows will have a baseline loss in allied strength points, meaning it will be impossible to max them out

    Rook looks at his team while Harding asks "What's our move, Rook?"

    Screenshot: BioWare / Kotaku

    Overall, it’s still a binary choice that evens itself out, but it will have pretty direct ramifications on your relationship with Neve and Lucanis above all else. It’s still possible to reach the end of their storylines (including having them become a Hero of the Veilguard, which is the equivalent to reaching maximum Loyalty in the Mass Effect series) and make up for the loss in allied power, but it will take more sidequests to make it happen, and you won’t have the shop to sell valuables to in order to juice those numbers.

    What I’m unsure of as of this writing is whether or not it locks you out of Neve and Lucanis’ respective romances. I saved Minrathous in my playthrough and my relationship with Lucanis was slow to progress for a bit, so I didn’t see any further options to flirt and eventually locked in my romance with Davrin. We’ll update this guide as that becomes clear.

    If you’re reading this guide, you’re probably a decent way into The Veilguard, but if you’d like a few extra tips to help you as you take down the elven gods, we’ve got those, too.

     

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    Kenneth Shepard

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  • Pinellas nonprofit Crisis Connect offers mental health help for storm victims

    Pinellas nonprofit Crisis Connect offers mental health help for storm victims

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    SEMINOLE, Fla. — The founder of a recently created Pinellas County nonprofit called Crisis Connect says he wants to help storm victims who have fallen through the cracks with mental health and financial resources.


    What You Need To Know

    • The founder of Pinellas County nonprofit Crisis Connect says he wants to help storm victims who have fallen through the cracks
    • Dr. Terry Collier, who has 35 years of experience as a trauma counselor, decided to create the organization because he saw a need in the community
    • Karissa Jackson, 46, who says her husband died shortly before Hurricane Helene destroyed all of her belongings, has been getting help from Crisis Connect
    • Check the Crisis Connect Facebook page for the latest information about the Beach Aid event planned for Thanksgiving weekend


    “What we’re doing right now is trying to throw that lifeline out, saying, ‘Don’t give up,’” said founder Dr. Terry Collier. “It’s going to take time, and it’s not going to be easy, but we’re going to make this thing happen together as a community.”

    Karissa Jackson, 46, moved into a rental home in Seminole with her two teenage children six days before Hurricane Helene’s record-breaking storm surge hit. Jackson, who did not have flood insurance, said her family lost 95% of their possessions — including two cars — when Helene sent 39 inches of seawater into the home.

    “It was very frightening. My anxiety, it was off the charts. My daughter, she was hysterical,” she said. “We really thought that we were going to drown and die.”

    To make matters much worse, Jackson’s husband, Bobby Schauer, 46, had unexpectedly died from a heart attack about one month before Helene. Jackson said she was not experiencing back-to-back disasters in less than six weeks — something that took a serious toll on her mental health.

    “So losing him and then having to move here and then losing everything,” she said. “I was driving home the other day, and it brought me to tears because we were together for 17 years.”

    Jackson said she was put in touch with Collier, 69, who gave her both financial and mental health help. She encourages others to reach out to Crisis Connect.

    “To have somebody there to help guide you, to say things that can help you, it definitely helps a lot,” she said. “I just I can’t thank him enough for wanting to help me.” 

    Collier, who has 35 years of experience as a trauma counselor, said many storm victims will need mental health resources as they navigate the rebuilding process.

    “Crisis is no respecter of persons — the elderly, the young children, marriages, disabilities, businesses,” he said. “Pretty soon, realization is going to step in. And that’s when frustration, that’s when making bad choices and judgment — people are signing contracts, depression, and the ultimate is, ‘I can’t take anymore.’”

    Collier has teamed up with developer Bill Karns’ ROC Park foundation and Madeira Beach city leaders to host a Thanksgiving weekend event where free meals and mental health counselors will be provided. It’s also a fundraiser for the nonprofit and will take place at ROC Park in Madeira Beach.

    “Beach Aid, we’re putting together in Madeira Beach. We’re trying to serve between 2,000 and 3,000 Thanksgiving dinners,” said Karns. “We want to have all of our affiliates there, Crisis Connect, to help with the grief counseling. That’s a big thing right now.”

    Karns, 66, has also set up the Mad Beach Donation Center, located at 15042 Madeira Way, where storm victims can find free supplies, which include food, cleaning supplies, clothing, bedding and furniture.

    “We took it on the chin, but we’re strong and we’ll come back,” he said. “I’m at that age now where it’s all about helping other people. I’m good, but I want to make sure our community’s good.”

    Collier said the resources they provide are for people who don’t have flood insurance and have been falling through the cracks. Thanksgiving plans for Beach Aid are still being finalized with the latest information available at the Crisis Connect Facebook page.

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    Josh Rojas

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  • Lakeland church prepares to help hundreds in Milton recovery event

    Lakeland church prepares to help hundreds in Milton recovery event

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    LAKELAND, Fla. — Lakeland residents will be able to access many of the resources they need in one location on Wednesday. Combee Connection Ministries and Church is teaming up with several organizations for a community recovery outreach.


    What You Need To Know

    • Combee Connection Church is hosting a Hurricane Milton recovery outreach on Wednesday.
    • The church is teaming up with nearly 20 agencies to provide resources and services.
    • The event will run from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.


    Church members spent most of Tuesday preparing for the event. With them was Savannah Gary, who has volunteered for Combee Connection several times this year.

    “I just wanted to give back and help people in our community. I grew up here. This is home,” she said.

    Gary lives just a few blocks from the church building. She shared photos of the day after Hurricane Milton made landfall, which severely damaged parts of her home.

    “We got our roof ripped off and our carport,” she said. “We lost power for four days, but as soon as I got power, we came out here and started working. This church actually helped me, so I help back.”

    The church has been connecting people to resources and services since 2017, in the aftermath of Hurricane Irma. But Pastor Kay Kasser says Wednesday will be their largest outreach yet.

    “It’s been a really big response. We’re looking for overflow parking, if that gives you an indicator,” she said.

    Kasser says they’re teaming up with more than 20 agencies to help community members, including the Red Cross and AmeriCorps.

    Once people sign in, they’ll receive assistance and boxes of food. They’ll also have access to portable laundry rooms and showers, which Pastor Kasser says residents in flooded areas need right now.

    “And when there’s a need, we’re here as a church to meet that need. That’s what we’re called to do,” she said.

    As for Gary, she’s looking forward to being of service, helping others at Combee Connection Church while she searches for some relief herself.

    The community event will run Wednesday, Oct. 30, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. If you would like to volunteer or make a donation, click here.

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    Alexis Jones

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  • Venice Theatre continues rebuilding its main stage following Hurricane Milton

    Venice Theatre continues rebuilding its main stage following Hurricane Milton

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    VENICE, Fla. — In its 75th season, going through a chain-link fence is not exactly what Kristofer Geddie envisioned he would do to showcase the Venice Theatre’s main performance space, the Jervey Theatre.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Venice Theatre continues to rebuild its main stage following the major damage that was dealt from Hurricane Ian
    • A major concern for the theater was that more damage might’ve happened when Hurricane Milton made landfall
    • Kristofer Geddie, the theater’s executive director, says the theater essentially suffered very little damage from the storm and they’re able to still do performances in their two smaller venues
    • According to Geddie, he hopes to reopen their main stage during their 76th season in 2026


    Each time he opens this gate, it’s a reminder of what happened.

    “The trauma, the daily trauma, is something that I can’t deny,” said Geddie, the executive director of the Venice Theatre. “It’s every day.”

    Because through the construction, the site is the empty shell of the Jervey. When Spectrum Bay News 9 visited the space a year ago, there were still some walls here and pieces of memories from shows gone by.

    Now, that’s all gone because of the destruction from Hurricane Ian.

    That major storm destroyed the roof, blanketed the space in water and left the Venice Theatre with a new and unanticipated $14 million project.

    “The walls have been taken out from last year, but the progress is slower than I would like,” Geddie said.

    There were some delays, which Geddie says they anticipated, but the last thing they wanted to see was another hurricane, this time, named “Milton.”

    “We at one point thought it was going to be a direct hit to Venice, and we didn’t think we would have survived that,” Geddie said.

    While storm surge and damage impacted most of Venice, with branches and debris on many street corners, the Jervey, for the most part, made it through unscathed.

    “We didn’t suffer as much as so many folks here in Venice,” Geddie said.

    Even with that minor bright spot, a lot more work is left to be done. Geddie says they need to keep raising money to fund the rebuild.

    One way they’re doing that is by following the number one cliché in theater: “the show must go on.”

    “We use it a lot, but that is the word resilience,” Geddie said. “To know how quickly our team came up with an idea, came up with a plan and executed that plan to make this into a workable space.”

    They’re using a building that was intended for educational courses to hold performances.

    Right now, “9 to 5: The Musical” is in the spotlight, giving folks a reprieve from the trauma outside.

    “Folks are losing their homes,” Geddie said. “People are losing their businesses. We haven’t had that release to laugh.”

    While this space is far smaller than the Jervey, just having a place for art to flourish is what excites Geddie about the future of his theatre.

    Because soon, the chain link will be gone, and the shows will be back in the Venice Theatre’s main house.

    Geddie expects the main stage at the Venice Theatre to reopen in 2026, during the theater’s 76th season.

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    Nick Popham

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  • Manatee resident turns disability into strength through fitness

    Manatee resident turns disability into strength through fitness

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    MANATEE COUNTY, Fla. — October is Disability Employment Awareness Month, and one resident in Manatee County has found strength in his disability, now hoping to help others.


    What You Need To Know

    • Robby Andrews had an accident in 2007 and found recovery in working out
    • In 2019 he started his business called 40X Max Performance and plans on helping adults and kids with disabilities
    • He strengthened his body and mind with fitness and overtime was able to retain a full-time job at Apollo Medical Transport

    When Robby Andrews steps foot in the gym, it’s go time.

    “Working out is my new drug. It replaces all of my anxiety during the day,” Andrews said.

    Fitness has been life-changing for Andrews since his accident in 2007.

    “The elevator was out in a condo, so I was using the stairway to go up. I ended up going out the fifth-floor window. I broke both my femurs, crushed my pelvis, had facial reconstruction, and was in a coma for six months. I spent about a year in the trauma unit with a spinal cord injury, and they said it would be a miracle if I ever walked again,” he said.

    But he did.

    He took his first steps in 2015 and started working out two years later.

    “As a spinal cord injury patient, my left side was the worst — it was dying. Lifting weights, stretching, and exercising gave me feeling back,” he explained.

    This led him to start his own personal training business, called 40X Max Performance.

    “I’m not a fan of people telling you what you can’t do. I’ll tell you what you can do, and I’ll sit by your side and tell you that you can do it.”

    Andrews also works full time at Apollo Medical Transport.

    “I love it because it’s a chance for me to give back. I used to be transported all the time when I first had my accident,” he said.

    He feels like he’s making a difference.

    “I transport a lot of people with amputations, and when they see me walk in, it gives them a glimmer of hope. That brings joy to my day,” he explained.

    For Andrews, it’s been a long road, but he’s adjusted.

    “To me, it’s natural. If I didn’t have a disability, I’d feel like something was wrong because it’s so natural to me now not to have a leg,” he said.

    Now, he’s focused on helping others.

    “I know how treacherous that can be — the fear of the unknown when you’re traveling and can’t control yourself. When they see me and hear a little bit about my story and what I went through, it just makes their ride so much easier,” he explained.

    Andrews has turned his difficulty into his strength, and he’s determined to help others do the same.

    In the future, Andrews plans to become a personal trainer for children with disabilities.

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    Julia Hazel

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  • St. Pete Woman’s Club works to restore 95-year-old building after hurricanes

    St. Pete Woman’s Club works to restore 95-year-old building after hurricanes

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Members and volunteers are working hard to restore the St. Petersburg Woman’s Club building, which is nearly 100 years old.

    Water and wind from hurricanes Helene and Milton damaged the historic landmark. It’s home to the club, known for community service since 1913.


    What You Need To Know

    • Volunteers work to restore the historic St. Petersburg Woman’s Club building, which was damaged in hurricanes
    • The building is almost 100 years old
    • Vice President of Daily Operations Cathy Allen said the building’s landmark is on the national, state, and local historic register
    • A fundraiser is being held to assist with the restoration process


    “We were very instrumental in a lot of the things that happened in downtown St. Petersburg as women, and back then, you didn’t do that, that’s not what you did. We were very involved in the suffrage movement,” said Cathy Allen, vice president of Daily Operations.

    Allen previously served as club president and is proud to help restore the future for the group that puts in 16,000 to 20,000 hours of volunteer service each year.

    “They come and they make quilts for hospice, and they crochet caps for newborns, and they do so much here and they do it as a group. The idea of not being able to meet here to do that is sad,” said Allen.

    Generations of families also gather at the venue for weddings, birthdays, celebrations of life and corporate conferences for businesses.

    “So, in order to be able to keep up this club — which by the way is on the National Historic Registry, State Historic Registry and the St. Petersburg Historic Register — it costs a lot of money to keep this up, so we get that money by having events. We’ve been returning money,” Allen said of having to cancel events since the storms.

    The club is now working to raise that money back, and community members are helping with the restoration.

    “We were like a big bathtub in here, filled with sea water and sewage water, because the sewage plants had shut down,” Allen explained. “We literally had to gut the entire building.”

    A building the community is coming together to rebuild.

    “This building means so much, not only to us, the members, but to the entire community because we do so much for the community,” she expressed.

    A fundraising campaign has been set up for those in a position to help. And money raised from the club’s “A Night of Jazz in St. Pete” event will go toward the restoration.

    Members and volunteers are working together to preserve history, while making sure future generations can serve their community and create new memories in the beloved space.

    “We’re trying to restore it to its former glory, but better,” said Allen.

    A Night of Jazz in St. Pete will be held at the club on Saturday, Nov. 2, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. 

    A GoFundMe page has been started to help with the restoration process.


    GoFundMe.com, or any other third-party online fundraiser, is not managed by Spectrum Bay News 9 or Spectrum News 13. For more information on how GoFundMe works and its rules, visit http://www.gofundme.com/safety.

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    Melissa Eichman

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  • Beloved music instructor to be inducted in Polk’s Arts & Culture Hall of Fame

    Beloved music instructor to be inducted in Polk’s Arts & Culture Hall of Fame

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    WINTER HAVEN, Fla. — The Polk County Arts and Culture Alliance will celebrate its annual Hall of Fame Gala Tuesday. This year, the group will induct five local legends, including beloved music instructor Dr. Jessie Davis Owens.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Polk County Arts and Culture Alliance will induct five people into its Hall of Fame Tuesday
    • Inductee, Dr. Jessie Owens, has taught jazz and classical music to Polk County students for the past 50 years
    • The Arts and Culture Hall of Fame Gala will be held at Nora Mayo Hall in Winter Haven


    Owens first sat behind a piano during her middle school band class. She later learned to play more instruments and spent the last 50 years sharing her knowledge of jazz and classical music with Polk County students.

    “It makes me feel wonderful that I touched somebody’s mind and given them the gift of love,” Owens said.

    Since retiring, Owens has held most of her classes in her home. She teaches people of all ages through her nonprofit, the Dr. J. Owens Academy of Fine Arts, including 9th grader Zyonn McGriff.

    “Her impact on me has been really special to me and my connection through music,” McGriff said.

    Owens’ impact on the community has earned her several awards and recognitions over the years.

    Recently, the city of Winter Haven declared Oct. 15 Dr. Jessie Davis Owens Day. Now, she looks forward to being inducted into the Polk Arts and Culture Hall of Fame.

    “It’s been quite a surprise. Really, honestly, I’m honored and humbled, and just overjoyed,” she said.

    But like any true musician, Owens said this recognition wasn’t something she strived for.

    “I wasn’t doing it for show, or fashion, or form,” she said. “It’s just a passion of mine. I just love music. I love singing. I love playing. I love conducting it.”

    Most importantly, she loves sharing music with others, which is what she plans to do behind her piano for years to come.

    The Hall of Fame Gala will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 29 at the Nora Mayo Hall in Winter Haven. For tickets to attend, click here.

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    Alexis Jones

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  • Tom Holland’s Spider-Man 4 Is Coming In 2026

    Tom Holland’s Spider-Man 4 Is Coming In 2026

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    The MCU’s favorite web-crawler will return to theaters in 2026. Spider-Man 4 will debut shortly after Avengers: Doomsday that year, with star Tom Holland confirming that production will begin mid-2025.

    “Next summer we start shooting. Everything’s good to go, We’re nearly there,” Holland said in an interview on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon earlier this week. “Super exciting. I can’t wait!” Spider-Man 4, the follow up to 2021’s No Way Home, will officially release on July 24, 2026.

    That puts it just a couple months after Avengers: Doomsday, which debuts on May 1 of that year, and stars Robert Downey Jr. as the titular Fantastic Four villain, as was revealed earlier this year at San Diego Comic Con 2024. That grouping recreates the previous one-two comic book punch when Far From Home released shortly after Avengers: Endgame, capping off the multi-year, multi-movie MCU saga.

    Read More: Ranking The Spider-Man Movies From Worst To Best, Now Including Venom 3

    The sequel will be directed by Destin Daniel Cretton, who made Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, and presumably have some tie-in with the greater MCU, though it’s not clear how exactly yet. “I’ve been speaking to [Robert Downey Jr.] a lot, especially about him making his [Marvel] return, which is super exciting,” Holland said on the Rich Roll podcast earlier this month. “That was a tough secret to sit on because I have a reputation for ruining things and I strategically have done no press.”

    The young actor, who also starred in 2022’s Uncharted, an adaptation of the hit PlayStation games, said the script for Spider-Man 4 had him excited. “We have a creative and we have a pitch and a draft, which is excellent. It needs work, but the writers are doing a great job. I read it three weeks ago and it really lit a fire in me,” Holland told the Rich Roll podcast. “Zendaya and I sat down and read it together and we at times were bouncing around the living room like this is a real movie worthy of the fans’ respect.”

    2026 is still a ways off and Insomniac Games recently confirmed that its Spider-Man 2 PS5 game won’t be getting any story DLC. The hit 2023 blockbuster will, however, be coming to PC next January.

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    Ethan Gach

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  • 2023’s Best Narrative Game Just Got Even Better

    2023’s Best Narrative Game Just Got Even Better

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    When I play a smaller game that really has an effect on me, I’m usually cool with not getting more of it. The advantage of artful, smaller-scope projects is that they can concisely say what they need to say without being beholden to all the forever-game nonsense that infects the AAA space. However, I’ll make an exception for Black Tabby Games’ horror visual novel Slay the Princess, one of the best games from 2023. The Pristine Cut expansion incorporates its new material smoothly with that of the original release, giving you more of what makes it so great and serving as a welcome reminder that this is an incredible game.

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    Kenneth Shepard

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  • Clearwater Marine Aquarium reopens after damage from Hurricane Helene

    Clearwater Marine Aquarium reopens after damage from Hurricane Helene

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    CLEARWATER, Fla. — The Clearwater Marine Aquarium is finally reopening Monday, Oct. 21, after sustaining damage during Hurricane Helene.


    What You Need To Know

    • Clearwater Marine Aquarium reopen Oct. 21 after sustaining damage during Hurricane Helene
    • CMA lost power for several days and flooded with four feet of storm surge
    • Zoo Tampa and Florida Aquarium assisted with animal relocation before, during and after the storm
    • CMA credits community partners and donors with its reopening, but says they need more monetary help to continue repairs and equipment replacement 


    Four feet of storm surge flooded the aquarium, damaging essential equipment for its animal rehab programs, as well as damaging lower level public areas of the aquarium.

    Florida Aquarium and Zoo Tampa assisted with animal relocation during the shutdown.

    CMA Vice President of Zoological Care Kelly Martin said community partners and donors helped with monetary donations to get the aquarium reopened, but they need more financial help to continue repairs and equipment replacement.

    “There’s so many ways you can contribute,” Martin said. “Help support our mission of rescue, rehab and release. Help us recover back to bigger, badder, stronger than we were before. You can contribute online at cmaquarium.org. You can go ahead and call us at 727-441-1790 and let us know how you can help.”

    CMA said it used a ride-out team during Hurricane Helene that helped monitor conditions and shore up and emergency issues during the storm.

    The ride out team is being credited with how quickly CMA reopened after losing power and essential equipment for several days.

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    Jason Lanning

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  • Domestic Violence Awareness

    Domestic Violence Awareness

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    YOUNGSVILLE, N.C. — It’s Domestic Violence Awareness Month.

    The North Carolina Council for Women and Youth Involvement reported 60,000 people in the state received services from domestic violence awareness programs.

    Yet, many organizations like Safe Space in Louisburg working with victims across North Carolina lack resources due to limited funding.

    A domestic violence survivor says those resources saved her life.


    What You Need To Know

    • The North Carolina Council for Women and Youth Involvement reported 60,000 people in the state received services from domestic violence awareness programs
    • Many organizations like Safe Space in Louisburg working with victims across North Carolina lack resources due to limited funding
    • The organization’s director Monica Kearney said she’s moved to learn how her nonprofit  is helping so many men and women. Her staff needs to raise $150,000 to keep the nonprofit up and running. They’re not even close to reaching their goal



    Every candle lit during the second annual Safe Space Pioneers of Hope ceremony represents victims and survivors of domestic violence.

    Organizers read the names and ages out loud during a candlelight vigil of more than 60 people killed in North Carolina in domestic violence cases over the past year.

    “It was a terrifying experience to know that he was there,” said a North Carolina woman. She didn’t want to show her face or disclose her real name because of fear of retaliation.

    The woman, a mother of two, shared her story for the first time to the public at the event earlier this month in Youngsville. She talked about the steps she took to leave her ex-husband. She says he was verbally abusive and controlling. 

    “He went into my own personal space. It was a private property, and he recorded intimacy within my household. He went ahead and that just made me feel like I did not have that same freedom. Like he came over and invaded my space,” she explained.

    During her speech, there were cheers and emotional moments. Her friend, who introduced her to Safe Space, joined her to give her a hug. She said she’s thankful her friend took her to this organization that offers support to victims of domestic violence.

    “One of the biggest steps I took was to file a complaint but also to find an organization. Find someone that can go ahead and help you. In this case it was Safe Space,” she explained.

    The organization’s director, Monica Kearney, said she’s moved to learn how her nonprofit is helping so many men and women. Her staff needs to raise $150,000 to keep the nonprofit running. They’re not even close to reaching their goal. 

    “The donations are critical for us to be able to sustain services as they are and to expand. We do not want to deny any victim services because of lack of resources,” Kearney added.

    In the meantime, the woman domestic violence survivor knows if Safe Space doesn’t get the donations it needs, victims may not have the same outcome.

    “It allows you to be free and recover that life that you think that you have lost,” she said.

    Safe Space is asking 1,000 people to donate $100 each to help victims of domestic violence.

    To find out how you can donate, visit here.

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    Siobhan Riley

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  • Back-to-back hurricanes leave parts of Zephyrhills underwater

    Back-to-back hurricanes leave parts of Zephyrhills underwater

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    ZEPHYRHILLS, Fla. — A week after Hurricane Milton made landfall off Siesta Key, Tampa Bay area residents are still feeling its impact.


    What You Need To Know

    • Portions of Zephyrhills are underwater after Hurricane Milton and previous storms have brought flood waters to communities
    • One area in Zephyrhills, the Silverado Golf & Country Club, has flooded twice in two months, after having done the same after Hurricane Debby
    • A spokesperson with the city says pumping has started to Geiger Pond and the inlet that goes underneath Eiland Boulevard


    Some communities don’t have power, while others remain underwater. One area in Zephyrhills near the Silverado Golf & Country Club has been flooded twice in a few months.

    This area is no stranger when it comes to flooding. Just a few months ago, after Hurricane Debby, portions of the golf club were underwater.

    Walking toward the back of her house, Stephanie Rogers takes in this view.

    “Here we go again,” she said.

    Her backyard looks out on the Silverado Golf & Country Club, which was left submerged underwater after Hurricane Milton. 

    “After the hurricane Thursday morning, we got out and the water, of course, was not up this far,” said Rogers. “It actually stopped at about the oak tree here that’s kind of broken. It actually broke during Helene.”

    At the golf and country club’s entrance, the sound of pumps can be heard draining flood waters.

    “It is entering both ends of our neighborhood and kind of in the center, as well,” Rogers said.

    A spokesperson with the city said pumping has started to Geiger Pond. But knowing how long it took to pump water after Debby, Rogers and others are wondering how long it will take for these waters to recede.

    “How do they recover?” Rogers said. “How does the golf course recover? How does the community recover?”

    Meanwhile, the city is still asking residents to limit flushing their toilets as they continue to make repairs to the sewer system.

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    Calvin Lewis

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