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Cody Blair, FW Bethesda, Sr.
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Grant Savage, Ovilla Chr., Jr.
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Jaxon Edwards, FW Bethesda, Sr.
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Seth Zebreski, Ovilla Chr., Jr.
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Garrett Franks, FW Bethesda, Jr.
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Jacob Zimmerer, Muen. Sacred Heart, Jr.
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Christian Curry, First Baptist, Jr.
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Kenny Bradshaw, Long. Chr. Heritage, Jr.
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Gene Wilson, First Baptist, Sr.
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Joseph Morris, Plano Coram Deo, Jr.
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Christopher Johnson, First Baptist, Sr.
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Reid Roberson, First Baptist, Jr.
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Reid Messick, Plano Coram Deo, Fr.
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Hunter Burnett, Garland Chr., Jr.
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Jordon Keener, Dallas International, Fr.
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Jack Kristofek, First Baptist, Sr.
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Zach Millhorn, Garland Chr., Jr.
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Cedrick Kelly, Long. Chr. Heritage, Sr.
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Kolbe Rohter, Irv. Faustina, Sr.
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Matt Villota, The Westwood Sch., Sr.
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William Warren, Alcuin Sch., So.
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Ke'von Day, The Winston Sch., So.
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Jack Nelson, Irv. Faustina, Jr.
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Chesley Turton, The Westwood Sch., Sr.
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Rudy Hartfield, Irv. StoneGate, So.
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Max Nathan, Alcuin School, So.
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Robert Cook, Irv. Faustina, Fr.
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Oliver Banks, Irv. StoneGate, So.
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Cameron Henderson, The Winston Sch., So.
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Joseph Sipe, Irv. Faustina, Jr.
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Nigerrell Tubbs, Tyler Street Chr., Jr.
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Donovan Handy, DeSoto Canterbury, Sr.
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Caleb Howard, Waco Eagle Chr., Jr.
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Deandre Smith, Tyler Street Chr., Jr.
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Patrick Washington, DeSoto Canterbury, Fr.
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Caleb Wilson, Waco Eagle Chr., So.
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Devon Hardage, Weatherford Chr., Jr.
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Brant Taylor, Waxahachie Prep., Jr.
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Braden Banks, Tyler Street Chr., Jr.
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Quentin Monette, DeSoto Canterbury, So.
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Jarrett Foland, Weatherford Chr., Jr.
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Horizontal floating shelves are a sleek and simple solution for storing items over a desk.
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If you've tried to set up a home office in the corner of your bedroom or living room, you know that creative storage strategies are essential to keeping clutter at bay. Floating or suspended shelves that sit over your desk are simple and space-saving solutions, and they can hold everything from books to files to electronics to decorative items. They can be installed in many different forms and materials to echo and enhance your existing decor.
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Long floating shelves, which can be installed on the wall above the desk, are flexible and functional, and they serve to echo the horizontal lines of your desk. Narrow shelves can be used to hold decorative prints, while wider shelves can hold receptacles for office supplies, plants, books, and other objects. To keep delicate items safe, or to conceal paperwork and filing, consider installing a horizontal cabinet.
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If you have high ceilings or large windows, you can complement them with multiple vertical hanging stacked shelves, or long and narrow tiered shelf units above the desk. Installing a vertically oriented shelf unit is also an ideal way to squeeze in some extra storage in narrow or awkward spaces. Use vertical shelves to flank an artwork or wall decoration, or add on to existing shelving.
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If you have a lot of items to store or require a lot of organization, consider grid shelving. This can come in the form of a single unit of cubby-style shelves, or in an open floating or suspended shelving unit that resembles a crosshatch or grid. For the most flexibility, look for shelving systems that are modular or customizable, so that you can create shelves of varying sizes according to your needs.
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Customization is the key to bold shelving. If your space is an awkward shape, you can cut and install your own plank boards for built-in shelving. Don't be afraid to re-purpose items, for example, install a set of recycled crates in place of grid shelving. Finally, have fun with aesthetics. Use shelving that is clear or the same color as the wall if you want your items to stand out, or paint your cupboards and shelves a bright color or pattern to make them an element of your decor.
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Summer, Aiden. "Ideas for Shelves Over a Desk." Home Guides | SF Gate, http://homeguides.sfgate.com/ideas-shelves-over-desk-102018.html. Accessed 21 April 2019.
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Week after week, the ‘American Idol’ judges have been blown away by Laci Kaye Booth, and she’s quickly emerged as a frontrunner to win the entire show!
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1. Her father is in the music industry. Laci’s father is country singer Jody Booth. Jody comes from a long line of musicians, and his mother taught him to play guitar when he was a young boy. Jody has done work as both a singer and songwriter in country music, and he continues to work on music to this day. In fact, part two of his album, The Rosewood Tapes, is due out in 2019, and he still travels the country on tour.
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2. She began singing from a young age. Laci was just three years old when she discovered her passion for singing, and she started playing guitar and writing her own songs when she was nine. As a young girl, Laci was constantly singing in church and around the house.
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5. She has a boyfriend. Laci often posts Instagram photos with her boyfriend, Cannon Bullock. They have been together for more than one year.
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Jane Campbell and Summer Green were teammates as recently as Saturday. Less than a week later, they were on opposite sides of the field working hard to spoil opening night for each other.
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Campbell, Stanford's talented sophomore goalkeeper, got the better of it on Friday night. She recorded nine saves, including two in the final five minutes of regulation, to help the sixth-ranked Cardinal beat host North Carolina, 1-0, as part of the Carolina Nike Classic.
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Senior forward Chioma Ubogagu scored the only goal of the game, with an assist from senior Alex Doll, in the 100th minute as Stanford downed the Tar Heels for the first time in program history.
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The decisive sequence began when Maddie Bauer took a free kick from midfield that Doll pushed toward Ubogagu just outside the box.
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Ubogagu spun right, beat three defenders toward the end line and squeezed in a left-footed shot from the near post.
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North Carolina, winners of 22 NCAA titles, held a 9-0-3 advantage over Stanford entering the game.
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"It's a significant victory," Cardinal coach Paul Ratcliffe said. "But right now, our focus is on this game. I'm really proud of the team. It was a great way to start the season. They deserved to get the victory. Hopefully, it will propel us to a really strong season."
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The goal came moments after Ubogagu and Taylor Uhl each barely missed wide. But it was evident the Stanford attack was clicking.
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The Cardinal meets No. 18 Duke on Sunday. It's the first time the teams have met since Stanford beat the Blue Devils, 1-0, to win the 2011 national championship. The Cardinal is 7-1 all-time against Duke.
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Green, on the watch list for the Hermann Trophy, was one of Team USA's main weapons with the Under-20 national team during its recently concluded run in the FIFA Under-20 World Cup in Canada. Campbell served as the backup goalie.
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Stanford freshman midfielder Andi Sullivan and sophomore defender Stephanie Amack were also teammates with Green, who took eight of the Tar Heels' 13 shots, including four on goal.
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Sullivan, a U.S. U-20 co-captain, had only one full day of training at Stanford before the team left for Carolina on Wednesday.
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"When you play North Carolina, they bring so much pressure, you have to whether the storm in the first half," Ratcliffe said. "We were able to calm things down in the second and keep better possession. The later it got, the better our chances were."
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Sullivan's control and leadership were vital as Stanford rebounded from a sluggish first half in her collegiate debut.
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"Andi was incredible," Ratcliffe said. "She's the type of player we're going to look to. She fits into the program so well, I wasn't surprised at her impact. You never really know until you see them in a big-game atmosphere, but she was so composed."
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Campbell stopped Green's shot in the 88th minute, forcing her into a point-blank miss, helping to solidify her seventh career shutout.
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"Jane was fantastic," said Ratcliffe, who also praised the entire defense, including Kendall Romine in the middle and freshman sub Jaye Boissiere in the midfield.
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Ubogagu missed an earlier chance in overtime, missing wide at 94:27. Stanford senior Taylor Uhl also missed a shot wide at 95:19.
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"I knew we were going to get another chance," Ratcliffe said. "We just had to finish. Then Chi made a great move and scored a great goal."
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Ubogagu, who had three shots on the goal for the game, made sure her final attempt was good. After receiving a pass from Doll, she beat the North Carolina goalkeeper to the right side.
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Architect Richard Paul gives a tour of the 17th-floor terrace in 3 World Trade Center on May 22.
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3 World Trade Center opens on Monday.
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Architect Richard Paul gives a tour of the terrace on the 76th floor of 3 World Trade Center on May 22.
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Office space on the 28th floor of 3 World Trade Center is seen on May 22.
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The Occulus is seen from the 16th floor of 3 World Trade Center on May 22.
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An outdoor terrace on the 76th floor of 3 World Trade Center offers views of the East River and Brooklyn.
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Architect Richard Paul gives a tour of the elevator area, which features LED lights that can change color, in 3 World Trade Center on May 22.
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The terrace on the 17th floor of 3 World Trade Center offers scenic views of the city.
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A 16th-floor auditorium area in 3 World Trade Center is seen on May 22.
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The 76th-floor terrace of 3 World Trade Center offers views of the city.
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One World Trade Center is seen on May 22 from the 76th-floor terrace of 3 World Trade Center.
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The terrace on the 17th floor of 3 World Trade Center is seen on May 22.
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Carol Hills: Let’s leave this world for a few moments and pause to look up at the heavens. It’s showtime tomorrow for total solar eclipse watchers. Not here in the US unfortunately, but over in Europe. If you’ve ever been in the moon’s shadow, the feeling is hard to describe. Lucky for us, we have David Baron to give it a try. He’s our former science editor here at The World and a bit of a total eclipse fanatic. For this occasion, David has traveled to the Faroe Islands far north in the Atlantic Ocean, between Iceland and Norway.
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David Baron: Total eclipses choose where they want to go and you have to chase them. This one, the only two places that it will cross land are the Faroe Islands, where I am, and Svalbard, which is up truly in the Arctic, off of Norway.
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Hills: I imagine normally the Faroe Islands is sparsely populated. Are you tripping over eclipse chasers like yourself?
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Baron: I think this is probably the biggest invasion of foreigners here since the Vikings arrived, is my sense. About 50,000 people live in the Faroe Islands and the figure I hear quoted is 8,000 visitors are expected to arrive by today.
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Hills: Where will you be positioned to see the eclipse and what time is this all going to happen?
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Baron: The partial eclipse, the beginning, is at 8:40 AM, but the exciting part is the total eclipse. For two minutes, starting at about 9:40 local time tomorrow, the moon will completely cover the surface of the sun. The total eclipse is only visible in what’s called the “path of totality,” which is a couple hundred miles wide. Europe will get to experience partial eclipse, but the total eclipse will just be in this narrow band. As to where I will go, this is the big question, everyone is talking about this, “Where will you go?” For those two minutes, you want the sun to be in a clear patch of sky, and the Faroe Islands being very cloudy most of the time, finding a clear patch will be difficult. So, everyone has been keeping an eye on the weather forecasts and scoping out what hillside they want to be on or what coastline they want to be on, with plans to make a quick change of plans at the last minute if the clouds should move. So, I’ve chosen a spot outside of Tórshavn, which is the capital city, but I may very well move to a different part of the islands if I need to.
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Hills: Tell us what it’s like to see an eclipse and what the whole feeling is like.
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Baron: Most everyone has seen a partial solar eclipse. The moon goes across a part of the sun and you put on special glasses, it’s not safe to look at the sun directly with the naked eye, but you’ll see the moon cut a little piece out of the sun, and it’s all very intellectually interesting. But if you’re within that narrow band where the moon actually will cover the sun entirely, during the total eclipse, that’s the only time when it actually is safe to look at the sun without special glasses. What you see in the sky is something that you will never, ever see at any other time. It really is like standing on another planet and looking at a completely alien sky because what is where the sun is supposed to be is now this glorious ring of light. Pictures don’t do it justice. It’s called the Solar Corona, it’s the outer atmosphere of the sun. It looks sort of like a wreath made of silvery thread and it’s different every time. That’s why people get hooked--they want to see the next eclipse because it will be different again. The planets come out and the brighter stars come out, but it’s not like nighttime. It’s a deep twilight on another planet. I’m a science guy, right? I think about things in very practical, logical ways, but it’s a very emotional experience. It connects you in a way to the solar system, to the universe that nothing else has for me. That’s what gets people hooked. I’ll admit to you, I’ve never done LSD but it’s very psychedelic. I think it’s addictive like a drug.
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Hills: David, you’re a bit of an eclipse obsessive. How many total eclipses have you witnessed?
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Baron: This will be my fourth. In 1998, I was in Aruba. In 1999, I went to Munich. In 2012, I was in Australia. So, having seen three before, it actually makes me a bit of a novice when it comes to eclipse chasing. Total eclipses only occur about once every 18 months somewhere on the planet and often they’re in much more remote places than the Faroe Islands. But here I’ve been meeting eclipse chasers where this will be their 10th, 12th, their 15th total eclipse. So, some people are really fanatical about it.
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Hills: Science journalist David Baron. Enjoy the eclipse tomorrow.
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Two adults are dead and at least nine people injured after a semi-truck collided with a school bus in central Illinois late Wednesday night.
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The bus was carrying the JV girls basketball team from Normal Community West High School along Interstate 74 near Bloomington when it collided with the semi-truck driving in the wrong direction, according to the Pantagraph.
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A school volunteer, 72-year-old Charlie Crabtree, died from his injuries, according to the school district.
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"Please keep the Crabtree family and the entire Normal West Community in your thoughts,” officials wrote on Facebook.
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The truck driver, 34-year-old Ryan Hute, also died of multiple blunt force injuries, according to the Pantagraph.
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