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natural cleaning products clean my home and leave behind a pleasant scent
I tried the plastic-free cleaners to find out
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Everything from hand soap to shower cleaner and lip balm meets strict standards for being non-toxic
Grove is a wonderful destination to discover new brands and must-have favorites
cleaning products take both cleaning and eco-consciousness seriously
The brand champions its products as free from plastic and harsh chemicals like parabens
Grove customers kept 1.93 million pounds of plastic from getting tossed into landfills
The cleaning concentrates and hand soaps prevented another 994,776 pounds of waste
cleaning collection includes multi-purpose kitchen and bathroom cleaners
glass cleaners and dishwashing liquid in delicious fragrances
The cleaning concentrates (which come in a pack of two one-ounce glass bottles) and reusable glass spray bottles are sold separately
The idea is that you buy a spray bottle once and refill it with cleaning concentrates over time—which saves plastic
cleaning products sound like a smart eco-friendly cleaning solution
would they leave my home smelling clean for more than a few minutes
I’ve been using the service since August 2021
I rely on their eco-friendly solutions for my weekly deep cleaning
I use this cleaning spray multiple times a day
Olive oil splatter on the glass range after dinner
I’ve gone through almost every multipurpose cleaning spray in the cleaning aisle
tossing out a plastic bottle every time it’s empty
For my initial test of the Grove Co. multipurpose cleaning concentrates
I emptied the contents from the one-ounce glass bottle concentrate into the reusable glass spray bottle
I cleared all the small appliances off the countertops and sprayed them down
the orange and rosemary scent gave a wonderful
herb-forward smell that was clean without the chemicals
I moved on to the stainless steel refrigerator and watched fingerprints disappear without streaks
Same thing on the stainless steel sink fixtures and even inside the microwave
multipurpose cleaner to the living room and bedroom to dust furniture and appliances
The essential oils didn’t leave residue behind and smelled fresh
I even spritzed some cleaner on a spot on the vinyl floor
If you’re going to take just one product from this Grove Co
The silicone sleeve is available in multiple colors so you can color code your glass cleaner bottle from your tile cleaner bottle
The silicone sleeve also prevents slips and subsequent breakage
Some refillable spray bottles have a cheap spray top
I’ve used these bottles daily and haven’t had any issues with leaks or drips
The spray is strong and evenly applies the product
which is extra important for the glass cleaner when you don’t want an inconsistent spray
Confession time: my patio door is covered in water droplets and streaks
The real confession is I’ve never once tried to clean it because
and it’s just going to get dirty when it rains again
which is why it’s the perfect victim for my Grove Co
but buffs out to a streak-free shine with paper towels
I was shocked at how quickly it cleaned my patio door and moved right along to removing water spots from the bathroom vanity mirror
I even went all in and cleaned my interior windows—a chore I usually skip
I worry about using harsh chemicals to clean the shower
The combination of a steaming hot shower and toxic chemicals feels unsafe
bathrooms don’t have the best ventilation
Tub and Tile Cleaner Concentrate be up to the task
I removed all of my shampoo bottles from the shower shelves and liberally spritzed the whole shower down
I held my breath to avoid breathing in chemicals
But the lavender and thyme scent smelled refreshing
the tub and tile cleaner eliminated soap scum on the stainless steel faucet
dried hair mask on the walls and made quick work of dust and debris that gathered on the shower floor
I wiped everything down with a sponge and was done in a matter of minutes
The trick with this stuff is to use it a few times a week to prevent soap scum buildup
The laundry sheet dissolved completely in about 30 seconds and created sudsy bubbles scented with lavender
closed the front and waited for the cycle to finish
I appreciate how fast and mess-free it is to use the laundry sheets—no measuring or pouring required
I also washed sweaty workout clothes and a load of denim in cold water with the Grove Co
Sometimes I have issues with laundry detergent not completely dissolving in cold water and leaving a white film on my dark clothes—grrrr
But that wasn’t a problem in my Grove Co
The laundry sheets are my go-to for washing sheets and towels that I want lightly scented with lavender
Pick and choose what products you want delivered to your door and when
While some messes may need a more heavy-duty
chemical-based cleaner for extra tough residue and stains
product is comparable to mainstream cleaners
Those seeking greener cleaning solutions will also appreciate the eco-friendly aluminum concentrates
which are as stylish as they are sustainable
The beauty of Grove Collaborative is orders are completely customizable
You can subscribe to recurring deliveries for household cleaning products like the cleaning concentrates so they arrive before you run out
buy what you need now and return when it’s time to stock up
makes it easy to edit shipments you’re subscribed to and discover more eco-friendly cleaning brands
offers an easy-to-use subscription service with many great perks
seasonal promotions and access to Grove’s new and exclusive products
While the $20 annual fee may raise a few eyebrows
be advised that there are re-enrollment fees if you suspend or cancel your subscription
has a great customer service department that we found responsive
particularly when resolving delayed shipments or missing products
The brand has occasional inventory shortages that can delay orders from shipping
Some reviewers have reported wanting more transparent stock levels to avoid delayed shipments
we found that each had a vast inventory of plant-based cleaning products for the whole home
However, Mrs. Meyers comes in plastic containers
which makes it far less sustainable than Grove Co.
and some products contain some harsh chemicals that may not be ideal for use around children and pets
we compared the price points of these two brands and noticed that Grove Co
had a much slimmer price point compared to Mrs
making it ideal for the budget-conscious user
Next, we looked at Method cleaners
This brand is well-known and trusted for its environmentally friendly
plant-based cleaning products that contain no harsh chemicals or VOCs
Both of these brands also offer disinfecting products for killing pesky bacteria
While this brand offers the same basic home products as Grove Co.
which can increase the use of single-use plastics
if you use their refill or recycling programs
the bottles can be reused or disposed of correctly
The refilling process can be more arduous than Grove Co.’s since this involves sending the product back to the brand
we compared the brands’ price points and discovered that Method is the most expensive compared to Grove and Mrs
each of these brands has a great lineup of effective cleaning products for all around the home
But Grove left the competition behind in terms of price point
After my first round of cleaning my entire house with Grove Co
I took the dog for a walk and ran some errands
When I returned home a few hours later I opened the door
took a big whiff and smelled…essential oils
I love returning home to the scent of a freshly cleaned house
it’s still my preferred brand of cleaning products
especially the multipurpose cleaning concentrates
and I’ve experimented with the holiday scents
The refillable glass bottles get daily use between the bathroom and kitchen and still hold up with a strong spray—no broken or chipped glass either
I’d always assumed eco-friendly cleaning products had to either be prohibitively expensive or not work well
I estimate these sustainable products have saved me from tossing about a dozen plastic bottles in the recycling bin (so far)
Shop on Grove Collaborative
Ready to join me and make the switch to eco-friendly cleaning? Grove Co. cleaning products are available through Grove Collaborative via an easy subscription model
Walmart and Amazon The collection is pretty affordable
I have found low prices on household essentials like dishwasher detergent packs
Method stain remover and beeswax wrap for leftovers
you can’t go wrong with making the switch to Grove Co
you can subscribe to recurring deliveries on certain items
A Grove subscription does not cost money and it’s accessible without a membership
The optional VIP membership ($19.99 per year)
gifts and exclusive sales and promotions throughout the year—along with some extra perks
Meyer’s rely on the power of essential oils and plant-powered ingredients
Grove Collaborative is an online marketplace that sells eco-friendly brands like Mrs
Meyer’s while offering its own line of natural household cleaners
Cleaning products sold on Grove Collaborative meet stringent standards that rule them non-toxic
Madi Koetting has five years of experience as a shopping editor and pioneer of Taste of Home’s social media team
with additional experience at Reader’s Digest
Better Homes & Gardens and Stylecaster
Given her experience with the home and lifestyle industries
she is a reliable source of advice when considering Grove Co
updated and contributed research to this piece
She has over five years of experience in product testing
she served as a commerce content update editor at Bob Vila
Additional research contributed by former Executive Editor and contributing writer, Megan Wood
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she was the daughter of the late Anne Santangelo Oden; and was also preceded in death by four siblings
Grove was the swim team coach at Sherwood Hill Swim Club for over 20 years and then started her own swim team at the Hopewell Community Center
She will be remembered by her family as a loving and devoted wife
Grove is survived by her husband of 63 years
and Ryan Bauer; a great-granddaughter on the way; one brother
The family will receive friends from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m.
contributions may be made to the charity of your choice in memory of Paula O
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Federal control over education has grown so powerful because progressives empowered the government for their own ideological goals
It seems remarkable that seemingly antisemitic protests by undergraduates
such as those at my own university of Northwestern
could threaten the biomedical research funding of its medical school
But the structure of civil rights laws as applied to universities has long allowed the federal government to cut off funding to the entire university based on the wrongful actions of particular units or departments
now alarmed by the federal government’s intrusive reach
bears direct responsibility for crafting the very legal weapons wielded against the universities it dominates
progressive legislators demanded sweeping amendments to civil rights law
expanding federal oversight over higher education
The sequence of events reveals a cautionary tale of political hubris: progressive confidence that state power would reliably serve their ends overlooked the reality that governmental authority
Today’s circumstances starkly illustrate how expansive federal control over civil society
The left’s outrage ought to focus not on this particular administration but on its own reckless empowerment of the state
a small Christian institution in northwestern Pennsylvania
Grove City sought independence from the federal government and its proliferating regulations to preserve a distinctive faith-based education
received federal Basic Educational Opportunity Grants (Pell Grants) to pay tuition
The Department of Education argued that because the college benefited indirectly from those grants
it must certify compliance with Title IX’s prohibition on sex discrimination
insisting that accepting students who had federal aid did not subject the entire college to federal rules
The dispute reached the Supreme Court in 1983
The Reagan administration inherited this enforcement proceeding but tried to take a nuanced approach to protect against giving the government power over all the operations of a private university
for whom I had the privilege of briefly working
argued that Grove City was indeed subject to Title IX because the college received indirect federal funding through students’ financial aid
also focused on a limitation contained in the statute
arguing that the restrictions on discrimination only applied to the “program” that received the federal funds—in the case of Grove City
that was the financial aid office—not the entire institution
Lee’s argument reflected the Reagan administration’s broader policy concern for protecting civil society
from federal rules that could transform their campus
The left’s shortsightedness has delivered into the hands of their opponents the very instruments of coercion they forged
the Court agreed with the Reagan administration’s position
It held that Title IX applied only to the specific program that received federal funds—in this case
the college’s financial aid office—rather than to the institution as a whole. In practical terms
this meant that Grove City College only had to ensure its financial aid operations did not discriminate on the basis of sex
This “program-specific” principle allowed self-determination for much of the college’s operations
that Title IX would not cover a college’s athletic department unless that department itself received federal funds
It also followed that should a university refuse to end its discrimination in a program
the federal government could only withhold funds from the program that engaged in the discrimination
As George Liebmann recently wrote for Law & Liberty
the left was enraged by the Reagan administration’s position and the Supreme Court’s decision
It pushed Congress to overturn it immediately
both the House and Senate passed the Civil Rights Restoration Act
which made all federal funds received by an educational institution subject to being cut off if there was discrimination by any unit. President Reagan vetoed the bill
warning that “would diminish substantially the freedom and independence” of universities
He saw it as a federal overreach—what he pungently labeled a “big government powergrab … cloaked in the mantle of civil rights.” Or
as Liebmann nicely put it in his recent essay
“Such power … allows the federal government to strangle institutions that don’t fall in line with its vision of social order.”
It is worth recognizing the intellectual roots of Reagan’s veto. Reagan was deeply influenced by Friedrich Hayek’s seminal work, The Road to Serfdom
He frequently quoted Hayek in speeches and hailed Hayek’s contributions when his successor
Bush gave Hayek the Presidential Medal of Freedom
Hayek feared that central planning by government would crush autonomy not only of markets
Reagan’s veto was a direct application of Hayek’s liberal precepts
Congress nevertheless passed the bill over his veto
all subsequent presidential administrations have enjoyed enormous leverage over universities
Any violation of Title VI or Title IX anywhere within the institution
puts a university at the risk of the loss of all federal funds in all its operations
Modern universities receive substantial federal funds
Virtually every university relies significantly on federal student aid
Research universities like my own receive substantial additional federal funding
particularly in biomedical research and in defense contracting
And Democratic administrations made aggressive use of this leverage to change practices at college campuses in heavy-handed ways. The Obama administration’s “Dear Colleague” letter in 2011 effectively mandated that universities overhaul their procedures for sexual abuse and harassment cases or face total loss of federal funding
the letter asked that guilt be determined by a bare preponderance of the evidence standard
despite the heavy costs to a student from a guilty verdict and expulsion
It also undermined due process by discouraging cross-examination and mandating training in which investigators were encouraged to believe the accusers
The government was deploying its enormous power to dictate processes to universities and regulate their relations with their students and, by extension
The Obama administration did not limit itself to regulating conduct; it aggressively extended its authority to police campus speech
It argued that speech that listeners thought was of a sexual nature could lead to a finding of a hostile environment actionable under Title VI
even if that conclusion were not based on objective facts
Such interventions encouraged speech codes and chilled debate
the Obama administration issued guidance interpreting Title IX to cover gender identity
advising schools that transgender students must be allowed to use facilities and participate in programs consistent with their gender identity or else be in violation of federal law. This requirement included access to bathrooms
and sports teams corresponding to their identity
this interpretation represented an aggressive and expansive reinterpretation of Title IX
It seems plainly inconsistent with this language
which prevents discrimination based on sex—a concept that at the time of Title IX was passed—referred to biological sex
But colleges did not want to risk their federal funding by flouting such government ukases
While many on the left decry the Trump’s administration’s attempt to use its power under the Civil Rights law to reform higher education to its liking
they did not lodge similar complaints against the Obama or Biden administrations’ exertion of power under the same authority
We should return more autonomy to civil society
by reducing the heavy hand of federal regulation
Such expansive government authority validates Ronald Reagan’s Hayekian prophecy that empowering government inevitably undermines civil society’s autonomy
Hayek’s critique lays bare the dynamic of the current funding‑cutoff regime
and prospectively applied; once administrators may pursue favored social ends case by case
Yet Congress now empowers federal agencies to “effectuate” anti‑discrimination norms by terminating—“in whole or in part”—every stream of federal aid to a university
while the Office for Civil Rights may invoke “any other means authorized by law.” Universities can thus face a remedial roulette
unsure how—or how severely—evolving notions of “hostile environment,” “pregnancy‑related conditions,” or “gender identity” will be enforced
The rule‑of‑law certainty Hayek prized yields to the horse‑trading of administrative justice
Hayek also warned that central planners cannot marshal the dispersed knowledge lodged in local practice; uniform mandates inevitably misjudge context and breed perverse incentives
One federal definition of compliance now governs thousands of heterogeneous campuses
Because a single slip can imperil grants for physics or medicine
counsel imposes campus‑wide prophylaxis: mandatory trainings
and quasi‑judicial procedures that outrun the statutory text
Washington’s abstractions flatten the landscape of academic life—precisely the epistemic error Hayek when centralized control becomes stronger
Hayek identified a ratchet of increased government power: each discretionary intervention invites the next
converting temporary power into permanent dominion
Program‑specific oversight gave way to institution‑wide sanctions; race and sex have expanded into an ever‑widening catalogue of identities
Every “modest” extension prepares the ground for the next
tightening the lever and nudging higher education farther down the road to bureaucratic serfdom
Bureaucratic mandates by the government require more bureaucrats in the university who gain more power over university life
displacing the more varied perspectives and knowledge of the faculty
Even under the old regime approved by the Supreme Court in Grove City
the government would have had influence over universities
because it could have cut off funds from units that violated its view of Title VI and Title IX
But its power would have been appropriately limited
Universities need not have feared the loss of all federal funds
They would have been in a better position to engage in a dialogue with the government rather than react to its dictates on any interpretation of Titles VI and IX
Clumsy governmental dictates on contentious matters such as transgender rights do not merely settle disputes; they inflame societal divisions by transforming moral disagreements into winner-takes-all political battles
thrives precisely because it embraces diversity and facilitates compromise
allowing pluralistic communities to coexist peacefully without being conscripted into ideological warfare
consistently undervalues the power of voluntary cooperation and cultural persuasion
Their shortsightedness has delivered into the hands of their opponents the very instruments of coercion they forged
vividly confirming an enduring truth: the power you grant government today will inevitably be wielded tomorrow by your adversaries
the wisest course would be to return more autonomy to civil society
The Trump administration has demonstrated to progressives that governmental power over education is indeed a double-edged sword
the left might now join friends of liberty in sheathing it
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The band Grove Street will present its second tribute concert featuring the music of Irish composer Turlough O’Carolan on Sunday
at the Monadnock Center for History & Culture
The two-hour concert will include a range of O’Carolan’s compositions
The traditional Irish music will be performed by Chaz Beaulieu on flute
Eric Blackmer on acoustic guitar and Lisa Murray on piano
O’Carolan was a blind itinerant harpist who lived in the late 1600s and early 1700s
Though lyrics were originally set to his melodies
The concert also marks the release of Grove Street’s new CD
"The Harp Unstrung," which will be available for purchase at the venue
For information, visit monadnockcenter.org
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The Grove was commissioned and developed by the Denver Center for the Performing Arts Theatre Company
The Grove received development support at New Dramatists through the Bucket List Initiative
a program supported by a grant from Venturous Theatre Funds of Tides Foundation
The Grove received a presentation as part of The Other Season at Seattle Repertory Theatre 2016-2017
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The Ufot Pass is your easy and affordable ticket to see the entire Ufot Family Cycle
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Approximate run time: 1 hour 45 minutes plus a 15-minute intermission
Content Advisories: The Grove features theatrical haze
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Open Captioned: 2/25 at 7 pm
Audio Described: 3/8 at 2 pm
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Playwright Mfoniso Udofia tells the story of a family homecoming
asking how we draw on the wisdom and beauty of our ancestors when the bonds of family are stretched to the limit
Abasiama’s eldest daughter Adiaha believes that becoming a writer can make her family proud
she has to choose whether to fulfill her parents’ desires or stay true to her own dreams
Director Awoye Timpo (The Bluest Eye at The Huntington) reunites with longtime collaborator Udofia for this story of a young woman coming into herself
with the rich heart of a family drama against the thrilling theatrical backdrop of a Greek chorus of ancestors
American Theatre Magazine “Offscript” Podcast – Offscript: What Mfoniso Udofia and Awoye Timpo Find in ‘The Grove’
GBH Under the Radar – Ufot Family Cycle continues with world premiere of ‘The Grove’
The Boston Globe – ‘The Grove,’ asks if you can be true to yourself and part of the collective
Broadway: JaJa’s African Hair Braiding (Manhattan Theater Club)
for the honey you gotta say when (New York Theater Workshop); Bloodwork (National Black Theater)
Patrice Johnson Chevannes Broadway: Racing Demon
Off Broadway: Endgame (Irish Rep); I’m Revolting
Halfway Bitches Go Straight To Heaven (Atlantic Theater Company); The Half God of Rainfall
runboyrun/In Old Age (NYTW); Steel Hammer (BAM); Henry V (The Public); Tamburlaine
Coriolanus (TFANA); Good Grief (Vineyard Theatre); Miss Julie (CSC)
Regional: The Winter’s Tale (Commonwealth Shakespeare Company); Romeo and Juliet (Classic Theatre of Maryland); Our Town (People’s Light); Macbeth (Hanover Theatre Rep); A Raisin in the Sun (New Rep); A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival Willpower Tour)
Valyn Lyric Turner The Huntington: John Proctor is the Villain
Regional: Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike (Gloucester Stage); A Raisin in the Sun (2024 Elliot Norton Award)
(New Rep); Seven Guitars (Actors’ Shakespeare Project); LORENA: A Tabloid Epic (Boston Playwrights’ Theatre); Walking the Tightrope (Wheelock Family Theatre)
Amani Kojo University: Heroes of the Fourth Turning
Education: SUNY Purchase Acting Conservatory
Paul-Robert Pryce Off Broadway: King Lear
Merchant of Venice (Compagnia de Colombari); Pecong (National Black Theatre of Harlem); She Talks to Beethoven (JACK!); Harry the Hunk (Cherry Lane Theatre); Empire State Works (Whitney Museum)
Regional: Create Dangerously (Miami New Drama); Hamlet
American Night: Ballad of San Jose (Yale Rep); Julius Caesar
Patrice Jean-Baptiste Regional: King Hedley II (Elliot Norton Award nominee)
Henry IV (Actors’ Shakespeare Project); Trouble in Mind
She can be seen in 988 Hotline’s most recent commercials and is a teaching actor with Company One
she was head coach of the speech and debate league at Milton Academy
Ekemini Ekpo Off Broadway: Reply All (Clubbed Thumb); The Switch (The Brick Theater). Regional: A Midsummer Nights’ Dream, The Tempest (Commonwealth Shakespeare Company); Coriolanus (Praxis Stage). Resident actor at Mercury Store, a new work development lab in Brooklyn. Education: Harvard College, Atlantic Acting School. @e.u.ekpo
Janelle Grace Regional: STEW (Gloucester Stage Company)
Marcus; or the Secret of Sweet Dead Man’s Cell Phone
or the Education of Undine (Lyric Stage); Smoked Oysters (Hibernian Hall); Everyday Life and Other Odds and Ends (Sleeping Weazel)
Aisha Wura Akorede The Huntington: Sojourners.University: Potus
Education: BFA Theater and Performance (Emerson College
Sharmarke Yusuf The Huntington: K-I-S-S-I-N-G
Regional: The Comedy of Errors (Shakespeare & Company); BLKS
Places & Things (SpeakEasy Stage); Fabulation
Or the Re-Education of Undine (Lyric Stage)
Maduka Steady Broadway: Amy’s View (Barrymore Theater)
Off Broadway: Mud River Stone (Playwrights Horizons)
Regional: The Firestorm (Local Theater Company)
Stick Fly (Contemporary American Theater Festival)
Intimate Apparel (Capital Repertory Theater)
A Raisin in the Sun (George Street Playhouse)
A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Utah Shakespearean Festival)
Maurice Emmanuel Parent The Huntington: Joe Turner’s Come and Gone
Chibuba Bloom Osuala Regional: Leroy + Lucy (Steppenwolf Theatre); Nina Simone: Four Women (South Coast Repertory Theatre; NAACP – Best Lead Actress)
Education: MFA (NYU Tisch Graduate Acting); BFA (SUNY Purchase Acting Conservatory)
Awards: 2024 NAACP Award for Best Actress in a Large Theatre
Awoye Timpo The Huntington: The Bluest Eye
Off Broadway: In Old Age (New York Theatre Workshop); Elyria
The Homecoming Queen (Atlantic Theater Company); Wedding Band (Theatre for a New Audience); Carnaval (National Black Theatre) Good Grief (Vineyard Theatre and Audible)
Rebekah Brunson Regional: The Winter’s Tale (Commonwealth Shakespeare Company); The Taming of the Shrew (Actors’ Shakespeare Project); A Light Under the Dome (Plays in Place); Orpheus in the Overworld (Fresh Ink Theatre)
Education: Emerson College Theatre; Performance BFA 2020
Jason Ardizzone-West The Huntington: Sojourners
Off Broadway: Syncing Ink (Apollo); shadow/land
Hungry (The Public); Monsoon Wedding (St Ann’s); Wedding Band (TFANA); Elyria (Atlantic); Good Grief (Vineyard)
Regional: Redwood (La Jolla); I Am Delivered’t (Dallas / Louisville); The Importance of Being Earnest (Pittsburgh / Baltimore); Bliss (5th Avenue); School Girls; Or
The African Mean Girls Play (Berkeley); Once On This Island (Cincinnati / Louisville); Uncle Vanya (Old Globe); Native Gardens
Off Broadway: Elyria (Atlantic Theater Company); The Ally
Regional: Theater of the Mind (Denver Center of Performing Arts); Blues for An Alabama Sky and Sweat (Guthrie); Drinking in America (Minetta Lane Theater); Seize the King (Alliance Theater); Fefu and Her Friends (American Conservatory Theater)
Reza Behjat is an Obie-winning theater artist and lighting designer based in New York
Rob Milburn and Michael Bodeen The Huntington: Sojourners
Earon Chew Nealey The Huntington: Sojourners Toni Stone
Three Houses (The Signature); Table 17 (Makeup Design – MCC); Midsummer Night Dream
Twelfth Night (Classical Theater of Harlem); Hamlet
Mojada (Public Theater); On Sugarland (NYTW)
Off Broadway: runboyrun (NYTW); Syncing Ink (The Flea)
Charles Haugland is the Director of New Work for The Huntington
and is currently in his fifteenth season with the company
His dramaturgical credits at The Huntington include world premiere productions by Kirsten Greenidge
along with co-creating the audio play series Dream Boston
Donnetta Lavinia Grays Dramaturgical credits: Ojai Playwrights Conference and as former Artistic Director of Coyote REP Theater Company
Playwright/Screenwriter: Where We Stand (Lucille Lortel
and the upcoming feature film Otis and Zelma
Dawn-Elin Fraser The Huntington: Sojourners
Off Broadway: FLEX (Lincoln Center); Buena Vista Social Club (Atlantic Theater); Richard III
Barbeque (The Public Theater); Nollywood Dreams (MCC); How to Defend Yourself
she recently worked on The Triumph of Love
Eight years at American Conservatory Theater included working with directors Carey Perloff
McMullen has stage managed over 30 shows over the past nine seasons at The Huntington
Lauren is a member of Actor’s Equity Association
Leslie Sears The Huntington: A Raisin in the Sun
Off Broadway: Sons of the Prophet (Roundabout)
Jesse Hinson (he/him) is a Boston-based violence designer
Casa Valentina (SpeakEasy Stage); Rx Machina (Boston Playwrights’ Theatre); The Minutes (Umbrella Arts)
The Little Foxes (Lyric Stage Company); Bud
Ademola Bello was born in the city of Ibadan in Southwestern Nigeria
As an Embedded Reporter for Playbill Eugene O’Neill National Theater Conference in June 2014
he wrote about twenty articles for Playbill on musicals and plays: interviewed directors
he has written for some Nigerian leading newspapers such as Punch
Ayshia Mackie-Stephenson is an intimacy choreographer
She uses theatre and media performance to investigate pleasure
Her critical and creative work appears in Routledge
International Review of Qualitative Research
Stew (Gloucester Stage); Simona’s Search (Hartford Stage); The Fortune Teller (Chuang Stage); How We Got On (Arts Emerson); Trayf
Good (New Rep); Clyde’s (Berkeley Rep); Queens
The House of Ramon Iglesia (Moonbox Productions); Vinegar Tom
Pentecost (PTP/NYC); A Taste of Honey (BCAP); Potus
A Case For The Existence of God (SpeakEasy Stage); Fences (Umbrella Theatre); Downtown Crossing
Morning Noon & Night (Company One); The Renaissance Mixtape (Apollo Theatre NYC)
Lucia Aremu second year actor at Brown/Trinity Rep
Audio Description Season Coordinator…………………
Amber Pearcy for Think Outside the Vox Inc
Audio Describer…………………………………………..Dave Heard
Pre-Show Audio Describer……………………………………………..Vivian Kobusingye Birchall
Audio Description Consultant and Blind Low Vision Expert……………………..Micaela Rose Shutt “Mikey”
Production Assistant…………………………………….Lexi Ashraf
Northeastern Co-Op Production Assistant……………………
Student Production Assistant…………….Alayna Domboski
Associate Scenic Designer………………………Baron E
Assistant Scenic Designer……………………….Mehula Singh
Carpenters …………………………….Bellamy Hassler
Run Crew………………………………………………..Nick Robinette
Prop Artisan…………………………………….Andrew T
Props Run…………………………………………………Corey Roberts
Costume Design Assistant…………………….Jaimy Escobedo
Wardrobe Run…………………………………Kathleen Shanahan
Wardrobe Swing……………………………..Jennie Stowe Fuchs
Wig Run………………………………………………………….Roisin Daly
Wig Swing…………………………………………………….Liv Curnen
Electricians…………………Emma Currier – Dougherty
Brighter Boston Interns…………………………………..Irea Blue
Associate Sound Designer…………………………Aubrey Dube
Audio Run (A2) …………………………………………….Sarah Miller
Northeastern Co-Op Sound…………………………Syd Randall
“The second play in the Ufot Family Cycle
holds a special place in my heart as it was the first play I ever wrote
The Grove explores the delicate balance between personal desires and the traditions of the close-knit Nigerian community she holds dear.”
“Much like August Wilson’s cycle plays
each play within Mfoniso’s cycle stands brilliantly on its own
The Grove leaps forward in time and invites us to Abasiama’s daughter
Adiaha’s college graduation party complete with the magnificently interwoven dreams and hopes of her parents
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Groups can save up to 20% off ticket prices for most productions. Student group pricing available. Learn more about group rates
$20 tickets are available to all performances for participants in the Huntington Community Membership Initiative. Use your exclusive HCMI promo code tied to your organization to redeem. Learn more about our Huntington Community Membership Initiative
$40 tickets are available any time for patrons age 40 years and younger as part of our HYPE program (Huntington Young Patron Events). Valid ID required. Tickets are subject to availability and some zone restrictions may apply. Use promo code DISCOUNT to access HYPE (40 Below) pricing. Input code DISCOUNT before seat selection. Promo will apply at checkout. Learn more about HYPE
At The Huntington, we believe price shouldn’t be a barrier for folks to enjoy world-class theatre. Because of this, we have a limited number of Pay-What-You-Wish tickets available for all Huntington performances for those who need them. Pay-What-You-Wish is not available online. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit Ticketing Services in person at either box office location or call us at 617-266-0800
$25 tickets are available to all performances for full-time students
Use promo code DISCOUNT to access Student pricing
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For questions about promo codes, please contact our ticketing team by emailing tickets@huntingtontheatre.org or calling 617-266-0800
The Huntington acknowledges that our physical spaces stand on the occupied homeland of the Massachusett people
We’d like to begin by acknowledging the Massachusett Tribe from whom the Colony
Province and Commonwealth of Massachusetts have taken their name
We’d like to pay respect to the ancestral bloodline of the Massachusett Tribe and their descendants who still inhabit the land to this day
We honor and respect the many native peoples who are connected to this land
including the Nipmuc and Wampanoag peoples
This land acknowledgement was created by staff of The Huntington with input from the council of The Massachusett Tribe at Ponkapoag. To learn more about the tribe or to donate in support of their current programs, visit their website www.massachusetttribe.org
Website by Substrakt
Ryan Pfeffer & Virginia Otazo
FL 33133">.css-56eu0z{width:1em;height:1em;display:inline-block;line-height:1em;-webkit-flex-shrink:0;-ms-flex-negative:0;flex-shrink:0;color:var(--chakra-colors-gray100);vertical-align:middle;fill:currentColor;}3540 Main Hwy Coconut Grove
Access exclusive reservations with your sapphire reserve card
PlayUnmute8.8Shore To Door Fish MarketSeafood
Coconut Grove
just pop open the cooler and help yourself
PlayUnmute8.4Le Bouchon du GroveFrench
Le Bouchon can trick your brain into thinking you’re in France for an hour and a half. For one, they give you free champagne when you sit down. Also, the interior has the look and personality of a lively Parisian bistro. The menu features comforting French dishes served in generous portions
The foie gras with crispy slices of toast is another starter worth getting on the table
They easily feed two or three and come in a massive cast iron pot with a big pile of crispy french fries
Japanese
You can come to this small counter for some of Miami's best sushi and not spend more than $30 on a filling donburi bowl. If you’re willing to spend a bit more, they have omakase options under $100
We love the chirashi omakase that comes with twelve pieces of sashimi
and sweet pickled mushrooms over sticky sushi rice
But the handrolls—each with a perfect ratio of rice
a school of tiny ceramic fish on the green wall
It's a peaceful spot perfect for a solo meal
8.5El Bagel Coconut GroveBagels
The El Bagel location on Virginia Street and Grand Ave is the best thing to happen in the Grove since those bed races in the ‘80s. It’s slightly smaller than the one on Biscayne—but still makes the best bagels in Miami
but you can always walk over to Peacock Park and let the salty breeze wash over you and your everything bagel
This location has a line out the door (and down the block) on weekends
You can place an order online in advance—but only for unadorned bagels and sides of schmear
If you want a bagel sandwich (and you do) get there early and plan accordingly
8.0Emissaryfull breakfast at this cafe and coffee bar
so you’ll likely get your granola parfait or cheesy egg sandwich before your laptop can power up
The rest of the menu is just what you want at a cafe like this: yogurt
and it's perfect if you're looking for a quick salad or sandwich loaded with Italian meats for lunch
8.0El CarajoSpanish
Most Miami gas station food consists of shriveled hotdogs and sketchy Jamaican beef patties, but El Carajo is a gas station where you’ll actually want to eat. Past the pumps, candy, and cigarettes, there’s a really great Spanish restaurant in the back
Pick out a bottle of wine from their giant selection and start with a big tabla of manchego cheese
and quince before moving on to sweet bacon-wrapped dates and plump gambas al ajillo
They also have tender lamb chops and paellas perfect for big group celebrations
PlayUnmute8.2The Original Daily Bread MarketplaceMiddle Eastern
8.3Chug’s DinerCuban
including a frita patty melt and a huge cast iron pancake
their ventanita is perfect for a quick cafecito and a pastelito
PlayUnmute7.6Barracuda Taphouse & GrillBar Food
Barracuda is the old hippy heart of the Grove—a nautical bar with beer pong
and pink benches set in the middle of Fuller Street
It’s a great place to grab a beer with friends after dinner or day drink on a Saturday
They also serve food—like what they call “the best snapper sandwich you’ve ever had.” They're overselling it just a tad
Cuda is just one of those places where you’re guaranteed to run into old friends or make temporary new ones out of strangers
American
The list of things we love about Krüs is longer than the spiral staircase you take to get to the dining room
On that list is fresh bread so delicious you won't be mad it's not free
an atmosphere that does for date nights what gamma radiation did for Bruce Banner
and glass block windows that face west and make the entire restaurant feel like one big flickering candle during sunset
Their seasonal menu—heavy on local produce
but get the heirloom tomatoes if it's on the menu
and any form of mushroom is usually a safe bet
How to get into Krüs KitchenChase Sapphire Reserve® cardmembers can unlock access to primetime reservations on OpenTable through the Visa Dining Collection. Find exclusive bookings here
PlayUnmuteLos FelixMexican
especially if you're a chilaquiles enthusiast
How to get into Los FelixChase Sapphire Reserve® cardmembers can unlock access to primetime reservations on OpenTable through the Visa Dining Collection. Find exclusive bookings here
PlayUnmute8.2EvaMediterranean
Back in the day, your CocoWalk food options consisted of The Cheesecake Factory, Hooters, and Fat Tuesday. Now, thankfully, Eva has raised the bar. The Mediterranean restaurant is casual enough for last-minute plans but ambitious enough to impress a date who loves dips
Perch at a hightop with coworkers at Eva’s excellent Happy Hour and share a bottle of Greek wine at half price
Or settle into a banquette on a third date for a meal full of reliable staples like branzino
How to get into EvaChase Sapphire Reserve® cardmembers can unlock access to primetime reservations on OpenTable through the Visa Dining Collection. Find exclusive bookings here
7.5Omakai Coconut GroveSushi
Similar to Omakai in Wynwood
the Coconut Grove location is a good place to have a casual multi-course sushi meal on a budget
and don’t be tempted to get the $95 Omakai experience
Service moves fast—it feels like a sushi speed date
8.2Loretta & The ButcherArgentinian
This great Argentinian restaurant is small—with the exception of its portions
you're coming here for one of the parrilla options with your choice of meat(s) and fries or a salad
The dining room looks like a Buenos Aires bistro—but the best seats are outside on a tiny deck elevated about a foot off the ground
Sit there and you might feel like royalty as you watch everyone else eat at normal height
They also have the earliest weekday Happy Hour in the Grove
7.6LokalBurgers
If you’re looking for a casual burger in or around Coconut Grove
But even if you’re not craving their version of a frita—with potato stix
and guava jelly—it’s still worth coming here for the fried alligator and a beer
You can stare at all the dogs people bring here while you consume both
check out the vermouth bar next door after you're done
A.C.'s IceesBombay DarbarIndian
Bombay Darbar is a great place to have a big Indian meal. It’s not a very subtle dining room, and the blue-and-purple neon lighting makes you feel like you’re about to see David Guetta, not eat some very tasty lamb vindaloo. The menu is a massive greatest hits of basmati rice dishes, chicken, lamb, and things from the tandoor oven. The only hard ordering rule is to make sure you’ve got some naan on the table.
Because The City Beautiful is also The City Delicious.
The best brunch spots in Miami, all in one place.
Ryan is a native South Floridian who's written professionally about his strange home (and its cheeseburgers) for over a decade.
Virginia is a Miamian with a creative writing degree. She managed restaurants for 11 years before joining The Infatuation Miami in 2022.
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The GROVE Well-Being Initiative is assessing the overall health and well-being of the current campus environment.
As part of the GROVE Well-being Initiative, faculty, staff and students are invited to take 10 minutes of their time each Monday at noon to focus on mindfulness and mental health well-being through informative videos by university counselors and campus wellness partners.
Lavena Wilkes
psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner at the University Counseling Center
Mental Health First Aid-Adult is an evidence-based training that teaches methods to help someone who is developing a mental health problem or experiencing a mental health crisis
understand and respond to signs of addictions and mental illnesses
the University Counseling Center has trained MHFA instructors that can provide the MHFA training throughout our campus community
662-915-7211
Copyright © 2025 The University of Mississippi. All Rights Reserved
The company is consolidating all of its private brands under one label as it looks to increase its visibility on retail shelves
By bringing all company-owned products under a single brand
Grove Collaborative is aiming to simplify the experience for customers
focus resources on its most innovative products and drive home its message as a planet friendly company
The rebrand also features a ready-to-use line of home essentials in aluminum packaging versus the concentrated refills Grove Co
The ready-to-use line will include hand soap
dish soap and concentrated laundry detergent to provide affordable
reduced plastic offerings without the need for a durable dispenser
Four new fragrances are launching this year across all products
Grove Collaborative is also launching a “Perfect Isn’t Sustainable
Progress Is” campaign to coincide with Earth Month and encourage customers to make choices to reduce plastic use
The company said the campaign — which runs across paid
email and performance marketing channels — is a rallying cry to think about sustainability differently
“Grove Collaborative is on a mission to make consumer products a force for human and environmental good — a mission we pursue each day by creating and curating planet-friendly
and efficacious products to support each customer’s sustainability journey,” Jeff Yurcisin
who just marked his seventh month in the CEO role
Grove’s plastic intensity (pounds of plastic per $100 of net revenue) was 1.07 pounds in the fourth quarter of 2023
an improvement from 1.11 pounds in the third quarter of 2023 and 1.08 pounds in the fourth quarter of 2022
The company said the fourth quarter of 2023 marked the lowest plastic intensity across the entire business
including owned brands and third-party products
In fall 2022, Grove Collaborative started selling its products at CVS, doubling its retail presence and distributing its products in more than 2,000 CVS locations and on the pharmacy chain’s website. Last year, Grove Collaborative launched a dedicated health and wellness hub, called Grove Wellness
to sell a curated assortment of products from various brands on its website
In early 2023, the Certified B. Corp. company expanded its wholesale channels by expanding its selection of products on Amazon and entering select Walmart stores
Grove Collaborative launched a new subscription model to improve the first order experience for new customers
The new model removes gated access and default subscriptions and creates incentives for customers to buy more
Yurcisin, a former chief executive officer at Zulily and Shopbop, in March outlined his goals for the new year after taking over for co-founder Stuart Landesberg as CEO in August
He said planet sustainability and a profitable business needed to co-exist
“We seek to be the most trusted brand for conscientious customers who want to make the right choices for their families and the plan to achieve that, we must deliver profitable growth,” Yurcisin said in the fourth quarter earnings call on March 6
“ I'm proud of our team's incredible progress over the past few months as we continue to prioritize profitability while putting the customer at the center of all that we do
The creation of a leading sustainable brand is a catalyst for our future growth
which we’ll accomplish by creating and curating the most efficacious and Planet first product.”
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agreed to buy the global rights to the BuyBuy Baby brand and Reebok’s U.S
The industry may be far from the dramatic day-to-day struggles of 2020
but it hasn’t yet escaped the long tail the global health crisis left in its wake
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Welcome to the Holy Grail of college football tailgating
The premier tailgating spot in college footballEvery fall
Ole Miss shows why the Grove is the envy of the nation
Fans descend on Oxford to support their Rebels and enjoy a weekend of fun and football
Take part in traditions such as the Walk of Champions
where fans line the path that the football team walks to Vaught-Hemingway Stadium
Enjoy some great southern cooking and hospitality
and see why Ole Miss is the hottest tailgating spot around
It’s all set in the heart of America’s most beautiful college campus and in the company of its most devoted fans
This is an experience you don’t want to miss
The festivities kick off Friday night when students race to claim tailgating spots
From the Walk of Champions to the Pride of the South marching band
our gameday traditions draw fans from across the country and must be experienced in person
Come find out why people all over the world head to Oxford on Saturdays in the Fall
Competing in the SEC means that the eyes of the college football world are on Ole Miss
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Photo: Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun
One steakhouse chain might have closed last year
but another one is making its way to that exact spot after a brief hiatus in central Ohio
Logan’s Roadhouse
a popular nationwide chain known for wood-grilled steaks
is moving right into the former O’Charley’s restaurant
there’s only two Logan’s Roadhouse locations in Ohio: one in Cincinnati
but Logan’s Roadhouse has had a home in central Ohio before
The City of Grove City said that Logan’s Roadhouse doesn’t quite yet have a projected opening date
but they’re currently retrofitting the now-closed O’Charley’s restaurant to make it their own
The steakhouse chain offers appetizers like beer-battered onion rings and mesquite wings
and numerous sides like mashed potatoes and mac & cheese
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When one of Australia’s most popular political columns changed hands late last year
few could have predicted it would unravel so quickly in a situation insiders describe as “shambolic”
and those of two other senior staff members
remains unpaid by progressive media mogul Piers Grove’s company General Publishing.
The Politics was one of Schwartz Media’s most-read media properties with around 27,000 email subscribers to the free column and a dedicated readership
many of whom were devotees of its flagship columnist Rachel Withers.
In the months since, Schwartz Media, which owns The Saturday Paper and The Monthly, sold the column to General Publishing for a sum Crikey understands was $200,000
and the publication has resorted to begging for donations
Months worth of salaries remain unpaid to Withers
the company’s managing director Olivia McDonnell
and the former editor of the company’s music vertical Check Check
Have a tip? You can anonymously tip off Crikey or contact Cam Wilson here and Gina Rushton here
at The Politics” and said that two staff had not been paid salaries
He said that they would be paid within a few months
and he said he understood “different people have different thresholds for patience”.
“I get that and I don’t judge them,” he said
adding that if he could “write a check for this and solve it” he wouldn’t even be on the phone to Crikey
Crikey understands Withers has accepted a payment plan but has reserved the right to seek her money sooner.
Grove’s career to date has been varied — an ASIC search revealed Grove is currently director of 23 registered companies
from media startups to “Australia’s first circular economy innovation accelerator” Boomerang Labs
But Crikey has looked into Grove’s nearly two-decades-long career in media
unearthing new legal documents and speaking to dozens of former colleagues and associates to paint a picture of a figure who charms up-and-comers with his “infectious” enthusiasm
and promises to make a successful business out of their talents
but soon leaves on less glowing terms.
In a statement Grove provided to Crikey in lieu of answering more than 50 questions put to him
he acknowledged his “areas for improvement are tempering my optimism
financial management and blue-sky thinking”
The year was 2012 and K-pop star Psy’s runaway hit “Gangnam Style” had topped charts around the world
where a box of hundreds of Psy bobbleheads sat unopened in a property in Alexandria
The property was used by a team creating the flagship Australian satirical news show The Roast
but Crikey understands ordering custom-made bobbleheads of the popstar was Grove’s idea.
The figurines posed a problem — The Roast was produced by Grove for the ABC
and it became apparent that a program associated with the national broadcaster perhaps shouldn’t be reselling bootleg merchandise for a Korean pop star
they had one leg raised in Psy’s trademark giddy-up dance style
which is a nice metaphor,” one person involved in the operation at the time told Crikey
The bobbleheads were eventually removed from the office.
The Roast aired on the ABC (even if it was the ABC’s secondary channel
ABC2) and helped introduce Australia to comedians such as Mark Humphries
Partners Nich Richardson and founding Chaser member Charles Firth helmed the show
with Grove listed as an executive producer
Richardson declined to answer questions from Crikey
A sum of $240,000 was transferred from The Roast’s production company’s account — which contained funding from the ABC to produce their program — to a bank account belonging to another company that Grove was involved in
Firth and Richardson would later claim that this was transferred without their knowledge.
Grove, Firth and Richardson were directors, along with another producer, Xanon Murphy, of the production company The Roast Pty Ltd, and had access to its bank accounts. The trio were also all shareholders of Manic Times Pty Ltd, a progressive-leaning creative studio that had a dozen or so employees at its peak. It was founded in 2007 to produce “satirical films and videos for union campaigns”
Manic Times’ other shareholders were Grove’s business partner Antony Stockdale
Forestry and Maritime Employees Union (CFMEU)
and the NSW branch of the National Union of Workers (NUW).
Murphy declined to comment or answer Crikey’s detailed questions
Stockdale gave the following statement via email: “Today it is clear to me that Piers Grove and Charles Firth were wildly incompatible as business partners
I have been trying to untangle myself from them ever since
Even to this day there are still legacy relationships I am trying to conclude.”
with Richardson and Firth running the creative side
Before going to Grove to find out the purpose of this transfer
the pair gathered evidence about what happened and
discovered it wasn’t the only significant transfer Grove had made from the production company’s bank account to organisations he was involved with.
The first was $50,000 to Republic Vision Pty Ltd
which was a holding company owned by Grove
This amount was then loaned to New Energy Lab
a company co-owned by James Slezak who declined to comment
Crikey understands Slezak was unaware of Grove’s loan to the company at the time
The second was $6,000 to a bank account for the production of a film about the life of anti-asbestos campaigner Bernie Banton
Grove served on the board of the Bernie Banton Foundation
When Richardson and Firth pulled business records for The Roast’s production company
According to a briefing given to a barrister in late 2014 on behalf of the production company
Grove and Stockdale had two years earlier agreed to put it into a holding company owned by an entity called Asia Pacific Production Solutions (International) Pty Ltd (APPSI)
filed with Australia’s corporate regulator the next month
did not list Firth or Richardson as shareholders of APPSI
They had been cut out of the business they were running
its sole shareholder was listed as the company owned by Grove
Murphy and Stockdale: Republic Vision Pty Ltd
The two later alleged they confronted Murphy
who signed forms to change company documents to reflect Firth and Richardson’s stakes in APPSI and their ownership of The Roast’s production company
demanding to know why this money had been transferred out of their accounts
Grove quickly replied that it was to cover “another group of loans that is outstanding to Common Interest Media” and said that it was a loan
It was the first they’d heard of this loan. Crikey does not allege that Grove misled the pair
Grove had also resigned as a director of Common Interest Media
The company’s other major shareholder and director Phil Benedictus declined to comment to Crikey
Firth and Richardson surprised Grove at his home
He signed a loan agreement giving him 10 days to pay back the $240,000
and a form that removed him as a director of The Roast Pty Ltd and its parent company
accused Firth and Richardson of “pressuring” Grove into signing the papers
said that the forms filed by Murphy to recognise the pair’s stake were “unlawful”
and threatened to report them to the corporate watchdog
Republic Vision paid back a significant portion of the loan
The rest was supposed to be covered by Grove
forfeiting his salary from The Roast and Republic Vision on the following day.
Firth and Richardson spent July trying to understand what had been happening under their noses
Crikey understands the ABC had raised issues with The Roast about accounting inconsistencies
but was ultimately satisfied that all funds from the broadcaster were paid back
Firth and Richardson believed that $133,000 of loans from The Roast’s bank accounts had been transferred between 2012 and 2014 to the creative studio Manic Times
the pair could only find around $78,000 that had been paid back.
Manic Times’ shareholders passed a motion the following day for Grove to have the company’s last six years of books audited
according to a report prepared by accounting firm Ferrier Hodgson
Grove told Manic Times’ board that he would only get the last financial year audited
there were serious doubts about the future of the business
according to two sources who worked at the company at the time
There had been an exodus of employees in the months prior.
Firth continued to chase repayments for money transferred by Grove to other companies
then followed up with a statutory request on behalf of The Roast’s production company for $64,000 — $50,000 for the transfer to Republic Vision and the $14,000 remaining outstanding from the $240,000 loan
a judge would award the money to The Roast Pty Ltd in a default judgment after neither Grove nor Republic Vision filed a defence to the claim.
“I wouldn’t wish working with Piers on my worst enemy
Piers is probably my worst enemy,” Firth told Crikey
“Piers exploits the trust of creatives and progressively minded people
and uses that trust to … waste their time and goodwill.”
A general meeting for the company was called for November 7 and Grove
writers for The Roast received a text before they came into work
They were told that the locks had been changed and no-one was to let Grove or Murphy into the building.
He said that he had done his best to “tidy up what was a very messy scene … [due to] a massive deterioration of income and staff”
He promised staff that he had filed the paperwork to pay their superannuation
but that the company was unable to pay out some annual leave as they waited for some clients to pay them
Grove wrote that he knew workers had been speaking with their union about owed entitlements and that he hoped the email would prevent “action against the company or its officeholders”
The administrator’s report later noted that Manic Times had not fulfilled its superannuation obligations since the end of June 2012
estimating that it owed $126,977 to its workers
One former Manic Times employee told Crikey that their own outstanding superannuation was eventually paid
Grove foreshadowed the imminent closure of the Manic Times
“I think we were building something exciting
fun and extremely useful to the entire labour and progressive movements,” the email said
The new board immediately found out the company had no money and couldn’t pay its staff
they placed the company into voluntary administration.
Accountants later wrote that Manic Times had been insolvent since at least the end of June
had not prepared financial statements for the three past financial years
and that once these were produced it was clear that the company had lost money each year
Ferrier Hodgson’s administrator’s report identified a number of factors for Manic Times’ demise
It said Grove believed “profits started to decline in June 2014” and blamed cash flow problems on sudden staff turnover requiring large entitlement payouts
The report’s authors also listed “poor strategic management” and “poor financial control including lack of records” as factors.
They also repeatedly noted that Manic Media was propped up financially with loans from companies owned by Grove and Firth
something that Grove acknowledged in an interview with Ferrier Hodgson
It listed multiple companies owned by Firth and Grove that had loaned more than $200,000 to Manic Times
mostly without documentation seen by the report’s authors
It also identified two loans totalling $176,704 to two Grove-related entities while it was insolvent.
Grove had moved on to his next media project
In 2014 Grove co-founded the satirical news website with former journalists Archer Hamilton and Charles Single
Crikey understands Grove’s contribution was primarily financial but that he offered invaluable publicity connections
as well as bringing business acumen that his two co-founders
The Betoota Advocate declined to comment for this story.
“The secret sauce to my publishing is backing talent
particularly younger talent,” Grove told Crikey.
When Grove first approached The Daily Aus in 2019
the Instagram-native youth news publication had fewer than 1,000 followers
and appreciated the social media-first approach to news as a way of building a direct relationship with audiences.
He set up a meeting and Grove told the pair that they were going to be the next big thing in news
providing a handful of small loans in exchange for equity
He took them to events to meet his impressive network
ascendant campaigns like the Australian Republican Movement and Keep Sydney Open (although two sources with knowledge of the lockout protest group grumbled to Crikey that Grove’s poor advice meant that the organisation nearly missed out on being registered as a political party)
Grove also helped The Daily Aus set up the business side of the company: opening bank accounts
The Daily Aus soon became one of Australia’s hottest media startups. With everyone glued to the news for updates during the COVID-19 pandemic, the outlet grew its Instagram followers to more than 220,000 in just two years
The Daily Aus sought to raise more money from outside investors
Grove wasn’t required to waive the outstanding loan as a condition of accepting this capital
The company raised $500,000 in February 2021, with Grove owning around a quarter of the company
In December 2021, Junkee Media (minus its creative studio) was purchased by Scout Publishing, a joint venture between Grove and RACAT Group, at a reported price of about $2.4 million — a big drop from its $13 million valuation in 2016
RACAT Group owns Australian Geographic and is headed up by David Haslingden
a former Fox executive and executive chairman of Nine Entertainment
The two had met as supporters of teal independent Allegra Spender
Haslingden did not respond to a request for comment
RACAT Group brought together Junkee Media and Australian Geographic to form Scout Publishing
Multiple Junkee staff told Crikey that Grove had claimed he sold his stake in The Daily Aus and invested $1.2 million into Scout Publishing.
When he became publisher of Junkee, Grove stepped down as publisher of The Betoota Advocate. The Sydney Morning Herald reported both sides had cast the departure as amicable “despite rumours of a falling out”.
A source with intimate knowledge of the Junkee deal explained that Grove’s vision for the brand was “compelling” and made sense
The source said Grove’s pitch involved folding Junkee Media into a coalition of youth publishers Grove had been involved in — The Betoota Advocate
The Daily Aus and meme page Brown Cardigan — but then it never materialised
“His enthusiasm is infectious,” the source said. “He presented himself as someone who was at least once involved in the daily operation [of The Betoota Advocate and The Daily Aus] … but it became clear they were pretty resistant [to the idea of the coalition].”
Crikey understands The Betoota Advocate and The Daily Aus were never on board with this vision
Grove wanted to fold Junkee in under the The Daily Aus banner
Not only was The Daily Aus a buzzy media company with a team of journalists of their own who didn’t want the baggage of a stable but stationary company
but Grove was now the owner and director of a direct competitor
Grove eventually sold his share of The Daily Aus to the music and event company Untitled Group for approximately $1.2 million
three years after he first got involved.
The Daily Aus founders told Crikey that Grove left the company after the trio “agreed it was going to be a conflict of interest to have strategic
commercial and editorial oversight over two direct competitors”.
Koslowski told the Good Weekend in 2023 about the toll of the relationship with Grove, without naming him. “We had an issue with an investor a few years ago, and it was on the same day I was moving out of my share house. Something about being in an empty room triggered a full-blown panic attack,” he reportedly said
Crikey released an investigation in 2022 detailing the inside story of Grove’s time at Junkee — less than a year after the sale went public
the brand was facing a mass exodus of staff
according to interviews with multiple staff members
“The reason he thought he could keep spending so much money is he thought we could start producing a lot of revenue very quickly and he was wrong,” a former Junkee employee told Crikey
“He had projections that would have had Junkee back at pre-pandemic levels in less than a year … a lot had changed in the business over that period but he seemed to think it would be like flicking a switch.”
The next year Grove was busy establishing General Publishing which
according to a corporate pitch deck circulated this year and seen by Crikey
is a “hub of engaging narratives and thought-provoking analysis across various domains”.
A few months later the deal with Schwartz was underway
with employees made redundant by Schwartz and some hired by Grove for the publication’s relaunch
Crikey understands Grove bought the list of readers for $200,000 and that the sum was not expected to be paid upfront in full but is still being paid in instalments
Schwartz Media’s founder Morry Schwartz and editor-in-chief Erik Jensen would not confirm how much of the sum had been paid but told Crikey: “We have no ongoing involvement with the title but we hope to see it succeed”
The first time many Schwartz employees knew the company had sold off its beloved free column was when The Politics’ editor Sarah Farquharson posted a message in a staff channel on the messaging program Slack notifying her colleagues she had been made redundant and would love them to join her for farewell drinks the following day
Rachel Withers — who was the column’s key writer but didn’t own it — likewise accepted redundancy and agreed to be employed by Grove to keep her column going
Withers said she believed Grove was personally wealthy
and it wasn’t as though no-one at General Publishing was getting paid — Crikey has confirmed with multiple freelance contributors that their invoices had been paid — but still Withers was waiting “for a business plan to appear”
“We were so busy trying to make the thing happen I didn’t have time to complain,” she told Crikey.
Withers remembers the moment she realised her salary might never come
In mid-April she said Grove raised the idea of asking subscribers for donations
She wasn’t sure where the money would be going or whether the publication would survive and didn’t feel comfortable attaching her name and face to the plea
“I hear you but a big part of this push is to clear up your salary.”
readers learned of Withers’ departure with a sudden email informing them that after three years
she would be stepping away from The Politics “with great sadness”.
Another source from General Publishing said The Politics’ relaunch had been “shambolic” as a small team tried to write
commission and promote the newsletter without Schwartz’s resources.
“When people’s salaries are coming out of one man’s pocket you need a serious amount of capital to start with and he always believed the next investor was right around the corner,” Withers told Crikey
adding that Grove told her a big $200,000 investor had pulled out
all that sort of stuff,” Grove told Crikey in a phone call
Grove sent an email to The Politics’ email subscribers seeking donations for the company with three separate donate buttons littered through the text
General Publishing was pitching to hire new talent and seeking new investors for The Politics and its sister publication Check Check with presentations
that spruiked Grove’s past roles at The Betoota Advocate and The Daily Aus.
people pony up and drop half a million bucks on the table and start a masthead
and then get cold feet after six or nine months and pull it,” Grove told Crikey
“And I [have] genuinely allowed two to three years.”
Grove shared an email with Crikey confirming Withers had been offered a payment plan of $500 a week on July 1
and said his former star columnist had accepted it 18 days later
He then sent a message to Withers telling her that he let Crikey know and hoped that it would “take the heat out of the story (or spike it entirely)”
“It will be interesting to see if The Politics can survive this broadside attack or if this will be another independent masthead killed by their own industry.”
Grove spoke on the phone with Crikey for this story and then later responded to a set of detailed questions — more than 50 in total — with the following statement:
I have worked across various new companies and projects
all with the aim of promoting good talent and great ideas that are useful to our communities
I am incredibly proud of the many projects I have founded or now lead
I am equally proud of the work I have done in South-East Asia through EnergyLab Asia
my work with the Australian Republic Movement and various new media projects
make a valuable contribution to the media landscape in Australia
Areas for improvement are tempering my optimism
financial management and blue-sky thinking
I was overly optimistic about the potential for investment
It is a great masthead with a highly skilled team
I am now trying to set things right financially
I believe that my overall contribution to independent media
and impact entrepreneurship are a net positive.”
ShareSaveCommentSmall BusinessEntrepreneursConsumers Are Demanding Sustainability Information — Grove Delivers With New Badging SystemByChristopher Marquis
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights
I write about businesses creating a more sustainable economic system.Follow AuthorFeb 05
07:38am ESTShareSaveCommentGrove Collaborative launched in 2012 as the world’s first plastic-neutral retailer
More over the years that the CPG industry can be a force for environmental good
Part of their work on reducing plastics translates into new formats for products including cleaning concentrates
we are literally living and breathing plastic
the consequences of the plastic crisis are dire — fueling the climate crisis
Grove Collaborative launched in 2012 as the world’s first plastic-neutral retailer
and has shown over the years that the CPG industry can be a force for environmental good
The company sells its own products under its Grove Co
along with more than 200 high-performing eco-friendly brands from home cleaning to personal care
who told me more about the brand’s outlook for seeking “progress over perfection” while leading the CPG industry to transformational change
away from its reliance on single-use plastic and the newly launched “Beyond Plastic” badging system
Christopher Marquis: Grove Collaborative recently announced a new “Beyond Plastic” badging system
What inspired the company to start this and why is it important
Jeff Yurcisin: Grove Collaborative’s mission is to transform the consumer products industry to be a force for human and environmental good
We create and curate products to meet our customers wherever they are on their sustainability journey
whether that’s swapping a single product for a sustainable alternative or overhauling the household and personal care products they’ve traditionally bought
Grove is a certified B Corporation - now in our 10th (!) year - and is the first plastic-neutral retailer in the world
And while that’s an achievement we are proud of
more must be done - and Grove will continue to lead the consumer products industry Beyond Plastic™
We’re doing our part through product innovation and new packaging solutions that are refillable and reusable or prioritize aluminum and other sustainable materials over single-use plastics
We’re also focused on increased education and transparency for our customers
ongoing progress measurement and quarterly reporting through the industry’s first plastic intensity metrics ($100 of revenue per pound of plastic sold)
partnerships with leading sustainability organizations like rePurpose Global
and management of our Plastic Working Group - a group of over 130 values-aligned brands
such as Seventh Generation and Tom’s of Maine
and solutions in our collective effort to reduce single-use plastic in our industry
We’ve made considerable progress in recent years and we love to celebrate that progress with our customers and partners
educated purchasing decisions to reduce their consumption of single-use plastic
Customers can look for three badges on our site – 100% Plastic Free
and No Single Use Plastic - to make it easier to help shop products that reduce plastic waste
Eliminating single-use plastic from the products we use everyday is critical to a sustainable future
but eliminating it entirely isn’t achievable today based on the available materials and scalable solutions
empower customers to make an impact with every Grove purchase
We love that this new feature offers our customers a transparent way to shop sustainably
Marquis: What is the process for becoming an approved and badged brand
All of the products that receive our new Beyond Plastic™ badges meet our strict standards and are further recognized for their plastic content by one of the three badges - 100% Plastic Free
Our public standards doubled with the new badging system help provide more transparency to our customers to take the guesswork out of sustainable shopping
we have a detailed process for vetting new third-party brands before they’re able to join our collaborative
● Reviewing all brand packaging for sustainability
including prioritizing products that have little to no single-use plastic and brands that have refillable and/or reusable product formats
we ensure the primary packaging component contains post-consumer recycled content
● Reviewing all ingredients to ensure they don't contain any of our No Way Ingredients
● Providing proof of cruelty-free certification
which has a number of points requiring fair labor and ethical business practices
● Completing a sustainability survey and plastic questionnaire to gather more information to support our evaluation of potential partners
What percent of Grove products will have this badge
Will outside brands be able to participate
Yurcisin: Beyond Plastic™ is Grove’s plan to solve the single-use plastic crisis for home and personal care products
This initiative is core to our mission and our brand
so the badges are protected and intended for Grove’s usage
but we encourage all retailers and manufacturers to be more transparent about the sustainability of their products and packaging while educating customers about the potential environmental impact of their purchases
We believe customers make the best decisions for themselves
but they need the proper information to make those decisions - which our industry is not readily providing
Not every product sold on our site - whether it’s our owned brand Grove Co
or trusted third-party brands - will meet the thresholds of 100% Plastic Free
But we think it’s important to highlight the products that meet the sustainability needs of our customers today
and we will continue expanding the number of products that meet those thresholds through ongoing evaluations of third-party products and continued improvements to our own Grove Co
More and more brands are joining us in supporting customers’ desires to reduce their single-use plastic footprint
and we would love to welcome those brands to our site and be part of our collaborative
Marquis: Why launch this badging system now
Is plastic information important to consumers
Yurcisin: Taking action on the global plastics crisis has never been more critical and our customers - as well as general consumers - are the key drivers of that action
Transparency and education are essential to transforming the consumer products industry - and that starts with actually disclosing the environmental impact of every product so that consumers can make informed purchasing decisions.The badging system helps support Grove’s goal of plastic reduction by informing and empowering our customers to purchase the right products for themselves
regardless of how much of it consumers put in their blue recycling bins
The more consumers know about the potential environmental impact of their purchases
the more information they have to make informed decisions
Beyond meeting the needs of our customers and supporting Grove’s overall sustainability commitments
our Beyond Plastic™ badges also help to provide more data points through the online experience that customers are accustomed to when shopping with traditional brick and mortar retailers
Shopping online doesn’t allow customers to physically evaluate the product and its packaging and often online product description pages or images don’t provide the whole picture
this is our way of being as transparent as we can throughout the online experience to help customers make informed
educated purchases based on their packaging values and preferences
Marquis: What do you anticipate the impact of the program will be
Yurcisin: Our goal is to shift consumer behavior and the CPG and retail industries away from a linear consumption model that heavily relies on single-use plastic
In order to shift consumer behavior and increase transparency of our packaging
we need to provide useful and educational product and packaging information throughout our shopping experience
The badges help our customers make more educated
informed purchasing decisions that align with their values
follow suit in providing transparent plastic and packaging information to help them on their sustainability journeys
Our Beyond Plastic™ badges help our customers shop products that are refillable or reusable
and contain little to no single use plastic
Grove customers have avoided over 9.7 million lbs of plastic by purchasing products that meet our Beyond Plastic™ standard instead of single-use
We also remain committed to plastic neutrality
meaning that for every ounce of plastic shipped to Grove customers
we collect the equivalent amount of nature-bound plastic pollution in India and Kenya through our partnership with rePurpose Global
Grove launched its plastic neutrality commitment in 2020 in partnership with Plastic Bank and has partnered with rePurpose Global since 2021
we have recovered more than 15 million pounds of nature- and ocean-bound single-use plastics from the environment - which is an incredible milestone to celebrate
While we know we alone cannot eliminate single-use plastic altogether
we are committed to making incremental progress over time for a more sustainable future
This is one in a series of posts marking the 50th anniversary of the designation of the Greenwich Village Historic District. Click here to check out our year-long activities and celebrations.
where each of the ‘Friends’ were supposed to have
While the crowds of tourists from across the globe gather across from 90 Bedford Street to take selfies with what they envision as the place where the Friends made their home (the program uses an exterior shot of the building
but of course the show was actually shot 3,000 miles away on a soundstage in Burbank
sometimes they seem to miss or ignore the actual history within footsteps and sight of the spot they’re standing
we want to offer you a tour of some of the true stars of Greenwich Village
with these buildings on our “If-you’re-going-to-look-at-the-‘Friends’-building,-why-not-check-out-these-real-historic-sites-while-you’re-at-it” tour
The 1799 Isaacs-Hendricks House at 77 Bedford Street is a wooden house
It’s hard to believe that it was originally a free-standing building surrounded by undeveloped land
A year after it was built the house was bought by Harmon Hendricks
who laid the foundations for the copper-rolling industry in America.” Around 1812
Hendricks set up a copper rolling factory in Bellville
where they supplied copper boilers for the large shipbuilding industry that was thriving along the NYC waterfront at that time
The factory supplied copper for the Savannah
the first steamship ever to cross the Atlantic
Hendricks was the first millionaire in America
He was a member of the Sephardic Congregation Shearith Israel of Spanish and Portuguese Jews
whose founders were the very first Jews to settle in North America
Hendrick’s descendants long remained active in New York civic life
serving in leadership roles on the Museum of the American Indian and as the first chair of the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission
the Isaacs-Hendricks House is the oldest extant house in Greenwich Village
a much-beloved Off-Broadway theater on one of the most beautiful streets in the city
Other prominent residents of the building include anthropologist Margaret Mead
This quirky little home was originally the site of an alley for delivery carts and the like to pass through. A house was constructed on the site in 1873. According to the designation report for the Greenwich Village Historic District
the wood casement windows were installed in the 1920s
they were taxed as a single building on a single lot
It was not until 1921 when the lot was subdivided by Alentaur Realty and the six houses sold and altered individually
that Grove Court took on its present delightful appearance and name.”
Grove Court is also known as the setting for O
Henry story “The Last Leaf.” Henry tells the story of a young girl dying from pneumonia who watched the leaves fall off the tree outside of her window
she assumed that she would die when the last leaf fell
she was saved by a benevolent elderly neighbor
The story was later turned into a movie that was also filmed in Grove Court
Twin Peaks
not to be confused with the television show
is located at 1o2 Bedford Street in the West Village
The quirky and picturesque apartment building got its namesake due to the later additions added to the original 2 1/2 story wood frame federal style house — the kind of simple structure one usually sees throughout Greenwich Village and Lower Manhattan
It got a “facelift” in 1925 when Clifford Daily purchased the building
The 1910s and 1920s saw an influx of the artistic community moving into Greenwich Village
Real estate developers were quick to change the appearance of the buildings to attract this new clientele
The 2 1/2 story building was raised to 5 stories and given a sort of Tudor/Medieval/Swiss Chalet facade
The building was specifically intended to attract artists
with 10 one-room studios with casement windows
similar to the “artists’ studios” which had been popping up on the top of houses throughout the Village during this time
Twin Peaks is located within the Greenwich Village Historic District
Just west of Bleecker Street, on 45 Grove Street, stands an originally free-standing home built in 1830. According to the Greenwich Village Historic District designation report “it was undoubtedly one of the finest and largest Federal residences in Greenwich Village,” often referred to ask the Whittemore Mansion
who was largely responsible for the early development of this part of the Village
The home later operated as a boarding house for artists and newcomers
One of the boarders was a man named Samuel K
Chester was a fellow actor and associate of John Wilkes Booth
Booth came to 45 Grove Street to meet with and try to convince Chester to participate in his plan to take over the government by kidnapping President Lincoln
Booth decided to change his plans and murder President Lincoln
Had Chester either agreed to participate in the plan to kidnap the President
This great new tool allows you to see side-by-side photos of every one of the more than 2,200 buildings in the district in 1969 at the time of designation
Among the tours on the map are sites of where films and TV shows (including Friends) were supposed to have taken place
as well as a variety of tours about the history
upon which many of the above-mentioned buildings can be found
and website in this browser for the next time I comment
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Please call or email us to arrange a time if you wish to meet with someone at the office
the block in Forest Grove bounded by 22nd and 23rd avenues and C and D streets reveals nothing of its past
It looks much like the surrounding residential blocks
You’d never know that this block was partly cleared 129 years ago by young Native Americans
who were brought to this quiet corner of northwest Oregon as part of a younger country’s drive to “civilize” them
You wouldn’t know these young people once fashioned leather into shoes
and fabric into uniforms under the supervision of white men and women
You wouldn’t know that this unremarkable block once was the focus of a tug of war between Salem
You’d never know that at least 12 young indigenous people died while they were being educated here
this block was the home of the Forest Grove Indian Training School
a project backed by the federal government
a former military officer — and teachers and administrators of Pacific University
The school was not officially part of Pacific
but the university supported the enterprise in many ways
As noted in a 1904 history that is stored in the Pacific University Archives
Pacific’s trustees exercised “a fatherly supervision” of the school
sending a delegation each year to visit the Indian school and report to the university
The trustees in turn passed their impressions to the Indian Department
The Pacific connection started with a letter from the university’s Board of Trustees to the Secretary of War in 1879
The trustees called for the appointment of Army Lt
Wilkinson to the new post of military professor at Pacific
they saw an opportunity to bring federal money to Forest Grove
They came to the school from the prairies and mountains
They have already learned to sing like nightingales and work like beavers.”— Harper’s Weekly
Wilkinson has placed before the Board of Trustees the purpose and plan of the Interior Department to educate at some institution upon this coast a certain number of Indian Youth of both sexes
and the Board of Trustees make this application for the detail of Lieut
with the understanding that this Board of Trustees incur no pecuniary liability thereby
and that the government pay all the necessary expenses attending the same,” read the letter
which was copied into the written minutes of a board meeting
still considered an active-duty Army officer
started putting Pacific students through military drills
and the bureaucratic and political machinery started grinding to bring to Forest Grove the nation’s second federally funded
off-reservation Indian training boarding school
along with some local merchants who stood to benefit
Many of the roughly 600 townspeople of Forest Grove
People of European descent had settled into all parts of the country by the 1880s
Native people had largely been driven from the territories they used for centuries
herded on to reservations and forced to sign treaties drawn up by government officials
who had lived near Gaston when missionaries like Tualatin Academy founder Harvey Clarke arrived in Oregon in the 1840s
were forcibly relocated southward to the reservation of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde
In a country still healing from the wounds of the Civil War
the government aimed to find a way to secure a final peace with the people it had decimated with disease and warfare and driven from their lands
The effort to resolve the unfinished business of settling the continent was wrapped in a belief that native people should be assimilated — cleansed of the characteristics and habits that distinguished their former lives and educated in the ways of white people
The Indian training schools were a manifestation of this effort
With the establishment of the Forest Grove Indian Training School
Wilkinson had most success enrolling children from tribes near Puget Sound
southeast Alaska and from east of the Cascades
A particularly poignant pair of photos in the Pacific University Archives vividly show what it meant for native youths to leave their families to come to Forest Grove
An 1881 photo of new arrivals from the Spokane tribe shows 11 awkwardly grouped young people
huddled together as if for protection in an unfamiliar place
Some have long braids of dark hair; some girls wear blankets over their shoulders; some display personal flourishes
A second photo of the group is purported to have been taken seven months later
after the Spokane children had lived and worked for a time at the Indian Training School
the same children are seated stiffly on chairs or arranged behind them
The six girls wear similar dresses; the four boys wear military-style jackets
one girl is missing in the second photo — one of the children who died after being brought to Forest Grove
said Pacific University Archivist Eva Guggemos
who has extensively studied the history of the Indian Training School
Surviving records tell us she had been sick for a while with “a sore” on her side and then took a sudden turn for the worse
The before-and-after photos of the Spokane children were meant to show that the Indian Training School was working: Young native people were being shaped into something “civilized” and unthreatening
But today the before-and-after shots appear desperately sad — frozen-in-time witnesses to whites’ exploitation of indigenous children and the attempted erasure of their cultures
“Some white people who have visited this school and see what We Indian children have done and do
Did the Indian children do this?”— The Indian Citizen
Harper’s Weekly magazine published a story about the Forest Grove Indian Training School in 1882
telling readers: “They came to the school from the prairies and mountains
They have already learned to sing like nightingales and work like beavers.”
Forced transformations like these played out across the country as America sought to deal with the nation’s original sin
Training School and Industrial School in Carlisle
“A great general has said that the only good Indian is a dead one
and that high sanction of his destruction has been an enormous factor in promoting Indian massacres
but only in this: that all the Indian there is in the race should be dead
This was the context for the establishment and operation of the Forest Grove Indian Training School
most of what we know derives from superintendents’ reports to the government
in letters and diaries written by teachers or administrators
These sources generally painted a rosy picture of what student life was like
“Formerly the laundrying for the whole school was done by the girls and a Chinaman
The Chinaman struck for higher wages and an Indian boy was put in his place
and it was found he did equally well,” notes the 1884 superintendent’s report
“Since which time the number of boys in the boys’ laundry has been increased to five
and they now do about two-thirds of the washing for the whole school.”
One of the few sources of direct testimony from students at the time are the slim entries in a teacher’s autograph book
a collection of notes written by about 44 young students during their time in Forest Grove
Many are filled with brief Christian sentiments
reflecting the evangelistic education they received at the school
“We can write our names in albums in this sinful world of ours
But will our names be found in that album which will be open on the last day before the great judgement
Your kind and willing teaching will never be forgotten through life
Also surviving in the Pacific University Archives is a single yellowed and tattered copy of The Indian Citizen
It notes practical things such as “During the past 4 months 493 garments
1 sewing room.” It also notes the formation of “The Indian Base Ball Club.”
The Indian Citizen has a lead editorial headlined “The Future of the Indians,” which speaks of the challenges indigenous people faced in the western United States in the 1880s
“Most of the white people have an idea that Indians cannot learn or remember anything which they are taught
But a great many who think in that way have been greatly surprised when they see the intelligence of the boys and girls and see some articles which they can make and that they are as industrious as any white children can be
Some white people who have visited this school and see what We Indian children have done and do
Perhaps the most vivid account of life at the Forest Grove Indian Training School is contained in an 1882 letter written by a teacher
She describes “an unfortunate incident” at the school
that he had a lot of money from home persuades him to run off with him
They stopped at Hillsboro and bought some clothes and then walked on toward Portland
“Some of the Indian boys in pursuit got on the train here
Obid & Charley walked as far as Beaverton and then concluded they would ride the rest of the way
Charley,’ then the rest of the boys showed themselves and they brought the boy back on the freight train
The boys who went after them showed considerable sense
and I fear will injure the school very much
I feel very sorry for Charley who is really a good boy and who felt very bad about it.”
but Obid (or Obed) Williams was sent to the state penitentiary to serve a sentence of a year
When he was released back to the Forest Grove Indian Training School
the superintendent put him on a train back to the Washington Territory
After Wilkinson was ordered to return to full-time active Army duty
Henry John Minthorn was appointed superintendent of the training school in Forest Grove
The educator and physician was a stern leader
as former Indian School student Henry Sicade wrote in 1917 to Samuel Walker of Forest Grove
“I well remember how the doctor would use his fists and number tens instead of reasoning with the boys,” said Sicade
Minthorn is probably best known as being the uncle of future president Herbert Hoover
who lived with Minthorn’s family in Newberg and Salem beginning in 1885
preferred Newberg and Salem to Forest Grove
he began to pitch the federal government on the idea of relocating the Indian Training School
I feel very sorry for Charley who is really a good boy and who felt very bad about it.”— Mary Francis Lyman
He succeeded in persuading the Indian Department
the Interior Department agency that oversaw Native American affairs
that the school should own enough acreage for the native students to farm
Officials in Salem offered the federal government a donation of 171 acres for the school and its farmland
Pacific and Forest Grove officials countered by offering real estate enticements of their own
The school moved from Forest Grove to Salem in 1885
Minthorn quit the superintendent’s job a little before the move
going on to become the first superintendent of Friends Pacific Academy
the predecessor of Newberg’s George Fox University
It is the country’s oldest continually operating off- reservation boarding school for Native Americans
The school today says its intention is to “afford each student an opportunity to achieve his/her full potential as a shared success between themselves
Nothing remains to mark the school’s time in Forest Grove
Pacific converted the Indian Training School’s boys’ dormitory into its first dormitory for college men in the 1890s
but the land was sold and the former dormitory demolished in 1908
While Pacific did not pay for nor operate the Indian Training School
It invited the school to open in Forest Grove
It employed the first superintendent as a professor of military tactics
It supplied trained teachers to work in the school
and its trustees lobbied on the school’s behalf to government officials in Washington
“I’ve always been drawn to exploring the horrible things we do to each other
And asking ‘Why don’t we learn from the past?’”— Eva Guggemos
Sicade and others associated with the school
Among the more haunting items in the collection is the autograph book
which holds page after page of the careful cursive of the young students
As university archivist, Guggemos has worked diligently to document this history. She has conducted extensive research on the Indian Training School, helped arrange exhibits, made public presentations and placed documents online
She is writing a book about the school that she hopes will be published in the coming 12 months
“I’ve always been drawn to exploring the horrible things we do to each other,” she said
“And asking ‘Why don’t we learn from the past?’”
Guggemos has ideas about ways Pacific can acknowledge its part in establishing and supporting the Indian Training School
she thinks the site of the school should have a historical marker
She suggests Pacific should reach out to the tribes of students who died at the school
asking their input on how to better acknowledge and care for the unmarked graves that exist in the Forest View Cemetery in Forest Grove
to local tribes to discuss the return of Native American artifacts held by the university
public acknowledgement that it is built on land where native people were pushed out
The first such acknowledgement took place at the May Commencement ceremonies
historians and Native groups are examining the legacy of the training schools
which caused children to be separated from their families in order to be shaped into something like white men and women
While the schools caused lasting damage to native families and tribes like the Puyallup
they did not succeed in “killing the Indian.” In fact
native people are reclaiming their culture and history in the Northwest and elsewhere
a Pacific alumnus and a member of the Navajo tribe
whose parents worked at Chemawa and attended federal boarding schools for 12 years
attended Guggemos’s recent public presentation on the Indian Training School
are the only things that haven’t been taken from us,” he told the hushed room
Archives/Special Collections Librarian—historic references and photos
Copyright © Pacific University all rights reserved | Legal Disclaimers
A draft environmental study published last week by the City of Los Angeles represents the latest step forward in developer Holland Partner Group's quest to build a mixed-use project featuring housing and retail across the street from The Grove and the Original Farmer's Market
View looking east from Town & Country parking lotMVE + Partners
named for its location near the southeast corner of 3rd Street and Fairfax Avenue
would replace the eastern half of the Town & Country shopping center with a new eight-story edifice featuring 331 apartments above approximately 84,000 square feet of commercial space and parking for 996 vehicles in a two-level subterranean garage and a three-level podium facing the rear property line
Holland Partner Group is planning a mix of studio
and three-bedroom apartments in the 3rd & Fairfax development
which would be accompanied by a new grocery store - adjacent to an existing Whole Foods and a CVS Pharmacy - as well as general purpose retail and restaurant space. As the development does not rely on density bonus or Transit Oriented Communities incentives
no affordable units are currently proposed
MVE + Partners is designing the podium-type building
which would rise approximately 100 feet above ground level. Plans call for a contemporary exterior
using a series of setbacks and cutouts to reduce the building's mass facing Fairfax Avenue
as well as a neighboring elementary school to the south. A series of courtyards and amenity decks are proposed for use by residents
View looking southeast from 3rd and FairfaxMVE + Partners
The project's environmental study points to a roughly 32-month construction period for the complex
inclusive of the demolition of the existing buildings on the property. However
a precise start date for the project will depend on the certification of the environmental impact report and full approval by the City of Los Angeles
Although the 3rd & Fairfax development is among the largest developments planned for the Mid-Wilshire and Beverly Grove neighborhoods, the current plan for the Town & Country site has been pared back from an original submittal in 2018, when Holland Partner Group had planned the project as a 19-story high-rise with more than 380 residential units
6300 W 3rd StreetCity of Los Angeles
recently announced that the company’s first equity sale raised $7.35 million
Grove is a Web3 infrastructure provider that builds enterprise-grade products and services on top of the decentralized POKT Network
Web3 is the latest iteration of the internet that allows users to control their data and payments without the need for conglomerate intermediaries
said it has raised about $30 million by selling its cryptocurrency token
he said most of that capital went to developing the blockchain protocol
and Grove’s first equity-based cash infusion would support the parent company
“I think what helped with the raise is the traction that we have,” O’Rourke told the Catalyst
“It definitely has been harder as a kind of macro environment … this is really the first time that crypto is in an environment where money is not cheap.”
Three prominent firms led the $7.35 million raise. Those included Avon Ventures, an affiliate of Fidelity Investments’ parent company; New York-based Placeholder Capital; and Tampa-based Druid Ventures
O’Rourke said the investment would allow Grove to hire additional people, grow the company and increase profitability. The blockchain and cryptocurrency industry rebounded in 2023 after several high-profile collapses dominated headlines in 2022
O’Rourke noted that historically high interest rates have also discouraged investors
people are actually doing more due diligence now,” he said
“It definitely impacted us – more so on just getting people over the hump to get more conviction,” O’Rourke added
it’s the traction that made the difference.”
a global pioneer in decentralized infrastructure
Its self-sovereign blockchain network launched in July 2020
the company’s mission is to provide developers with access to “the most reliable
Network officials envision “a future where the world’s most important digital infrastructure is owned and governed by its users.”
The decentralized network now includes over 16,000 globally distributed nodes – or stakeholders authorized to confirm transaction legality and security
POKT supports more than 40 leading blockchains
said his firm has “witnessed and supported Grove’s vision” since 2018
“Their commitment to enabling coordination across globally dispersed blockchains has positioned Grove as critical integration infrastructure for Web3,” he added
O’Rourke noted that Druid’s founders partially bootstrapped the company through selling their POKT holdings
“which is pretty cool.” Avon and Placeholder are among the industry’s largest investment firms
and he said the raise significantly increases Grove’s legitimacy
In early 2022, Pocket was worth $1.5 billion. Its current market capitalization is $192.7 million
The company rebranded to Grove earlier this year
O’Rourke said it became increasingly important to separate the business from its blockchain protocol
foundation and other Pocket-branded subsidiaries
He grew up in Tampa Bay and appreciates local blockchain stakeholders viewing the company as torchbearers
“As we’ve moved along and gotten some success
it’s always been important for me to show people – especially locally – that if I can do it
others definitely can,” O’Rourke said with a laugh
He expects to launch the latest network upgrades next summer and called the number of people contributing to the changes “incredible.” O’Rourke said people typically judge a crypto-based company according to its token’s value, and CoinGecko shows the price of POKT soaring 312% in the past month and 90% over the last year
cheaper and more reliable than its centralized counterparts
He also remains “massively bullish” on Tampa Bay’s overall tech ecosystem
“I think it’s been getting better as people learn and make mistakes,” O’Rourke said
I think we’re learning pretty quickly now.”
Michael O’Rourke previously participated in the inaugural edition of Decent Cities
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friendly locals – and a battle with an octopus
What she hasn’t done is catch an octopus – until this morning. We are in a boat off the Galician coastal town of O Grove, in north-west Spain, and a fisherman in yellow oilskins named Felix Piñeiro is lifting octopus pots out of the steel-grey waters. Everything around us – the laid-back peninsula town, its neighbouring islands – is obscured by heavy mist, focusing our view on the task at hand.
The first two pots contain only crabs, though Nieves doesn’t seem disappointed.
“Huge nécoras,” she says excitedly, using the Spanish word for velvet crabs, which are a delicacy in this part of the world.
a larger pot resembling a bucket is winched to the surface
water spouting through a hundred tiny holes
its white-suckered tentacles flailing about in all directions
half-daunted as the tentacles twist up her sleeves
View image in fullscreenGetting a grip … chef Nieves Barragán Mohacho and fisherman Felix Piñeiro inspect the day’s catch
except where statedThis experience – feeling awed and a bit overwhelmed by what comes out of the sea – may sound familiar to anyone who’s been to Galicia
This rugged region is an extremely beautiful place to visit
With more than 1,000km of Atlantic coastline at its disposal as well as countless bays and estuaries
or rías – where shellfish grow large and juicy in nutrient-rich waters – it’s also one of the most exciting seafood destinations on the planet
A Coruña's Old Town is an excellent place to get lost in
before winding up at a great bar called La BombillaOctopus is the main focus of this trip
Nieves is researching local cooking methods for her new restaurant
where she plans to cook octopus Galician-style in large copper pots – but that doesn’t mean we’re ignoring all the other delights the region has to offer
We begin where most pilgrimages to Galicia end – in Santiago de Compostela, about 70km inland from O Grove. For the tens of thousands who each year walk the Camino de Santiago
the pilgrimage to the shrine of the apostle St James the Great
this elegant regional capital marks the final stop
They gather in the wide square next to the 1,000-year-old cathedral
which is said to house the saint’s remains
and lie flat on their backs contemplating their achievement
The cathedral in Santiago is also famous for its botafumeiro
an enormous brass censer that swings like a pendulum through the transept on certain days of the year trailing great clouds of incense
After a quick appreciation of the cathedral’s ornate interior we hurry on in search of lunch
View image in fullscreenIncense inside … Santiago de Compostela’s cathedral is famous for its botafumeiro, an enormous brass censer. Photograph: AlamyWe find it at Mercado de Abastos
pumpkins and cabbages bigger than basketballs
Under the colonnades at the seafood section
and then get distracted by the alien-looking percèbes
which are plucked from wave-battered rocks and cliffs along the Galician coast – a risky business for the percebeiros doing the plucking
Some of the best produce from these stalls ends up at Abastos 2.0
We pause here for lunch before we head north
“People in Galicia are so friendly,” Nieves remarks as we sit out in the sun eating raw sea bass and drinking Estrella Galicia beer
the restaurant’s co-owner Iago Pazos presents us with a large slab of empanada gallega (Galician pie
this one filled with tuna and red pepper) to tide us over until dinner
where a spread of seafood dishes – including lobster
nécoras crabs and a magnificent John Dory – are matched with beers from the distillery
View image in fullscreenBehind glass … Mercado de Abastos market in Santiago de CompostelaThe city’s most arresting sight is the Tower of Hercules
a 55m Roman lighthouse situated on a promontory at the edge of town
the lighthouse still functions today and you can climb it most of the way to the top
combined with the long walk back along the promenade
is an excellent way to work off a heavy lunch
The next day brings us to O Grove, though we haven’t come here just to catch octopus. Since Nieves first visited Galicia five years ago, she has been making an annual pilgrimage to eat at a restaurant in town called d’Berto
full stop,” she says of the owner Berto Domínguez García
who does the sourcing while his sister Marisol runs the kitchen
and ending with a sublime torta de queso (cheesecake)
View image in fullscreenAt a pinch … Nieves with a lobster at d’BertoLater
Berto takes us to the local fish market to watch the day’s catch being auctioned
Then it’s on to the Albamar winery in nearby Cambados
and afterwards dance (or at least stagger along) to a local band playing traditional music on the gaita
a type of bagpipe which hints at the region’s Celtic roots
is the 5kg octopus that Nieves caught earlier in the day
cooks it Galician-style in a large copper pot
to tenderise the flesh; Xurxo softens this one up by whacking it 42 times against a granite headstone
I must confess to some queasiness at this point
having witnessed the poor thing being caught
But my qualms are quickly forgotten when the octopus is served up with caramelised onions and potatoes
“The flavour is much fuller than frozen ones,” says Nieves
Not a bad thing for an octopus to taste like
Particularly when the sea in question is the one crashing against the shores of Galicia
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Grove has super cute reusable glass spray bottles and soap dispensers
You don’t have to be a subscriber to purchase Grove products
but you do get some decent perks if you do subscribe
including free shipping on orders over $29
Regular shipping is $4.99 for VIP orders under $29 and non-subscriber orders under $49
so it’s on the very cheap end of subscription services
It’s worth it if you plan to place four or more orders per year
Grove will add suggested products to your cart for you
which you can obviously remove or swap for others
Grove will automatically set your products to renew on a monthly/semi-monthly basis
which is either annoying or helpful depending on who you are
I found it a bit annoying because I live alone in a small studio apartment and a monthly refill was too frequent for me
you can go in and change the frequency or if you want the products to be recurring or not
One thing I really appreciate about the Grove Co
subscription is that I can skip orders whenever I want and only reorder products when needed
They'll send you emails to remind you when your next order is about to ship
I honestly don’t feel the pressure of the subscription
Possibly the best part about ordering from Grove is that you get a cute little personalized note written on your box
I get to order eco-friendly products and feel like I’m supporting a company that cares about its customers
I do have to admit that I canceled my Grove Collaborative subscription
The Target a block away from my apartment stocks Grove products
and for the types of products I regularly purchase from Grove
it seemed more sustainable to just walk down the street and buy them from Target than to have them shipped and delivered to my apartment
the products are a little cheaper on Grove’s website
I found myself missing the power of bleach for my kitchen and bathroom
Grove cleaners come as concentrates that you mix with water and I just didn't feel like they were getting the job done on some of the surfaces in my apartment
I was interested in Grove for its sustainable packaging more than its natural ingredients
I switched back to buying the occasional Clorox product in addition to my Grove cleaning products.
I have used Grove products for around two and a half years now and used the VIP subscription for a year
I've tested a range of products such as sponges
When coming up with the review scores for Grove
Everyday use: In evaluating the performance score
I looked at whether Grove could fully replace my normal cleaning and household items
Price and accessibility: Grove doesn't require a subscription to purchase and regular shipping is only $5
The subscription is on the super low end for subscription costs at $19.99 per year
and the products themselves are affordable and no more expensive than their non-sustainable counterparts
Grove is also available at Target for those who prefer to shop in person
In Greenwich Village, there is no doubt that a large part of the appeal of a home such as this is its history
one finds that this enclave was not always so sought after
“The present six connected houses on the rear of this lot were built for Cocks and finished in 1854; however
when the lot was subdivided by Alentaur Realty and the six houses sold and altered individually
that Grove Court took on its present delightful appearance and name.”
it was used as an example to remodel the Minettas into a more artistic outlet
Grove Court is also well-noted for being the setting to O
Henry’s “The Last Leaf.” In 1907
this short story was included in the collection The Trimmed Lamp
“The Last Leaf” tells the story of a young girl dying from pneumonia who watched the leaves fall off the tree outside of her window
She believed she would die when the last leaf fell
but an old artist neighbor risks his own life to save her
Henry begins his story: “In a little district west of Washington Square the streets have run crazy and broken themselves into small strips called ‘places.’ These ‘places’ make strange angles and curves
One Street crosses itself a time or two….So
to quaint old Greenwich Village the art people soon came prowling
hunting for north windows and eighteenth-century gables and Dutch attics and low rents.” In 1952 a film
“The Last Leaf” was one story included and was filmed at Grove Court
Today, residents maintain the ‘place’s’ grounds themselves, planting lush beds of ivy and flowers in both the facades’ flowerboxes and in the public space. Popular design blog Apartment Therapy even gave Grove Court its Flowerbox Award
but wouldn’t it be worth every penny to live in this quiet
epic Atlantic scenery and supreme seafood combine to great effect on Spain’s most beautiful coastline
Lush green valleys and rugged mountains
baroque cathedrals and the smell of grilled seafood
The architectural grace of Santiago de Compostela and the industrial churn of Vigo
but amid the variety there are two constants: first
it’s one of the best places to eat seafood in the world; and
is the most beautiful on the Iberian peninsula
about three-quarters the size of the Netherlands
and so for this guide we’ll travel along its coast
coastal towns and seafood restaurants from Ribadeo and Ortigueira in the north via A Coruña and the Costa da Morte and then south to the area known as the Rías Baixas
Although Galicia is good to visit all year round
the best time to go is from June to September
even during the hottest months of the year
tranquil fishing village of multicoloured houses
is the perfect place to pass the afternoon staring out at the bay while sipping a nice glass of albariño
From here it’s only a 15-minute drive north to Estaca de Bares
the most northerly point of the Iberian peninsula
Its 19th-century lighthouse is a quiet place from which to appreciate the uninterrupted views of the Bay of Biscay and the relentless ferocity of the Atlantic
View image in fullscreenSanta Maria do Campo in ViveiroSet amid rolling hills covered with pines and eucalyptus trees
Viveiro is on the estuary of the river Landro
with walls that have withstood pirate attacks and plagues
and springs that have attracted countless Santiago pilgrims
its grand entrance gates and over its medieval bridges
Covas beach is also only a short walk from the town centre
View image in fullscreenIsla Coelleira and the cliffs near Praia de Xilloi
this kilometre-long beach is one of the best in Lugo province
showers and restaurants nearby and is a good place for families
View image in fullscreenSome 7km long
this beach is considered the longest in Galicia
white sand and framed by the majestic Mount Pindo
it is a spectacular place to pass a few hours
but lacks amenities like showers and changing rooms
one of the best seafood restaurants in the area
View image in fullscreenThe traditional Galician calvary at Cape Finisterre Photograph: AlamyFor centuries
this rugged outcrop was considered the most westerly point in Europe (though Cabo da Roca in Portugal is actually 10 miles further west) and
The last stop before the beginning of the Mare Tenebrosum
the cape is submerged in legend – tumble down the rocks
and it feels like standing on the precipice of the world
View image in fullscreen Photograph: AlamyOysters have been famous in the city of Vigo for hundreds of years
Farmed on the estuary in the nearby town of Arcade
they come in fresh every morning to the oyster shops of Rúa das Ostras (the street of the oysters)
the many street stalls sell the shellfish for between €12 and €18 a dozen
this village is perhaps one of the most beautiful on the Galician coast
After the rustic stone houses that line the seafront
the biggest attraction here is the hórreos
traditional granaries built in wood or stone and raised on pillars
There are 30 of these unique constructions dotted along the promenade and throughout the town
originally from Galicia but raised in Lucerne
Javi Olleros developed a passion for food in his father's restaurant
He began his studies at the Lamas de Abade catering school in Santiago de Compostela and gained experience in the kitchens of "Casa Solla," Toñi Vicente
Martín Berasategui at "Bica do Sapato" (Lisbon)
and in the world of Seiji Yamamoto (Tokyo)
During his second year of professional training
proving that there's nothing wrong with failing or discovering a vocation late
and doing internships in many places and of course in my father's kitchen
since 2009 he has been running "Culler de Pau" (Galician for "wooden spoon") in O Grove
The idea was always to create a small restaurant and live on the top floor
but they decided the best way to reconcile was to share the infernal rhythms of the business
and the challenge was to convince the Galician public to understand Olleros' cuisine to aspire to higher goals
Despite MICHELIN not being so focused on vegetable-centric restaurants at the time
the first Star arrived in 2012 and the second in 2020
The Green Star was awarded for the restaurant's organic garden
But Olleros insists that he is not a farmer or a businessman
and that neither the garden nor the greenhouse were born to be self-sufficient
"We buy every type of vegetable from our local suppliers in even greater quantities than before
because they are the ones who have supported us from the beginning." The activity of "Culler de Pau" also feeds on all the research work he does in projects where he collaborates with other producers and organizations like the CSIC
the restaurant has grown and changed: new spaces have been created
like the research lab where the team meets
the nine tables with which it started have been maintained
Do you want to discover the latest news and recipes of the most renowned chefs and restaurants in the world
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Margaret Martin constantly interacts with pieces of her childhood.
but used most of all: a 200-year-old rug that lies at her front door.
"I appreciate old things and the history," she said
The heirlooms in her Third Avenue home used to reside less than a quarter of a mile away on the former campus of O'More College of Design in its main house — the Abbey Leix Mansion
The red brick home sits far back from behind the iron-rod fence at the corner of Margin Street and Lewisburg Avenue.
While the home and property used to belong to Martin's family
the Italian-style house will now serve another life as it becomes the cornerstone for the Franklin Grove and Garden Estates
a preservation project taken on by the Heritage Foundation of Williamson County to restore the property and improve the grounds.
The opportunity became available a little more than a year ago when O'More students and teachers transferred to Belmont University
wanting to reclaim the property versus allowing for redevelopment.
Backstory from 2018: Belmont University to acquire O'More College of Design
"I think it’s wonderful that it is going to be preserved," said Martin
"I think that my memories are very sweet there. My great-grandparents lived there until they died
My grandparents lived there until my father was born. A lot of people have moved here to Franklin
and they like the old things that have been saved
How the project startedSix million dollars in only a matter of months.
That's the amount and time frame foundation CEO Bari Watson Beasley faced to save the O'More property
Belmont provided time for the nonprofit to raise the money to purchase the property
and we reached that moment in time that it wasn’t just the expectation of the town that we would do this," Beasley said. "We knew that this was a critical project."
More: Heritage Foundation hires new director for Franklin Theatre
Beasley said the fundraising task was daunting at the start
The organization hadn't raised a single dollar for the project when it decided to start the campaign to save the property
the foundation had paid off its largest expense: the Old
Those donations — from Emily Magid and Calvin and Marilyn LeHew — enabled the nonprofit to find another property that needed preservation.
"I think that’s what is unique and special," Beasley said. "People stepped up at the right time and helped us be able to purchase the property and create a vision that people for generations can enjoy."
One of those individuals was Sondra Morris
who owns the Moore house across the street from campus
In renovating her nearly 100-year-old home
she said she felt an obligation to also help spark change outside her front door with a donation to preserve the land
the foundation had raised the money with Morris' help
More: Heritage Foundation to move Rosenwald school to downtown Franklin
"I don’t know of many other places in the city that large in downtown," Morris said
"It’s a beautiful property. I expressed my vision with some people
and I told them what I envisioned the property to be
I wanted to see beautiful gardens, fountains
I wanted it to be something that everyone in Franklin could enjoy."
What's inside the project With the college and its name gone to Nashville
the foundation now had a blank slate.
Including two mansions on the property and plenty of land
members of the nonprofit took time to brainstorm
Those ideas formed the name Franklin Grove
which paid homage to a former girls school on the property before the Civil War.
The Abbey Leix Mansion will become a partial museum with an art gallery and a space to host events.
The Fleming-Farrah mansion –– renamed now the LeHew Mansion after donors –– will feature an innovation hub spurred by Williamson, Inc.
"It's going to become an incubator for nine businesses that start out there," Beasley said. "They launch in that house and spring forward somewhere else in the Nashville and Cool Springs area
Then more new businesses rotate in once they move out. It’s amazing that we are able to partner with Williamson
Inc. on something that involved preservation."
a greenhouse and a carriage house will also rise up on the property
but it will also mean tearing down the former classrooms built up around the campus
Once that process is finalized with the Franklin Historic Zoning Commission
the foundation can move another feature it saved: a Rosenwald school.
Serving African American students before desegregation
The foundation will restore the schoolhouse and feature its Heritage Classroom initiative in the building.
More: Frist family to chair Heritage Foundation of Williamson County's 2019 Heritage Ball
"It’s the last unrestored Rosenwald school in Williamson County," foundation board President David Garrett said
"The farm it sits on eventually will be developed
but this part of what the foundation does is to save places before development comes in
It’s more important to save it and have other people explore and learn from it."
Quietly formulating the schedule for the rollout during the next two years, Shannon Lapsley is piecing it all together.
"The campus is our mission in action," Lapsley said
"But there are a million moving pieces
I am making sure all of the pieces are flowing in a consistent way
This place is always going to be a gem for the community
it’s going to take time to get there
Lapsley said there will be soft openings for buildings on the property as they become restored or finished
She will also help the team in cultivating the stories and history for the property
so the nonprofit can share that with visitors.
I want to make sure every aspect that we dreamed about comes to fruition," Lapsley said
I think it's going to be better than renderings and better than what any of us have imagined."
Reach Emily West at erwest@tennessean.com or 615-613-1380 and on Twitter at @emwest22.
the influential former lawmaker and current chairman of the board of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey — has sued the township of Cedar Grove and its manager
accusing them of denying her the police chief position because of her brother's intervention and gender discrimination
Eileen O'Toole is a captain in the Cedar Grove Police Department
She became officer in charge after the police chief retired last year
and has also served as acting township manager when the current manager
She alleged that Tucci "did not plan on interviewing her and she was going to be the next Chief of Police" and that two Township Council members also told her this
She was the first woman to be promoted to a supervisory position in the Cedar Grove Police Department
filed in state Superior Court in Essex County on Tuesday
details how she allegedly lost her promotion after a family dispute with her brother the night before her daughter's wedding in November 2021
Kevin O'Toole is not named as a defendant in the lawsuit
How NJ lost $850M to NY:A look inside the negotiations to split federal transit funds
Text messages that followed between the family members allegedly included false suggestions from Kevin O'Toole that Eileen O'Toole has a drinking problem
should quit his job that was "secured" for him and that he could face an internal investigation
who allegedly said "this is not going to be a good meeting" and explained that she would not be getting the police chief position because the "town council is disgusted with you," the lawsuit said
She says there were no "written charges of insubordination" in her personnel file and she received "exceptional employment evaluations," including from Tucci
who negotiated her salary for her current position
the attorney representing the township and Tucci
wrote in an email that the "most qualified candidate" was selected to serve as police chief
a candidate with "the longest service and highest educational degree," who previously was offered the job in 2017 but declined it
More:Lawsuits claim Cedar Grove senior living facility failed to protect residents from COVID
"The Township and Township Manager Tucci look forward to vigorously defending this frivolous lawsuit," Giacobbe wrote
In addition to the allegedly false narrative about the reasons she was not promoted
including insubordination and misuse of the chief's vehicle
Eileen O'Toole was stripped of her captain duties and "ostracized," the lawsuit said
She claims Tucci "conferred" with her brother about the reasons she was not promoted
More:$27 for a beer? Port Authority reins in 'totally indefensible' airport drink prices
allegedly confronted Kevin O'Toole about his sister's non-promotion
and he repeated the allegedly false reasons
including one she had not been told in the meeting with Tucci
Robert O'Toole said his son is an "evil person."
Kevin O'Toole said in an emailed statement that he was "saddened" to read about the lawsuit and his family in the news
He indicated that arguments in the family have erupted over vaccination opinions
"Whether it be on vaccination policy or politics
I sought out assistance from the Essex County Prosecutor‘s Office regarding my being a victim of harassment/stalking," O'Toole wrote
As this matter is now the subject of legal proceedings
this will be the last I will comment on this subject or my family."
The Essex County Prosecutor's Office did not immediately respond to requests for comment
Kevin O'Toole served as a council member and mayor in Cedar Grove from 1989 to 1996
and in the New Jersey Legislature from 1996 to 2017
first as an assemblyman and then as a senator
More:Murphy administration sends $58.3M to NJ Transit after missing months of payments
He was named by then-Gov. Chris Christie to the Port Authority board in 2017, three years after the political retribution scandal known as Bridgegate, in which a former agency executive, David Wildstein, admitted to realigning lanes at the George Washington Bridge entrance in Fort Lee to punish that town's mayor.
O'Toole, a Republican close to Christie, sat several years earlier on the legislative committee that investigated the realignments. He now writes political columns for Wildstein's news website, the New Jersey Globe.
In addition to his role leading the Port Authority board, O'Toole is a managing and founding partner of the law firm O'Toole Scrivo, LLC, based in Cedar Grove.
When it comes to the marquee names in science and engineering, it’s a safe bet that most will have heard that of Thomas Edison, the American inventor commonly supposed to have invented the light bulb. And yet hardly anyone unfamiliar with the history of 19th century physics will know the name of William Robert Grove, the Welsh scientist whose invention of the incandescent electric light predated Edison’s co-option of an established technology.
Voltaic electricity may become a useful means of locomotion
| Seafood/Pixabay
Padrón Pepper Festival Pimientos de Padrón are well-loved throughout Spain and are often served as tapas
and are celebrated every year with their own festival
The festival actually takes place in the nearby town of Herbon
The small green pepper is celebrated with floats
Pimientos de Padron, Galicia | ©Manuel / Flickr
Cheese Festival of Arzúa Northern Spain, particularly Galicia and Asturias, produce some excellent cheeses, and the small village of Arzúa situated along the Camino de Santiago makes some of the best. The soft white Arzúa-Ulloa cheese is honoured during the Festa do Queixo Azúra
many stalls are set up where visitors can learn about and try various local cheeses
exhibits and cheese-making workshops are also part of the event
Galician Tetilla cheese | ©Tamorlan / Wikimedia Commons
The Albariño Wine Festival Albariño is Galicia’s famous white wine, which is celebrated during its very own festival, held in the town of Cambados. Taking place in August each year, the event combines wine and music
and hosts concerts from various international artists
Albariño wines from Galicia | ©Luis Miguel Bugallo Sánchez / Wikimedia Commons
Octopus Festival of Carballiño Pulpo or octopus is Galicia’s most famous dish
so of course there’s a festival paying homage to this too
It takes place every August in the town of Carballiño
in the province of Ourense and attracts many visitors from all over the region
between 25,000 and 30,000 kilos of octopus are consumed
along with thousands of glasses of Ribeiro wine
Pulpo a la Gallega, Galicia | © Javier Lastras / Wikimedia | ©Javier Lastras / Flickr
The Festival of the Giant Omelette Unless you’ve been to Galicia, you won’t realise they actually make the best tortillas (potato omelettes) in the whole of Spain
the Galicia tortilla is celebrated at the Festa da Tortilla Xigante in the town of Carcacía
During the festival a gigantic potato omelette is made
measuring around three and a half metres across and able to feed around 500 people
It’s so big that a crane is needed to lift the huge frying pan into place
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Tortilla de Patatas | © Tamorlan/Wikicommons
The Fair of the Cocido of Lalín Almost every region in Spain has has its own version of the cocido – a hearty stew, which often features chickpeas or beans and various types of meat and vegetables. The Lalín Galician cocido contains everything from tuna and snails to pork, rabbit, chickpeas and potatoes. The Feira do Cocido de Lalín takes place in February and not only features lots of stew and cooking demonstrations
but also around 50 different cultural activities and workshops
Cocido stew | © Javier Lastras/Flickr
where empanadas are accompanied by music and sporting events
Empanadas Gallegas | ©Tamorlan / Wikimedia Commons
Ribeiro Wine Fair in Ribadavia Besides albarino wine
The festival takes place on the first weekend in May in the town of Ribadavia
among medieval streets and the ruins of an old castle
Wineries throughout the region are represented at the festival with their own stalls
alongside live cooking demonstrations and wine workshops
The event also brings all of Galicia’s favourite treats together
Glass of Ribiero white wine | Max Pixel
Santigao Tapas Competition If you want to try many of Galicia’s delicacies in one festival, then make your way to the Concurso de Tapas de Santiago de Compostela, which takes place in the city of Santiago de Compostela in November
various bars and restaurants around the city create a special tapas dish
and you can follow routes around the city to taste them all
Over a quarter of a million plates of tapas are eaten during the competition
to discover who has made the best of the year
If you click on a link in this story
All recommendations have been independently sourced by Culture Trip
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Stanley McChrystal and comedian Conan O'Brien
will be among the featured speakers at the Bohemian Grove encampment of rich and powerful men under the redwoods in Monte Rio
Up to 2,500 Bohemian Club members and their guests will attend the all-male encampment that opened Thursday and runs through July 28
all in complete secrecy behind the gates of the San Francisco-based club's 2,700-acre enclave along the Russian River
the conveyance for some of the plutocrats and powerbrokers
the former commander of American forces in Afghanistan
will discuss "On Leadership" in one of the daily talks presented beside a small lake ringed by towering redwoods
Failure in Surviving the Media Revolution" — sounds a bit more serious than his patter on the NBC show or his current show
Also in the lineup for the Lakeside Talks are Paul Otellini
speaking on "What My Life in Tech Taught Me"; Stanford University President John Hennessey ("The Coming Tsunami of Online Education"); and Jorge Quiroga
president of Bolivia ("South America After Chavez," referring to Hugo Chavez
the socialist president of Venezuela who died in March)
political commentator and former presidential adviser; Chris Matthews
political talk show host; and William Reilly
former Environmental Protection Agency administrator
The Lakeside Talks — which in the past have featured the likes of Henry Kissinger and George H.W
who in 1995 introduced his son George to the august crowd — were the object of protests launched by the Bohemian Grove Action Network in 1980
Critics say they resent the midsummer frolics by the titans of the military-industrial complex
and fringe elements allege the Bohemians engage in satanic worship
Club officials say its more like a group of guys "out in the woods having a good time."
The Bohemians inhabit 119 camps among the redwoods
a cluster of cabins and tents for sleeping
typically featuring a speciality drink made with the finest alcohol
had scaled back her involvement in 2001 but re-engaged last summer to stage a protest in conjunction with the Occupy movement
is now fuming over what she considers another group's infringement on her organizations's name
referring to plans by a group called Bohemian Grove Action and Resistance for a daylong protest at the grove gates on Saturday
Sean Ackley of Brentwood posted notices online saying
"Let us descend of (sic) Bohemian Grove and keep up the pressure so they know we have not forgot."
Moore said she's getting calls from people who think she's involved
and she's further annoyed by Ackley's posting that says "the original BGAN group" will show up at the grove on July 20
helped set up the Bohemian Grove Action Network's Facebook page
a Republican with conservative tea party sentiments
Bohemian Grove Action and Resistance is the name of his Facebook page
and Ackley said he felt he was cooperating with Moore's group
Told that Moore has no plans for a July 20 action
Ackley said his group will hand out fliers and use bullhorns to talk to people arriving at the grove on Saturday
The protesters have no plans to engage in civil disobedience or get arrested
said the club "supports people's right to protest and they hope the protesters respect the rights of the members of the club to peacefully assemble at the grove."
The club remains "exceptionally popular and relevant" and has a 20-year waiting list for prospective new members
You can reach Staff Writer Guy Kovner at 521-5457 or guy.kovner@pressdemocrat.com
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Dennis O’Neill of Shrine of All Saints in Morton Grove could be a relic of St
| Tom Higham and Georges Kazan / Oxford University
Santa Claus is coming to town? It turns out that his ancient inspiration — St. Nicholas — might already be here, in Morton Grove, based on new findings from researchers at Oxford University.
The north suburb’s Shrine of All Saints includes thousands of saintly “relics” — bits of bone and locks of hair, as well as objects once owned or used by religious figures, such as clothing — on display for the curious and the faithful.
Several bone fragments said to have come from Jolly Old St. Nick himself are among the relics, which were collected over decades by the Rev. Dennis O’Neill, rector of the shrine and pastor of its home church
hoping to determine whether they might be genuine
who with Georges Kazan directs the Oxford Relics Cluster at Keble College’s Advanced Studies Centre
Now — the week of the St. Nicholas feast day — the researchers in England have released their findings that radiocarbon dating of the piece of pelvis suggests O’Neill could indeed have a little bit of St
“The radiocarbon dating results pinpoint the relic’s age to the fourth century AD — the time that some historians allege that St
Tom Higham, an Oxford researcher, said in a written statement: “Many relics that we study turn out to date to a period somewhat later than the historic attestation would suggest
suggests that we could possibly be looking at remains from St
who’s been collecting religious relics since he was a teenager on the South Side
founder of the Shrine of All Saints in Morton Grove
As is the story of how St. Nick’s bones ended up dispersed in the first place. In the centuries after he died, his “tomb in Myra became a popular place of pilgrimage,” according to the St. Nicholas Center in Holland, Mich. “Because of the many wars and attacks in the region
some Christians were concerned that access to the tomb might become difficult
“For both the religious and commercial advantages of a major pilgrimage site
the Italian cities of Venice and Bari vied to get the Nicholas relics
sailors from Bari succeeded in spiriting away the bones
“An impressive church was built over St. Nicholas’ crypt, and many faithful journeyed to honor the saint who had rescued children
generosity and the countless miracles attributed to his intercession.”
He said he bought them a decade or so ago from a collector who said “they came from a convent in southern France.”
The Oxford tests are the first on bones believed to be from St
the Bari collection does not include the saint’s full pelvis
only the left ilium (from the upper part of the bone),” according to Oxford
Nicholas “relic is from the left pubis (the lower part of the bone)
this suggests that both bone fragments could be from the same person.”
Georges Kazan, another Oxford researcher
said in an interview the hope now is to test the Bari and Venice bones
match them against the one from Morton Grove and see whether they all came from the same person
Kazan said it’s exciting to think such relics could be “genuine.”
“The relics held in Venice consist of as many as 500 bone fragments
which an anatomical study concluded were complementary to the Bari collection
suggesting that both sets of relics could originate from the same individual
It remains to be confirmed what fragments of the pelvis are contained amongst the Venice relics
There are items associated with nearly 1,800 Christian saints at the Morton Grove shrine
including bones said to have belonged to Jesus’ apostle St
which the Oxford team wants to test at some point
Relics, though, have a controversial history. Kazan has written: “Many Christians saw relics as earthly repositories of God’s Holy Spirit
They became invaluable commodities and symbols of status
the trade in relics was seen as the embodiment of the worst excesses of superstition and cynicism.”
O’Neill said relics still hold purpose
including helping people better understand and model holy people of the past
and providing a different way of connecting to God
O’Neill knows that some of his relics might not be authentic
either misidentified over the years or forged
relics have played a role in Eastern Orthodox
Catholic and even some Protestant traditions
Strands of hair from Mother Teresa at Shrine of All Saints
Nicholas was known for his generosity and care of children
though he didn’t fully “evolve” into Santa Claus until more than 1,000 years after his death
there was a “poor man with three daughters” but no dowry — money to give to suitors
they were “destined to be sold into slavery.“Mysteriously
a bag of gold appeared in their home providing the needed dowries
“are said to have landed in stockings or shoes left before the fire to dry.”
That was “the beginning of the link between him and Santa Claus,” O’Neill said
Among the more contemporary relics at O’Neill’s shrine: a piece of clothing that once belonged to Edith Stein, a nun killed in the Holocaust, and strands of hair from Mother Teresa, the nun who tended to the poor in India and was recognized in 2016 as a saint
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Located in the southern portion of Yosemite
the Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias is the largest sequoia grove in Yosemite and is home to over 500 mature giant sequoias
The national park idea is rooted in the Mariposa Grove
In 1864 President Lincoln signed legislation protecting the Mariposa Grove and Yosemite Valley for "public use
and recreation." This landmark legislation holds an important place in our country's history and was enacted at a time when the nation was embroiled in the Civil War
For the first time in our nation's history
the federal government set aside scenic natural areas to be protected for the benefit of future generations
Later added to Yosemite National Park in 1906
the Mariposa Grove is a popular destination within the park
The Mariposa Grove closed in spring 2015 for a large-scale restoration project that was formalized through the Mariposa Grove Restoration Project Final Environmental Impact Statement
The two primary goals of this project were to improve giant sequoia habitat and improve visitor experience
This included addressing the declining conditions of the grove and nearby South Entrance that were adversely affecting the ecological health of the sequoias (e.g.
trails and other buildings encroaching on roots of the ancient trees
the Mariposa Grove was designed to accommodate a certain number of people in order to maintain the facilities
We are carefully monitoring the grove to evaluate how the new services are operating
A free shuttle provides service from the Mariposa Grove Welcome Plaza
The welcome plaza has about 300 parking spaces and may fill up by late morning
Arrive by mid-morning to increase chances of finding a place to park
Dates are subject to change according to weather and road conditions
shuttle service will begin no earlier than April 15 (possibly later)
and will close on or before November 30 (depending on conditions)
Late May (tentatively) through September 24: 8 am to 7 pm (last bus leaves Mariposa Grove at 8 pm)
September 25 through November 1: Weather permitting
8 am to 5:30 pm (last bus leaves Mariposa Grove at 5:00 pm)
November 1 through November 30: Weather permitting
8 am to 3:30 pm (last bus leaves Mariposa Grove at 5:00 pm)
December 1 through (at least) April 15: No shuttle service available
When the Mariposa Grove Road is open (approximately mid-April through November)
it is only open to vehicles displaying a disability placard
The road is open to near the Grizzly Giant (including the trailhead and arrival area)
Access to Mariposa Grove is via a two-mile hike (each way) on the Washburn Trail or the Mariposa Grove Road (each has approximately 500 feet in elevation gain)
Several miles of trails are available in the grove from that point
The Grand Tour is an eight-hour tour operated by our park concessioner
Glacier Point and the Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias
Ranger-led programs may be available on a limited basis; check local listings for dates
Part of this restoration project focused on creating new trail systems that allowed for accessibility and overall visitor access
while protecting the sequoia ecosystem and promoting ecological health
While the Mariposa Grove Road closes to cars from the end of November until at least April 1
all trails in the grove remain open in the winter for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing
Access to Mariposa Grove when the road is closed is via a two-mile hike (each way) on the Washburn Trail or the Mariposa Grove Road (each have approximately 500 feet in elevation gain)
Overnight camping is allowed in the Mariposa Grove from December 1 through April 15 if the Mariposa Grove Road is closed cars and there is enough snow for skiing. A wilderness permit is required to camp
and camping is only allowed above the Clothespin Tree
Water is available at the welcome plaza only and vault toilets are available in the Mariposa Grove at the arrival area
Reservations are required for all commercial carriers with vehicle capacity of 16 or more arriving to the Mariposa Grove. Commercial parking reservations are only available to commercial operators having a commercial use authorization (CUA) from Yosemite National Park
Schools planning to visit the Mariposa Grove by bus should email the Educational Fee Waiver Office for parking information and do not need to make advanced reservations online
Download the NPS app to navigate the parks on the go