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Sheffield council byelection result shows talk of Lib Dems' demise may be premature

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Liberal Democrat candidate romps home in Fulwood byelection to bolster Nick Clegg's chances of retaining Hallam in general election

The Liberal Democrats may have had mixed electoral fortunes across the country, but in a crucial council byelection in the Sheffield suburb of Fulwood the party's performance was more assured.

Fulwood is the quintessential 'leafy suburb' and lies right in the heart of the Sheffield Hallam constituency of the deputy prime minister and Lib Dem Leader Nick Clegg.

A third of families here live in detached houses; nearly a fifth of these have five or more bedrooms (the national average is less than 5%). This is not, it is fair to say, the Sheffield of The Full Monty.

Despite spirited campaigns by both Labour and the Conservatives, the seat remained solidly Lib Dem on Thursday night. Cliff Woodcroft, a 63-year-old community campaigner who lives in the ward, cruised to a comfortable victory, gaining 1,400 more votes than Labour's Olivia Blake, who leapfrogged the Tories' Vonny Watts into second place.

The Lib Dems actually gained about 400 more votes than their 2012 total, on a virtually identical turnout. No-one will be more relieved by this impressive win than Clegg. Since he held his Sheffield Hallam seat in the balmy days of 2010 with a comfortable 15,000 majority, he has faced a torrid time locally.

First came the formation of the coalition in a city that remains overwhelmingly red, politically. Then there was the government's fateful decision to rescind a loan guarantee to Sheffield Forgemasters followed by Clegg's decision to renounce his manifesto commitment and vote to increase university tuition fees to £9,000 a year.

In a seat with a huge student population, a visit to Clegg's constituency office became a rite of passage for student protestors, while the Forgemasters decision rekindled raw memories from the 1980s about industrial areas being left high and dry.

Then in 2011, the Lib Dems lost control of the council, fuelling speculation that Clegg may have to vacate Sheffield and look elsewhere for a seat.
However, the result in Fulwood shows the Lib Dems retain a highly resilient campaign machine and the chances of a "Portillo moment" at the next general election are receding.

So much so that on Thursday Clegg advertised for a new parliamentary assistant and has recently recruited a well-regarded activist as his local press secretary. He looks like a man hunkering down for a fight.

Labour last week began its process to find a candidate to stand against Clegg in 2015. Despite fighting talk that a good campaign focusing on Clegg's "betrayal" could unseat the Lib Dem Leader, the result in Fulwood offers a psephological clue that rumours of the party's political demise in their northern redoubts like Sheffield may be exaggerated.

* *Kevin Meagher* (@KevinPMeagher) is an associate editor of Labour Uncut, a contributor to Left Foot Forward, and a communications consultant Reported by guardian.co.uk 3 hours ago.

Barrow Docket Book for April 26-28, 2013

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Barrow Docket Book for April 26-28, 2013 Patch Barrow, GA --

The following individuals were arrested and booked into the Barrow County Detention Center from April 26 through 28, 2013.

· Betty Jane Bowles, 69, 115 Chateau Terrace, Apt. 1, Athens, charged with deposit account fraud/bad checks $499 or less
· John Douglas Brannen, 32, 148 W. Midland Ave., Winder, charged with battery (family violence, first offense) and criminal trespass
· Megan Leanne Clark, 19, 209 Wood Ave., Winder, charged with theft by shoplifting
· William Kevin Cody, 36, 1866 Whitley Road, Bethlehem, charged with disorderly conduct
· Austin Dale Cronic, 20, 1427 Wyndham Way, Bethlehem, charged with obstruction or hindering law enforcement and disorderly conduct
· Jeffery Allen Crumbley, 47, 124 Griffith St., Winder, hold for Madison County
· Jessica Daniel, 18, 643 Carl-Bethlehem Road, Winder, charged with obstruction or hindering law enforcement and disorderly conduct
· Breana Paulette Deal, 20, 408 Laythan Court, Winder, charged with theft by shoplifting and six counts theft by deception
· April Ann Denny, 31, 111 Logan Court, Statham, charged with simple battery (family violence) and criminal trespass (family violence)
· Deidra Ashley Dove, 33, 1772 Miller Springs, Bethlehem, charged with hut and run/duty of driver to stop at or return to scene of accident, following too closely and driving while license withdrawn
· Olivia Monroe Eslick, 20, 1127 Loganville Highway, Bethlehem, charged with theft by shoplifting
· Timothy Henry Ferguson, 28, 62 Main St., Lot 23, Auburn, charged with possession of methamphetamine
· Barry Alan Ford, 29, 635 Chicken Lyle Road, Winder, charged with two counts probation violation
· Michael Jasaton Harvey, 21, 101 King St., Winder, charged with two counts probation violation and two counts obstruction or hindering law enforcement
· Alan Maurice Hogan, 26, 264 Wood Ave., Apt. A, Winder, charged with disorderly conduct and obstruction or hindering law enforcement
· Devin Sanchez Jackson, 22, 426 N. Ridge Lane, Winder, charged with three counts probation violation, sale of marijuana within 1,000 feet of government housing, sale of marijuana, willful obstruction of law enforcement officers by use of threats — felony, illegal possession of controlled substance, possession and use of drug-related objects, three counts prescription drugs must be in their original container, unlawful to possess, control, manufacture, deliver, distribute, dispense, purchase, sell, etc., two counts possession of a schedule I or II controlled substance with intent to distribute and manufacture, deliver, distribute, administer, sell, possess with intent to distribute controlled substance
· Jodie Brooke Johnson, 21, 2060 Broad St., Statham, charged with obstruction or hindering law enforcement
· Kenwin Shurmar Johnson, 30, 759 Tanners Bridge Circle, Bethlehem, charged with probation violation
· Christopher Allen Knight, 27, 7 Picklesimon Road, Winder, charged with failure to maintain lane, failure to maintain insurance, possession of a schedule II controlled substance, DUI — alcohol and possession of open alcohol container
· Kayla Tiara Martin, 20, 253 Glen Ave., Apt. 32, Winder, charged with disorderly conduct
· Walter F. McCarty, 56, 116 Griffith St., Winder, charged with illegal possession of controlled substance and expired or no license plates or decal
· Candice Nicole McClung, 21, 50 Nunnally Road N.E., Winder, charged with obstruction or hindering law enforcement and unauthorized distribution of controlled substance, use of fictitious number, etc.
· Donna Elaine McDaniel, 44, 463 A Carl Bethlehem Road, Bethlehem, charged with probation violation and obstruction or hindering law enforcement
· Ashley Vera Dee Miller, 26, 1469 Harmony Grove Church Road, Auburn, charged with theft by shoplifting
· Randall David Millwood, 50, 38 Montgomery St., Savannah, charged with failure to appear
· Dustin Lawrence Moon, 31, 880 Christmas Ave., Bethlehem, charged with obstruction or hindering law enforcement and marijuana — possess less than 1 ounce
· Tracy Caroline Parris, 39, 6307 Laurel Wood Trail, Flowery Branch, charged with destruction, removal, concealment, encumbrance, transfer, etc., in regard to security interest
· Kyle Spencer Patrick, 22, 4427 Trestle Way, Buford, charged with probation violation
· Anthony Bernard Pope, 50, 200 Wood Ave., Winder, charged with failure to appear
· Joseph Renardo Pope, 30, 420 Greystone Drive, Winder, charged with giving false name, address or birth date to law enforcement officer, obstruction or hindering law enforcement and marijuana — possess less than 1 ounce
· Robert Harrell Smith, 26, 918 Park Place, Loganville, charged with theft by shoplifting
· Erica Micki Sprague, 25, 1231 Dale Drive, Monroe, charged with probation violation
· Austin Bishop Trimble, 24, 88 Cypress Place, Winder, charged with robbery
· Robert Nick Warbington, 26, 137 Raymond Drive, Winder, charged with robbery

You might also be interested in reading:

· Barrow Docket Book for April 22-25, 2013
· Barrow Docket Book for April 19-21, 2013
· Barrow Docket Book for April 15-18, 2013
· Barrow Docket Book for April 12-14, 2013
· Barrow Docket Book for April 8-11, 2013

Subscribe to Barrow Patch’s newsletters, follow us on Twitter and “like” us on Facebook. Reported by Patch 1 hour ago.

Olivia Palermo doesn't break beauty rules

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Olivia Palermo doesn't like to break beauty rules.The style icon has a very strict skincare regime and doesn't let herself deviate from it, claiming... Reported by ContactMusic 1 day ago.

'Scandal': Fitz Finally Chooses Between Mellie And Olivia

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The First Lady gave Fitz an ultimatum on "Scandal" this week. He needed to choose his wife or his mistress, Olivia. She gave him 36 hours to make his decision. And as that clock ran out, he made a very bold statement to drive home his choice. He spent those last moments of Mellie's ultimatum with Olivia.

We’re gonna sit here, and the clock of my marriage is going to run out," Fitz told her. "You’re going to sit here with me and watch me choose you.”

But it was more than just choosing Olivia over Mellie. His wife told him that if he chose Olivia, she would go straight to the media and spill the beans all about his affair, which could destroy his political future -- and present. Still, he chose Olivia.

And Mellie proved true to her word, wasting not a single minute after her deadline before she went public.

Entertainment Weekly was glad to see Fitz's bold gesture, describing it as "sweet, mellow, and exactly the gesture that he needed to make to Olivia to get her to even consider being back with him.”

This wild ride is only going to get wilder with two episodes left in the season. Stick around to see where "Scandal" goes from here, Thursdays at 10 p.m. ET on ABC.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser. Reported by Huffington Post 1 day ago.

Scandal Scoop: Bellamy Young Teases What's Next For Mellie, Fitz and Olivia After the First Lady's Shocking Move!

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We can't wait to see Olivia (Kerry Washington) handle this one. Thursday night's episode of Scandal once again left us with our jaws on the floor and bowing to Shonda Rhimes'... Reported by E! Online 17 hours ago.

Get a Sneak Peek at the Major Drama on the 'Jerseylicious' Season Five Finale!

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Get a Sneak Peek at the Major Drama on the 'Jerseylicious' Season Five Finale! Hide the scissors! It's the season five finale of Jerseylicious this Sunday and it's packed with hair, high fashion and lots of drama.

*Olivia Blois-Sharpe* gets her chance to shine as an on-air commentator at the fashion show she helped plan.

Too bad the cat fights are overshadowing the catwalk. Tension remains high between *Tracy DiMarco* and *Gigi Liscio*. But it's Gigi's ex-boyfriend *Frankie Buglione* that brings her to tears.

*OK! News: Tracy DiMarco Discusses the Season Five Finale of Jerseylicous*

Gigi literally gasps when Frankie shows up at the event with his new girlfriend *Brooklyn*. "Get the hell out of here!" says Gigi when she spots the two. "I need a Xanax."

And a tissue. Meanwhile, Olivia rushes right over to Frankie and Brooklyn to give them kisses and to say hello.

When Gigi asks Olivia if she invited them, Olivia explains they knew about the party so she told them they could attend. "I'm just, like, taken off guard, that's all," Gigi cries.

*OK! News: Find Out How Jerseylicious Star Gayle Giacomo Keeps Her Staff in Line*

Little did Gigi know that she was about to really be blindsided. On her way out the event she runs into Tracy. "I'm leaving but I really don't have time for your childish texts, so I just want to clear the air and just say thank you," Gigi tells her nemesis.

"For what?" asks Tracy.

"Because you sent me a text message," answers Gigi.

"Exactly. And you didn't respond, which was super mature. You're so irrelevant to me it doesn't even matter," Tracy fires back. "Your existence is completely pointless to me."

*Watch: See Amanda Bynes Talk Drugs, Rehab and Lindsay Lohan in a Re-Discovered Interview*

But emotions boil over when talk turns to another of Gigi's ex-boyfriends, *Carmine Gianna*.

"So taking pictures with an ex-boyfriend and giving me the finger…I'm really not on your mind?" asks Gigi.

"Why the f**k are you crying over Frankie if all you care about is Carmine?" snipes Tracy.

"I want Carmine?" asks an incredulous Gigi.

Olivia steps in to try to get Tracy to stand down. "Relax, she had a hard day, okay! Don't attack her in an emotional way like that. That's not right, Tracy!"

Find out how—or even if—the drama all ends when the finale airs this Sunday, May 5 at 8/7c on Style!

*Be sure to tell us your favorite part of the show in the comments section below or on Twitter @OKMagazine*

Photo credit: 
Style Reported by OK! Magazine 12 hours ago.

'Nothing Is The Same'

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The May 2 episode of "Scandal," titled "A Woman Scorned," gave new meaning to the words "game-changer" -- not only did we witness Fitz (Tony Goldwyn) choosing his relationship with Olivia (Kerry Washington) over his marriage to Mellie (Bellamy Young), but in retaliation, Mellie went live on national television to reveal that her husband was having an affair.

So where do our troubled characters go from here? In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, creator Shonda Rhimes admitted, "Fitz's declaration also changed the fabric of the show as well. Everything is turned on its end at the end of Thursday's episode. And next week, nothing is the same."

Still, Olivia challenged Fitz to "earn" her in Thursday's episode, and his decision to sit and watch her watch him as the clock on Mellie's ultimatum ran out certainly seemed to put the dysfunctional couple back on the same page -- but can they maintain a relationship with the eyes of the world upon Fitz?

"Those two characters believe that they can actually be together," Rhimes told TVGuide.com. "Whether or not the forces around them are actually going to let that happen is an entirely different story. Whether Olivia's responsible fixer side is going to allow that to happen is an entirely different story."

Both characters have their share of dirty laundry, too; Fitz still hasn't told Olivia that he killed Verna (Debra Mooney) and Olivia's seemingly in no hurry to admit that she slept with Jake (Scott Foley), who is old friends with Fitz but also a part of the mysterious B-613 program that created killers like Huck (Guillermo Diaz) and Charlie (George Newbern).

"Jake is a very is very interesting character who has some people rooting for him, some people think he's a good guy, some people think he's a bad guy, nobody knows for sure what's going on there," Rhimes told THR. "As we head into the finale, you're going to start to discover more of what that's about."

We'll also see genre favorite John Barrowman in the penultimate episode of the season (titled "Any Questions?"), and Rhimes told THR and TV Guide that he'll be playing a fellow fixer with "a very surprising client."

The identity of the mole is still in question, and Rhimes told THR that the cast was "freaking out" when they discovered the truth -- but there's more to that mystery than we might think: "It's not just who the mole is, it's who the mole is working with and what's going on there that's even bigger than just who the mole is. We're really proud of who the mole is, that's a pretty surprising twist but it's even bigger than that."

*For more on the final two episodes of "Scandal" Season 2, click over to TV Guide and THR. *

"Scandal" airs Thursdays at 10 p.m. ET on ABC. Reported by Huffington Post 11 hours ago.

I'm So Excited, The Eye Of The Storm, Gimme The Loot: what to see at the cinema this week

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I'm So Excited | The Eye Of The Storm | Gimme The Loot | Robosapien | Come Out And Play | Shootout At Wadala | 21 & Over | Dead Man Down | Dragon | Chimpanzee | It's Such A Beautiful Day | All Stars

**I'm So Excited** (15) *
*(Pedro Almodóvar, 2012, Spa) Javier Cámara, Raúl Arévalo, Carlos Areces. 90 mins**

Almodóvar responds to his country's economic woes with camp hysteria and Carry On humour. In many ways this airborne disaster farce – anarchic, absurdist, garishly stylish and gleefully debauched – is a return to the Spanish auteur's subversive roots. But there's a serious subtext to the silliness, and the metaphors are brought back down to earth for a satisfying landing.

**The Eye Of The Storm* (15)
(Fred Schepisi, 2011, Aus) Charlotte Rampling, Geoffrey Rush, Judy Davis. 119 mins*

The imminent death of Rampling's matriarch throws an aristocratic family's dysfunction into relief in this Aussie drama, whose overstuffed story is redeemed by three watchable leads.

**Gimme The Loot* (15)
(Adam Leon, 2012, US) Tashiana Washington, Ty Hickson. 79 mins*

Bronx graffiti taggers eye the ultimate target in this relaxed drama, with lovable characters and spot-on comedy to recommend.

**Robosapien* (PG)
(Sean McNamara, 2013, US) Jae Head, Penelope Ann Miller, Bobby Coleman. 86 mins*

Formulaic kids' flick designed to market a toy.

**Come Out And Play** *(18)
(Makinov, 2012, Mex) Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Daniel Giménez Cacho. 85 mins*

A couple stumble across some adult-slaying children on a Mexican island, and live to regret it. Or will they?

**Shootout At Wadala* (18)
(Sanjay Gupta, 2013, Ind) John Abraham, Kangna Ranaut. 155 mins*

Mumbai cops v gangsters in a fact-based Indian crime thriller.

**21 & Over* (15)
(Jon Lucas, Scott Moore, 2013, US) Miles Teller, Skylar Astin, Justin Chon. 93 mins*

The Hangover writers try (and fail) to pull a similar trick with a younger demographic, as two fratboys strive to get their comatose buddy home.

**Dead Man Down* (15)
(Niels Arden Oplev, 2013, US) Colin Farrell, Noomi Rapace. 118 mins*

The Dragon Tattoo director comes to Hollywood with an oddly meandering but sporadically stirring thriller, centred on Farrell and Rapace's perilous mutual revenge plan.

**Dragon* (15)
(Peter Chan, 2011, HK/Chi) Donnie Yen, Takeshi Kaneshiro. 98 mins*

A villager's violent past comes to light in this distinctly Chinese variation on A History Of Violence, a mix of detective thriller and kung-fu action.

**Chimpanzee* (U)
(Alastair Fothergill, Mark Linfield, 2012, US/Tan) 78 mins*

Incredible footage of chimps in the wild clashes with Tim Allen's child-friendly narration, making for a Disney doc that plays more like a Disney cartoon.

**It's Such A Beautiful Day* (NC)
(Don Hertzfeldt, 2012, US) 62 mins*

Stick-figure animation and everyday anxiety characterise Hertzfeldt's uniquely inventive, poignantly witty universe. It's a great place to visit.

**All Stars* (U)
(Ben Gregor, 2013, UK) Theo Stevenson, Akai Osei-Mansfield, Ashley Jensen. 106 mins*

More musical antics from the makers of Streetdance, aimed at viewers too young to know how corny the "let's put on a show" plot is.

*Out from Friday*

*Star Trek Into Darkness*

The crew of the Enterprise get a load of Benedict Cumberbatch.

Out from Thu

*Mud*

Matthew McConaughey plays a child-friendly fugitive.

*Dead Fall*

Eric Bana and Olivia Wilde are on the run.

*The Reluctant Fundamentalist *

Riz Ahmed plays an aspirant Pakistani whose life is changed by 9/11.

*A Hijacking*

Somali pirates create a situation in this tense Danish thriller.

*Our Children*

Tahar Rahim and Emilie Duquenne lead a French family tragedy.

*Vehicle 19*

The wrong choice of rental car sets up a South African chase movie.

*Village At The End Of The World*

Greetings from Niaqornat, north-west Greenland, population: 59.

*Go Goa Gone*

Zombies crash the party in this Indian horror comedy.

*Journey To Italy*

Reissue for Rossellini's 1954 drama, AKA Viaggio In Italia.

*Coming soon*

*In two weeks … *Baz Luhrmann unveils *The Great Gatsby *… More Vin Diesel muscle cars in *Fast And Furious 6 *…

*In three weeks …* The "wolfpack" are back on the loose in *The Hangover Part III *… A fantasy clash of forest-dwellers in animation *Epic *…

*In a month …* Neil Jordan returns to vampirism in *Byzantium *… Robert De Niro smartens up for *The Big Wedding *… Reported by guardian.co.uk 7 hours ago.

I didn't mind my husband's affairs – till he fell in love with another woman

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Olivia Fane and her first husband had an arrangement that allowed them both to stray, but within limits. It worked for years – but then he wanted to change the rules ...

When I was a girl of 13, my mother said, "Darling, I want to give you some sound advice. You must be a virgin on your wedding night. No man likes soiled goods. But after you've had your children and providing you are totally discreet, you may take lovers."

Doubtless her own mother had said the same to her; and I only learned recently that at the end of the war my grandfather had stayed on in Durban three months longer than was strictly necessary. Everyone knew that the reason was "a woman". No one raged, no one even mentioned it. When he came home, my grandparents continued to have many happy years together, as though there had barely been an interruption.

When I was a teenager, this division of love from sex made perfect sense. For me, sex was fundamentally shallow. It was about lust, greed, the desire for possession. It was about appearances. It was about bottoms and hair and legs. It was about a Mick Jagger mouth. It was about wanting to be touched down there by someone who was really, really good looking. In fact, I was always faintly contemptuous of sex.

Love, meanwhile, was everything to me. If sex was about taking, love was about giving. While sex was possessive and turned a person into an object-body, love was generous. Love was about saying, "I trust you, and I give my very soul to you. I want you to know me, every part of me, and I want to know you, every part of you."

Of course, I had never read Freud. I had no knowledge of the primacy of the genital relationship and how, if you get that right, everything else follows. Nor did I know anything about the modern orthodoxy that sex has to be sewn into the relationship right from the beginning for it to be a successful one. Instead, being a classicist, my influences were Plato and Aristotle, both of whom, I was delighted to read, had as low an opinion of sex as myself. For Plato, sex sat on the lowest rung of the ladder, while truth sat on the highest.

Aristotle was even more dismissive. Human beings shared a sex drive with animals. Sex was about biology, reproduction, and equivalent to a desire for food. Far more interesting, according to Aristotle, was the fact that human beings were intelligent and creative.

So when I met my first boyfriend, who became my first husband, I was delighted to discover that his family history in some strange way mirrored my own. At school I had found nobody to agree with me at all. When I had argued that the phrase "making love" in its modern sense was a lie – in that it was impossible to experience love and desire simultaneously – everyone looked at me pityingly. What a relief it was, therefore, to marry into a family who seemed to have lived out my entire philosophy of love and sex for generations.

One of the reasons people object to infidelity so much is that they see it as a betrayal of trust. But trust is not an absolute. There is a context to it. My wedding vow might have been: "I trust you to love me, confide in me, have no secrets from me, and I shall have none from you."

We wrote ourselves a marriage contract. Our marriage would always come first, would always win. My husband was a travel writer and away for months at a time. I had been brought up to believe that most red-blooded husbands were unfaithful to their wives anyway, particularly during conferences abroad, so wasn't it both wise and reasonable to allow him one affair a year, provided his lover didn't live in England, that it didn't last more than a fortnight and he sought my permission first?

And as I didn't travel, wasn't it reasonable that I should be allowed 10 snogs a year and one full-blooded affair, lasting no longer than a fortnight and taking place within the London borough of Stoke Newington?

I loved my marriage. I adored my husband. He was the cleverest, wittiest man I had ever met. When he wasn't abroad, he worked at home. I looked forward to every meal I had with him, every conversation. A poet friend of ours used to say about our marriage that it had "grammar", whatever that meant. He said it in a serious, impressed sort of way. I enjoyed the fact that my marriage had grammar. My husband was my life.

I have in my attic a little red suitcase containing the 150 love letters he wrote to me over the course of our marriage. The last one in particular was poignant, written in Romania after the fall of Ceaucescu and communism. By then we had three small sons. The letter was a long one. He loved us all so much, he was missing us so much, he had seen such terrible things, that sort of thing.

But what are words? I've instinctively distrusted writers ever since, they and their pretty words. A month later he was in love with someone else.

He rang me from a skiing holiday, full of astonishment and praise. We talked a little. I was so happy. Then he said, "By the way, do you mind if I sleep with X? The trouble is, she lives in London."

"Just once, just once," I enthused, generously.

I'm afraid there remains a part of me as contemptuous of this "falling in love" business as I had been about sex as a teenager. What is falling in love all about? Even when he told me about it, well, we'd been there before. Falling in love = fancying someone rotten and wanting to sleep with them. By then – eight years into our marriage – I knew how history gives a relationship ballast. How can mere fantasy even rival intimacy? Yet fantasy is obsessive. It involves thinking about someone day and night. And that, I knew, was what he was doing. For the first time in our marriage, I understood I was losing him. Even when he looked at me, he was no longer there.

Our last weekend together was a travesty. We were on holiday in the Italian Alps, purportedly to mend our marriage. On the first night as we lay there in our bed trying to snuggle up together, water began to fall on us from the ceiling. The bathroom above us had flooded. The hotel was full, and the only place they could find a space for a bed was in a corner of the dining-room. The next morning we sat up to watch the breakfasters. It was the sort of surreal situation we'd have so enjoyed at any other time. But we could barely react, and lay there glum.

Eventually, we managed to set out for our walk. We were wearing ordinary walking boots and anoraks, but it was colder than we'd been expecting. Higher and higher we went, leaving the trees behind us, clambering up ice and rocks, trudging through snow. We barely exchanged a word. It was growing dark and on we climbed. At last we found a refuge, but we couldn't reach it because the rocks surrounding it had become too icy and we couldn't get a grip. I was so cold and tired and miserable that my only wish was to curl up in a ball to die. When my husband saw what was happening to me he suddenly took charge. He took my hand and said, "Come with me." By now it was pitch black. I just let him guide me. An hour and a half later, we reached another refuge and here I am to tell the tale. He saved my life on the same day as he left me. 

To be so close to a person for 12 years and then to lose him has been, without doubt, the most painful experience of my life. The trouble is that when you give your very soul to someone it takes a long time to retrieve it. I found myself phoning my oldest school friends, who'd known me long before I married. I wanted to say, remind me who I am, take me back to my old unwounded self. But everything seemed so empty, so devoid of meaning. Divorce is worse, I think, than bereavement. If he had died, I would have a memory and honour it. But he was only dead to me: he was absolutely alive to someone else.

The trouble with love is that though it's the riskiest thing you can do, though it brings in its wake the greatest pain imaginable, it's also the richest. Three years later, I married again, and we're about to celebrate our 20th wedding anniversary. If anything, I value being close to someone even more second time round. It's only when you lose it that you understand how precious the much-maligned nuclear family is. To have a second chance at playing those old-fashioned roles (we have two sons of our own), to play my female part in the most traditional of marriages, has been the luckiest thing that has ever happened to me.

Nowadays, I don't even get to have a single snog a year with someone else, which seemed quite hard when he first told me he wouldn't tolerate it. Yet though we're faithful to each other, I'm pleased that, like me, he rates souls above bodies and shuns the modern orthodoxy of sex being deep and meaningful. We are merely lusty, and when we're old and give up sex, a big so what. We have just as much fun reading plays together, and who knows, I might even start singing when he plays his violin.

"With this body I thee worship", is what we say if we marry in church. We also become "one flesh". As I get older, these words resonate more and more. My husband's body is mine, my body is his. Somehow, I like that.

• The Conversations: 66 Reasons to Start Talking by Olivia Fane is published by Square Peg, £15.99. To order a copy for £12.79, with free UK p&p, go to guardian.co.uk/bookshop or call 0330 333 6846 Reported by guardian.co.uk 6 hours ago.

River Dell Girls Track Team Runs the Penn Relays

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River Dell Girls Track Team Runs the Penn Relays Patch River Dell, NJ --

The River Dell Girls Track Team ran the prestigious Penn Relays last Thursday.  

The Penn Relays is the oldest and largest track and field competition in the United States, hosted annually since April 21, 1895 by the University of Pennsylvania at Franklin Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 

The 4x100 placed 1st in their heat. Although they did not place, the 4x400 and 4x800 ran well. According to the girls, it was an amazing day watching athletes compete from all over the world.

Kristen Choo, Maddie Bonivita, Paige Fernandez, Emily Croonquist ran the 4x800 relay.
Marina Reilly, Jamie Woods, Erin Hughes, Olivia Schuster ran the 4x100 relay.
Noreen Bryne, Melissa Gibbons, Paige Fernandez, Nicole Burrowes ran the 4x400 relay.

The team had the opportunity to meet some of the members of the Kenya Olympic Team. 

Fernandez has worked with Hope 2 Kenya, a non-profit that raises money to purchase malaria medicine for residents of Kenya. 

The girls said that they are going to send a picture of the team wearing their Hope 2 Kenya t-shirts and send it to the Kenyan team. 

*Follow RiverDell Patch on Facebook and Twitter;  Click here to sign-up for our daily newsletter and get local news like this delivered to your in-box. * Reported by Patch 2 hours ago.

Miss Lincolnshire Olivia Landin to judge Miss England qualifying heat

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Miss Lincolnshire Olivia Landin to judge Miss England qualifying heat This is Lincolnshire -- The winner of this year's Miss Lincolnshire Olivia Landin is set to be a judge at a qualifying round for Miss England. The logistics engineer, 21, from Market Deeping, will be on the panel at Miss Every Model Magazine 2013. As the reigning title holder for the competition, she will also be handing over her crown. The 2013 winner will then compete against Miss Landin, and other regional champions, at the Miss England final in June. Miss Every Model Magazine 2013 will take place on Saturday, May 11, at The Falcon Hotel, in Uppingham, Rutland. Miss Landin will be joined by fellow judges Ruth Deane, editor of Every Model Magazine, Fay Hill, of Celebrity Publicity, and former Miss Sheffield Kayleigh Hewitt. Reported by This is 19 hours ago.

Emma Stone And Olivia Wilde Ran For A Good Cause Today

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Emma Stone And Olivia Wilde Ran For A Good Cause Today Emma Stone and Olivia Wilde celebrated all things women on Saturday. The ladies, decked out in matching tees and jackets, took part in the EIF Revlon Run Walk for Women in New York City, now in its 16th year. The event raises funds for research, treatment services and financial support to women facing cancer. “Emma...Read more» Reported by Celebuzz 18 hours ago.

Sandy Hook School Plans Mulled By Newtown Board

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NEWTOWN, Conn. -- Newtown officials struggled Friday night to move toward a decision on what to do with the elementary school where 20 first-graders and six educators were shot to death in December, after teachers expressed grief and frustration during a closed-door session before a public meeting was held.

A task force of 28 local elected officials had been set to possibly vote on a recommendation to the local school board but continued the discussion to next Friday.

The panel had narrowed a list of choices to renovating Sandy Hook Elementary School, tearing it down and constructing a new building at the same site or building a new school on nearby property.

But several teachers told the task force Friday evening that they felt they were being left out of the process, and some said it would be too traumatic to ever work on the property again, according to task force members and school district staff who described the private session.

The panel then went into a public session and discussed other sites for a new school that previously had been ruled out, which upset some of the nearly 90 people who packed the meeting room, which had only about 25 chairs.

"I'm very confused," said Newtown resident Janet Ziperstein, who has two children who attended Sandy Hook. "It's very difficult to watch this process."

Some task force members also said they weren't sure where the process was heading. First Selectwoman Pat Llodra said time was a concern, because officials want to get a funding plan to state lawmakers before the legislative session ends next month.

Residents have mixed opinions on what should be done with the school.

Brian Engel, whose 6-year-old daughter, Olivia, died in the Dec. 14 shootings, told the task force that he and his wife want the village of Sandy Hook to have an elementary school but at a different location. He said he didn't want Olivia's younger brother to ever have to walk into the building where the massacre took place.

"We do want him to go to Sandy Hook School, but at an alternate location – not where his sister died," Engel said after the meeting.

The 430 children who survived the shootings are now attending a remodeled school in the neighboring town of Monroe that has been renamed Sandy Hook Elementary School. A few parents said Friday night they didn't want to send their children to that school for much longer.

Other residents favor renovating the existing school. Some want a new school built in Sandy Hook. Others want officials to consider using town property in other parts of Newtown for a new school.

Two psychologists, Melissa Brymer and Jill Barron, told the task force that officials in other towns where mass shootings have occurred have grappled with the same problems in deciding what to do with the shooting site. They said making that decision can be a difficult and painful process because of the strong feelings and different viewpoints.

Columbine High School in Colorado, where two student gunmen killed 12 schoolmates and a teacher in 1999, reopened several months afterward. Crews removed the library, where most of the victims died, and replaced it with an atrium.

Virginia Tech converted a classroom building where a student gunman killed 32 people in 2007 into a peace studies and violence prevention center. And an Amish community in Pennsylvania tore down the West Nickel Mines Amish School and built a new school a few hundred yards away after a gunman killed five girls there in 2006.

On the morning of Dec. 14, gunman Adam Lanza, who had killed his mother at their Newtown home, went to Sandy Hook Elementary School and opened fire with an assault rifle, killing the 20 children and the six adults. He killed himself as police arrived at the school.

Police have not disclosed a possible motive for the killings. Law enforcement officials have said Lanza showed an interest in other mass killings and played violent video games.

Whatever choice the task force recommends will be sent to the town's Board of Education. Any plan would have to be approved by voters at referendum.

One panel member, Laura Roche, said there was no way she would support reopening the school.

"To me, that is always going to be a site where 26 people were murdered," she said. Reported by Huffington Post 19 hours ago.

Olivia Colman: 'People kept asking me who the Broadchurch killer was'

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Olivia Colman first made her name in comedies such as Peep Show and Twenty Twelve, but in the last year she has exploded into drama. Megan Conner talked to her just as Britain was holding its breath for her performance in the finale of Broadchurch

Olivia Colman has asked to meet at a private members' club in Soho. I didn't have her down for that – she doesn't seem the type to be falling out of the Groucho, but this one is a little less hip, the sort of place that is filled with film and television executives having nice lunches. On the table next to us a group of agents is discussing whether the Cannes film festival is up to much this year: "I mean, I might be better off in San Sebastián…" I think I hear one sigh.

It's the sort of place you might come if you were a bit of a luvvie or were looking to get in with the BBC. But it soon turns out that Colman has a more pragmatic reason for being here. Today is not a normal day in the life of the actor. Today brings the finale of Broadchurch, the ITV drama which has turned her into a household name. Tonight nearly 10 million viewers will tune in to find out who killed schoolboy Danny Latimer. "I'll do anything to avoid being asked who it is right now," she laughs, pouring the tea.

She arrived by black cab, which is not her usual style, but: "I've been spending a fortune on taxis this week. It got to the point where I had to stop getting the train because people kept asking me, and well, I was afraid of letting it slip. Obviously," she adds, "there's been no chance of me going out and getting pissed. I'd fuck it up instantly. People would only have to look at me and I would tell them who it is."

Colman dispels any remaining possibility of luvviedom by carefully assembling me a forkful of her lunch because she insists I must try it. We are both eating mackerel – mine has been grilled, while she has ordered the "soused" option, mainly because it "sounds fun".

"I'm getting you a good bit of everything," she says, gathering up the ingredients from her plate. "I want you to try this nice mustardy cream. Here we go. Do you mind sharing my fork? Sorry."

She keeps conversation light and is endearingly polite, more timid than I expected, even a little shy. She does not look worlds apart from the characters she plays on television, whether that be DS Miller in Broadchurch or Twenty Twelve's Sally, just better dressed; younger, even. I am intrigued when she says she is quite a mellow person ("I mean, I rarely shout and scream"), because on screen she has a habit of going ballistic and doing it brilliantly. In the final episode of Broadchurch the focus became less about the killer – who was revealed (spoiler alert!) as Miller's husband Joe – than Colman's reaction to the news. The impact of her performance was so raw and immediate her name started trending on Twitter – hardly unusual for the show, which has become TV's most tweeted-about drama (according to ITV), but a concept I know will be lost on Colman, having spent five minutes at lunch explaining to her what a hashtag is.

She claims not to be on Twitter because she is "not thick-skinned enough". Until recently her roles in TV comedies such as Peep Show only saw her vaguely recognised on the street: "I think people knew the face, if not much else, and so I always got a bit of pointing and shouting."

But the last two years have proved a revelation. As well as being a great comedian, Colman has shown herself to be a breathtaking tragedian. The turning point was Tyrannosaur, an independent film directed by actor Paddy Considine in which she played an abused wife. Not only did she receive a clutch of industry awards, but casting directors finally realised what Colman was capable of. "It was weird," she admits, "because I'd been doing drama auditions for years."

Offers of grittier work streamed in: first the BBC thriller Exile, dealing with Alzheimer's, then the Margaret Thatcher biopic The Iron Lady, co-starring Meryl Streep. As Colman mastered the ex-PM's daughter Carol on the big screen (she says by watching old episodes of I'm a Celebrity…), Streep was said to be awestruck and declared Colman "divinely gifted" in her Bafta acceptance speech. Colman was asked to give a statement to the press on the day of Thatcher's death, an idea which still makes her guffaw: "I mean, I can't imagine what they thought I might be able to add."

This year she is up for her own Bafta. Well, two, actually – a nomination for both comedy and drama, recognising her diverse talent. One is for best comedy performance – her role as Hugh Bonneville's lovelorn PA in the brilliantly nuanced Olympics sitcom Twenty Twelve – while the other is a best supporting actress nod for Jimmy McGovern's Accused. She describes the latter, in which she played a mother grieving the shooting of her son on a Manchester council estate, as "beautiful. I mean, when people say there's nothing on British telly it's just nonsense." As in Broadchurch, the power in Colman's performance is weighted in the final scene, for which she says she was given the gift of a "wonderful speech". "Oh god…" she says, breaking off. "I'm getting a bit teary just thinking about it."

Unlike her method chums, Colman is someone with her emotions always close to the surface. "I've got a lot of actor friends who go: 'I'm in the process of working it all out'," she says, mimicking a panicked face. "And I suppose I just don't. I don't annotate scripts, I don't think too deeply about it, I just have to… feel it. Oh, it sounds awful, doesn't it? Like I don't deserve to be doing this."

She cannot explain much more: "It's just how I do it. I don't know if that's what you're meant to do; I don't know if it's what other people do. I just think you can only imagine how you would feel – if it were you…"

She knows instantly when a scene hasn't gone well – "I don't believe myself. I'm literally just saying the lines and I think that's bad and I can tell"– but at the end of a hard day's work she's not so bereft of energy she can't make it to the pub. "If it's a tough scene it's pretty cathartic, so I can generally just order a gin and go: 'Aah…'"

Recently she reunited with Paddy Considine. The pair will star in The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, returning to ITV next week. You sense that she is a little bit in love with him. "Oh I am, because he's just so black and white, can't lie, and once he takes you into his heart that's it." Considine has also bonded with Colman's husband Ed Sinclair, a writer: "Ed sent me this beautiful email after he saw Tyrannosaur, telling me what he thought, so I forwarded it to Paddy." And? She laughs. "Paddy rang me and went: 'He got it. He fucking got it.'"

Originally from Norfolk, Colman got the urge to act while starring in a school play at the age of 16. Unable to see how she could make it a career, she enrolled for a teacher training course at Cambridge, where she joined a golden generation of talent at Footlights. It was here that she met Sinclair, along with her future Peep Show co-stars David Mitchell and Robert Webb. "It was the first time I met people and thought: 'Oh, you're like me…'" she says. "You like the acting... Oh, I see." Yet she claims not to be Cambridge proper: "I was no Stephen Fry. Never the four-A student. Absolutely not."

Having initially harboured ambitions to be an actor himself, Sinclair went on to study drama at the Bristol Old Vic. Colman followed and took a job cleaning B&Bs to support him before deciding to enrol. "I do think it helped that I was so shit at everything else. If I had been good at science or a real wordsmith maybe it would have been harder to back myself."

She says her family life is "number one. Always has been. I just couldn't see the point without Ed or the kids." They have two sons, Hal, seven, and Finn, five, and their set-up seems to work; while Colman is on set, Sinclair retreats to the attic to write and is currently finishing the third draft of his first novel.

Right now Colman is bringing in most of the money ("We support each other. He'd do the same for me") but takes on mostly British projects so she can be at home. "I also genuinely care about British film and TV. I'll watch British stuff before anything else – it's a pact I made with myself."

She already has a number of projects lined up for the rest of the year: the C4 drama Run, The 7.39, and penned by One Day author David Nicholls for the BBC. In regards to whether she'll return to Broadchurch for the confirmed second series, she says: "I'm not allowed to tell you anything, so don't look at me. Don't look into my eyes."

Of the upcoming Baftas, she thinks it's "obvious" which of the two gongs she would most like to win. "Oh, the one for Accused," she says, looking a bit teary again. "Tyrannosaur and Accused just mean so much." She cannot articulate quite why, though. Is drama more difficult? "No. You can pour just as much energy into a comedy as a really harrowing role." Does she connect more emotionally with the dramatic work? "Oh, I don't know."

In the end, she says: "I just think the other girls up for best comedy performance deserve it more." I suggest dramatic roles are more revered by the critics. "Yeah, I s'pose. But I spent a long time telling myself awards don't matter. Of course they don't." And then you get nominated. "Yes, then you get nominated! And you wake up in the night having a sweat." Reported by guardian.co.uk 14 hours ago.

Mystery surrounding James Bond mentor M's real name revealed: 007 fan discovers character played by Judi Dench is called Olivia Mansfield

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Mystery surrounding James Bond mentor M's real name revealed: 007 fan discovers character played by Judi Dench is called Olivia Mansfield An eagle-eyed fan managed to freeze-frame a single camera shot in Skyfall lasting just a split-second and discovered that M’s real name is Olivia Mansfield. Reported by MailOnline 13 hours ago.

West Chester Area Students up for Big Awards

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West Chester Area Students up for Big Awards Patch West Chester, PA --

 

West Chester Area High School students will be walking the red carpet and keeping their fingers crossed Sunday night at the eighth annual Philadelphia Region Cappies.

The Cappies are like the Tony Awards for high school theater and high school theater critics.  Students from 37 public and private high schools are participating in this year's awards show which will be presented at the Upper Darby Performing Arts Center at Upper Darby High School.

Not only are actors, musicians, set, sound and costume designers honored the Cappies honor student theater critics. Since October 236 critics have written 1,240 reviews that have been evaluated by teachers. The best reviews have been published in more than a dozen local newspapers and online.

And the nominees from West Chester are:

*Senior Male Critic Nominees*

· *Devin Randall* West Chester East High School

*Marketing and Publicity*

· *Cecile Adrian, Lydia DeBevoise, Rachna Kota*, Westtown School, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

*Sound*

· *Claudia Nunes*, Westtown School, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

*Orchestra*

· *Spelling Bee Pit Band*, Westtown School, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee
· *Pit Orchestra*, West Chester East High School, Hairspray

*Female Vocalist*

· *Elena Dunn-Barcelona*, Westtown School, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

*Male Vocalist*

· *Chris Infantino*, Westtown School, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

*Comic Actor in a Musical*

· *Jamie Catania*, Westtown School, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

*Supporting Actress in a Musical*

· *Olivia Heisterkamp*, West Chester East High School, Hairspray

*Supporting Actor in a Musical*

· *Nathan Mullen*, Westtown School, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

*Song*

· *Pandemonium*, Westtown School, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

*Musical*

· *The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee*, Westtown School

The Cappies started in Washington, D.C. 14 years ago and is now active in 18 cities across the U.S. and Canada. The Greater Philadelphia region is the second largest, with 37 participating schools this year.

According to a press release from the Cappies organization:



The Greater Philadelphia Cappies Gala will begin with a musical number performed by representatives from each of the schools in the program. Throughout the evening, 15 schools nominated for Song, Play, and Musical will perform selections from their shows.

More than 250 nominated students will receive medallions, and 42 trophies will be presented to the Cappie winners. Superintendents, principals and board members from participating schools, as well as theater professionals and members of the press, will serve as special guest presenters.

Reported by Patch 1 hour ago.

Products are getting smaller but price you pay stays the same

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Inflation is a menace when prices are rising, but a more insidious form is finding its way into our trolleys - the prices are staying the same, but the items we buy are shrinking. Shopper Olivia Beckett (pictured) is unhappy. Reported by MailOnline 45 minutes ago.

Love Olivia Wilde's Wavy, Undone Tresses? Steal The Look!

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Love Olivia Wilde's Wavy, Undone Tresses? Steal The Look! *Olivia Wilde* and her hair stylist Ben Skervin chose to pair wavy, undone tresses with her white, midriff-baring Calvin Klein gown. Ben, who used Vidal Sassoon Pro Series products to craft the look, shares instructions on how you can repeat the style yourself.

*Photos: See The Hottest Looks From The Met Gala's Red Carpet*

• Work Vidal Sassoon Pro Series Boost & Lift Foaming Air Mousse througout wet hair to create texture and volume. Then, run fingers through hair for a rough dry.

• Around the front hair line and foreheard, use a round brush to blow dry sections straight to offer softness around the face.

*Photos: Sweet Summer Dresses For Under $100*

• Once hair is dry, wrap one-inch sections of hair down the barrel of a curling iron in a spiral, holding for only 4-5 seconds each, creating slight waves.

• After you've worked through your entire head with waves, allow hair to cool.

*Watch: Inside Sherri Shepherd's No Gym Workout*

• Mist texturizing spray into hair roots to give a beachy, undone texture.

• Brush strands out and set hair using Vidal Sassoon Pro Series Flexible Hold Hairspray to hold waves in place.

*When you're headed to a big event, do you prefer lengthy locks like Olivia's or a crisp updo? Tell us in the comments below or tweet @OKMagazine.*

Photo credit: 
Dimitrios Kambouris, Getty Images Reported by OK! Magazine 1 day ago.

Oswego East, Oswego Induct National Honor Society Students

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Oswego East, Oswego Induct National Honor Society Students Patch Montgomery, IL --

The Oswego East High School and Oswego High School chapters of the National Honor Society inducted many new members last month.

62 students from the junior and senior classes were selected for membership by the faculty council at Oswego East and were inducted on April 10.

90 students from junior and senior classes were inducted at Oswego High school on April 24.

Selection for membership was based on the four core virtues of the National Honor Society: Scholarship, Character, Service and Leadership. 

Students with a class ranking of junior or senior who also met the 3.5 grade point average Scholastic requirement were invited to apply for membership.  Eligible students completed the application process and were then evaluated based on the remaining virtues of Character, Service and Leadership by the faculty council.

*Oswego East High School NHS Inductees*

· Rebekah Adams
· Harris Ahmed
· Ernesto Alvarez
· Yosuf Aslam
· Cassandra Anderson
· Kevin Anselmo
· Brooke Arbeen
· Madalyn Aubuchon
· Kayla Bates
· Zachary Behnke
· Emily Bong
· Kaitlyn Braun
· Andrew Brewer
· Alan Cabiness
· Nelly Casas
· Ashley Clayton
· Corie Cochran
· Kaitlyn Delli
· Baroosh Durrani
· Kelly Dyja
· Nicholas Ebelhack
· Tyler Engleman
· Andrea Esquina
· Jason Evans
· Amanda Freeman
· Keagan Griffin
· Kaitlyn Griffith
· Sajela Harlow
· Jenna Heiser
· Alyssa Herndon
· Armani Hrobowski
· Eiman Jamil
· Rena Johnson
· Alyssa Kleinhardt
· Abigail Klick
· Sarah Kovac
· Hillary Kuehl
· Kelsey LaMartina
· Thao Le
· Quinton Lee
· Lesly Lopez
· Stephanie Lopez
· Brandon Love
· Jessica Mandel
· Mary McDonald
· Megan Miller
· Gregory Newman
· Gabriela Nikoloska
· Camila Novo-Viano
· Elijah Page
· Trevor Peterson
· Luke Prisco
· Patrick Riggio
· Ian Ross
· Daniela Silva
· Nicole Snyder
· Samuel Stovall
· Caitlyn Sullivan
· Jordan Sullivan
· Karina Villarreal
· Rachael Walker
· AshleeWilliams

*Oswego High School NHS Inductees*

· Adamski, MacKenzie
· Annala, Amelia
· Ashner, Marissa
· Bennett, Olivia
· Blount, Sydney
· Brawner, Benjamin
· Cabrera, Nicolas
· Carr, Tia
· Cavins, Kennedy
· Cepeda, Alec
· Ceres, Abbie
· Compton, Alex
· Contreras, Adianis
· Cooper, Ailysh
· Davey, Erin
· Doshi, Kajol
· Dutton, Anna
· Fay, Christian
· Federau, Alexander
· Feltes, Alexander
· Figgins, Elizabeth
· Flake, Crystal
· Frantik, Sarah
· Garcia, Ruby
· Gerstung, Lauren
· Graff, Sean
· Guerra, Cayla
· Hartnett, Thomas
· Hernandez, Julian
· Holm, Bryce
· Iracheta-Martinez, Diana
· Janiak, Alexandra
· Johnson, Jessica
· Jones, Christian
· Kiger, Kaylee
· Klingbeil, Kristina
· Krumholz, Nathan
· Leibrock, Calvin
· Lewis, Olivia
· Licul, Courtney
· Lloyd, Sydney
· Lockard, Tyler
· Maher, Nathan
· Majewski, Emily
· Mang, Colton
· Matic, Anna
· Matthews, Katherine
· McWethy, Ross
· Messmore, Lily
· Meyer, Katherine
· Mills, Kaylan
· Milosch, Wyatt
· Mirkes, Anna
· Nation, Julianne
· Neitzel, Kara
· Nguyen, Victoria
· Nygaard, Desiree
· Pacyna, Matthew
· Pajor, Melinda
· Pales, Allison
· Panock, Samantha
· Patel, Nikita
· Perello Ruiz, Alex
· Perez, Blanca
· Perez, Rebecca
· Pool, Alexander
· Prentice, Kyle
· Prentice, Stephanie
· Prystash, Emily
· Riess, Brooke
· Rosebraugh, Meghan
· Schultz, Nicholas
· Scott, Emily
· Seeger, Spencer
· Seeger, Steven
· Sefranek, Nicholas
· Shramuk, Kirby
· Stiefbold, Sarah
· Sullivan, Emma
· Terando, Teagan
· Thevenot, Tyler
· Tran, Duc
· Tyminski, Megan
· Valkanova, Ralitsa
· Vann, Tucker
· Veseli, Iva
· Watson, Katherine
· Whowell, Bradley
· Wieczorek, Sydney
· Zacker, Ami

Congratulations to all! Reported by Patch 1 day ago.

Olivia Sprauer: Martin County High School teacher forced to resign over glamor model photos

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Olivia Sprauer, 26, called to the principal's office at Martin County High School in Florida after one of her bikini shots was sent to him Reported by CapitalBay 1 day ago.
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