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#Katherine Cormier
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Masterpost of every character who has already competed
If you want to request a character be included in a future bracket, check this list first to make sure they haven't already competed
Lena Adams Foster (The Fosters) Elida Al-Feyr (Vagrant Queen) Nyssa Al Ghul (Arrow) Cassie Ainsworth (Skins) Luisa Alver (Jane the Virgin) Winter Anderson (American Horror Story: Cult) Miss Audrey (Snowpiercer) Babs (A Series of Unfortunate Events) Saanvi Bahl (Manifest) Bambi (Minx) Josephine Barry (Anne with an E) Sister Beatrice (Warrior Nun) Bilquis (American Gods) Maya Bishop (Station 19) Sarah Bishop (A Discovery of Witches) Alana Bloom (Hannibal) Cheryl Blossom (Riverdale) Anne Bonny (Black Sails) Kelly Booth (Black Mirror) Nova Bordelon (Queen Sugar) Nancy Botwin (Weeds) Dana Bryant (Mythic Quest) Robin Buckley (Stranger Things) Lena Burnham (Ray Donovan) Calliope Burns (First Kill) Delia Busby (Call the Midwife) Amanita Caplan (Sense8) Wendy Carr (Mindhunter) Chanel #3 (Scream Queens) Max Chapman (A League of their Own) Piper Chapman (Orange is the New Black) Denise Christopher (Timeless) Grace Choi (Black Lightning) Cassandra Cillian (The Librarians) Jade Claymore (Willow) Dani Clayton (The Haunting of Bly Manor) Raelle Collar (Motherland: Fort Salem) Dulcie Collins (Deadloch) Delphine Cormier (Orphan Black) Theo Crain (The Haunting of Hill House) Frannie Crowne (Brave New World) Moiraine Damodred (The Wheel of Time)
Alex Danvers (Supergirl) Ashley Davies (South of Nowhere) Carina DeLuca (Station 19) Jo Deluca (A League of Their own) Bo Dennis (Lost Girl) Clare Devlin (Derry Girls) Rosa Diaz (Brooklyn Nine-Nine) Franky Doyle (Wentworth) Camina Drummer (The Expanse) Waverly Earp (Wynona Earp) Kat Edison (The Bold Type) Philippa Eilhart (The Witcher) Mabel Elmsworth (The Buccaneers) Camile Engelson (Stitchers) Eretria (The Shannara Chronicals) Isobel Evans (Roswell New Mexico) Dana Fairbanks (The L Word) Juliette Fairmont (First Kill) Emily Fields (Pretty Little Liars) Veronica Fisher (Shameless) Fleabag (Fleabag) Flower (Ghosts) Gabrielle (Xena: Warrior Princess) Lupe Garcia (A League of Their Own) Bibi Garvey (Bad Sisters) Mirror Philippa Georgiou (Star Trek: Discovery) Gigi Ghorbani (The L Word: Gen Q) Stella Gibson (The Fall) Sue Gilbert (Dickinson) Emily Grace (Murdoch Mysteries) Yara Greyjoy (Game of Thrones) Monet de Haan (Gossip Girl) Judy Hale (Dead to Me) Yuri Han (XO, Kitty) Millie Harcourt (The Bletchley Circle) Nicole Haught (Wynonna Earp) Lauren Heller (Younger) Emma Hernandez (Vida) Pamela Isley (Batwoman) Susan Ivanova (Babylon 5) Bradley Jackson (The Morning Show) Alice Jones (Once Upon a Time) Tara Jones (Heartstopper) Quinn Joseph (Harlem) Kate (One Mississippi) Annalise Keating (How to Get Away with Murder) Tina Kennard (The L Word) Kennedy (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) Yasmin Khan (Doctor Who)
Aneela Kin Rit (Killjoys) Camille L'Espanaye (The Fall of the House of Usher) Victorine LaFourcade (The Fall of the House of Usher) Lagertha (Vikings) Shelly Lambert (Minx) Sara Lance (Arrowverse) Lauren Lewis (Lost Girl) Lexa (The 100) Maggie Lin (Saving Hope) Anne Lister (Gentleman Jack) Veronica Lodge (Riverdale) Santana Lopez (Glee) Lucretia (Spartacus) Lyria (The Shannara Chronicals) Tara Maclay (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) Elizabeth Macmillan (Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries) Queen Maeve (The Boys) Maggie (Good Omens) Sofia Marchetti (Sex Education) Margot (Once Upon a Time) Bess Marvin (Nancy Drew) Cara Mason (Legend of the Seeker) Max (Black Sails) Katherine Mayfair (Desperate Housewives) Ally Mayfair-Richards (American Horror Story) Mazikeen (Lucifer) Shane McCutcheon (The L Word) Betty McRae (Bomb Girls) Lake Meriwether (Love, Victor) Freya Mikaelson (The Originals) Sandy Milkovich (Shameless) Mabel Mora (Only Murders in the Building) Ellen Morgan (Ellen) Rory Morningstar (Lucifer) Aleesha Morrison (Upload) Hayes Morrison (Conviction) Blanche Mottershead (Upstairs Downstairs)
Mulan (Once Upon a Time) Leighton Murray (Sex Lives of College Girls) Raffi Musiker (Star Trek: Picard) Susie Myerson (The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel) Nadja (What We Do in the Shadows) Nicky Nichols (Orange is the New Black) Nico (Vida) Nina (Good Omens) Allie Novak (Wentworth) Dani Núñez (The L Word: Gen Q) Ola Nyman (Sex Education) Shona O'Keefe (This Way Up) Kelly Olsen (Supergirl) Van Palmer (Yellowjackets) Marjorie Palmiotti (Veep) Gail Peck (Rookie Blue) Aline Penhallow (Shadowhunters) Valencia Perez (Crazy Ex-Girlfriend) Laura Peterson (The Morning Show) Lindsay Peterson (Queer as Folk) Anissa Pierce (Black Lightning) Brittany S. Pierce (Glee) Naomi Pierce (Succession) Alice Pieszecki (The L Word) Eve Polastri (Killing Eve) Bette Porter (The L Word) Bill Potts (Doctor Who) Arthie Premkumar (GLOW) Amae Rali (Vagrant Queen)
Scylla Ramshorn (Motherland: Fort Salem) Amy Raudenfeld (Faking It) Logan Rawlings (Young & Hungry) Maia Rindell (The Good Fight) Arizona Robins (Grey's Anatomy) Eve Rothlo (How to Get Away with Murder) Root (Person of Interest) Willow Rosenberg (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) Kenya Rosewater (Defiance) Susan Ross (Seinfeld) Siuan Sanche (WoT) Ellaria Sand (Game of Thrones) Jenny Schecter (The L Word) Jinju Seong (Snowpiercer) Seven of Nine (Star Trek: Voyager & Star Trek: Picard) Toni Shalifoe (The Wilds) Kalinda Sharma (The Good Wife) Carson Shaw (A League of Their Own) Sameen Shaw (Person of Interest) Leslie Shay (Chicago Fire) Amy Silva (Vigil) Bea Smith (Wentworth) Petra Solano (Jane the Virgin) Rose Solano (Jane the Virgin) River Song (Doctor Who) Kitty Song Covey (XO, Kitty) Serena Southerlyn (Law & Order) Zelda Spellman (Chilling Adventures of Sabrina) Maya St. Germain (Pretty Little Liars) Moira Strand (The Handmaid’s Tale) Della Street (Perry Mason) Tamsin (Lost Girl) Kit Tanthalos (Willow) Stahma Tarr (Defiance) Jamie Taylor (The Haunting of Bly Manor) Thirteen (House, MD) Thirteenth Doctor (Doctor Who) Tara Thornton (True Blood) Bess Till (Snowpiercer)
Tituba (Salem) Toni Topaz (Riverdale) Callie Torres (Grey’s Anatomy) Fabiola Torres (Never Have I Ever) Taissa Turner (Yellowjackets) Two / Portia Lin (Dark Matter) Alex Vause (OITNB) Mel Vera (Charmed) Villanelle (Killing Eve) Karen Walker (Will & Grace) Martha Walker (Silo) Poussey Washington (Orange is the New Black) Ellen Waverly (For All Mankind) Kerry Weaver (ER) HG Wells (Warehouse 13) Sterling Wesley (Teenage Bounty Hunters) Nora West-Allen (The Flash) Jayne Wetherby (Dracula) Lucy Westenra (Dracula) Ilana Wexler (Broad City) Ryan Wilder (Batwoman) Carol Willick (Friends) Lana Winters (American Horror Story) Bernie Wolfe (Holby City) Camile Wray (Stargate Universe) Xena (Xena: Warrior Princess) Meh Yewll (Defiance) Yorkie (Black Mirror - San Junipero)
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femslashrevolution · 11 months
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Popular Pairing List Update
The following pairings have more than 10 recent posts in their pairing tag, and are therefore too popular to be posted on Rarepair Thursdays:
Amalia True x Penance Adair (The Nevers)
Anita St. Pierre x Della Street (Perry Mason)
Anne Boonchuy x Sasha Waybright (Amphibia)
Ava Coleman x Janine Teagues (Abbott Elementary)
Carol Aird x Therese Belivet (Carol)
Cinta Kaz x Vel Sartha (Star Wars)
Drea Torres x Eleanor Levetan (Do Revenge)
Eleanor Levetan x Gabbi Broussard (Do Revenge)
Eleanor Roosevelt x Lorena Hickok (The First Lady)
Ellie x Riley Abel (HBO The Last Of Us)
Emily Prentiss x Jennifer Jareau (Criminal Minds)
Frannie Langton x Marguerite Benham (The Confessions of Frannie Langton)
Katherine Hastings x Sadie Ryan (American Auto)
KJ Brandman x Mac Coyle (Amazon Paper Girls)
Lily Evans x Narcissa Malfoy (Harry Potter)
Mia Reed x Vada Cavell (The Fallout)
Midge Maisel x Susie Myerson (The Marvelous Mrs Maisel)
Miorine Rembran x Suletta Mercury (Mobile Suit Gundam Wing)
Natasha Romanoff x Peggy Carter (Marvel Cinematic Universe)
The following pairings have been posted less frequently recently, and have therefore been removed from the popular pairing list:
Addy Hanlon x Beth Cassidy (Dare Me)
Alex Danvers x Kelly Olsen (Supergirl)
Alex Vause x Piper Chapman (Orange Is The New Black)
Alexis Rose x Twyla Sands (Schitt’s Creek)
Allison Argent x Lydia Martin (Teen Wolf)
Andi Mack x Buffy Driscoll (Andi Mack)
Anne Shirley x Diana Barry x Ruby Gillis (Anne With An E)
Buffy Summers x Willow Rosenberg (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
Caitlin Snow x Iris West (The Flash)
Camina Drummer x Naomi Nagata (The Expanse)
Cosima Niehaus x Delphine Cormier (Orphan Black)
Dinah Lance x Helena Bertinelli (DCU)
Eleanor Shellstrop x Tahani Al Jamil (The Good Place)
Finch Tarrayo x Josie Saltzman (Legacies)
Greta Moreno x Riley Luo (Generation)
Hannah Miller x Sarah Fier (Fear Street)
Hermione Granger x Narcissa Malfoy (Harry Potter)
Ji-yeong x Kang Sae-byeok (Squid Game)
Joan x Zoey Clarke (Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist)
Kathryn Janeway x Seven of Nine (Star Trek: Voyager)
Lady Hideko x Sook Hee (The Handmaiden)
Laurel Lance x Nyssa al Ghul (Arrow)
Natasha Romanoff x Wanda Maximoff (Marvel Cinematic Universe)
Neopolitan x Yang Xiao Long (RWBY)
Nora Grace x Viri Gómez (Skam Spain)
Paris Geller x Rory Gilmore (Gilmore Girls)
River Song x Thirteenth Doctor (Doctor Who)
Seo Ji-wan x Yoon Sol (Nevertheless)
Shane McCutcheon x Tess Van De Berg (The L Word)
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Note
Hello there! Can I please request some female faceclaims between 18-29 that could play the future daughter of Eddie Redmayne (Newt Scamander) & Katherine Waterston (Tina Goldstein) please? Thank you so much!!
Oh, I did a face merge and the people below looked more suitable to me. I hope it helps you.
Sophia Lillis (20) Violet Brinson (18) Caitlin Blackwood (22) Samantha Cormier (24) Dalila Bela (20) Sadie Soverall (20)
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njadastonearm · 1 year
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2022 in books! All in all my best year for reading in a while -- I beat last year by 22 books and ~6500 pages. Thank you, audiobooks!
Full list below the cut. Favorites are bolded and marked with an asterisk.
Conjure Women by Afia Atakora
The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway
King Richard by Michael Dobbs
When Women Invented Television by Jennifer Keishin Armstrong
Destiny of the Republic by Candice Millard *
Uncommon Sense Teaching by Barbara Oakley, Beth Rogowsky, and Terrence J. Sejnowski
The Lost Founding Father by William J. Cooper
The Fossil Hunter by Shelley Emling
Velvet Was the Night by Silvia Moreno Garcia
If I Understood You, Would I Have This Look On My Face? by Alan Alda *
Coolidge by Amity Shlaes
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen *
My Heart Is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones *
The Quartet by Joseph J. Ellis
The Woman They Could Not Silence by Kate Moore *
The Bully Pulpit by Doris Kearns Goodwin
The Man From the Train by Bill James
How the Multiverse Got Its Revenge by K. Eason
I'll Be Gone In the Dark by Michelle McNamara
The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson
How to Write a Lot by Paul J. Silvia
The Truffle Underground by Ryan Jacobs
The Awakening by Kate Chopin *
Lovecraft Country by Matt Ruff *
Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake
The Dark Descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein by Kiersten White
While Justice Sleeps by Stacey Abrams
What Lives in the Woods by Lindsay Currie
Time Is a Mother by Ocean Vuong *
Why Fish Don't Exist by Lulu Miller *
Arsenic and Adobo by Mia P. Manansala
The Chalk Man by C. J. Tudor
His Hideous Heart edited by Dahlia Adler
The Woman In the Library by Sulari Gentill
Persuasion by Jane Austen *
Misery by Stephen King *
The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek by Kim Michele Richardson
The Book Woman's Daughter by Kim Michele Richardson
Grant by Ron Chernow *
The Disappearing Spoon by Sam Kean
American Moonshot by Douglas Brinkley
The Axeman of New Orleans by Miriam C. Davis
Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson *
Sisters by Daisy Johnson *
A Woman Is No Man by Etaf Rum *
The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloane
Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
The Motion of Puppets by Keith Donohue
Sherlock Holmes (Audiobook collection: The Adventure of the Empty House/The Adventure of the Devil's Foot/The Adventure of the Abbey Grange) by Arthur Conan Doyle
The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum *
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller *
The Marvelous Land of Oz by L. Frank Baum
Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel
Three Pianos by Andrew McMahon
Call Us What We Carry by Amanda Gorman
Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen
Ozma of Oz by L. Frank Baum
Dorothy and the Wizard In Oz by L. Frank Baum
I Hope This Finds You Well by Kate Baer
The Zealot and the Emancipator by H. W. Brands
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rpgkroywen · 2 years
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Face-Claim Master List w/BlogURLS
           F
Abigail Cowen - Daphne Blackwell ()
Alexa Demie - Ira Magdalene  (https://iramagdalene.tumblr.com)
Alycia Debnam-Carey - Feyre Archeron  ()
Annalisa Cochrane - Fischl von Luftschloss Narfidort  (https://fischltheprincess.tumblr.com/)
Anya Taylor Joy - Isabella Krul Constantin  ()
Astrid Berges Frisbey - Maruine Lynx  ()
Benedetta Porcaroli - Yisie Tudor  (https://yisietudor.tumblr.com/)
Casimere Jollette - Tsaritsa  (https://frostbitef.tumblr.com/)
Cheng Xiao - Hu Tao  ()
Daisy Ridley - Rey Organa Skywalker  (https://reyorgnaskywlkr.tumblr.com/)
Danielle Rose Russell - Brannagh  ()
Eiza Gonzalez - Helena Heydrich  (https://queenofthedmnd.tumblr.com/)
Elizabeth Olsen - Waleraine Carmilla Bloodbringer  (https://thoushaltnotsufferawitchtolive.tumblr.com/)
Elle Fanning - Ilyanna Ivanov  ()
Ennik Somi Douma - Sandorone  (https://sandronethemarionette.tumblr.com)
Fernanda Ly - ZeroTwoB  ()
Jang Ye-eun - Kujou Sara  (https://kujoufsara.tumblr.com/)
Jennie Kim - Geto Suguru  ()
Jessica Alexander - Felicia Sarah Hardy  ()
Josephine Langford - Evaluna Jora Black  (https://evalunablack.tumblr.com/)
Katherine McNamara - Minerva Freya Johnson  ()
Katheryn Newton - Celenia  ()
Katheryn Winnick - Athena Yaxley  ()
Kennedy McMann - Charlotte Loise Faraday  (https://charlotteeloisefaraday.tumblr.com)
Kim Do-yeon - Nivrele Clair de Luna  (https://nivrele.tumblr.com/)
Liz Gillies - Andrew Raven Tepes  ()
Madelyn Cline - Lumine  (https://luminetheviatrix.tumblr.com/)
Mae Van Der Weide - Elvira Maeve Rosier  (https://elviramaeverosier.tumblr.com/)
Margot Robbie - Eve Mary Jordan  ()
Meg Donnelly - Anastasia Saint-Petersburg  (https://anastasiarstpetersburg.tumblr.com/)
Momo Hirai - Raiden Ei  ()
Natalie Alyn Lind - Kara Kent  (https://reddaughterofrao.tumblr.com/)
Natalie Dormer - Lilith  ()
Ning Yi Zhuo - Ganyu Latifi  ()
Olivia Holt - Yoimiya Naganohara  (https://yoimiyaqnaganohara.tumblr.com/)
Phoebe Dynevor - Proserpina Aidoneus  (https://paidoneus.tumblr.com)
Roseanne Park - Ayaka Kamisato  ()
Sadie Sink - Corvina Selwyn  ()
Sadie Soverall - Mary Jane Walsdorf  ()
Samantha Cormier - America Kennedy Singer  ()
Samara Weaving - Anthea Lucille Shephard  ()
Samara Weaving - Gabriel  ()
Sana Minatozaki - Yae Miko  (https://guujivioleteverbloom.tumblr.com/)
Sasha Kichigina - Heather Juliette Gashler  (https://heatherjulietteg.tumblr.com/)
Sasha Luss - Manon Blackheart  ()
Soo-young Park - Columbina aka Damselette  ()
Summer Fontana - Vrethera Blackwell  ()
Tiffany Young - Ningguang  ()
Victoria Pedretti - Nesta Archeron  (https://nestarcheronc.tumblr.com/)
Wonyoung Jong - Mona Megistus  () M
Aaron Taylor Johnson – Peter Sigmund Saintville  ()
Adam Huber - Satan  ()
Alex Fitzalan - Asmodeus  ()
Alex Saxon – Connor Cloudstrider  ()
Andrew Garfield - Benjamin P. Rolf  ()
Ben Affleck - Capitano  ()
Charlie Cox - Leonel Demarcus  ()
Charlie Hunnam - Kieran Knight  ()
Christian Yu – Geto Suguru  ()
Cody Fern - Lucifer Morningstar  ()
Danny Griffin - Fred Jones  ()
Drew Starkey – Childe/Tartaglia   ()
Dylan O’Brien - Aidan Blackwell  ()
Evan Peters - Dorian  ()
Evan Roderick - Waldemar Desmond Cloudstrider  ()
Evans Nikopoulos - Rhysand Darkbloom  ()
Freddie Thorp – Harry Osborn  ()
Freddy Fox - Draco Malfoy  ()
Henry Cavill - Pierro  ()
Hwang Min-hyun - Scaramouche  ()
Jacob Elordi – Cassian Faladel  ()
John Bubniak - Peter De Luc  ()
Leo Howard – Kazuha Kaedehara  ()
Logan Lerman - Percy Thaert  ()
Lorenzo Zurzolo - Henry Silverhood  ()
Lucas Bravo - Sebastian De Medici  ()
Lucas Lynggaard Tønnesen – Mikaela Morningstar  ()
Luo Yunxi - Pantalone  () 
Matthew Daddario - Leonard Blackwell  ()
Maxence Danet-Fauvel - Dominic Crouch  ()
Michael Provost - Maxon Schreave  ()
Michael Rosenbaum - Lex Luthor  ()
Oh Se-Hun - Kamisato Ayato  ()
Regé-Jean Page – Mansel Rudyard  ()
Rudy Pankow – Aether Viatrix  ()
Sam Claffin- Vernes Thaert  ()
Sam Corlett – Tamlin Glittersteam  ()
Song Jiyang - Xiao Latifi  ()
Theo James - Aurelian Edouard  ()
Timothee Chamalet - Yuichiro Amane  ()
Toby Regbo - Theseus De Medici  ()
Tom Hiddleston - Adam Shephard  ()
Tom Holland - Fenris Rolf  ()
Zane Holtz – Victor Sage  ()
Christian Bale - Hybern Kralı  
Thomas Doherty - Dagdan
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hellyeahydkj · 2 years
Text
got into some ohio library website by pressing random numbers and i dunno where else to find these reviews on that’s a fact jack so
https://www.limalibrary.com/ stuff is from here
Authors: Hartle, Anna
SOURCE: Technology Connection. Nov96, Vol. 3 Issue 7, p44. 2p.
That's a Fact, Jack!
Follett, 1995. Initial 5-title package, $750; additional title discs, $39. Macintosh- 8MB RAM. Grades 5-8.
This program, intended to be a motivational reading and writing program, was quick to install, thanks to the easy-to-follow instructions in the user's manual. This version was used on a standalone Mac LC 575 with 8MB RAM and System 7.1, but can be installed for multiusers on a network with or without a file server. The snazzy introduction, with its hip characters explaining "logon" from Quick-Time film clips, welcomes players into a television studio to be participants on a Jeopardy-style game show. Clear graphics and sound entice the player to stick around to see what happens next. When I first loaded the disc, I was momentarily stymied because I couldn't find the sound control panel. This program relies heavily on its sound, yet there is no entry for this in the index or in the troubleshooting section of the manual. In fact, other than the installation directions, I found the manual a little difficult to maneuver. I finally found the volume control panel under the section called Control Room Options (referring to the control room of a TV studio). If this program is to be used in a quiet library or classroom, and especially if it's networked within the same room, headphones are a must.
To play this game, players must follow three simple steps: register by signing on, pick out a book that corresponds to the available titles in the collection and read it, and then return to the computer and play a game that asks questions about the book they've just read. Don't miss that one big prerequisite for using this program! In fact, in the detailed instructions in the manual under playing the game, Step 2 is "Read a book"! The titles that are included in the starter kit are all well-known contemporary classic novels for the middle school by such authors as Lloyd Alexander, Avi, Robert Cormier, Katherine Paterson, Beverly Cleary, and Lois Lowry. Questions pertaining to each of the books are accessed by loading one of five discs. The material sent with the software offers 15 more discs (five titles per disc) available for purchase, covering the major young adult fiction for this age group.
After the player chooses a book and grade level, the game show host, Jack Patterson, pops out on video and leads the contestant through several questions that quiz the player on her/his knowledge of the story. Each game randomly uses 36 possible questions. Correct answers are cheered. If a student answers incorrectly, the right answer is given and explained. Players have the option to compete against themselves or other students. At the end of a game, a final score is tallied. High scorers can add their names to a top ten list.
Once a student has registered onto the program, all scores will be stored and tallied. The program is set up so that only the software administrator (called the Station Manager) has access to all student records and game settings. Different teachers (called Producers) can be signed onto the program and both have access to the Control Room, which provides for various customizing features and preferences of the program, such as review of questions, students' average scores, and setting grade level. There is a pause feature so that questions can be discussed at length by teachers and students.
For players, the game is fairly easy to use. There are clear directions on how the questions, both printed and read aloud, are to be answered. Players have the option to earn bonus points by answering a fill-in-the-blank question instead of multiple choice. There are several types of questions (literal, inferential, hypothetical, dialog, and writing technique) covering several categories including details about the plot, characters, setting, theme and tone. Students who don't read the book carefully or for detail will have that reflected in their scores.
The promotional material claims that this program motivates reading through fun, riveting activity, promotes student reflection, fosters whole language methodology, and promotes higher-order thinking skills. The type of questions asked, the inviting format and game show enticement will achieve the goals to some extent, but the student will still have to make that giant first step to read the book. Reading enrichment, remedial education teachers, and tutors will find this a useful program, too, in designing an individual learning plan.
The toll-free number offers a voice-mail menu of options for connections, one of which is a separate technical support number. One attempt at this number provided cheerful, courteous responses; the next time it was busy. When I had a serious technical question, I was on hold for 15 minutes but had my questions answered easily and quickly. An inquiry about information on this product resulted in an almost overnight delivery of more promotional material. I was also informed that the software is only available for the Macintosh platform for the time being. Recommended. Anna Hartle, Cincinnati (Ohio) Country Day School
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Authors: Hartle, Anna
Source: Book Report. Jan/Feb97, Vol. 15 Issue 4, p56. 2p.
That's a Fact, Jack! 1995. 5-CD-ROM package, $750; additional discs, $39 each, for Macintosh. Follett. Grades 5-8.
This program, intended to be a motivational reading and writing program, was quickly installed by following the user's manual. This version was used on a standalone Mac LC 575 with 8MB RAM and System 7.1, but can be installed for multiusers on a network with or without a file server. The snazzy introduction, with its hip characters, welcomes players into a television studio to be participants on a Jeopardy-style game show. Clear graphics and sound entice the player to stick around to see what happens next. When I first loaded the disc, I was momentarily stymied because I couldn't find the sound control panel. This program relies heavily on its sound, yet there is no entry for this in the index or in the troubleshooting section of the manual. In fact, other than the installation directions, I found the manual a little difficult to maneuver. I finally found the volume control panel under the section called Control Room Options (referring to the control room of a TV studio). If this program is to be used in a quiet library or classroom, and especially if it's networked within the same room, headphones are a must. To play this game, players must follow three simple steps: register by signing on, pick out a book that corresponds to the available titles in the collection, read the book and return to the computer for the game show. The books included in the starter kit are all wellknown contemporary classic novels for the middle school by such authors as Lloyd Alexander, AVI, Robert Cormlet, Katherine Paterson, Beverly Cleary, and Lois Lowry. Questions are accessed by loading one of the five discs. Each disc contains questions for five books (15 more discs are available for purchase). After the player chooses a book and grade level, the game show host pops out on video and leads the contestant through randomly selected questions from a base of 36. Correct answers are cheered. If a student answers incorrectly, the right answer is given and explained. Players have the option to compete against themselves or other students. At the end of a game, a final score is tallied. High scorers can add their names to a top ten list. Once a student has registered onto the program, all scores will be stored and tallied. The program is set up so that only the program administrator (called the Station Manager) has access to all student records and game settings. Different teachers (called Producers) can be signed onto the program and both have access to the Control Room, which provides for various customizing features and preferences of the program, such as review of questions, students' average scores, and setting grade level. There is a pause feature so that questions can be discussed at length by teachers and students. For players, the game is fairly easy to use. There are clear directions on how the questions, both printed and read aloud, are to be answered. Players have the option to earn bonus points by answering a question fillin-the-blank instead of multiple choice. There are several types of questions (literal, inferential, hypothetical, dialog, and writing technique) covering several categories including details about the plot, characters, setting, theme and tone. Students who don't read the book carefully or for detail will have that reflected in their scores. Reading enrichment, remedial education teachers, and tutors will find this a useful program, too, in designing an individual learning plan. Recommended.
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Authors: Buckleitner, Warren
Source: Instructor. Oct2000, Vol. 110 Issue 3, p74. 3p.
Middle School: Literary Quiz Show
That's A Fact, Jack! Read is a new series of 45 CD-ROMS designed to quiz kids on classic books typically covered in upper elementary and middle school reading curricula. Each CD covers ten titles pertaining to a common theme, tailored to a given grade level. For example, "Discrimination and Prejudice in America" (Disc 33), for grades 6-8, explores such novels as The Witch of Blackbird Pond and Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry. Students first read one of the books individually (the books are not included) and then take one of the fast-paced quizzes at the computer. A noisy narrator reads all the questions and answers aloud--both a strength and a weakness, depending on what your students' needs are. Although the questions are all multiple choice, they often do require some higher order thinking skills, and the text is clear and easy to read. Feed-back is instant:
When students make an error, explanations of the correct response are offered. Also, progress reports can be printed out.
The presentation is right on target for upper elementary and middle school kids, and there are single- and multiple-player options. You can modify the quizzes, but you can't add your own questions; and you can adjust the timer, but you can't turn it off completely. Other weaknesses include a lack of detail on error analysis and some non-interruptible introductions. Still, the price is right and the quality is high. The individual purchasing options make this a viable choice for even single classrooms. Note that there are over 450 quizzes available in the entire series.
[++++ 1/2] Rating: 4.3
That's A Fact, Jack! Read, Tom Snyder Productions, Win/Mac, $59.95 per disc; www.tomsnyder.com Grades 2-8
~~~~~~~~
By Warren Buckleitner
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Authors: Lindroth, Linda
Source: Teaching Pre K-8. Nov/Dec2000, Vol. 31 Issue 3, p25. 3p.
Section:
TECHNOLOGY IN YOUR CLASSROOM
EDITOR'S CHOICE
Whether your focus is to inspire a joy of reading, motivate students in sustained silent reading or strengthen reading comprehension, software can help you meet the needs of your students.
That's a 'Fact Jack! Read
That's a Fact Jack/Read is a CD-ROM quiz program for grades 3-10 to help access the reading comprehension of literature books students have read. The series, from Tom Snyder Productions, is made up of 45 CD-ROM programs covering 450 of the literature books teachers and students often choose for classroom reading. Each CD-ROM addresses a specific theme with review questions for 10 books that reflect the theme. Some of the themes include: Mystery and Adventure, Survival, Loyalty and Honor, Examining Values, Animal Stories, American History, The American Civil War, Discrimination and Prejudice and others. The Mystery and Adventure CD-ROM for grades 3-5 includes such classroom favorites as Tuck Everlasting, Stuart Little and The Whipping Boy.
Interactive game show. That's a Fact Jack/Read uses a game show format to review reading comprehension. An audio M.C. reads the questions and answers during play. All questions in the basic quiz mode are multiple choice and cover literal, inferential, hypothetical, dialogue and writing technique types. In the Bonus Round, students play Use It or Lose It which gives students a statement from the book selected and five points of evidence, or events in the story and students must decide if the evidence supports the main idea in the statement.
Game play can be individual, small group, or classroom mode. One, two or three players can compete in individual mode. I like the discussions that occur when I let students play against each other. Individual scores can be recorded, but the discussion is much livelier!
One of the components that sets this program apart from others that offer quizzes on books students read is the Classroom Mode. I love the possibilities this quiz mode offers for motivating student reading and reinforcing Read Aloud books. Classroom Mode lets you go through the Multiple Choice Quiz game or the Use It or Lose It game with a book the whole class has read to stimulate discussion and go over ideas in the book. The pace is quick and the teacher has control of the questions selected.
My favorite-and the favorite of my students-is Use It or Lose It. My students use more critical thinking and are motivated to analyze a book as they try to figure out points of evidence. As each point is brought up, the teacher can click on the Why? button after each class response to get an audio explanation of why the point of evidence supports the main idea or does not support the main idea. The same feature is also available for the multiple choice game format.
I also love the features of the quiz format that allows students to select a game time of 10, 20, 30 or 40 minutes. This makes it possible for all students to finish a game in the scheduled time. Another positive feature is the immediate feedback; as each question is answered, an explanation is given for why it is correct or incorrect which relates directly to the content and events in the book.
Administration tools. Selecting play options is easy. The teacher can set up classes, divide classes into teams, read and print student reports with scores, and review the questions and answers, or even omit a question from a quiz. Game Play options can be set to keep records, allow student replay, pause, or lengthen time for answering questions from 15 to 25 seconds.
Extensions.
A supplemental guide gives writing and discussion extensions for each book. Opinionnaires are statements of belief that relate to the themes in the book. These can be used to spark discussion or writing activities. Personals are open-ended questions for getting students to do reflective writing or relate the story events to their own lives.
For more information, visit www. tomsnyder.com or call 800-342-0236. Mac/Win95/98; $59.95 per CD.
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Authors: Veccia, Susan | Scroggs, Sandy
Source: Multimedia Schools. Mar/Apr98, Vol. 5 Issue 2, p62. 2p. 1 Black and White Photograph, 1 Chart.
Section:
Product Reviews-In-Brief
Electronic Resources for Schools
This section provides concise, original reviews of new or important CD-ROMs, videodiscs, magnetic media, and Web sites that relate to the K-12 curriculum. All reviews are written by practicing educators who, in most cases, have used the software in a school environment. While grouped into broad, age-appropriate categories, these categories should not be viewed as prescriptive. To facilitate "comparison shopping," these reviews are highly structured. Reviewers prepare a "report card" based on the five-star scale.
That's a Fact, Jack!
Company: Produced by Learn Television, distributed by Follett Software Company, 1391 Corporate Drive, McHenry, IL 60050-7041; Customer Service and Technical Support: 800/323-3397; Fax: 815/344-8774; http://tfj.fsc.follett.com
Price: $349--Macintosh Deluxe Kit includes program engine disc and choice of five title discs; $99--Macintosh Starter Kit includes program engine disc and choice of one title disc; check Web site for special pricing offers; Windows version due in Fall 1998
Audience: Producer recommends grades 4-10; reviewer suggests grades 3-10
Format: CD-ROM: graphics, sound, video
System Requirements: Minimum requirements are a Macintosh computer with a 68LC040 processor running System 7.1 or later, 8 MB RAM, 30 MB free hard disk space, double-speed CD-ROM drive, and monitor with 256+ colors. It is recommended that no other applications be running, that file sharing be turned off (except on networking this database in a multi-user environment), that virtual memory be turned off, and that you not use RAM Doubler.
Description: That's a Fact, Jack! is a motivational reading program that tests higher-order thinking skills in a television-game show environment. After reading a specific book, students can test their reading comprehension and understanding by playing against the computer or against multiple contestants. There are 60 different title discs, and each one features five award-winning or notable books that share a common theme. For example, the theme of title disc #5 has to do with how people adjust to life's big changes and challenges, and the books that illustrate this theme are Cages, Mr. Henshaw, Cracker Jackson, Strider, and Number the Stars. The theme of title disc #3 is about traveling into new and uncertain worlds, and the books chosen for this disc are A Wrinkle in Time, Maniac Magee, The Indian in the Cupboard, The Whipping Boy, and The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. The recommended reading levels for the books on any one disc may have a range of 2.5 grades.
Reviewer Comments: Installation: I tested the program on a Mac 575 with 8 MB of memory and on a Power Macintosh 7600/120 with 16 MB of memory. You will need to read the instructions in the manual before trying to install the program. I also tried running the program without limiting the extensions on the PowerMac and did not have any problems. There are three options for installing: single-user, multi-user without a file server, and multi-user with a file server.Installation Rating: A
Content/Features: Similar to the familiar Family Feud program, That's a Fact, Jack! is hosted by the animated and appealing Jack Patterson. Each game show covers material from one book and is intended to serve as a measure of reading comprehension. After using their password to gain entry to the program, students select a book title and indicate whether they would like to have fill-in-the-blank questions, which offer more points, or multiple-choice questions. The questions cover a range of categories, and their level of difficulty increases with the proportion of correct answers. And, while points will be subtracted from a team's score if they select the wrong answer, their total can never go into negative numbers. If they do not complete the game successfully, they have two other chances to do so. Depending upon how the teacher has set up the program, students retaking the test may or may not have the same questions.
To get the most from this program, you should take the time to read the manual cover to cover and to experiment with the program. In keeping with the format of a television studio, teachers can use the station manager and the producers to control the settings of the program; you can limit the number of times students can retake the test, set the maximum time limit for completing a test, control the number of questions, select the questions, or establish the number of points required to play in the bonus round. You may customize each of these options or select from among the four templates that the program provides. Whatever your choice, you make these selections before introducing the program to your class. When students sit down to log in with their assigned password, they will need to know which television producer is their teacher's alter-ego and will take them to the game show that has been customized for their use.
Teachers will like the format and nature of the questions. Each game show contains 36 questions that cover four themes within the book. The types of questions fall into five categories: literal, inferential, hypothetical, dialog, and writing technique. The report form for each student will include the test date, book title, reading level, sophistication level, number of questions, types of questions, score in the bonus round, and final score. The statistics can be presented in ratio format or percentage format and printed. Content/Features Rating: A
Ease of Use: This program is easy to use if you read through the manual ahead of time and impossible to use it you don't; I have a colleague who will testify to that. The only part of the program I found to be a little awkward involved the printing options; although you can print out all of your students' scores, each one will be on a separate page. Ease of Use Rating: A[-]
Product Support: The easy-to-read manual has large print, many illustrations, and three main parts: Getting Started, Playing the Game, and Control Room Options. There is also a trouble-shooting section and an index. If necessary, you can call the toll-free telephone number for technical support. I connected very quickly each time. Product Support Rating: A
Recommendation: At first, I thought the price for this program was too high, especially when compared to programs such as Electronic Bookshelf or Accelerated Reader (a program my school currently uses). However, I have changed my mind. Although there are fewer titles per disc, the presentation style and types of questions make this program shine. The game show format was very popular with our students, and even led to a highly-motivating rivalry between two of our classrooms. Such team play would be further enhanced by Follett's Sidekeys ($395), a device that allows students to buzz in from their desks rather than crowding around one computer. If your budget will allow it, I think this is an excellent reading-motivation tool that is well worth the money. Outstanding--a "must" buy!
Reviewer: Sandy Scroggs, Librarian, Kate Schenck Elementary School, 101 Kate Schenck Avenue, San Antonio, TX 78223; [email protected] or [email protected].
                            Report
Overall Rating               *****
Installation                 A
Content/Features             A
Ease of Use                  A-
Product Support              A
Maximum rating: 5 stars
PHOTO (BLACK & WHITE): That's a Fact, Jack!
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compiled by Susan Veccia, Editor, MultiMedia Schools
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Authors: Harper, Naomi | Parmigiani, Rosemary | Svec, Debbie
Source: Media & Methods. Jan/Feb98, Vol. 34 Issue 3, p16. 2p. 1 Black and White Photograph.
That's a Fact Jack is a motivational CD-ROM reading series featuring a variety of CD-ROM discs, each with five stories. Jack Patterson is the friendly video game-show host who guides students through the stories in a highly interactive format. Patterson tells students the category for questions that are asked. Students accrue points throughout the game for correct answers.
That's a Fact Jack does not just ask yes or no questions. Students must understand the context of the stow and use creative thinking to answer the questions. Using the "side keys," or buzzers, classes can also play in teams. Each team has a captain and only the captain can buzz in with an answer. This CDROM is challenging and fun, promoting creativity and teamwork.
THE FOLLETT SOFTWARE COMPANY;, 1391 Corporate Dr., McHenry, IL 60050-7041; 800/3233397. System requirements: MAC: System 7.1 or higher, 256 color monitor, 8MB, 30 MB free space, CD-ROM drive. Cost: $99-starter kit, $349-deluxe kit. c1996. Circle No. 212 on the Reader Action Card.
PHOTO (BLACK & WHITE): That's a Fact Jack is a motivational CD-ROM reading series featuring a variety of discs, each with five stories.
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Naomi Harper; Rosemary Parmigiani and Debbie Svec
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simlili · 3 years
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Mesa Flats rotation Week 1 : Anthony Zilch
Anthony, Gordon’s thug in the scenario, moves in into Rachel’s empty house. He reveals his real face as soon as he’s sent to the mirror, and soon meets his nose-mate: Katherine Cormier ! Meanwhile, townies are being silly by the pool.
Just one more household to finish posting Mesa Flats’ first week. This was played ten years ago, 2011, I’m really glad these screencaps are finally sorted out.
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Does it have lesbians?
Me, every time someone recommends a new show. 
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pingvinsstuff · 7 years
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otp with child
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riceli · 4 years
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BANNED CLASSICS
Banned Classic Books - banned in various countries, time periods, etc. Non-fiction, children's, modern, etc.
How many have you read?
1
The Great Gatsby (F. Scott Fitzgerald)
2
The Catcher in the Rye (J. D. Salinger)
3
The Grapes of Wrath (John Steinbeck)
4
To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee)
5
The Color Purple (Alice Walker)
6
Ulysses (James Joyce)
7
Beloved (Toni Morrison)
8
Lord of the Flies (William Golding)
9
1984 (George Orwell)
10
Lolita (Vladimir Nabokov)
11
Of Mice and Men (John Steinbeck)
12
Catch-22 (Joseph Heller)
13
Brave New World (Aldous Huxley)
14
Animal Farm (George Orwell-1945)
15
The Sun Also Rises (Ernest Hemingway)
16
As I Lay Dying (William Faulkner)
17
A Farewell to Arms (Ernest Hemingway)
18
Their Eyes Were Watching God (Zora Neale Hurston)
19
Invisible Man (Ralph Ellison)
20
Song of Solomon (The Song of Songs, also Song of Solomon or Canticles, is one of the megillot found in the last section of the Tanakh, known as the Ketuvim, and a book of the Old Testament.)
21
Gone With the Wind (Margaret Mitchell)
22
Native Son (Richard Wright)
23
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest ( Ken Kesey)
24
Slaughterhouse-Five (Kurt Vonnegut)
25
For Whom the Bell Tolls (Ernest Hemingway)
26
The Call of the Wild (Jack London)
27
Go Tell It on the Mountain. (James Baldwin)
28
All the King's Men (Robert Penn Warren)
29
The Lord of the Rings (J. R. R. Tolkien)
30
The Jungle (Upton Sinclair)
31
Lady Chatterley's Lover (D. H. Lawrence)
32
A Clockwork Orange (Anthony Burgess)
33
The Awakening (Kate Chopin)
34
In Cold Blood (Truman Capote)
35
Sophie's Choice (William Styron)
36
Cat's Cradle (Kurt Vonnegut)
37
A Separate Peace, by John Knowles
38
Naked Lunch (William S. Burroughs)
39
Brideshead Revisited (Evelyn Waugh)
40
Women in Love (D.H. Lawrence)
41
The Naked and the Dead (Norman Mailer)
42
Tropic of Cancer (Henry Miller)
43
An American Tragedy (Theodore Dreiser)
44
Rabbit, Run (John Updike)
45
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Mark Twain)
46
Candide (Voltaire)
47
Sons and Lovers (D.H. Lawrence)
48
The Autobiography of Malcolm X (Alex Haley and Malcolm X)
49
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (Dee Brown)
50
Fahrenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury)
51
Howl ( Allen Ginsberg - a poem)
52
Leaves of Grass (Walt Whitman)
53
Moby-Dick (Herman Melville)
54
Our Bodies, Ourselves (a book about women's health and sexuality produced by the nonprofit organization Our Bodies Ourselves (originally called the Boston Women's Health Book Collective)
55
The Red Badge of Courage (Stephen Crane)
56
The Scarlet Letter (Nathaniel Hawthorne)
57
Sexual Behavior in the Human Male (Alfred C. Kinsey, Wardell R. Pomeroy, and Clyde E. Martin)
58
Stranger in a Strange Land (Robert a Heinlein)
59
A Streetcar Named Desire (Tennessee Williams)
60
Uncle Tom's Cabin (Harriet Beecher Stowe)
61
Where the Wild Things Are (Maurice Sendak)
62
The Crucible (Arthur Miller)
63
Anne Frank: the Diary of a Young Girl (Anne Frank)
64
The Bell Jar (Sylvia Plath)
65
Arabian Nights (Richard Francis Burton & Geraldine McCaughrean)
66
Gullivers Travels (Jonathan Swift)
67
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Maya Angelou)
68
Madame Bovary (Gustave Flaubert)
69
Moll Flanders (Daniel Defoe)
70
A Wrinkle in Time (Madeleine L'engle)
71
Bridge to Terabithia (Katherine Paterson)
72
The Chocolate War (Robert Cormier)
73
The Perks of Being a Wallflower (Stephen Chbosky)
74
Harry Potter (J. K. Rowling)
75
The Giver (Lois Lowry)
76
Alice in Wonderland (Lewis Carroll)
77
The Handmaid's Tale (Margaret Atwood)
78
Flowers for Algernon (Daniel Keyes)
79
The Outsiders (S. E. Hinton)
80
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (lMark Twain)
81
That Was Then, This Is Now (S.E. Hinton)
82
The Golden Compass (Philip Pullman)
83
Charlotte's Web (E. B. White)
84
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (Roald Dahl)
85
The Giving Tree (Shel Silverstein)
86
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (C.S.Lewis)
87
The Wizard of Oz (L. Frank Baum)
88
James and the Giant Peach (Roald Dahl)
89
Grimm's Fairy Tales (Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm)
90
The Little Mermaid (Hans Christian Anderson)
91
Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark (Alvin Schwartz
92
Winnie-The-Pooh (A. A. Milne)
93
Siddhartha (Hermann Hesse)
94
The Metamorphosis (Franz Kafka -1915)
95
Frankenstein (Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley)
96
The Canterbury Tales (Geoffrey Chaucer)
97
The Well of Loneliness (Radclyffe Hall)
98
All Quiet on the Western Front (Erich Maria Remarque)
99
The Master and Margarita (Mikhail Bulgakov)
100
Heart of Darkness (Joseph Conrad)
“A book banned” sounds like a joke.
Are people a bunch of idiots that have to be controlled by some System that decides what can be read and what can not?
It is ridiculous.
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MARVEL OC'S MASTERLIST
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Name: Ellen Cooper
Species: Human
Love interest: Tony Stark
Face claim: Diana Silvers
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Name: Pamela Marie Pearson
Species: Human
Love interest: Steve Rogers
Face claim: Scarlett Leithold
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Name: Katherine Pamela Rogers
Species: Enhanced human
Love interest: Natasha Romanoff
Face claim: Philippine Urvois
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Name: Mary Elizabeth Rogers
Species: Human / TBD
Love interest: Bucky Barnes
Face claim: Samantha Cormier
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Name: Nyx Reed
Species: Inhuman
Love interest: Steve Rogers
Face claim: Isabella Valhosa
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ozianelphaba · 4 years
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Thanks for tagging me love @the-sweetest-noise
Name: Iris
Pronouns: She/Her
Nickname: I don’t have any lol
Zodiac sign: Aquarius
Height: 174 cm I think, so that’s like 5′7? 5′8? Idk
Languages: Dutch, English, French, a bit of German, Frisian
Nationality: Dutch
Favourite season: Spring
Favourite scent: My first cup of coffee in the morning 
Favourite colour: Pink
Favourite animal: Cat
Favourite fictional characters: Katherine Howard, Sara Lance, Lena Luthor, Lexa (still), Carmilla Karnstein, Delphine Cormier, etc.
Tea, coffee or hot chocolate: Coffee
Average sleep hours: 8-11 hours
Dog or cat person: Cat person!
Number of blankets: One, with an extra one nearby 
Dream Trip: Back to NYC or London
Blog established: Idk, ages ago
Followers: 164
Random fact: All my cats’ names start with the letter L
Tags: @hausofho1bein @sliceofham @argondezaoito
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danger-archive · 6 years
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Below the cut you can find 87 redhead fcs of all ages, and many ethnicities. There are models, singers and actors available. 
List will be updated as much as possible! 
abigal cowen (actress)
alexandra breckenridge (actress)
alina kovalenko (model)
amy adams (actress)
amy lee ‘ailee’ (singer)
asena keskinci (actress) 
başak gümülcinelioğlu (actress)
bella thorne (actress)
bree kish (model)
bryce dallas howard (actress)
bridget regan (actress)
charlotte spencer (actress)
christina hendricks (actress)
danielle victoria (model)
daria sidorchuk (model)
daria milky (model)
debby ryan (actress)
deborah ann woll (actress)
elçin sangu (actress)
eleanor tomlinson (actress)
elena satine (actress)
elinor krupski (model)
ellie bamber (model)
elizabeth lail (actress)
elyse dufour (actress)
erin kellyman (actress)
evan rachel wood (actress)
felicia day (actress)
francesca del fa (actress)
freya mavor (actress)
grace holley (model)
hari nef (actress)
han seung-yeon (actress)
hayley williams (singer)
holland roden (actress)
holliday grainger (actress)
isla fisher (actress)
jade thompson (model)
jaime ray newton (actress)
jane levy (actress)
jayma mays (actress)
jessica chastain (actress)
joanna garcia (actress)
jolijn henneman (actress)
karol queiroz (model) 
karen gillan (actress)
katherine mcnamara (actress)
kathryn prescott (actress)
katie leclerc (actress)
katie stevens (actress)
kennedy mcmann (actress)
kim hyun-ah ‘hyuna’ (singer)
kim whalen (actress)
kristina marie (model)
laura berlin (actress/model)
laura gwyneth butler (model)
leslie mann (actress)
lily collins (actress)
lilly dreesen (actress)
lindsay hansan (model)
luca hollestelle (actress/model)
ludovica martino (actress)
luanna perez (model)
madelaine petsch (actress)
maddison brown (actress)
maggie geha (actress)
marina ruy barbosa (actress)
marjolein tegel (model)
mary-kate wiles (actress)
megan prescott (actress)
megan west (actress) 
melis sezan (actress)
molly quinn (actress)
niamh walsh (actress) 
rachelle lefevre (actress)
rebecca furguson (actress)
rebecca rittenhouse (actress)
rose leslie (actress)
riley rasmussen (model)
sarah drew (actress)
sarah rafferty (actress)
samantha cormier (instagram model)
sophie skelton (actress)
sophia lillis (actress)
sophie turner (actress)
soul larouge (model)
stefanie martini
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balkinbuddies · 5 years
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We’re celebrating July 4th with  the ALAN Review article entitled “Where Are They Now? Remembering Our Most Popular Young Adult Authors.”
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     An article written by Don Gallo appeared recently in the Summer 2019 issue of The ALAN Review entitled “Where Are They Now? Remembering Our Most Popular Young Adult Authors.” Among those remembered were four authors with whom I worked very closely during my years at HarperCollins and, with Don Gallo's and the ALAN Review's permission, I'm including those remembrances on the Balkin Buddies blog:
     Here they are in  the order they appeared in the article:
Paul Zindel [Tied for first place with S.E. Hinton in 1988]*
    Paul Zindel's death in March 2003 ended the brilliant career of a unique individual. Not only did he win a Pulitzer Prize for Drama and an Obie Award for Best American Play in 1970 for The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds (1965), but he was also one of the earliest writers in the field of contemporary literature for young adults. The Pigman, published in 1968, is still one of the most well-known and widely taught novels in the genre. He followed The Pigman with My Darling, My Hamburger (1969); Pardon Me, You're Stepping on My Eyeball (1976), The Undertaker's Gone Bananas (1978); Harry and Hortense at Hormone High (1984); and other novels with attention-getting titles. His writing revealed how well he understood teenagers, believing that “adolescence is a time for problem-solving – for dealing with the awesome questions of self-identity, responsibility,  authority, sex, love, God, and death” (Gallo, 1990, p. 228).
     In addition to Gamma Rays, this versatile author wrote a number of other plays, including And Miss Reardon Drinks a Little (1971) and Ladies at the Alamo (1975), as well as a number of movies and television scripts that include Up the Sandbox (1972), starring Barbara Streisand; Mame (1974), starring Lucille Ball; Runaway Train (1985), starring Jon Voigt; Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking-glass (1985), with a cast of 50 stars that included Red Buttons, Ringo Starr, Scott Baio, and Shelley Winters; Babes in Toyland (1986), starring Drew Barrymore and Keanu Reeves; and A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1989), starring Keshia Knight Pullman. During those years working in Hollywood, Zindel associated with numerous movie and television actors and became good friends with Walter Matthau who lived in the house next door.
     In his later years, Zindel, always knowing what would appeal to teen readers, turned from realistic fiction to monster/horror books, such as The Doom Stone (1996), Rats (1999), and Night of the Bat (2001) – all of them filled with suspense and action and all selected as Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers.
     Zindel reveals a lot about himself in his 1987 autobiographical novel, The Amazing and Death-Defying Diary of Eugene Dingman, except that the fictional Eugene grows up in Bayone, New Jersey, while Paul grew up on Staten Island, New York. Of his teen years, Paul says bluntly: “I was an awkward freak.” More about Zindel's early life, family, and adventures can be found in his autobiography, The Pigman and Me (1992), which was named one of the 100 Best of the Best Books published for teenagers during the last part of the twentieth century.  In 2002, the American Library Association bestowed upon Paul Zindel the Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement, and later that same year, he was presented with the ALAN Award for his contributions to young adult literature.
M. E. Kerr [Tied for fourth place with Robert Cormier and Katherine Paterson in 1988]*
     Writing under the pseudonym of M. E. Kerr, Marijane Meaker was one of the earliest authors to gain notoriety in the YA publishing world with Dinky Hocker Shoots Smack!, published in 1972. Among her 20 popular novels are Is That You, Miss Blue? (1975), I'll Love You When You're More Like Me (1977), Gentlehands (1978), Him She Loves? (1984), Night Kites (1986), the Fell series (1987, 1989, 1991), and Deliver Us from Evie (1990). Kerr has always chosen to write about differences in people, “understanding them....trying to make sense of it all, never losing sight of the power love lends.”
     In an interview published in Teenreads, she explains her motives: “I was very much formed by books when I was young....I was a bookworm and a poetry lover. When I think of myself and what I would have liked to have found in books those many years ago, I remember being depressed by all the neatly tied-up, happy-ending stories, the abundance of winners, the themes of winning, solving,  finding – when around me it didn't seem that easy. So I write with a different feeling when I write for young adults. I guess I write for myself at that age” (“M. E. Kerr).
     Marijane Meaker began her career in publishing after she was unable to sell any of her stories to magazines. She presented herself as Ms. Meaker, a literary agent with six clients, and sent out her own work under various pseudonyms, male as well as female. One was a middle-aged female teacher writing true confessions (at $300 a story); another was a young college woman selling to magazines, such as Redbook and Ladies Home Journal; a third “author” told a story, titled “I Lost My Baby at a Pot Party,” about her child wandering from a house where a saleslady was pitching Teflon pots. Along the way, a Gold Medal Books editor convinced her to write a novel about sorority life, for which she earned $4,000 a book at a penny a word. This very resourceful writer also published two or three adult mysteries a year under the name of Vin Packer, and other novels were penned as Ann Aldrich and Laura Winston. Her books for children are published under the name Mary James. “A lot of my stories,” she says, “sold well enough for me to enjoy trips to Europe, an apartment off  Fifth Avenue in New York City in the 90s, and a Fiat convertible.”
     M.E. Kerr's novels for teens have won multiple awards, including a Christopher Award in 1978, a Golden Kite Award from the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators in 1981, a California Young Readers Medal in 1992, the Margaret A. Edwards Award from the American Library Association in 1993 for her lifetime contribution to young adult literature, the Knickerbocker Award for Juvenile and Young Adult Literature in 1991, the ALAN Award in 2000, and the Golden Crown Literary Society Award for her groundbreaking works in the field of lesbian literature in 2013. In 1996, Long Island University awarded her an honorary doctorate.
     A collection of her short stories for teens – dealing with dating, love, race, bigotry, homosexuality, self-love, and  acceptance – titled Edge,  was published in 2015. And Highsmith: A Romance of the 1950s, a memoir recounting Meaker's relationship with famous mystery writer Patricia Highsmith, was published in 2003. Still writing at the age of 91, Meaker recently completed a novel about gay life in New York City during the 1940s and how she became a literary agent for her own work. It's titled Remind Me, based on the lyrics of an old song from that time written by Jerome  Kern and Dorothy Fields (1940): “Remind me / Not to find you so attractive / Remind me that the world is full of men.
Katherine Paterson [Tied for fourth place with Robert Cormier and M. E. Kerr in 1988]*
     Born in Qing Jiang, China, in 1932, the middle daughter of missionary parents, Katherine Paterson has lived in a variety of places, from Tennessee, Virginia, Maryland, and New York City to China and Japan, where she was a Presbyterian missionary. She now lives in Montpelier, Vermont.
     Her highly regarded novels include The Sign of the Chrysanthemum (1973), Of Nightingales That Weep (1974), Master Puppeteer (1975), and Rebels of the Heavenly Kingdom (1983), but she is known best for Bridge to Terabithia (1977), which won the Newbery Medal in 1978; The Great Gilly Hopkins (1978), which won the National Book Award in 1979; Jacob Have I Loved (1980), which won the Newbery Medal in 1981; and Park's Quest (1988), which made The Horn Book Fanfare Honor List in 1988. Published in 1996, Jip, His Story won the Parents' Choice Story Book Award and the Scott O'Dell Award for Historical Fiction in 1997. In 2006, Bread and Roses, Too won the Christopher Award and was a Bank Street Best Children's Book of the Year, a Notable Social Studies Trade Book for Young People, a Parents' Choice Gold Medal historical fiction book, and one of Voice of Youth Advocate's Top Fiction for Middle School Readers.
     Paterson has also authored several autobiographical books about her writing, including Stories of My Life (2014), and is a coauthor of Consider the Lilies (Paterson & Paterson, 1986), a nonfiction book about various plants of the Bible that she wrote with her husband, John.
     Over her long writing career, Paterson has also received a long list of awards for her body of work. Among them are the Kerlan Award from the University of Minnesota (1983), the ALAN Award (1987), the Hans Christian Andersen Medal for Writing (1998), the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award (2006), the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award (2013), and the Massachusetts Reading Association Lifetime Award, along with writing awards from Germany, France, and Sweden. In 2000, she was declared A Living Legend by the Library of Congress, and for 2010-2011, Paterson was the US Ambassador for Young People's Literature. She is also the recipient of more than a dozen honorary degrees, including ones from Vermont College of Fine Arts, the University of Maryland, Hope College, and Washington and Lee University.
     Paterson's latest novel is My Brigadista Year (2017), set in Cuba in 1961 during the literacy campaign that made Cuba a fully literate nation in  one year.
Robert Lipsyte
     The author of The Contender (1967) turned 80 years old this spring, as his ground-breaking novel passed the 50-year mark in print. Lipsyte is also the author of One Fat Summer (1977), Summer Rules (1981), The Brave (1991), The Chemo Kid (1992), The Chief (1993), and Raiders Night (2006) for teens, and for young readers, The Twinning Project (2012). Lipsyte's list of publications for teenagers isn't especially lengthy when compared to those of some authors who have been writing for the same length of time, but that's because writing books for and about teenagers is only one kind of work he has done especially well. He has also published a number of short stories, essays about sports issues, and biographies of several sports celebrities, such as Muhammad Ali, Jim Thorpe, and Michael Jordan, as well as several nonfiction books for adults, including Nigger, with Dick Gregory (1964), the African American satirist; Sportsworld (1975/2018); and Idols of the Game (1995). As the author of The Contender, one of the very first realistic novels about contemporary teenagers, Robert Lipsyte was honored with the Margaret A. Edwards Award by the American Library Association in 2001.
     And that's not all. Among other things, Robert Lipsyte has been a highly respected columnist and prize-winning sports reporter for The New York Times, a correspondent for the CBS television program Sunday Morning with Charles Kuralt; the host of his own award-winning television interview program, The Eleventh Hour, on New York City's public television station, WNET Channel 13; author of a television documentary series about sports; and the Life (Part 2) series for PBS-TV on subjects of interest to older people. He is also the author of an entertaining memoir, titled Accidental Sportswriter (2011).
     In addition to speaking at a lot of high schools, Lipsyte recently has been flying to North Carolina for a week at a time to teach at Wake Forest University, which he says he enjoys very much. He continues to write a monthly column, mostly on local politics, for his hometown weekly, The Shelter Island Reporter, which he says “gives me as much pleasure as the old Times' column.” He also occasionally writes about sports and politics for a site called Tomdispatch, which distributes to a batch of leftish publications like The Nation and The Guardian. If that's not enough, after his cameo on the O.J.: Made in America documentary film (Edelman, 2016) that won an Oscar, he gets called often to pontificate on various TV documentaries, most recently on one about Sonny Liston, three on  Muhammad Ali (including one by Ken Burns), and another on that “hard year” 1968.
     Meanwhile, this very busy author has been promoting the film, Measure of a Man (Scearce, 2018), starring Donald Sutherland, based on One Fat Summer, Lipsyte's 1977 novel about a bullied teen. View the trailer at https://trailers.apple.com/trailers/independent/measure-of-a-man/. “I have toyed with a new YA novel,” he claims, but where will he find the time?
     *Based on the list of 169 authors' names Mr. Gallo sent to 41 present and past officers of ALAN in 1988, asking them “to identify the most important and popular YA fiction writers of the time and to add other names of writers they felt were as important.” Due to space limitations, he “limited this investigation to the top 30 authors included on that 1988 list.”
     The ALAN Review   Summer 2019
     Reprinted with permission from the ALAN Review and Don Gallo.
     I hope you enjoyed this excerpt and get to read the entire article. Personally, I feel honored to have worked with such incredibly talented authors as well as with all the amazing people at ALAN.
     For information on Balkin Buddies, be sure to visit our website or blog.
Catherine Balkin, Balkin Buddies
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raoulgoldenlake · 5 years
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As mentioned, this project is going to focus on the 100 most banned and challenged books from 2000 to 2009, based on a list from the American Library Association. There are picture books, young adult and middle grade, and a couple of controversial books for adults. 
When I post reviews I’ll put the most obvious content warnings (violence, sex, abuse etc) but if you want something tagged, let me know! For example, I’m not currently planning to give drug content warnings, but I’m happy to do it if someone wants me to!
Complete list of books I’m going to be reading is under the cut.
1. Harry Potter (series), by J.K. Rowling 2. Alice series, by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor 3. The Chocolate War, by Robert Cormier 4. And Tango Makes Three, by Justin Richardson/Peter Parnell 5. Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck 6. I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, by Maya Angelou 7. Scary Stories (series), by Alvin Schwartz 8. His Dark Materials (series), by Philip Pullman 9. ttyl; ttfn; l8r g8r (series), by Lauren Myracle 10. The Perks of Being a Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky 11. Fallen Angels, by Walter Dean Myers 12. It’s Perfectly Normal, by Robie Harris 13. Captain Underpants (series), by Dav Pilkey 14. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain 15. The Bluest Eye, by Toni Morrison 16. Forever, by Judy Blume 17. The Color Purple, by Alice Walker 18. Go Ask Alice, by Anonymous 19. Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger 20. King and King, by Linda de Haan 21. To Kill A Mockingbird, by Harper Lee 22. Gossip Girl (series), by Cecily von Ziegesar 23. The Giver, by Lois Lowry 24. In the Night Kitchen, by Maurice Sendak 25. Killing Mr. Griffen, by Lois Duncan 26. Beloved, by Toni Morrison 27. My Brother Sam Is Dead, by James Lincoln Collier 28. Bridge To Terabithia, by Katherine Paterson 29. The Face on the Milk Carton, by Caroline B. Cooney 30. We All Fall Down, by Robert Cormier 31. What My Mother Doesn’t Know, by Sonya Sones 32. Bless Me, Ultima, by Rudolfo Anaya 33. Snow Falling on Cedars, by David Guterson 34. The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big, Round Things, by Carolyn Mackler 35. Angus, Thongs, and Full Frontal Snogging, by Louise Rennison 36. Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley 37. It’s So Amazing, by Robie Harris 38. Arming America, by Michael Bellasiles 39. Kaffir Boy, by Mark Mathabane 40. Life is Funny, by E.R. Frank 41. Whale Talk, by Chris Crutcher 42. The Fighting Ground, by Avi 43. Blubber, by Judy Blume 44. Athletic Shorts, by Chris Crutcher 45. Crazy Lady, by Jane Leslie Conly 46. Slaughterhouse-Five, by Kurt Vonnegut 47. The Adventures of Super Diaper Baby: The First Graphic Novel by George Beard and Harold Hutchins, the creators of Captain Underpants, by Dav Pilkey 48. Rainbow Boys, by Alex Sanchez 49. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, by Ken Kesey 50. The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini 51. Daughters of Eve, by Lois Duncan 52. The Great Gilly Hopkins, by Katherine Paterson 53. You Hear Me?, by Betsy Franco 54. The Facts Speak for Themselves, by Brock Cole 55. Summer of My German Soldier, by Bette Green 56. When Dad Killed Mom, by Julius Lester 57. Blood and Chocolate, by Annette Curtis Klause 58. Fat Kid Rules the World, by K.L. Going 59. Olive’s Ocean, by Kevin Henkes 60. Speak, by Laurie Halse Anderson 61. Draw Me A Star, by Eric Carle 62. The Stupids (series), by Harry Allard 63. The Terrorist, by Caroline B. Cooney 64. Mick Harte Was Here, by Barbara Park 65. The Things They Carried, by Tim O’Brien 66. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry, by Mildred Taylor 67. A Time to Kill, by John Grisham 68. Always Running, by Luis Rodriguez 69. Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury 70. Harris and Me, by Gary Paulsen 71. Junie B. Jones (series), by Barbara Park 72. Song of Solomon, by Toni Morrison 73. What’s Happening to My Body Book, by Lynda Madaras 74. The Lovely Bones, by Alice Sebold 75. Anastasia (series), by Lois Lowry 76. A Prayer for Owen Meany, by John Irving 77. Crazy: A Novel, by Benjamin Lebert 78. The Joy of Gay Sex, by Dr. Charles Silverstein 79. The Upstairs Room, by Johanna Reiss 80. A Day No Pigs Would Die, by Robert Newton Peck 81. Black Boy, by Richard Wright 82. Deal With It!, by Esther Drill 83. Detour for Emmy, by Marilyn Reynolds 84. So Far From the Bamboo Grove, by Yoko Watkins 85. Staying Fat for Sarah Byrnes, by Chris Crutcher 86. Cut, by Patricia McCormick 87. Tiger Eyes, by Judy Blume 88. The Handmaid’s Tale, by Margaret Atwood 89. Friday Night Lights, by H.G. Bissenger 90. A Wrinkle in Time, by Madeline L’Engle 91. Julie of the Wolves, by Jean Craighead George 92. The Boy Who Lost His Face, by Louis Sachar 93. Bumps in the Night, by Harry Allard 94. Goosebumps (series), by R.L. Stine 95. Shade’s Children, by Garth Nix 96. Grendel, by John Gardner 97. The House of the Spirits, by Isabel Allende 98. I Saw Esau, by Iona Opte 99. Are You There, God?  It’s Me, Margaret, by Judy Blume 100. America: A Novel, by E.R. Frank
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nsula · 5 years
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Dean’s List Fall 2018
NATCHITOCHES –  One thousand two hundred sixty students were named to the Fall 2018 Dean’s List at Northwestern State University. Students on the list earned a grade point average of between 3.5 and 3.99. Those named to the Dean’s List by hometown are as follows.
 Aberdeen Proving Grd, Maryland -- Adrian Borel
 Addis -- William Seaman
 Alexandria – Iris Barrera, Marquita Benjamin, Morgan Bryant, Katylyn Cox, Ashley Day, Qurshea Decoste, Destiny Dotson, Selena Elmore, KelVina Ford, Daryn Freeman, Maeghan George, Khloe Jasper, Leslie Katz, Taylar Lee, Kelli Leone, ShaKiyla Lindsey, Jimmie Magee, Madalyn Mayer, Lauren McLeod, Olivia Mosley, Lashanda Moss, Kellie Pebbles, Ragan Richey, Imani Ricks, Sydney Roseman, Kaitlin Roshto, Caleb Ross, Shakera Shorts, Kizzy Slaughter, Avery Tharp, Alexander Trotter, Hailey Urena, Alysha Walker, Christopher Warren, William Welch, Aalyiah Williams;
 Anacoco – Alan Cosio, Danielle Egan, Elizabeth Guy, Andrea Halladay, Madeleine Hensley, Karington Johnson, Kelen Kay, Jason Ortiz, Clarissa Owens, Brooke Phillips, Amanda Sorg, Erica Wade, Emily Williams;
 Angers, France – Sophie Podevin;
 Angola – Ursula Poarch;
 Arlington, Texas -- Samantha Bell, Devin Gipson, Charles Rogers;
Arnaudville –Bailey Dautreuil;
Athens – Ryan Carroway;
Atlanta – Jonathan Friis, Alexis Hanson, Peyton Howell,
Aurora, Colorado – William McCullough;
Austin, Texas – Skylar Besch, Ysmina Smith;
Avondale – James Brown, Mikala Clark;
Ball – Stephen Carpenter, Lauren Nugent, Vanessa Toney;
Barksdale AFB – Victoria Charles, Jeanine Matthews;
Bastrop – Anna Akins, Alisha Bolton, Haleigh Irby, Chadwick Jones, Haleigh Vollmar;
Baton Rouge – Merodac Beraki, Randy Blackwell, Rosa Campbell, Joshua Cheatwood, Peyton Clark, Emmanuel Dunn, Bryn Edmonston, Maisyn Guillory, Kelly Guillot, Melvin Hudson Misterie Jarrell, DJacqulyn Johnson, Elizebeth Ledet, Bethany Lee, Sarah Lovern, Madalyn Mullins, Mary Pourciau, Colleen Reese, Ethan Smith, Reagan Smith, Haley Sylvester, Sarah Talbot, Jessica Joseph;
Bayside, Nova Scotia – April Trowbrige;
Baytown, Texas – Norma Trejo;
Belcher – Jessica Herbert;
Belle Chasse – Hayley Barbazon, Alexander Melcer, Jade Talazac, Natalie Wilson, Annie Wright;
Belle Rose – Thomas Daigle;
Belmont – Jayce Gentry;
Bentley – Stephanie Hayes;
Benton – Haley Crosby, Holly Crosby, Jessica Gates, Joshua Johnson, Kara Knippers, Abigail Lauterbach, Hannah Schott, Daniel Scott, Ted Scott, Jadyn Sepulvado, Torea Taylor, Audrey Trujillo, Kimberly Umphries, Jackson Mathews;
 Berwick – Brittany Vidos;
Bossier City – Christian Baker, Clayton Brown, Amber Engel, Sydney Gootee, Sydney Shannon, Austin Averitt, Alexandra Borrmann, Courtney Brooks, Abigail Castillo, Emily Cheatham, Lacy Chism, Caitlin Cover, Ri’Kaela England, Kelly Flores, Matthew Flynn, Kelsey Gallman, Candace Guillory, Rebecca Hickson, Jodi Hill, Anqumesha Jeter, Elizabeth Jones, Abigail Kent, Tina Kile, Marci King, Rebecca Markle, Arielle Martignetti, Claire McMillan, Brittany Morris, Kennedy Parson, Brittani Phillips, Khayla Pugh, Litzy Rivera, Kassidy Robideaux, Andrew Robinson, Rheagan Rowland, Jeffrey Ruiz, Elisha Scott, Hope Spaw, Brittany Spence, Tori Spraggins, Terrence Stewart, Susan Stone, Savannah Swaim, Benjamin Tanner, Avery Tibbets, Kortney Toellner, Jirneicia Ward, Courtney Wilson, Dominique Wineglass, Jennifer Woods, Nour Zeidan, Andrea Holley, Ashley Bennett, Ashanti Hill, Brittney Malmay,
Boyce – Bo Bowers, Sarah Hill, Amanda Land, Hannah Miller, Wyatt Miller, Miranda Perry, Ashley Smith, Jessie Turner;
Breaux Bridge – Blythe Duvall, Shayla James, Ashtin Mouton, Tyler Thibodeaux;
Brookeland, Texas – Morgan Horn, Paige West;
Brusly – Emma Wallace;
Buda, Texas – Kathryn Wristen;
Bullard, Texas – Brandon Duecker;
Bunkie – Brett Baker, Izola Williams, Kearia Wilson;
Burleson, Texas – Eric Neeley;
Bush – Saige Tassin;
Callisburg, Texas – Maycy English;
Calvin – Chris Price;
Campti – Destiny Potts, Stoney Slaughter, Alexis Smith;
Canton – Tiffany Cayson;
Carencro – Malik Babin, Destiny Kennerson, Jasmin Thibodeaux;
Cartagena, Colombia – Edwin Castro Frias, Jose Colon-Marrugo, Valeria Correa Meza, Victor Lopez Ramos, Romulo Osorio Herrera, Cristian Paez Geney, Daniel Racero Rocha;
Cartagena Bolivar, Colombia – Alejandro Dager Carrasquilla, Luis Osorio Betancourt, Saily Romero Marrugo, Valeria Perez Espinosa, Veronica Perez Espinosa, Ramon Sarruf Monroyl
Carthage, Illinois – Nicole Clark;
Castor – Kaycee Collinsworth;
Center, Texas – Chelsea Henderson;
Central – Christian Chustz;
Chalmette – Dylan Fuselier, Sara Mendoza;
Cheneyville – Fontana Mitchell;
Clayton – Glendalyn Boothe, Ruben Smith;
Cleburne, Texas – Patrick Murr;
Clifton – Toni Smith;
Clinton, Mississippi – Adam Moncure;
Cloutierville – Alexia Gistarb;
Colfax – Camren Bell, Alison Churchman, Mikayla Richardson, Evan White;
College Station, Texas – Jasmyn Hunter;
Columbia – Tyler Duchesne, Jackson McCann;
Converse – Zachary Faircloth, Nicolas Farmer, Ashley Forgues Brock, Skyler Laroux, Elaina Richardson, Noah Sepulvado, Ashley Sims;
Coppell, Texas – Jada Freeman;
Cottonport – Rayne Canoe, Zachary Gauthier, Justin Tigner;
Coushatta – Kori Allen, La’Zaria Clark, Elizabeth Cummins, Dillon Foshee, Jason Gross, Ashley Guye, Tawanda Johnson, Sidney Jones, Emily King, Jeremy Lawson, William Lee, Aaron Murray, Allison Pearah, Jon Russell, Amey Sepulvado, Carmie Williams, Caroline Wren;
Covington – Kayla Keys, Andrea Mier, Cathleen Oviedo, Etienne Blanchat;
Crowley – Alyssa Huval;
Cumberland, Maryland ­– Rebekah Apple;
Cypress, Texas – Alexis Gomez;
Dallas, Texas – Nadia Carney, Natalie Robledo;
Darrow – Micheal Douglas;
DeKalb, Texas – Jaquan Jackson;
DeQuincy – Austin Nichols, Hayden Robertson;
DeRidder – Carson Brown, Maygin Chesson, Alphonse Engram Ashleigh Fedderman, Bambi Hardesty, Michael Keeper, Dustin Lauderback, Kyla Lockhart, Kimberly Nolen, Don Prater, Hayley Richard, Shynikia Roberson, Mikalyn Russell, Lauren Taylor, Ebony Terry;
Deer Park, Texas – Patrick McDonald, Blake Stephenson;
Denham Springs – Caitlyn Cutrer, Caitlin Griffin Halle Mahfouz, Jonathan Rodriguez, Stephanie Ryals, Amy Thomas, Emily Williams;
Denton, Texas – Ian Edwards;
Derry – Hannah Antee;
Des Allemands – Dilaney Deroche;
Destrehan – Patrick Juneau, Kiera Robinson;
Deville – Kealee Anderson, Hailey Bolton, Alexis Dennis, Kayla Dewilde, Candice Dryden, Amy Henderson, Karlee Littleton, Marlee Paulk, Vivian Vallery;
Dike, Texas ­– Brynn Offut;
Dodson – Kierstyn Cyrus, Nolan Griffin, Lydia McGaha, Brittany Walker;
Donaldsonville ­– Natalie Landry, Madeline Sotile;
Doyle – Mackensie Ulrich;
Dry Creek – Kayla Mandelin;
Dry Prong – Jacob Boydstun, Sarah Desselle, Christy Gough, Alisabeth Lockhart;
Duson – Autumn Ritter, Lane Royer;
Duvall, Washington – Jason Smigelski;
Effie – Jaydan Perkins;
Elizabeth – Clyde Hurst;
Elm Grove – Gabrielle Smith;
Elmer – Jerrica Beebe, Mikayla Deloach, Halston Rachal, Joseph Rachal;
Enon Valley, Pennsylvania – Jennifer Smiley;
Eros – Alecia Smith;
Ethel – Abby Guillory;
Eunice – Carli Esters, Tammy Richard, Emily Deshotel;
Evans – Lakin Smith;
Evergreen – Shelby Riche;
Farmerville – Jalissa Loyd;
Ferriday – Shanequa Tyler, Dalenesha Wimley;
Fisher – Hayden Courtney;
Flatwoods – Jasmine George;
Florien – Gabrielle Bryant, Ashley Carter, Travis Cook, Faith Hopkins, McKenzie Kuhlow, Megan Lampkin, Noah Parker, Emma Ray, Ashley Ross, Elizabeth Squillini, Shari Wilson;
Forest Hill – Andrianne Dore, Rachel Humphries, Claudia Marie, Charli Stanley;
Forest Park, Illinois – Kimberly Murray;
Forney, Texas – Kaymi Wheeler;
Fort Polk – Laura Cerqueira, Amanda Dhondt, Jasmine Dyer, Clarrissa Lancour, Jennifer Lara Hager, Andrea Marquez, Clare Masa, Blaise Nkengafac, Madison Popp, Lindsay Romero, Shiela May Tabonares, Whitney Tipton, Christian Wood;
Fort Riley, Kansas – Breanna Bryan;
Fort Sill, Oklahoma – Iryana Burrus;
Fort Worth, Texas – Charles Gregory Meade;
Franklin – Chaqaire Jenkins, Cheyenne Smith;
Franklinton – Brian Geragthy, Aron Stephens;
Freeland, Washington – Paul Aune;
Fresno, Texas – Terres Anderson;
Frierson – John Rachal, Valerie Smith;
Frisco, Texas – Adam Trupp;
Gardena, California – Cole Llorens;
Geismar – Kristi Contreary;
Georgetown – Laura White;
Gibsland – Tyler Sneed;
Glenmora – Kristopher Devore, Precious Goins, Abbie Johnson, Megan Johnson, Nellie Johnson, Savannah Thompson, Tiara Baker;
Gloster – Kylee Causey, Jennifer Simmons, Johnette Whorton;
Goldonna – Alexander Guillory;
Gonzales – Addison Adams, Ryan Gremillion, Victoria Gardner, Legand Lilly, Corey Payne, Jamien Sampson, Zoe Tapp, Jaci Templet, Trencia Washington;
Gorman, Texas – Kourtney Seaton;
Gramercy – Amber Theisges;
Grand Cane – Nathan Graham, Emily Miller, Matthew Raybon;
Gray – Cassie Becnel, Tevyn Johnson;
Greenwell Springs – Katherine Bryant, Katherine Langlois;
Gretna – Chloe Johnson, Jasmine Myles, Trinity Velazquez;
Gueydan – Hannah Sedatol;
Gulfport, Mississippi – Tamara Benton;
Gun Barrel City, Texas – Colton Banghart;
Hahnville – Catelyn Errington;
Hammond – Andrea Hidalgo, Kaylon Willoughby, William Woodworth;
Harlingen, Texas – Frances Knight;
Harvey – Tajalai Evans, Christiana Johnson, Alexis Taylor;
Hattiesburg, Mississippi – Mary Mitchell;
Haughton – Matthew Bailey, Benny Broadway, Arneshia Brooks, Katelynn Edwards, Shelby Grubbs, Kobe Jackson, Kylee Jackson, Daniel Langen, Sarah Ledford, Nicklaus Lowery, Angie Nguyen, Jamie Phillips, Makenzie Rains, Licentra Randolph, Kaylee Swart, Valerie Taylor, Zoey Thomas, Logan Turner, Lomia Watkins, Larissa Wells, Hunter Woods;
Haynesville – Eriel Fields, Sabrina Sowell, Allyssa Dodds;
Heflin – Rachael Vickers;
Henderson, Texas – Andrew Blackmon, Christina Marie Colley;
Henderson – Asha Cormier;
Hessmer – Kaitlynn Burke, Laney Jeansonne;
Hineston – Richard Clark, Madison Morrison, Karlie Taylor;
Homer – Francene Ferguson, Shannon Rhodes;
Honolulu, Hawaii – Melissa Baker, Hans Andersen Tan;
Hornbeck – Sarah Ceballos, Jerry Hughes, Jr., Carrie Wilson;
Hosston – Alaysia Fredieu;
Houma – Kelsey Chauvin, Anna Gautreaux, Zoe Hebert, Dylan LeBlanc, Venessa McKinley, Sara Rebstock, Kyle Siddle;
Houston, Texas – Bruce Beth, Brittany Davis, Oai Lee Huynhl
Hutto, Texas – Tommi Long;
Ida – Madison Campbell;
Independence – Chloe Whiddon;
Iota – Morgan Gotte, Katie Latiola;
Iowa – Marvette Williams;
Jamestown – Kylie Knotts;
Jeanerette – Brandy Jackson;
Jefferson – Matthew Broekman, Codi Vernace, Amanda Wilburn;
Jena – Tiara Brown, Candace Decker, Jessi McNeely, Dena Ray;
Jennings – Emily Benoit, Destany Brown, Phillip Gotte, KaTierra Lewis;
Jonesboro – Natalee Gray, Tia Moore;
Jonesville – Rachel Eichmann, Kayla Robertson, Kameron Stevenson, James White;
Kalaupapa, Hawaii – Kamamalu Nishihira-Asuncion;
Keatchie – Brittany Miller, Amber Nash, Sarah Plaisance;
Keithville – McKenzie Knotts, Shleby Loftin, Cara Lorensen, Dominique Jackson, Jerry Parks, Deja White;
Kemp, Texas – Katelynn Messer
Kenner – Gennyfer Pena;
Kerens, Texas – Brandon Brumbelow, Diego Maldonado;
Killeen, Texas – William Hooper, Nathalohn Nanai;
Kinder – Teralyn Plumber, Stewart Wheeler;
Kingwood, Texas – Alexandria Bailey;
Konarskie, Poland – Elzbieta Iwaniuk;
Labadieville – Jacelynn LeBlanc, Logan Simoneaux;
Lacombe – Casey Casler;
Lafayette – Taylor Aucoin, Bailey Begnaud, Natalye Bradley, Javian Bush, Amari Carmouche, Joshua Delaughter, Shaniya Fuselier, Ashley Guidry, Adele Hebert, Bryce Hernandez, Julia Laperouse, Collin Monaghan, Joshua Monaghan, Sarah Palmintier, Christina Poole, Jordan Redd, Madison Weathers, Ireland Williams;
Lake Arthur – Nicole Andrews, Tuesdi Stipek, Hannah Worley;
Lake Charles – Rebekah Nicholas, Emily Roller, Isaiah Roy;
Lake Wales, Florida – LaRon James;
Lakeside, California – Amanda Lee;
LaPlace – Melvin Bates, Jalen Haydel, Jacob St. Pierre;
Larose – Nicholas Hebert;
Las Vegas, Nevada – Caitlin Schweighart;
Lavon, Texas – Berenice Bretado, Matthew Howeth;
League City, Texas – Kennedi Carter, Mary Gilbert, Emily Ornelas, Lacee Savage, Christopher Zirkle;
Leander – Karissa Boswell;
Leavenworth, Kansas – Anuhea Iyo;
Lecompte – Logan Cheek, Allison Williams;
Leesville – Dakota Abrams, Kimberly Alwell, Summer Atkins, Kaitlyn Bailey, Hannah Baker, Marilyn Brooks, Rachal Brown, Kaylee Busby, Victoria Carbaugh, Jessica Clare, Angie Culbert, Baylor Dillon, Raegan Dotson, Brandon Fredieu, Miranda Fulks, Ashley Garcia, Sean Grady, Morgan Hall, Britney Harvey, Kimberly Henley, Haley Hood, Kelly Kealaula, Zachary Keeton, Lane Koury, Samatha LaMonte, Daniella Lowry, Karl Marzahl, Kylie McAllister, Amy McKellar, Kelly Mitchell, Emily Moore, Taylor Newman, Joseph Orchi, Kaitlyn Pajinag, Victoria Perkins, Elizabeth Rios, Amber Rose, Chloe Rouleau, Destiny Sanders, David Santos, Erin Schwartz, Riley Shackelford, Brandy Sherman, Joseph Slaughter, Claire Smyth, Heather Snell, Alicia Stanford, Collin Strickland, Sydni Striedel, Matthew Ward, Marissa Weldon, Mikayla Zills;
Lena – Lashae’ Lucas, Courtland Smith;
Lettsworth – Meilyn Woods;
Lindale, Texas – Eden Cook;
Little Elm, Texas – Jasmine Ealy, Daniel Larin, Brian Lenox, Kaitlyn McCullogh;
Livingston – Chase Crane;
Logansport – Kendoyle Cox, Megan Holmes, Maci Martin, Charles McClintock;
Longview, Texas – Hannah Dunn;
Lonoke, Arkansas – Rachel Terry;
Loranger – Cambree Bailey, Jessi Dominique;
Luling – Macie Barrios, Nathan Roth;
Lumberton, Texas – Joshua Terry;
Mabank, Texas – Dustin Huffman;
Madisonville – Sarahjane Ladut, Bailey Perrilloux;
Magnolia, Texas – Kyle Moore;
Mamou – Melissa Soileau;
Mandeville – Maci Burt, Mya Holmes, Sheridan Smith, Jalen Willis;
Mansfield – Canessia Johnson, Samantha Powell;
Mansura – Beau Barbry, Magen Hegger;
Many – Chelsa Arthur, Victoria Barnhill, Rachel Bensinger, Toby Bruce, Maegan Burkett, Hannah Chanler, Patrick Colston, Sarah Cross, Timothy Early, Tiarra Frazier, Brittney Garcie, Emily Holcomb, Mayci Lewis, Jenifer Meadows, Athena Mitchell, Kasey Moore, Seth Ozsoy, Chelsea Parrie, Andrew Penfield, Heather Trichel, Krisha Williams, Tyler Colston, Sheridan Gowen;
Marble Falls, Texas – Sarah Lewis;
Maringouin – Laura Scronce;
Marksville – Olivia Johnson, Shelby Lemoine, Madeleine Morrow, Tanner Nugent, Mackenzie Stanley;
Marrero – Tara Brown, Jade Duthu, Dorothy Gioia;
Marshall, Missouri – KaNeeshia Gay;
Marshall, Texas – Sydney Swilley, Abigail Upton;
Marthaville – Dylan Daniels, Mallory Powell, Hannah Sattler, Frank Lester;
Maurice – Jenna-Clair Courville, Adele Vincent, Elise Vincent;
Meraux – Sophie Stechmann;
Merryville – Aric Johnson;
Metairie – Kathryn Bancroft, Anna Birbiglia, Taylor Crawford, Cameron Duhe, Mary Gaffney, Ellie Mandel, Andrew Pitari;
Midlothian, Texas – Rachel Fowler;
Midlothian, Illinois – Daniel Hlad;
Minden – Roxy Easley, Abby Greene, Peyton Gray, Fisher McLemore, Kirsten Sibley, Amber Slater, Asata Sylvas, Edoard Talamayan, Madison Tanner, Jordan Young;
Minneapolis, Minnesota – Jenna Carlson;
Missouri City, Texas – Cayla Jones;
Monroe – William Adcock, Allie Ellerbe, Jaronda Griffin, Parron Jones, Skylar Sorrell, Jarviar Wade, Brittany Wilson;
Montegut – Megan Pellegrin;
Montgomery – Morgan Bartlett, Morgan McManus, Erikk Sluss, Hannah Vercher, Michael Waxley;
Moreauville – Austin Dismer, Nicholas Jackson;
Morrow – Quaniqua Joseph;
Murcia, Colombia – Cristina Gonzalez Corchon;
Natchez – Jackson Carroll, Jacorrian Davis, Courtney Sarpy, Morgan Slaugher, Patricia Wise;
Natchez, Mississippi – Victoria Bradford;
Natchitoches – Adedayo Adeniji, Jordan Alex, Tyler Anderson, James Armstrong, Aaron Averett, Brock Barrios, Gracie Bennett, Gavin Bergeron, Ciara Blade, Keaton Booker, Charles Bouchie, Shenita Braxton, Taylor Burch, Deasia Burrell, Ladiamond Burrell, Morgan Burris, Ebone Burton, Kezia Butler, Savannah Bynog, John Byone, Maria Carmona-Ruiz, Kiondra Clark, Lane Clevenger, Kaia Collins, Leanna Coy, Whitney Crooks, Kenneth Darcy, Kara Davis, Kelsy Davis, Sean Day, Leah Deford, Trenton Downs, Ashley Dranguet, Peyton Ebarb, Virginia Falgoust, Daniela Forero Salcedo, Hannah Forsythe, Eric Fredieu, Katlynn French, Luis Gallo Quintero, Abbie Gandy, Jeffrey Goff, Samuel Greene, Julian Guerrero Acevedo, Laura Guzman Rodriguez, Brianca Hall, Valentina Herazo Alvarez, John Howell, Jared Hulsey, Emily Johnson, Zachary Johnson, Abagael Kinney, Lyndon Knueppel, Karlee Laurence, Carlomagno Leon Jimenez, Maya Levo, Alba Maloff, Brooklyn Martin, Paula Martinez Marrugo, LiZhang Matuschka, Tyler McCain, Michael McClung, Kristin McQuillin, Jasmine Milsap, Sarah Moody, Coy Morgan, Matthew Nelson, Jorgia Nevers, Kevin Nutt, Kiara Padilla, Griffiana Paige, Kenneth Penrod, Chaka Palm, Kevin Price, Shalondria Rainey, LaKendria Remo, Alejandro Restrepo Cardozo, Kierstin Richter, William Rogers, Maria Rushing, Chandler Sarpy, Gabrielle Scarborough, Natalle Sers, Anise Settle, Anna Sibley, Jonathan Simmons, Patrick Sprung, Josie Stamey, Nicholas Swank, Carosha Taylor, Samuel Taylor, Harrison Thomas, Enonedria Thompson, Margaret Thompson, Caitlyn Tobin, Austin Townsend, Ricardo Ventura, Eva Venzant, Lauren Vienne, Ryan Wade, Daniel Whatley, Thomas Wiggins, Sherri Williams, Rylee Wyer, Naoko Yoshida,
Navasota, Texas – Shelton Eppler;
New Braunfels, Texas – Charli Fouts;
New Iberia – Tara Bonvillain, Kyrsten Freyou, Jacob Gary, Jeannette Hardy, Nicole Moore, Madison Romero, Alexis Trosclair;
New Llano – Laura Cowell, Sylvia Milerski, Dennis Stein, Collar Wilson;
New Orleans – Faith Burke, RyShaneka Kirsh, Trevor Morgan, Gloria Smyly, Rishard Winford;
Noble – Savannah Anderson, Landen Funderburk, Joshua Ray;
Nolensville, Tennessee – Joseph Tappel;
Norfolk, Virginia – Samantha Broughton;
North Richland Hills, Texas – Cody Germany;
North York, Ontario – Alexander Comanita;
Oakdale – Clayton Ashworth, Staci Brown, Kirstin Richard;
Olla – Morgan Barbo, Cierra Evans, Tanner Terrell;
Opelousas – Jordan Brisco, Kenya Gradnigo, Amy Levier, Sheridan Mayo, Kayla Pitre;
Paincourtville – Hannah Brister;
Panama City, Florida – Adam Normand;
Paradis – Kaitlyn Dunn, Kallie Lutz;
Pearland, Texas – Clent Jones;
Pineville – Victoria Bordelon, Raegan Brocato, Kaitlyn Burns, Taylor Campbell, Caitlin Crawford, Deanna Daniel, Katlin Ernst, Victoria Gambino, Brooke Gongre, Kaitlyn Jackson, Landon King, Laura Lachney, Carlee Lake, Jeffery Lepage, Emily Litton, James Perry, Cinnamon Player, Hannah Pusateri, Diane Richey, Rachel Rudd, Amaria Sapp, Jordan Sensat, Micah St. Andre, Reygan Taylor, Jaclyn Whatley, Rodney Williams;
Plain Dealing – Nicholas Cason;
Plano, Texas – Asher Van Meter;
Plaucheville – Matthew Armand;
Pleasant Hill – Makenzi Patrick, Yasmine Maxie;
Pollock – Tanner Brazil, Erika Clark, Dalton Kopp, Samantha Wilber,
Pollok, Texas – Katelyn Boles;
Ponchatoula – Kaitlyn Hawkins;
Port Allen – Kennedy Cullen, Evan Daigle, Samantha Moses;
Port Barre – Lauren Deville, Skylar Guidroz, Kirsten Sonnier;
Prairieville – Donesha Blount, Lauren Breaux, Claire Credeur, Chloe Lambert, Kyle Munson, Ellise Vice, Derek Walle, Brady Wilson;
Princeton – Micah Larkins, Alyssia Mobley, Katelyn Nattin, Ariell Shield;
Provencal – Rachel Head, Christopher Jennings, Samantha Toro;
Puyallup, Washington – Aine Oh;
Quitman – Cassie Tucker;
Raceland – Paige Parks, DQuincy McGuire;
Rayne – Bailey Beard, Bishop Breaux;
Rayville – Emily Rawls, Terry Rogers, Leslie Sharbono;
Reno, Nevada – Olivia Marazzo, Sydney Oren;
Richardson, Texas – Riley Cantrell, Lauren-Ashley Clarke;
Ringgold – Joseph Hays, Terreny Langford, Lauren Nelson, Olivia Prado, Aileecia Tipton, Darrion Sims, Caleb Vining, Tyler Weathers;
River Ridge – Alexander Thibodeau, Taylor Young;
Robeline – Chad Berly, Jonathan Chism, Hunter DuBois, Alecia Eddleman, Kelsey Elkins, Hannah Hennigan, Richard McCollum, Morgan Neugent, Ember O’Bannon, Megan Palmer, Lillian Rachal, Tyler Tousek, Jeffrey Watley;
Rosepine – Emilee Johnson;
Rosharon, Texas – Whitney Washington;
Ruston – Irene Hild, Lara Schales, Jamesha Woods;
Saint Amant – Kylie Nix;
Saint Bernard – Emily Snyder;
Saint Francisville – Robert Burke, Claire Leming, Ryan Reed;
Saint Gervais la Foret, France – Marcelline Poitevin;
Saint Martinville – Chaselyn Lewis;
Saline – Isabella Jones, Malayna Poche;
San Antonio, Texas – Hayden Brown, Paris Finkbeiner, Kelli Gamble;
San Pedro Sula, Cortes, Colombia – Jose Bustillo Aguero, Cesia Corrales, Bella Trimino Gutierrez;
Saratoga, Arkansas – Christie Sain;
Scott – Hannah Durgin, Taylor Joseph;
Scurry, Texas – Rebecca Blackshear;
Shantow City, China – Zhixin Lin;
Shongaloo – Kayla Mouser;
Shreveport – DayJah Alexander, Maria Awwad, Shakendra Bailey, Erin Batts, Antanae Baylock, JiKeeriya-Jontay Bowden, Rakeisha Brown, Anquaneshia Burnham, Kaylan Campbell, Neeley Caudle, Kesherion Collins, Hannah Crnkovic, Kendall Crosby, April Daniels, Joslyn Davis, Destiny Deal, Kevin Denks, Kimberly Dennis, Kaitlyn Doyal, Chenara Dredden, Laura Mary-Katherine Duhon, Shalanda Duncan, Reagan Escude, Chloe Farrar, Jenna Fielder, Sterlin Foster, Jamie French, Tyler Gardner, JaSae Gatlin, Rayvin Gaudet, Evan Gibson, Karina Goodnight, Lauren Gore, Ashleigh Grace, Anna Green, Elaina Guerrero, Matthew Haltom, Jennifer Hardey, Regyne Hardy, Kelsey Harlow, Madison Harper, Kimberly Housley, Shleby Hunter, Madyson Istre, Jazzmine Jackson, Caitlin Johnson, Carly Johnson, Christopher Johnson, Jada Johnson, Zachary Johnson, William Mahoney, Caitlyn Malloy, LaTonya Martin, Aysia Mills, Acquiria Mitchell, Dylan Molenhour, Shanautica Montgomery, Kelly Moody, Kendall Murray, Aaron Navarre, Hannah Nicholls, Olivia Noonan, Annabelle Parker, Soleil Paterson, Mary Murray, Michael Phelps, Hayden Pilcher, Laura Pritchard, Bailey Rech, Nahjee Reid, Mallori Sanders, Kendall Sanford, Angelica Satcher, Yuriana Sauseda, Katherine Sawyer, Lawson Scott, Cynthia Shahriar, Shermaine Shorter, Mary Sibley, Ciara Sipes, Richard Sloan, Jessica Sowers, Lindsey Sullivan, Jordan Taylor, Joyce Taylor, Rodnisha Terry, Anne Tibbit, Chloe Vance, Kayla Waller, Lajayda Williams, Suzanne Williams, Kristy Wilson, Jonathan Zavalydriga;
Simmesport – Olivia Draper, Taylor Myers;
Simpson – David Marquis, Christina Snider;
Singer – Emily Smith;
Slidell – Rikki Ayers, Brittany Brooks, Jacqueline Coleman, Shakera Dixon, Jordan Garcia, Thomas Garner, Claire Harvey, William Jensen, Tristan Johnson, Allyssa Marshall, Isabel Melhado, Kha Nguyen, John Norvel, Theresa Sharp, Raina Woods;
Spain – Judit Castillo Gargallo;
Spring, Texas – Victoria Harris;
St. Francisville – Emeria Jones;
St. Martinville – Cassandra Zenon;
Starks – Sara Hyatt, Melina Royer;
Stonewall – Carolyn Davlin, Emmy Hinds, Tobert Mcallen, Hunter Tuck, Jonathan Perot, Hunter Tuck;
Sulphur – Andrina Ferguson, Madeline Fortenberry, Derek Henry, Helen-Lois Mancil, Trevor Molitor, Elisabeth Perez, Makenzie Simon, Justin Sittig, Andrew Stephens, Shelby Sullivan, Sonya Wren;
Sunset – Deandra Eaglin, Sonia Vidrine;
Talihina, Oklahoma – Heidi Couch;
Taylor, Texas – Jake English;
Texarkana, Texas – Sydney Cowgill, Cody Hambly, Jasmine Neal;
Texarkana, Arkansas – Monique Walker, Kenneth Williams;
Thibodaux – Beth Olin, Cierra Winch;
Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania – Brianna Morosco;
Trout – Harley Lisenby, Kalee McGuffee;
Tupelo, Mississippi – Bailey Griffin;
Vidalia – Charles Johnson, Brittany Kennedy;
Ville Platte – Regan Hazelton;
Vinton – Shae Cramer, Kelsie Rayon, Madison Zaunbrecher;
Vivian – Jaylon Berry, Hannah Campbell, Chase Lewis;
Warrenton, Virginia – Melissa Martinez;
Washington – Madelyn Dupont, Ambrieanna Lazard;
Waskom, Texas – Mary Alexander, Blakely Canfield;
Waynesboro, Mississippi – David Hodo;
Welsh – Edna Hofmann, Daniel Menard;
West, Texas – Nathan Nors;
West Monroe – Abigail Beck, Brandy Chapman, Alexandra Clack, Kirstin Elrod, Brianna Fife, Evelyn Maguire, Cassandra Phillips, Candyce Steele, Melissa Taylor, Syroi Webb, Christopher Wynn;
Westwego – Tja’h Edwards;
Wills Point, Texas – Rebekah Clark;
Winnfield – Jermesia Anderson, Taylor Burnett, Mia County, Ashlyn Duck, Rhonda Duff, Jourdan Fitzgerald, Hunter Johnson, Kayla Jones, Caitlyn Martin, Tenisha Phillips, Avonna Wilson;
Winnsboro – Samantha Browning, Hunter Cooper, Darrel Doyle, A’Lexus Johnson;
Winter Springs, Florida – Justin Garretson;
Youngsville – Blair Fontenot, Charli Fontenot, Brette Reaux, Isabelle Vivien;
Zachary – Lydia Johnson, Chasity Matthews, Demetriona Goudeau;
Zwolle – Kierstyn Cartinez, Hillary Charles, Michantwana Lacey, Courtney McDaniel, Holly Laroux, Konner Parrie, Treveon Perrty, Marcelina Remedies;
2 notes · View notes