Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ira Bernstein (born 1959 in Malverne, New York) is a dancer and teacher in the United States who specializes in traditional American dance forms such as Appalachian-style clogging, flatfoot dancing, tap dance, and step dancing. He is considered an authority on clogging, and the leading figure in this dance style.
Clogging, buck dancing, or flatfoot dancing [1] is a type of folk dance practiced in the United States, in which the dancer's footwear is used percussively by striking the heel, the toe, or both against a floor or each other to create audible rhythms, usually to the downbeat with the heel keeping the rhythm. Clogging can be found at various Old ...
She graduated with a B.S. from Duke University in 1951. She worked at the Center for Disease Control (CDC) for 15 years where she learned bacteriology and took night classes at the University of Georgia. [2] Under the name Lillian Haldeman, she earned her Ph.D. from Montana State University in Bozeman, Montana, in 1962.
ATLANTA - Georgia State University police say a student was arrested, and two others are on the run after an armed robbery in one of the school’s dorms on Oct. 30.. Investigators say it ...
The 21-year-old South Georgia State College student embraced Christianity and was “all about improving himself,” according to the leader of a student organization.
Initially intended as a night school, Georgia State University was established in 1913 as the Georgia School of Technology's Evening School of Commerce. [23] A reorganization of the University System of Georgia in the 1930s led to the school becoming the Atlanta Extension Center of the University System of Georgia and allowed night students to earn degrees from several colleges in the ...
The average federal student loan debt per person in Georgia has grown to more than $40,000, according to a Chamber of Commerce report.. This puts the Peach State as the No. 3 most student-debt ...
Restraint and seclusion are legal in Connecticut. The acts were recorded to have taken place tens of thousands of times per year for over a decade, especially to Black students and students with autism. A bill introduced in 2023, SB 1200, would replace seclusion with a time-out in an unlocked room and limit when restraint is allowed. [9] [10]