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Alamance County protest cases keep moving through the courts

Verdicts and dispositions Alamance News reporter Thomas Murawski s charge of resisting a public officer was dismissed – he was arrested Oct. 31 while taking photos of Graham Police clearing Court Square during the I Am Change march. Cary Kirk Griffin was convicted of two counts of resisting a public officer and one count of second-degree trespass. Elizabeth Duford was found not guilty of resisting a public officer. Avery Markel Harvey was convicted of disorderly conduct by impeding traffic, but not guilty of resisting a public officer. Rikeah Nashea Johnson was not guilty of resisting a public officer. Support local journalism, please subscribe to the Times-News.

Graham Police arrest two protesting Andrew Brown s death Tuesday in first use of new protest ordinance

Witnesses said nearly 40 people took part on Tuesday in a protest in downtown Graham at which two people were arrested. The protest formed in reaction to the killing of Andrew Brown Jr. by deputies of the Pasquotank County Sheriff s Office in Elizabeth City, N.C. Graham Police charged two of the protestors with violating the city’s new protest ordinance. Protesters walked around Court Square, according to Elon University professor and photographer Tony Crider, and stopped at Sesquicentennial Park, often referred to as Wyatt Outlaw Park. There were no counter-protesters or any obvious police presence until about 7:20 p.m., when Graham Police officers came out and started distributing flyers with information about the protest ordinance. The city ordinance requires a permit or notice of protest for a demonstration of 10 or more downtown.

Houston s Seven Wonders Are a Time Capsule for the City

Houston s The towers, also called Pillars of the Community, commemorate the Bayou City s 150th anniversary. By Emma Schkloven 2/8/2021 at 11:00am Published in the December 2020 issue of Houstonia It’s impossible to miss the seven towering pillars as you stroll along the Sesquicentennial Park promenade or across Preston Street Bridge. By day, the looming 70-foot structures that make up Seven Wonders echo the city’s impressive skyline, while they double as enormous lanterns that bathe the nearby Buffalo Bayou and the back of the Wortham Center in a warm glow by night. Yet Seven Wonders, also called Pillars of the Community, is far more than just a hat-tip to local architecture or a ginormous night light. It is designed to act as a time capsule, a history book, and a crystal ball—capturing a single moment of Houston life, commemorating a historic event, and looking toward the city’s future all at once.

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