Chelsea Kate Isaacs (born December 14th, 1987) is an American actress, model, and poet. At the age of 8, she was discovered by a well-known director amusing a crowd of pedestrians close to her residence in New York City. Since then, she has appeared on various Nickelodeon commercials, shows, and independent films. In 1998, Isaacs was the most desirable hand model in the United States and Canada. Isaacs has been described by the Cantolino Press as having an "electric presence that is both entertaining and very believable" with "an extremely evolved sense of the human psyche." She has won 18 poetry contests throughout the world, and has been referred to as a "Renaissance Woman." After 2002, Isaacs took leave from the entertainment industry to focus on her studies. In 2006, she was allegedly spotted in several critically-acclaimed underground art projects where she went by an alias. Some of these art projects include the short, avant garde films "Help Wanted" and "Process Normal." Since then, a number of internet blogs and websites have formed whos members post listings of Isaacs' mysterious underground music projects in which she prefers to be involved with anonymously. Isaacs was recently featured in a 2007 issue of the star-studded Miami-based magazine Ocean Drive. Chelsea Kate Isaacs is now studying at a southern university, pursuing a career in either journalism or law.
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George Piper (born May 28, 1968) is a veteran newsperson and an independent candidate for Mayor of Lebanon, Indiana in the Nov. 6, 2007, general election.
He most recently served at managing editor at The Lebanon Reporter and currently works in a writing capacity for Purdue University.
Biography
A native of Whiting, Indiana, Piper graduated Whiting High School and went to college at Indiana State University in Terre Haute, Indiana to pursue a degree in journalism. While at ISU, he worked for the Indiana Statesman, the campus newspaper; was a member of the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity and met his future wife Leanne Burris.
His newspaper career started at the in Effingham, Illinois in 1990. His next journalism stops were at The Republic in Columbus, Indiana and the Post & Mail in Columbia City, Indiana. While at the Post & Mail, he rose from reporter to editor, and, at age 25, was at that time the youngest editor of a daily newspaper in Indiana.
Piper and his wife moved to Jefferson, Wisconsin, which he worked as an assistant editor at two aviation trade publications in Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin. He returned to daily newspapers in 1996 at The Daily Register in Portage, Wisconsin. After moving to Columbus, Wisconsin, they had the first of their four children. At that time, Piper left newspapers to become a free-lance writer and a stay-at-home dad.
By 2000, the couple had two children and sought to return to Indiana. The managing editor's position became available at The Lebanon Reporter in Leanne's hometown. Piper worked there until the spring of 2003, when he left to help start a daily newspaper, The Noblesville Daily Times, in Noblesville, Indiana. He served as a the newspaper's first editor and was charged with hiring a full-time staff, designing the newspaper's look and selecting necessary equipment - all within a 90-day timeframe. After 18 months in Noblesville, Piper returned to The Reporter, where he worked until he announced his candidacy for Mayor of Lebanon in June 2007.
George and his wife, Leanne, who is a nurse liaison in Indianapolis, have four children.
Elected office
Piper is on the ballot for the Nov. 6, 2007 general election in Lebanon.
His four-point platform includes the following points:
*Revitalizing downtown
*Cleaning up gateways
*Attracting professional jobs and residential growth
*Customer service and training for city employees
More information is available at his Web site .
George Piper (born May 28, 1968) is a veteran newsperson and an independent candidate for Mayor of Lebanon, Indiana in the Nov. 6, 2007, general election.
He most recently served at managing editor at The Lebanon Reporter and currently works in a writing capacity for Purdue University.
Biography
A native of Whiting, Indiana, Piper graduated Whiting High School and went to college at Indiana State University in Terre Haute, Indiana to pursue a degree in journalism. While at ISU, he worked for the Indiana Statesman, the campus newspaper; was a member of the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity and met his future wife Leanne Burris.
His newspaper career started at the in Effingham, Illinois in 1990. His next journalism stops were at The Republic in Columbus, Indiana and the Post & Mail in Columbia City, Indiana. While at the Post & Mail, he rose from reporter to editor, and, at age 25, was at that time the youngest editor of a daily newspaper in Indiana.
Piper and his wife moved to Jefferson, Wisconsin, which he worked as an assistant editor at two aviation trade publications in Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin. He returned to daily newspapers in 1996 at The Daily Register in Portage, Wisconsin. After moving to Columbus, Wisconsin, they had the first of their four children. At that time, Piper left newspapers to become a free-lance writer and a stay-at-home dad.
By 2000, the couple had two children and sought to return to Indiana. The managing editor's position became available at The Lebanon Reporter in Leanne's hometown. Piper worked there until the spring of 2003, when he left to help start a daily newspaper, The Noblesville Daily Times, in Noblesville, Indiana. He served as a the newspaper's first editor and was charged with hiring a full-time staff, designing the newspaper's look and selecting necessary equipment - all within a 90-day timeframe. After 18 months in Noblesville, Piper returned to The Reporter, where he worked until he announced his candidacy for Mayor of Lebanon in June 2007.
George and his wife, Leanne, who is a nurse liaison in Indianapolis, have four children.
Elected office
Piper is on the ballot for the Nov. 6, 2007 general election in Lebanon.
His four-point platform includes the following points:
*Revitalizing downtown
*Cleaning up gateways
*Attracting professional jobs and residential growth
*Customer service and training for city employees
More information is available at his Web site .
Emily Lacy is a folksinger and experimental filmmaker based in New York and Los Angeles. She collects songs from the banks of folk music history while also creating her own works for banjo, guitar, or acapella performances. She has also sung about specific women who have died under varying political circumstances including Marla Ruzicka, Rachel Corrie, and Leslie Ironroad.
Her influences include Pete Seeger, Jeffrey Lewis, Bob Dylan, Elizabeth Cotten, Woody Guthrie, Barbara Dane, and Peter La Farge.
She was asked to open for the Philadelphia band Dr. Dog throughout the Eastern United States in the Winter of 2007.
She has created the following 5 homemade albums:
Sing with an open Heart and your heart will shine, 2005
Youngster Balladeer, 2006
Makeshift Medallions, 2007
Newsworthy New York Tapes, 2007
Emily Lacy Sings Leonard Cohen Songs, 2007 (created for a multimedia performance Lacy did based on Cohen at the Manual Archives, a small puppet theater in Los Angeles)
Emily Lacy primarily played in art galleries and experimental spaces within the Los Angeles area from 2006-2007. Below she is pictured playing upon a spinning bicycle platform at Park Projects in Los Angeles. Before playing by herself for audiences, she first began to play music in a punk/folk/rock band called Daphne the Painted Lady. This band was formed between Laura Steenberge, Joe Napolitano, and Emily Lacy, in the Fall of 2002, a few months after Lacy decided to learn guitar. The band played for 4 years or so in LA, becoming increasingly more hard edged and punk, from it's more strictly based rock and roll roots,- With faster and faster beats and screamier and screamier vocals entering into the equation. At the same time the folk element was also growing in devotion within other parts of the set. The band played for fans and friends alike all around Echo Park, Silverlake, and Los Feliz, as well as several performances at CalArts. Eventually the band began to dissolve and play less and less shows as all members pursued multiple other projects by Winter of 2006. Before dissipating the band added Bassist, Keyboardist and general music wonderboy Duncan, who added a layer of genre-specific detail to each song played. He made the punk songs more punk and the western songs more country.
Emily began to play solo on banjo near to once a week in the LA underground Artscene beginning in the Fall of 2006, and rapidly found herself devoting herself to that practice full-time.
She has decided to take a home in the Catskill Mountains where she can focus on playing and recording music from sun-up to sundown, while still taking trips to either New York City or Los Angeles for whatever creative project may take her there.
She is currently working on a novel of observations entitled "Hunger Passes".
Her influences include Pete Seeger, Jeffrey Lewis, Bob Dylan, Elizabeth Cotten, Woody Guthrie, Barbara Dane, and Peter La Farge.
She was asked to open for the Philadelphia band Dr. Dog throughout the Eastern United States in the Winter of 2007.
She has created the following 5 homemade albums:
Sing with an open Heart and your heart will shine, 2005
Youngster Balladeer, 2006
Makeshift Medallions, 2007
Newsworthy New York Tapes, 2007
Emily Lacy Sings Leonard Cohen Songs, 2007 (created for a multimedia performance Lacy did based on Cohen at the Manual Archives, a small puppet theater in Los Angeles)
Emily Lacy primarily played in art galleries and experimental spaces within the Los Angeles area from 2006-2007. Below she is pictured playing upon a spinning bicycle platform at Park Projects in Los Angeles. Before playing by herself for audiences, she first began to play music in a punk/folk/rock band called Daphne the Painted Lady. This band was formed between Laura Steenberge, Joe Napolitano, and Emily Lacy, in the Fall of 2002, a few months after Lacy decided to learn guitar. The band played for 4 years or so in LA, becoming increasingly more hard edged and punk, from it's more strictly based rock and roll roots,- With faster and faster beats and screamier and screamier vocals entering into the equation. At the same time the folk element was also growing in devotion within other parts of the set. The band played for fans and friends alike all around Echo Park, Silverlake, and Los Feliz, as well as several performances at CalArts. Eventually the band began to dissolve and play less and less shows as all members pursued multiple other projects by Winter of 2006. Before dissipating the band added Bassist, Keyboardist and general music wonderboy Duncan, who added a layer of genre-specific detail to each song played. He made the punk songs more punk and the western songs more country.
Emily began to play solo on banjo near to once a week in the LA underground Artscene beginning in the Fall of 2006, and rapidly found herself devoting herself to that practice full-time.
She has decided to take a home in the Catskill Mountains where she can focus on playing and recording music from sun-up to sundown, while still taking trips to either New York City or Los Angeles for whatever creative project may take her there.
She is currently working on a novel of observations entitled "Hunger Passes".
April Inez (born as Kaplowitz) was born in Denton, Texas, to two University of North Texas graduates. Her childhood was characterized by her family's numerous moves within Texas and Arkansas, which became more frequent after her parents' divorce when she was four. "Music was really the only continuity then," said April. She listened to her father's jazz records constantly as a child, developing a special fondness for Ella Fitzgerald, Stevie Wonder, and Paul Chambers. At age eleven April bought her first guitar and progressed swiftly.
In the years following she took to singing, piano and bass, focusing largely on the latter. By the age of thirteen she was playing professionally on a regular basis, most often in rock bands. She was soon drawn to jazz and has within the past three years become an active jazz bassist in the Austin music scene. Though largely self-taught in guitar, April studied bass under Lynn Seton at the University of North Texas and later with Slim Richards. In addition to jazz, she play almost any genre of music including latin, blues, rock and classical. Venues preformed in include Austin, Texas’ Emo’s, The Elephant Room, Antone's, Treadgills (south and north), Flipnotics, Red Eyed Fly, Red Rum, Red 7, Johnny Finns, Milligan’s, Ruta Maya, Quacks (and many more) and Houston venues such as The Dark Room and Clark’s.
In the years following she took to singing, piano and bass, focusing largely on the latter. By the age of thirteen she was playing professionally on a regular basis, most often in rock bands. She was soon drawn to jazz and has within the past three years become an active jazz bassist in the Austin music scene. Though largely self-taught in guitar, April studied bass under Lynn Seton at the University of North Texas and later with Slim Richards. In addition to jazz, she play almost any genre of music including latin, blues, rock and classical. Venues preformed in include Austin, Texas’ Emo’s, The Elephant Room, Antone's, Treadgills (south and north), Flipnotics, Red Eyed Fly, Red Rum, Red 7, Johnny Finns, Milligan’s, Ruta Maya, Quacks (and many more) and Houston venues such as The Dark Room and Clark’s.