Harry Amos Moore (born January 1, 1994) is a future Australian professional rugby league footballer currently signed with the Melbourne Storm of the NRL to play with their U-15 team. A schoolboy Queensland representative lock, was signed at the age of 15 showing great promise for the future.
Biography
Moore attends Marist College Ashgrove where he represented the Schools the 1st XV rugby union side for number of years. Flanker was his preferred position although possesses the talents to play predominantly anywhere in the 15 man game. He came to Marist Ashgrove as a boarder in grade 11 and made an immediate impact on the sporting scene. He previously went to Xavier College in Hervey Bay.
Personal life
Harry is currently in a strong relationship with the wonderful Sophie O'Toole. They have been High School sweet hearts for an eternity. She will be making the move down to Melbourne with Harry next year.
Biography
Moore attends Marist College Ashgrove where he represented the Schools the 1st XV rugby union side for number of years. Flanker was his preferred position although possesses the talents to play predominantly anywhere in the 15 man game. He came to Marist Ashgrove as a boarder in grade 11 and made an immediate impact on the sporting scene. He previously went to Xavier College in Hervey Bay.
Personal life
Harry is currently in a strong relationship with the wonderful Sophie O'Toole. They have been High School sweet hearts for an eternity. She will be making the move down to Melbourne with Harry next year.
Bruce Walker Crabbe (born February 14, 1962, at Louisville, Kentucky) is an American professional baseball manager and coach. In , he will serve as manager of the Salem Red Sox, Class A Carolina League affiliate of the Boston Red Sox, after spending as skipper of the Lowell Spinners, the Red Sox' Short Season-A affiliate in the New York-Penn League, his second term in that post.
Crabbe graduated from West Orange High School, Winter Garden, Florida, and attended the University of Florida where he played baseball and received a bachelor's degree in liberal arts. A third baseman and second baseman primarily, Crabbe played professionally in the farm systems of the Chicago Cubs, Atlanta Braves and Toronto Blue Jays from 1984-92, compiling a career batting average of .278 in 2,558 at bats. He played at the Triple-A level for the Iowa Cubs, Richmond Braves and Syracuse Chiefs. Crabbe threw and batted right-handed, standing 6 feet 2 inches (1.9 m) tall and weighing 175 pounds (79 kg).
His professional coaching career began in women's baseball as the director of player development and scouting and infield coach of the Colorado Silver Bullets from 1995-97. He then returned to minor league baseball as a manager, infield instructor and batting coach in the Texas Rangers' system from 1998-2004. As manager of the Rookie-level Pulaski Rangers from 1998-2001, he was named Appalachian League Manager of the Year in . In 2005 he joined the Red Sox system as a coach with the Class A Wilmington Blue Rocks. He managed Lowell for the first time in and then worked as the Red Sox' minor league infield coordinator from 2007-09. Crabbe lives in Ashburn, Virginia.
Crabbe graduated from West Orange High School, Winter Garden, Florida, and attended the University of Florida where he played baseball and received a bachelor's degree in liberal arts. A third baseman and second baseman primarily, Crabbe played professionally in the farm systems of the Chicago Cubs, Atlanta Braves and Toronto Blue Jays from 1984-92, compiling a career batting average of .278 in 2,558 at bats. He played at the Triple-A level for the Iowa Cubs, Richmond Braves and Syracuse Chiefs. Crabbe threw and batted right-handed, standing 6 feet 2 inches (1.9 m) tall and weighing 175 pounds (79 kg).
His professional coaching career began in women's baseball as the director of player development and scouting and infield coach of the Colorado Silver Bullets from 1995-97. He then returned to minor league baseball as a manager, infield instructor and batting coach in the Texas Rangers' system from 1998-2004. As manager of the Rookie-level Pulaski Rangers from 1998-2001, he was named Appalachian League Manager of the Year in . In 2005 he joined the Red Sox system as a coach with the Class A Wilmington Blue Rocks. He managed Lowell for the first time in and then worked as the Red Sox' minor league infield coordinator from 2007-09. Crabbe lives in Ashburn, Virginia.
Ronald Davies High School is the fourth and newest high school in the Fargo Public Schools of Fargo, North Dakota. Davies High School serves grades 9 through 12. Doors to DHS opened in Fall of 2011, however the school was established in 2010, when students of neighboring school (South High School, of Fargo) were segregated in sports and activities, yet remained attending the same building for academics. Construction of DHS took approximately 2 years, and (even in the state of students attending the school in the 2011-2012 year) minor construction is still being done.
Students kick off the very first school year with new activities, playing on a new football field, and presenting the musical Little Shop of Horrors on their new stage.
Davies is named after Ronald Davies, a former Cass County Judge.
Students kick off the very first school year with new activities, playing on a new football field, and presenting the musical Little Shop of Horrors on their new stage.
Davies is named after Ronald Davies, a former Cass County Judge.
Jeffery Russell Hall was the Southwestern States Regional Director
of the National Socialist Movement.
He traveled to the desert with his members of his group as armed civilians on border patrols, preventing illegal entry into the United States.
He lived with his wife and five children and was murdered by his ten-year-old
son.<ref name="cbs"/>
Political activity
A plumber by trade,
32-year-old Jeffery had been having difficulty finding work for three years,
because of the economic downturn in the construction industry. Blaming his problems on Jews and non-whites, he became a local leader in the Neo-Nazi movement.
In 2010 he ran for the Western Municipal Water District board as a white supremacist.<ref name="water"/>
Just 12 hours before Hall's death, a reporter from the New York Times was in Hall's home and spoke to the his son , and the 10-year-old showed off a leather belt bearing a silver insignia of the Nazi SS, which his father had given him.<ref name="uk"/>
Murder
Jeffery bragged that he was teaching eldest son Joseph to use night vision equipment and shoot a gun.<ref name="nyt" />
Eventually that same ten-year-old child would tell police how he got a .357 revolver from a shelf in the closet, pulled the hammer back, aimed the gun at his dad's ear while he was asleep on the couch, and shot him.<ref name="declare" />
Joseph admitted to police that he was tired of his dad hitting him and his mom.
His 26-year-old stepmother Krista also admitted Jeffery had been violent with her and the son, sometimes losing self-control and kicking his son in the back. He punished his children to varying extremes on a daily basis.
The police report said that the house was filthy dirty, with the floor littered with clothes, and the odor of urine. Many weapons were accessible to the children.<ref name="declare" />
The son was arrested and taken to juvenile hall. The other four children were taken into protective custody. Krista was later arrested and charged with criminal storage of firearms
and child neglect.<ref name="declare" />
Joann Patterson (Jeffery's mother and Joseph's grandmother) was given temporary custody of the other four children. On a 60 minutes interview, she stated that her grandson had been acting out by starting fires. She was not surprised that he killed his father, only that she expected it would not happen until her grandson was older.
Family history
Joseph Hall and his younger sister were born to
Jeffery Hall and his first wife Leticia Neal.
Neal later had twins by another father.
In 2003, the twins were hospitalized for failing to thrive,
and Child Protective Services removed Hall's two children.
Social workers reported that Neal had no electricity or gas,
maggots were on dishes, and the children were dirty, hungry and thirsty, and had bruises. Leticia Neal now lives in Spokane, Wash.<ref name="cbs"/>
Halls two children were temporarily placed with his mother Joann Patterson, because he was on probation for driving under the influence.
In 2004, Hall was granted full custody of his two children.
After divorcing Neal, Hall married Krista McCary, and had three more daughters.
At the time of his death, he had five children, ages 10, 9, 7, 3 years plus a 2-month-old infant.
Joseph was a volatile and violent child, who had been expelled from several schools
for attacking students and staff, once nearly choking a teacher with a
phone-cord.
His grandmother Joann Patterson said he had no understanding of cause and effect.
Joseph and his sisters were being educated at home by their parent under the guidance of River Springs Charter School.
of the National Socialist Movement.
He traveled to the desert with his members of his group as armed civilians on border patrols, preventing illegal entry into the United States.
He lived with his wife and five children and was murdered by his ten-year-old
son.<ref name="cbs"/>
Political activity
A plumber by trade,
32-year-old Jeffery had been having difficulty finding work for three years,
because of the economic downturn in the construction industry. Blaming his problems on Jews and non-whites, he became a local leader in the Neo-Nazi movement.
In 2010 he ran for the Western Municipal Water District board as a white supremacist.<ref name="water"/>
Just 12 hours before Hall's death, a reporter from the New York Times was in Hall's home and spoke to the his son , and the 10-year-old showed off a leather belt bearing a silver insignia of the Nazi SS, which his father had given him.<ref name="uk"/>
Murder
Jeffery bragged that he was teaching eldest son Joseph to use night vision equipment and shoot a gun.<ref name="nyt" />
Eventually that same ten-year-old child would tell police how he got a .357 revolver from a shelf in the closet, pulled the hammer back, aimed the gun at his dad's ear while he was asleep on the couch, and shot him.<ref name="declare" />
Joseph admitted to police that he was tired of his dad hitting him and his mom.
His 26-year-old stepmother Krista also admitted Jeffery had been violent with her and the son, sometimes losing self-control and kicking his son in the back. He punished his children to varying extremes on a daily basis.
The police report said that the house was filthy dirty, with the floor littered with clothes, and the odor of urine. Many weapons were accessible to the children.<ref name="declare" />
The son was arrested and taken to juvenile hall. The other four children were taken into protective custody. Krista was later arrested and charged with criminal storage of firearms
and child neglect.<ref name="declare" />
Joann Patterson (Jeffery's mother and Joseph's grandmother) was given temporary custody of the other four children. On a 60 minutes interview, she stated that her grandson had been acting out by starting fires. She was not surprised that he killed his father, only that she expected it would not happen until her grandson was older.
Family history
Joseph Hall and his younger sister were born to
Jeffery Hall and his first wife Leticia Neal.
Neal later had twins by another father.
In 2003, the twins were hospitalized for failing to thrive,
and Child Protective Services removed Hall's two children.
Social workers reported that Neal had no electricity or gas,
maggots were on dishes, and the children were dirty, hungry and thirsty, and had bruises. Leticia Neal now lives in Spokane, Wash.<ref name="cbs"/>
Halls two children were temporarily placed with his mother Joann Patterson, because he was on probation for driving under the influence.
In 2004, Hall was granted full custody of his two children.
After divorcing Neal, Hall married Krista McCary, and had three more daughters.
At the time of his death, he had five children, ages 10, 9, 7, 3 years plus a 2-month-old infant.
Joseph was a volatile and violent child, who had been expelled from several schools
for attacking students and staff, once nearly choking a teacher with a
phone-cord.
His grandmother Joann Patterson said he had no understanding of cause and effect.
Joseph and his sisters were being educated at home by their parent under the guidance of River Springs Charter School.