In September 2005, Lightstone Group donated 50 Memphis apartments to help Hurricane Katrina victims in need of housing following the storm, offering the apartments rent-free for six months. "We are fortunate to have the ability to house families affected by this traumatic event and can only hope that in some small way, those affected by this tragedy will be able to take some comfort in receiving this temporary shelter", Lichtenstein said. Read More...
You're on track to get doubled donations (and unlock a reward for the colleague who referred you). Keep up the great work! {"callToActionDisplayName":"Taft Early Learning Center","outOfStateSupporters":6.2,"hasFundedProjects":true,"pageName":"schoolpage_63944","schoolLevelGivingEnabled":false,"usesDonorsChoose":true,"infoPageType":"school","demographicsInfo":{"numStudents":521,"numTeachers":22,"percentFrplEligible":29,"percentAsian":1,"percentBlack":0,"percentWhite":86,"percentIndigenous":0,"percentLatinx":7,"showFreeAndReducedPriceLunchInfo":true,"showDemographicsInfo":true,"sourceTooltipString":"the National Center for Education Statistics","gradesServed":"Pre-K - 3","studentTeacherRatio":"23.7:1","demographicsDataSource":"MDR School","equityFocus":false},"inStateSupporters":93.8,"schoolId":63944,"financialInfo":null,"twitterShareText":"Learn more about Taft Early Learning Center on @DonorsChoose:","canonicalPageUrl":"schools/massachusetts/uxbridge-public-schools/earl-d-taft-elementary-school/63944"}
Public School Pre-K - 3
521
22
Taft Early Learning Center is a public schoolin Uxbridge, Massachusetts that is part of Uxbridge Public Schools. Read More...
Like Heller’s debut, “The Diary of a Teenage Girl,” her next film is a period piece of an era that’s not too far from our memory yet features stories we likely haven’t seen before. Her first film was about the coming-of-age misadventures of a teenager (Bel Powley) growing up in 1970s San Francisco. This time, Heller sheds the Polaroid palette she used in that movie for a look that captures the in-between feeling of its era—one where the grimiest of years had passed yet working writers could still afford to live in Manhattan. Read More...