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  • The Greenville Roller Girls were the first Roller Derby team in the City of Greenville, N.C. This all female team lasted only about three months from start to finish, later disbanding with a few members forming another team, The Ring City Rollers. Left to Right Becky Durham, Lauren Hayden, Megan Hucks, Ashley Talbot, and Jenn Angele prepare for practice at Galaxy Sports in Kinston, N. C.  jfgdr
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  • Greenville business owner Delia Liuzza signs for Presedential candidate Barack Obama's speech Thursday at Minges Coliseum in Greenville. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • Becky Durham, Hope, Celeste Lajoine, Samantha Kauffman, and Jenn Angele, members of the Greenville Rollergirls practice at Galaxy Sports in Kinston, N.C.
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  • Presedential candidate Barack Obama speaks Thursday at Minges Coliseum in Greenville. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • Left to Right, Jenn Angele, Celeste Lajoine, Hope Renee, and Megan Hucks, members of the Greenville Rollergirls joke around after practice at Galaxy Sports in Kinston, N.C.
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  • Hope Renee, top left, and Jenn Angele watch as Celeste Lajoine, and Megan Hucks, members of the Greenville Rollergirls sort out safety pads after practice at Galaxy Sports in Kinston, N.C.
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  • Presedential candidate Barack Obama pauses during a speech Thursday at Minges Coliseum in Greenville. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • Zi Ayala and Jenn Angele wrestle at  Angele's home in Greenville during a cookout to pass out uniforms for the team.
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  • The four blocks of Dickinson Avenue between Reade Circle and Tenth Street in Greenville have become known as a diverse community within a community. Lined with tightly packed buildings and accessible sidewalks the area that lends itself to foot traffic.  <br />
	This once thriving business district has become a stretch of storefronts ranging from sparse to empty. Busy weekend traffic has seemingly disappeared with the exception of occasional foot traffic taking a shortcut to another location. Furniture stores and bakeries have given way to only a few remaining businesses and a hand full of newly relocated businesses. <br />
	The absence of neon lights and towering billboards has kept many of these stores hidden from passer-bys. Antique stores and a lone comic book store mark an ironic era in Greenville's history next to silently decaying buildings, while a single martial arts business remains a lighthouse of sorts as the only business open after dark. <br />
	Despite the decline in business many owners, some of whom have occupied stores for more than fifty years, remain doing ?business as usual.? Frank Craft, owner of Williams Shoe Shop echoes best the street's quiet resistance to change simply saying, ?this is home.?<br />
All American Martial Arts sits as the lone business open after dark on this four block stretch of Dickinson Avenue.
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  • Jenn Horne and Gabe Albanese are raising their daughter Jubilee in a collective house in Greenville N.C. Upon becoming pregnant the couple decided against moving out of the small room they share in the house into one of their own feeling it may "isolate" the child. The house consists of between two and five college age roommates that are active in the community. Roommates tour in bands hold vegetarian dinner nights and strive to build a sense of community in a college town they describe as transient. Jenn Horne and Gabe dress their daughter Jubilee in the small room they share in Greenville N.C.   jfg
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  • Presedential candidate Barack Obama speaks Thursday at Minges Coliseum in Greenville. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • Presedential candidate Barack Obama speaks Thursday at Minges Coliseum in Greenville. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • Presidential candidate Barack Obama speaks Thursday at Minges Coliseum in Greenville. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • Presedential candidate Barack Obama pauses during a speech Thursday at Minges Coliseum in Greenville. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • Gabe Albanese kisses his infant daughter Jubilee as he walks his girlfriend Jenn Horne, right,  to Cape Fear Tattoos in Greenville N.C.
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  • Supporters of Barack Obama listen to the Presidential candidate's speech Thursday at Minges Coliseum. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • Members of the team try on uniforms at the home of Jenn Angele.
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  • Becky Durham, left, smokes a cigarette as Hope Renee waits for a ride at Galaxy Sports in Kinston, N.C. After practice the girls, most of whom smoke walk out with cigarettes in their mouths and light up before leaving.
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  • Jenn Angele practices shoulder moves on a party-goer on the night the team got their uniforms. The team had a cookout to celebrate the uniforms, which was a milestone for the short time the team has been together.
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  • Sara Yoder touches the stomach of Traci Davis as Becky Durham looks on. Davis, who is pregnant and expecting in June plans to participate with the team after having her baby.
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  • Ashley Talbot, left, Megan Hucks, Becky Durham and Sara Yoder talk before practice at Galaxy Sports in Kinston, N. C.
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  • Sara Yoder, left, Ashley Talbot, center, and Becky Durham look back at teammates after a fall at Galaxy Sports in Kinston, N.C. When the team began practicing many of the girls hadn't roller skated in several years.
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  • Supporters of Barack Obama cheer the Presidential candidate's speech Thursday at Minges Coliseum. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • Supporters begin to crowd around the stage before a rally for Barack Obama Thursday at Minges Coliseum. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • Mel Watt, left, and G.K. Butterfield prepare the crowd for an appearance by Barack Obama during a rally for the Presidential candidate Thursday at Minges Coliseum. (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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  • Supporters of Barack Obama walk past a projection screen while finding seats Thursday at Minges Coliseum. (Jason A. Frizzelle) This collection of images represents more than a decade of work at newspapers and wire services throughout North Carolina. I now practice my style of story-telling photography for weddings community events as well as portrait sessions ranging from brides to local authors. After graduating from Randolph Community College I spent more than a decade documenting communities throughout Eastern North Carolina with a camera. My passion for capturing story-telling images has allowed me to witness everything from High School Football to Hurricanes and even Presidential visits.<br />
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My award-winnng photography has been published internationally, appearing in publications such as The Atlanta Journal Constitution, The Los Angeles Times, USA Today, The Guardian of London, and Time Magazine.<br />
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As a child I loved the writing of Ray Bradbury, who was often noted for “tuning the ordinary into the extraordinary.” That’s the approach I take to every assignment, finding the priceless moments in everyday life. Weather I’m capturing a high school touchdown celebration or a bride’s final minutes before saying “I do,” I’m preserving an extraordinary memory.<br />
            <br />
Whether I'm documenting a diverse community or capturing a couple's first dance, I'm photographing something extraordinary!
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  • dickinson08.jpg
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  • Jonathan Bowling works on art work at his shop on Dickinson Avenue.
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  • A Customer browses through comic books at N
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  • The couple's mutual friend Ashley plays with Jubilee as Gabe looks on at Cape Fear Tattoos.
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  • Gabe Albanese stands in the kitchen of the house with his daughter Jubilee. Jenn later moved out of the house because the couple agreed if they were gonna stay together they couldn't live together at this time.
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  • Roommates participate in a weekly vegitarian dinner night. The members of the house hold the dinner nights and open them up to members of the community as an opportunity to try vegitarian dishes and "exchange ideas."
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  • Gabe Albanese feeds his daughter Jubilee as roommate Carli Cox builds a screen to make a t shirt.
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  • Jenn Horne and Gabe Albanese play with their daughter Jubilee in the living room of their house.
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  • Jenn Horne places a band-aid on the finger of Gabe Albanese after he got a splinter building screens to make t shirts. Members of the house raise money through a variety of methods, making and selling t shirts and patches is one of the ongoing methods.
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  • Frank Craft waves goodbye to a customer at his hardware store on Dickinson Avenue.
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  • Tony Miles, left, a customer of sixteen years, looks through comic books as David Tilley walks by shortly before closing at Nostalgia Newsstand.
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  • Lee Wyman has his hair cut by James Paige at Paige's Barbershop on Dickinson Avenue.
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  • James Paige sits down in between customers at his barber shop on Dickinson Avenue.
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  • Jenn Horne holds her daughter Jubilee as roommate Steve Backus, out of frame, plays with her.
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  • Gabe Albanese hugs Jenn Horne as their roommate Steve Backus makes dinner before one of the weekly vegitarian dinner nights.
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  • Gabe Albanese uses water from the sink to flush the toilet in the bathroom. He removed a pipe in the sink to catch excess water and uses it to flush the toilet in order to conserve water.
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  • Rena Billeda, age, 13, rests her head on the shoulder of her grandmother Ruth Miller as the two and John Hill listen to the funeral service of Billy Ray Greene. Greene died from injuries after an automobile accident that also claimed the life of Greenville Police Officer Jason Campbell, the first Greenville Police Officer to die in the line of duty since 1952.
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  • (MOMENTS COLUMN)<br />
Lauren Noll, right, covers her face and Jessica Duensing, left, watches as Ashley Joswick pulls a nail out of the wall at Mudslinger's Coffee Co. on Evans Street in Greenville. The three, all seniors at East Carolina University, will graduate in May with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Graphic Design and where preparing for a senior show of their work. "It's been a long run," said Noll, "five years in the making, " added Joswick. With a quick glance at the work on the wall Noll admits, "it was worth it.? (Jason A. Frizzelle)
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