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Photo essay: Columbus-based artist Rah Lowry

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Photo essay: Columbus-based artist Rah Lowry

What to do when you're a 4-year-old and your artistic muse is whispering in your ear, stirring your heart with a passion you never knew existed?

For Rah Lowry, he listened.

The Brooklyn, N.Y., transplant, now living in Columbus, not only followed his passion, but was also encouraged to do so by his grandmother.

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“Think about how wonderful. Me with a fist full of crayons. I'm 4 years old, and my grandma me to draw on the walls,” said Lowry, smiling at the memory. “That's a special kind of to learn, explore, experiment and dream.

“She still has the first thing I drew back then. For the longest time, it occupied a place of honor, magnetized to the fridge. It gave her such genuine pleasure. I remember how that made me feel. I knew I was on to something. Growing up in New York, I was exposed to, well, everything. It being a mecca for everything, everyone and art of all kind everywhere. For me, it wasn't sensory overload. I was like a sponge, still am.

“By the time I was 16, I was creating tattoos and graffiti art. Can you imagine? I certainly did. I even attended the Art Institute of Ft. Lauderdale, but with only siz months left before I graduated, the classes closed. is like that with the unexpected. I got into graphic art and animation while there. But I want it known — I'm a self-taught artist.”

Lowry met his wife, Brie, in Atlanta. They have two : Rah, 2, and Xen, 8 months. The moved to Columbus in 2021.

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“When I was around 21, I got into perfecting my coloring. I've always wanted to take a color and blend it into something else, play around and see what I got,” said Lowry as he intensely studied the sculpture he'd been working on.

He pauses, staring out a window at his backyard and sighs. The 's enormous, gentle giant of a dog Oz saunters over and inspects Lowry's animation work on a laptop, whileleaning his entire 120 pounds against him. It draws Lowry back from wherever his memories had taken him.

“And that's why I didn't want to paint,” said Lowry, picking up a Copic Marker and blending a particular green on a screen bearing one of his colorful illustrations. “Say you make paint and you mess it up, you're left at zero. If I blend a marker, I can just keep going. It makes life a little easier.”

Lowry's artistic groove reflects his journey from that young boy to the father of two he is today.He is a sculptor, an animator and graphic artist who also has the ability to create his artistic visions on a computer.

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“My family and my art give me peace. It's a sense of soul and a sense of atmosphere that I thrive in, and that radiates to those who experience my work. I need to feel that coming back to me everyday because that gets me going in the morning.”


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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

EPA absolves MDEQ, Health Department of discrimination in funding Jackson water

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mississippitoday.org – Alex Rozier – 2024-05-08 15:42:36

About a year and half ago, on the heels of Jackson's infamous water system failure, advocates and politicians from Mississippi began publicly questioning the mechanisms that are supposed to such .

In October 2022, U.S. Reps. Bennie Thompson and Carolyn Maloney wrote Gov. Tate Reeves, grilling him over an apparent disparity in how federal funds were allocated to Jackson versus other parts of the state.

Then days later, the Environmental Protection Agency's office opened an investigation into two state agencies — the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality and the Mississippi Department of Health — in response to the NAACP's claims of discrimination under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title VI prohibits discrimination — based on race, color or national origin — in providing federal assistance.

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On Monday, though, the EPA announced it had ended the probe after finding no evidence the agencies had short-changed Jackson's water system. In its investigation, the EPA looked at the funding amounts and racial demographics of that received water funding from MDEQ and the Health Department and determined there was no correlation between the two factors.

A scatter plot from the EPA's analysis comparing the levels of funding cities received with their percent of Black .

“The evidence overwhelmingly shows that the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality did everything right,” MDEQ Executive Director Chris Wells said in a press release the EPA's announcement.

The two agencies are in charge of disbursing funds from the EPA called “state revolving loan,” or SRF, funds, which are meant to cities make infrastructure improvements. MDEQ handles SRF funds related to wastewater infrastructure, while the Health Department handles SRF funds for drinking water.

But the claims against the agencies were only part of the 2022 complaint the NAACP filed with the EPA. The federal agency did not address another complaint: The group also focused on the state , which has denied attempts in recent years by Jackson to raise money for its water system, such as creating a new 1% tax.

Click here for the EPA's full responses to MDEQ and Health Department.

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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

MSGOP Chair Bordeaux stepping down. Mike Hurst endorsed as successor

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mississippitoday.org – Taylor Vance and Geoff Pender – 2024-05-08 12:25:40

Mississippi Republican Party Chairman Frank Bordeaux announced on Wednesday that he will not seek reelection to his post and endorsed former U.S. Attorney Mike Hurst to succeed him. 

Bordeaux, an insurance executive, wrote on Facebook that he's had a great tenure as the party's chairman, but it was time to “pass the torch” to a “new leader with a fresh perspective.” 

“We've seen a lot of success,” Bordeaux said. “We've elected more Republicans in the last few years to local, state, and federal offices than at any point in history. With every election, we've gained seats and put more conservatives in positions to improve the lives of .” 

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Republican Gov. Tate Reeves in September 2020 backed Bordeaux, a longtime Coast , to replace former GOP Chairman Lucien Smith, a move that likely proved crucial to the governor transforming the Coast into a political firewall of during the 2023 statewide election. 

It's typical for a sitting Republican governor, as head of the state party, to pick a new chairman. While the executive committee technically elects a GOP chairman, a governor's choice is typically installed by acclamation. There has been no major executive committee to a Republican governor's chairman nomination in recent history.

Reeves did not immediately make a statement after Bordeaux' announcement on social , but Hurst in a statement on Wednesday indicated he has Reeves' support.

“I want to thank Gov. Tate Reeves for his support, Chairman Frank Bordeaux for his incredible leadership, and the staff of the MSGOP, who have all raised our party to new heights and have achieved so much for our conservative principles over the last number of years,” Hurst said.

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Gov. Tate Reeves signs qualifying paperwork to for reelection, as his wife Elee Reeves, left, and party chairman Frank Bordeaux look on at the Mississippi Republican Headquarters in Jackson, Miss., Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2023. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi

“Our future is bright in Mississippi and, if elected chairman, I hope I can play a small role in making our state and our party even better in the future,” Hurst added.

READ MORE: Lucien Smith out as MSGOP chair; Gov. Reeves backs Gulf Coast businessman to replace him

Republican Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann in a statement Wednesday said: “Being chairman is a tough, uncompensated job which takes a significant amount of personal time. Frank's leadership through part of the pandemic and the recent statewide election has been pivotal to bringing organization, unity, and success to the Republican Party across the state. We appreciate his service and look forward to continuing his efforts under the guidance of Mike Hurst.”

Hurst has been involved in state and national Republican for years. He is currently a partner in the Phelps Dunbar law firm's Jackson office. Hurst served as the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Mississippi under 's administration from 2017 to 2021, and previously served as an assistant U.S. attorney. 

Prior to his presidential appointment, Hurst was the founder and director of the Mississippi Justice Institute, a division of the Mississippi Center for Public Policy. He also previously served as a legislative director and counsel to then-U.S. Rep. Chip Pickering, and served as counsel to the Constitution Subcommittee of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee.

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Hurst's wife, Celeste Hurst, was elected last year to the state House District 77 seat, representing , Rankin and Scott counties.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Crooked Letter Sports Podcast

Podcast: It’s crunch time in both college and high school baseball.

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We are into the second of May, which means the college and high school seasons have reached the point where every pitch matters. At present, Mississippi is a likely 2-seed, Southern Miss is a 3-seed and is on the outside looking in. The Rebels, however, can change that this when No. 1 ranked A&M to Oxford. Also, Tyler gives the lowdown on all the high school baseball playoff action.

Stream all episodes here.


This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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