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"Rush Week is a 1989 American slasher film directed by Bob Bralver and starring Pamela Ludwig, Dean Hamilton, and Roy Thinnes. Its plot follows a sorority coed investigating a series of underreported missing persons cases on her college campus. Cast Release Rush Week was released on home video in 1991 by RCA/Columbia Pictures Home Entertainment. =Critical response= A review in the Variety television and film guide called Rush Week a "slasher film long on pretty girls and short on gore. It's a belated direct-to-vid release. Durable if cornball format has coeds being killed on a college campus during the frats' annual rush week ceremonies... Bralver seems more intent on satisfying voyeurs." Michael Weldon in The Psychotronic Video Guide (1996) called the film "another stupid, boring teen/horror movie." In his book Legacy of Blood: A Comprehensive Guide to Slasher Movies (2004), film historian Jim Harper noted: "Although running several years too late to catch the slasher craze, Rush Week is a fairly honorable attempt to rehash the past." References Works cited * External links * Category:1988 films Category:American slasher films Category:American films Category:American teen horror films Category:Films about fraternities and sororities Category:Films set in universities and colleges Category:1980s slasher films Category:Films about fratricide and sororicide "
"The District No. 5 Schoolhouse is a historic district school building at 32 Pleasant Valley Road in Underhill, Vermont. Built in 1861, it served the town as a school until it was damaged by fire in 1951, but remains a community landmark. It is now owned by the local historical society. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2018. Description and history The District No. 5 Schoolhouse is located a short way east of the village center of Underhill, on the south side of Pleasant Valley Road at its junction with Stevensville Road. It is a 2-1/2 story wood frame structure, with a gabled roof and clapboarded exterior. Its main facade is three bays wide, with an entrance topped by a modest corniced entablature. Windows are set on both levels of the outer bays, trimmed by simple moulding. The building has plain cornerboards, and the gable ends have short returns. A flagpole is mounted at the center of the gable, rising above the roof ridgeline. The school was built in 1861, as a single-story structure, and was the third school building to stand on the site. Of the town's fifteen district schools, it is now the only surviving one still in public hands. The building's second story was added in 1915, and it served as a school until a fire in its wood stove caused significant interior damage. The building was thereafter used by the town for storage and as a garage, adding a garage door to the front. In 1983, the building was taken over by the local historical society, which undertook a partial restoration of the building to its early 20th-century appearance. Because the restoration was not completed, the building again deteriorated, and a renewed drive is underway to make it fully usable as a community space. See also *National Register of Historic Places listings in Chittenden County, Vermont References External links Category:School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Vermont Category:National Register of Historic Places in Chittenden County, Vermont Category:School buildings completed in 1861 Category:Buildings and structures in Underhill, Vermont "
"Tinus peregrinus is a species of nursery web spider in the family Pisauridae. It is found in the United States and Mexico. References Category:Pisauridae Category:Articles created by Qbugbot Category:Spiders described in 1924 "