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Summer Travel, Adventure, and Community Service Programs for Teenagers

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Summer Teen Tours and Teen Travel Programs. Choose from 2 to 6 weeks of adventure throughout the world including the United States, Canada, Alaska, Hawaii, Europe, Iceland, Australia, New Zealand and Costa Rica!

Community Service + Cultural Exploration

Authentic and meaningful volunteer opportunities abound! Whether you travel with us to Ecuador, Hawaii, California, or Costa Rica, each program is designed to be a rich, fulfilling experience!

For Younger, Local Travelers...

Tour weekdays & spend weekends at home..

The perfect summer for students in the New York/New Jersey Metro area and the Philadelphia/Cherry Hill area completing 6th, 7th and 8th grades! Choose from 2, 3 or 5 weeks of adventure.

40-Day East to West tour of the United States

Your Crossroads journey begins by traveling to Syracuse, New York and continues to Niagara Falls where we take an action packed jet boat trip on the rapids of the Niagara River. The best roller coasters in the world await us at Cedar Point Amusement Park in Cleveland. We’ll visit the home of the Michigan Wolverines when we stay in the dorms at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Our teen tour continues through the Mid-West as we catch the antics of the Blue Man Group in Chicago, and check out the Mall of America in Minneapolis.

More summer teen tour highlights await us as we enter the Rocky Mountains: the Badlands National Park, Mt. Rushmore, a Wyoming whitewater raft adventure, Yellowstone National Park, Salt Lake City and a taste of the old west in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

The beautiful Southwest unfolds before your eyes as our Crossroads teen tour journeys into Bryce Canyon National Park. We’ll walk along the Rim of the Grand Canyon and then navigate the Broken Arrow Trail on our Pink Jeep Off-Road Adventure in Sedona, Arizona. After our relaxing resort stay in Scottsdale, it’s the bright lights and excitement of Las Vegas.

Sunny California is the next destination on your summer teen tour! Stay at our spectacular resort in San Diego, where we enjoy professional surfing lessons and visit the world-famous San Diego Zoo. We’ll checkout all Los Angeles has to offer before visiting Universal Studios and Disneyland. Next, it’s on to Lake Tahoe for water-skiing and tubing on our beach day. Finally we head to San Francisco for the final stop of your Crossroads teen tour. Teenagers spend three terrific days exploring the city by the bay before traveling home with your new teen tour friends and summer memories from the adventure of a lifetime.

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For students in grades 6-12

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9th Grade Movie Night

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If you have a student going into the 9th grade, mark your calendar for after HS services on June 6th for Oakley & June 9th for other sites. Your student will meet their cGroup leader, enjoy a movie and hang out with other 9th graders at their site. Check below for your site's details.

East Side

June 9th after HS service at RJ Cinema to watch the movie IF. Bus transportation provided - Parents please pick up at RJ Cinema at 10:15pm (No registration needed)

Florence

June 9th after HS service at Cinemark to watch Space Jam. Bus transportation provided - Parents please pick up at Cinemark at 10pm

lexington

June 9th after HS service at Regal to watch the movie IF. Bus transportation provided - Parents please pick up at Regal at 9:45pm

Mason

June 9th after HS service at Regal to watch the movie IF. Bus transportation provided - Parents please pick up at 10:30pm at Regal Cinemas in Deerfield

Oakley

June 6th after HS service we'll be walking to Cinemark at Oakley Station to watch IF. Bus transportation provided - Parents please pick up at 11:15pm at Cinemark

West Side

June 9th after HS service at Crossroads West Side to watch the movie Remember the Titans. Parents please pick up at Crossroads West Side at 10pm (No registration needed)

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Move Up - Summer Kick-Off: June 2

  • Dayton - coming in June
  • West Side - Sunday 5/26 at 12:30pm in Meeting Room A

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Tuesday, June 11th - Friday, June 14th at Crossroads Oakley

This is a hands-on, week long experience, ministry training, and personalized coaching for your students on the weekend production and worship teams. This kicks off your students year long commitment to worship and production teams at their site.

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Summer Camp

High School Camp: June 29-July 3, 2024 Middle School Camp: July 22-26, 2024

Are you ready for the Best Week Ever?! Crossroads Students are headed to Bowling Green State University for a week of awesomeness. We're excited to learn more about Jesus, hang out together, and have tons of fun! You DO NOT want to miss Summer Camp next year! HS closes June 14 MS closes July 15

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Justice...and what it means to follow a Good King

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Can God be good when the world seems... so bad?

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World's Best Dad

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What I wish someone had told me about college

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Feeling some tension with a big choice? Engage 'wrestling mode.'

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Ramen Noodles Aren’t Even That Good (But You’ll Eat Them Anyway)

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Travel, Study, and Work Filled Students’ Summer

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Olivia Smith (far left) studied contemporary songwriting at the Frost Institute at the University of Miami.

Crossroads students have the flexibility to engage at school and pursue outside interests, and their summer pursuits were no exception. Here’s just a few examples of what students were up to this summer. In addition to part-time jobs and summer travel, students and families shared the following news:

  • Becca Clair ’24 visited Guatemala for a mix of tourism and service as part of her bat mitzvah.
  • Sophie Cohen ’20 and Meg Corbett ’20 were camp counselors at their grade school alma mater, New City School.
  • Jena Denney ’21 interned for the Muny this summer as a sound technician.
  • McKinlee Morris ’20 worked on projects including at Saint Louis University Hospital as a mechanical engineering intern with IMEG Engineering Consulting.
  • Oliva Smith ’20  attended the Frost Institute of Contemporary Songwriting at the University of Miami.
  • Mystik Stargod ’20 volunteered at the Aim High high school prep program as a teacher’s assistant.
  • Miles Thomas ’20 was an archery instructor and camp counselor at Camp Ondessonk.

Ashlyn Wiley at Ohio State University

  • Ronald Wagner ’20 attended conferences in Atlanta (JCamp Atlanta 2019) and Kentucky (Western Kentucky University’s Xposure 2019) to study photojournalism.
  • Ashlyn Wiley ’20 (left) attended camps at Ohio State University (for athletic training) and Wake Forest University (for sports medicine).

Curious About Crossroads?

Questions? Email Us! Or call 314-367-8085

These people still believe in democracy (little d) and are working to keep it.

On this july 4th holiday, america's system of democracy is under threat. these people are working to keep it alive and well..

WASHINGTON ‒ For Joseph Atou, democracy is sharing with hundreds of visitors the history of America’s foundation.

For Gregg Amore, it’s teaching the younger generation the importance of civic engagement.

And for John Suttles and Tina Barton, democracy means ensuring elections work.

According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, democracy is government by the people. On the ground that can look different to different people, but for some, what they call democracy is at the heart of what they do and what they hope to protect.

“Democracy is that lever, that tool, that gift that allows us to move toward a more perfect union,’’ said Sam Daley-Harris, author of “Reclaiming Our Democracy. Every Citizen’s Guide to Transformational Advocacy.” “That assumes that it wasn't perfect in 1776 for sure. And here we are now, it ain't perfect now. Our lever, our tool, our mechanism, our gift is democracy.”

Prep for the polls: See who is running for president and compare where they stand on key issues in our Voter Guide

In some spaces, the word "democracy" has spurred intense debate among candidates, activists and scholars.

It has topped some polls as an important election issue. In January, 49% of Democrats and 29% of independents cited the future of democracy as the top issue facing America, according to an exclusive USA TODAY/Boston Globe/Suffolk University poll in New Hampshire. A Washington Post poll released last week found that the majority of voters of all political beliefs consider "threats to democracy in the U.S." important. And that's true of more than 70% of voters who say they strongly support either President Joe Biden or former President Donald Trump .

Ahead of the nation’s July 4 celebrations, USA TODAY talked to a range of people dedicated to democracy, including a former election official, a veteran of the civil rights moment and a tour guide at the U.S. Capitol, about what democracy means to them and how they’re doing their part to move it forward.

As the stories of these citizens show, sustaining democracy takes work. And support for these efforts remains crucial, Daley-Harris said.

“It's the political will of the people that makes and sustains the political will of governments,’’ he said. “Make sure there's a next step that people can take to take the enthusiasm onward rather than have it fizzle."

Welcome to the United States

Joseph Atou

Joseph Atou, dressed in a bright red jacket, handed each of the 40 tourists a headset at the U.S. Capitol Visitors Center .

“Over here,’’ he directed. "Move forward, please.’’

Atou is one of dozens of guides leading tours of the U.S. Capitol , offering visitors a chance to see and hear how democracy here works. During the peak from March through August, about 10,000 people a day visit the center.

Atou believes he’s helping educate Americans and foreigners about the nation, its checks and balances, its history and its evolution.

“A lot of the time people see the government as far away,’’ Atou explained between tours on a recent afternoon . “They don’t really understand a lot of how it really works.’’

But after the nearly hourlong tour, Atou is excited when visitors tell him, ‘‘Oh, I didn’t know that is how it is.’’

At the start of that day's tour, Atou asked foreign visitors where they were from. "France," "Austria," "Indonesia" and "South Korea," they yelled out.

“Welcome to the United States of America,’’ he responded.

Atou then guided them through the Capitol, pointing to paintings like the presentation of a draft of the Declaration of Independence, busts of icons like Martin Luther King Jr., and statues of presidents like Thomas Jefferson.

The group circled the Grand Rotunda at the heart of the Capitol, where Atou pointed way up to the dome and shared that dignitaries like Sen. John McCain had lain in state there. Visitors peppered Atou with questions. He rattled off answers.  

Atou especially enjoyed explaining how each state selects statues to represent them in the National Statuary Hall, only steps from the Rotunda. He urged visitors, while on Capitol Hill, to reach out to their congressional representative.

“It’s a way for me to tell them to get involved,’’ Atou said.

At the end of the tour, visitors applauded.

Theresa Raffeiner from Austria said she appreciated the lesson and Atou’s humor. “It wasn’t so serious,’’ she said. “I don’t want to feel like I was on a field trip.’’

Atou, 50, an independent who lives in Rockville, Maryland, has been a tour guide for 11 years.

He was born in Cameroon in central Africa and later lived in France. He combined passions of his grandfather, an artist, and his father, a high school history teacher, to study art history in Paris. He later did research in Germany for his masters in art history.

Because of his background, Atou said, it’s easy to incorporate history with art during his tours.

He also uses his experiences in other countries to relate to foreign visitors. At stops on his tour, he explained in French to tourists why histories of the countries were connected. He also speaks German and Greek.

Atou said he learned a lot about American history while living in other countries.

“But you have to come here to actually understand that,’’ he said. “When they talk about slavery, for example, they will tell you that there were horrible things, but they will never tell you about Emmett Till. They will never tell you about Dred Scott . They will just portray that as evil. They were mean people. They enslaved people.”

“Working here really helped me to understand the position of African Americans.”

All those experiences help drive Atou’s passion for his work. He also helped design the Heroes of Civil Rights tour at the Capitol.

“It’s fun,’’ he said. “I try to teach, but the American system is a little bit complex.’’

Preserving fair and safe elections

Tina Barton

Tina Barton has traveled to more than 30 states in the past two years. In each place, she has met with local, county and state officials, those who conduct hazmat details, and people who work in Homeland Security or for the FBI. 

 It's all in the name of preserving fair and safe elections, which she considers a crucial part of the democratic process. 

Barton helps municipalities create plans for Election Day.

She spent 32 years working in government across Oakland County, Michigan, half as an elections clerk.

This type of preparation is Barton’s passion. And after facing death threats, it has become personal.

“The goal is to have an operations plan in place with anybody who has some sort of stake in the voting process in case there is an event that could range from intimidation, de-escalation to threats to lives,” said Barton, vice chair of the nonprofit Committee for Safe and Secure Elections .

”We walk through several scenarios to try to make their communities safer,” added Barton, also a senior expert for The Elections Group . “The demand has been so great. They come away with their eyes more wide open. We want them to prepare their plans. To implement them. To test them.”

A married mother of two adult children, Barton said election workers have faced increased scrutiny since 2016, but it intensified in 2020. A Republican, Barton doesn’t believe doubting election workers is a partisan issue, either. “We’re living in pretty divisive times right now,” she said.

She cites a recent poll by the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law, a liberal or progressive nonprofit law and public policy institute, that found nearly 40% of local election officials had been threatened, harassed or abused on the job. “That’s a 10% increase,” Barton said. “A huge number.”

The poll also showed that more than 90% of municipalities have increased their election security since 2020. “Another huge number,” Barton said.

Andrew Nickels, of Carmel, Indiana, has been convicted of threatening Barton’s life and her family. After the 2020 election, he left a menacing voicemail and accused her of fraud when Trump and then-Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel alleged voter irregularities in Oakland County, where Barton was in charge. 

Barton denounced the accusations and state officials said McDaniel’s claims had no merit.  

“It was hurtful, shocking, stunning, all the things I never expected,” Barton said. “You can either let it defeat you or define you. I clearly let it define me and I’m absolutely stronger. I’m using my experiences and skills to help others not go through what I did.”

Barton said she plans to give a victim impact statement when Nickels is sentenced next month. 

“His threat did not cause me to back down. In fact, it made me stronger,” Barton said. “It makes election officials stronger. They work incredibly hard to make sure voters can have a free, safe and accurate election.”

On a bridge and at a crossroads

John Suttles

When John Suttles takes Highway 80 into Selma, Alabama, he’s struck by how much the city still looks like six decades ago when he and others marched across the Edmund Pettus Bridge to demand voting rights for its Black citizens.

There’s still a gas station, a sign welcoming visitors and the bridge.

The 76-year-old veteran of the Civil Rights Movement makes the pilgrimage nearly each year in part to share with young people the importance of voting.

“You have to vote because that's the way democracy works,’’ he said. “If you don't vote, you don't have a democracy and that is where we at now at this crossroads in the United States.”

For Suttles, a working democracy means his efforts 60 years ago are paying off with more people of color registering to vote and casting ballots. To continue that effort, Suttles champions the importance of voting at events, including a Juneteenth panel in his hometown of Johns Creek, Georgia. Earlier this year, he joined a virtual panel hosted by the federal Election Assistance Commission.

“I am constantly looking for opportunities to talk about it with anybody that wants to listen,’’ said Suttles, a retired Minnesota transit worker. “There’s a lot of naysayers about the vote. But that just doesn't make sense to me.’’

Since he was a teenager, Suttles said, he has been working on “this thing called voting and democracy and human rights.’’

Suttles, who lived outside Selma, joined peaceful protesters crossing the Edmund Pettus Bridge in a march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, in 1965. Like others, he was beaten by police on that "Bloody Sunday."

Suttles donated the bloodstained Army jacket he wore that day, loaned to him by his uncle, to a National Park Service interpretive center in Selma .

He and his wife, Kay, often join the annual bipartisan pilgrimage to Selma when civil rights veterans, U.S. presidents, members of Congress and others gather to commemorate the march. Georgia Rep. John Lewis, the late civil rights icon, used to lead the trip .

Suttles, a Democrat, appreciates the chance to talk to young people who often ask about his experience on ''Bloody Sunday.''

“They're always fascinated that a young person like myself back in them days would have enough to get up knowing that there's a 99% chance that you're going to get beat up and (yet) you go fight for somebody else's civil rights and voters' rights and human rights,’’ he said.

Suttles said he would have it no other way.

“I bought into it in the '60s,’’ he said. “It’s sort of like a religion. It’s part of me now. I have to be involved in some capacity that can make a difference.’’

Standing up for women

Poojitha Tanjore

In March, a group of female politicians, activists and other prominent community leaders came together at  a local high school in Virginia to discuss the importance of women raising their voices and fighting for change.

Among the group was 22-year-old Indian American Pooja Tanjore, a master’s student at Columbia University in New York and a diplomatic fellow with USAID, which administers foreign aid and development assistance.

“I borrowed my mother's blazer. … I didn't feel like I knew all the etiquette to be in this space," she joked to an almost equally youthful audience of high schoolers, according to the Loudoun-Times Mirror.   "I'm going to have to buy my own blazers.”

Tanjore, a Cincinnati native, told USA TODAY that women have “really always been at the core of what's important to me about democracy.”

Everyone has the right to speak and have a voice, she said.

“And I think women have historically been neglected in that space, and so it's very important that they have the right to speak and feel empowered.”

The fight for womens’ rights and representation is something Tanjore has been involved in since her teens ‒ starting at the grassroots level. 

At age 16, she founded a Virginia chapter of the national nonprofit Rise to Run, aimed at encouraging high school and college women to run for office. 

Working on former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign, Tanjore said, helped her form a strong network to launch the chapter. The group helped bring together young women from different backgrounds and connect them with mentors. 

Though the chapter is now defunct, she has continued serving in other ways, such as campaigning for female lawmakers and speaking at summits aimed at empowering women. Last year, she worked as a legislative fellow in Democratic Virginia Rep. Jennifer Wexton’s office.

“I grew up with people knocking doors (and) I worked on a bunch of political campaigns, and you just see all this energy of people who really care about local politics, like the causes in their local communities, because people know that change is made locally,” she said. 

“So even just on that grassroots level, it's so inspiring, and it just continues to reinforce how important democracy is.”

Her great-grandmother, forced to marry as a child, was her biggest source of inspiration to get involved in this work, she said. The older woman, who died two years ago, had children while still a teenager herself and was widowed just a few years later. 

“Seeing what that did to her really inspired me to work toward women's rights.”

Keeping democracy is everyone's job

Gregg Amore

It's tough to keep teenagers from their phones these days. Gregg Amore managed to keep a hotel ballroom-full laughing, raising their hands and nodding along this spring as he talked about the importance of maintaining American democracy.

Power, he reminded his audience of high schoolers at the Rhode Island Civic Leadership Summit, is something you want to hold onto once you have. He doesn't want to give up his own job as Rhode Island's secretary of state, he noted.

His 30 years of teaching high school students have helped him hone his message. Some of the students had even heard him give this talk before. But they didn't seem to mind. A few of the anecdotes were fresh and his questions kept them awake, several said.

A lifelong Rhode Islander with the accent to prove it, he doesn't talk down to the high schoolers, many of whom will be voting in their first election in November. He has nailed a tone that says "I respect your intelligence, but I also have information you'll want to know."

Amore, 57, a former hockey and baseball coach, mentioned the charge that the 2020 election was stolen. Instead of dismissing it out of hand, as many fellow Democrats do, he explained that in 2020, three Rhode Islanders voted in both Florida and Rhode Island. All three were caught and prosecuted.

"Is there voter fraud? Yes. Is there widespread fraud? No," he said, explaining the auditing process his state and others use to ensure that the vast majority of votes are counted accurately.

"We don't have a voter fraud problem in this country," Amore told the students. "We have a voter suppression problem in this country."

Ancestors of many of the people who have trouble accessing the polls today were prevented from voting by intimidation tactics or so-called literacy tests that asked impossible questions, like "How many bubbles does this bar of soap create?" he said, holding up a bar to emphasize the absurdity.

"If Americans don't pay attention, if we don't push back, you will see proposals for some sort of literacy test for future voters."

He closed his talk by citing Benjamin Franklin, who, at age 81, ran into a friend as he was walking out of the 1787 Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia.

"What do we have?" she asked him about their newly established form of government. "A republic or a monarchy?"

"Madam, we have a republic ‒ if you keep it," Franklin supposedly replied.

"That's your job," Amore charged the young people listening to his vision of democracy. "To keep it."

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Niclas Larsson Is Ready to Shoot More Close-Ups

The film director grew up in Sweden with a love of American movies. Now he would like you to see his surreal debut, “Mother, Couch,” in a theater.

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Niclas Larsson, barefoot in a dark suit, sits on a couch in a city apartment next to large white dog.

By Alexandra Jacobs

If old age is not for snowflakes — well, try directing a 90-minute feature film about old age in the iPhone era, as Niclas Larsson has done.

Mr. Larsson, 33, greeted me on a recent morning into his 15th-floor terraced apartment in a former button factory in Manhattan, looking eerily like his dog, a blond lurcher named Ted, the way many owners do. He had settled here, the garment district of Midtown Manhattan, after rejecting “hipper” quarters in Brooklyn and the financial district.

A native Swede with a deep appreciation of Americana, he was offering strong black coffee and strong opinions on where his new movie, “Mother, Couch,” should be seen, like the Angelika theater downtown, where it opens on Friday, and the Nuart in Los Angeles.

“Hollywood is like, What’s going on?” Mr. Larsson said, considering the summer box office, which has thus far been a faint shadow of last year’s Barbenheimer . “No one knows what’s going on. But I want to give the nerds the option of going to the theater. It’s made for a theater. It’s shot on 35 — it’s all the film nerdy things in there.”

“You know what also about a theater that we forget is the God perspective of people telling us a story,” he went on. “People forget — the big shadow plays they did around the fires in the Stone Age? They did them large, because it’s important.”

“Mother, Couch,” based on “Mamma i soffa,” a 2020 Swedish novel by Jerker Virdborg, and shot to some local excitement in Charlotte, N.C., indeed takes on large themes, including mortality, parenthood and that Gen Z bugaboo, capitalism.

The story is focused on an elderly matriarch (Ellen Burstyn at 91: “the cutest, most beautiful lady,” Mr. Larsson said) who plunks down on a sofa at a furniture store and refuses to get up, causing her three adult children to rally around her in distress, if not consensus. The most agitated and involved of them — in the wilds of elder care, there’s always one — is played by Ewan McGregor. Lara Flynn Boyle, as his sister, and F. Murray Abraham, as the identical-twin owners of the store, also figure.

Mr. Larsson was fretting a little that, at the Toronto International Film Festival last September, some had suggested that “Mother, Couch” was a dramedy, an impression seemingly confirmed by a poster featuring Mr. McGregor as he looks winsomely heavenward. (The image has since been changed to something more surreal .)

“I’m like, ‘Guys, it’s horror — we did a mistake,’” he said (his excellent English is flecked with such occasional slight malapropisms). “If we lure the audience into believing that it’s a comedy, they’ll walk out. And they did, of course. Can you imagine? Poor people!”

Though the director whose career Mr. Larsson most covets is Billy Wilder ’s, he saw plenty of horror movies as a child, including two starring Ms. Burstyn: “The Exorcist” (1973) and “ Requiem for a Dream ” (2000). He grew up on a farm near Malmo, often looked after by grandparents oblivious to the rating system, and he was about 8 when he watched Brad Pitt in “Seven.”

“That was a huge deal for me,” he said. “Like, what is this incredible force that comes from this screen? How can I feel this terrified?”

His mother worked long hours at a beauty salon, where he read a lot of celebrity gossip magazines, wondering, What do these people do? Why are they important? Why do people take pictures of them? He also fingered the hair-color samples. “Which I loved, because they had these beautiful little knots,” he said.

His father was a former military officer who sold charter tours and had a cool record collection. Little Niclas went on a TV talent show, “Little Stars,” and did an impression of Alice Cooper as he sang “ School’s Out ,” complete with a snake wrapped around him. He won.

He became a fairly successful child actor but soon realized you could have more fun behind the camera, controlling what people said. “I hated school,” he said. “I was sort of a loner, and sort of famous, and that was weird to deal with, and I was really bad, bad, a bad kid. Not violent, but I didn’t like the assignments. Like, for example, when we had Swedish class and were told to write a three-page story, I couldn’t understand why I couldn’t hand in 10 pages.”

Ingmar Bergman films weren’t doing it for him, either.

“Way more interesting to watch ‘Rambo,’ you know what I mean?”

Truck honks were wafting upstairs, but Ted had fallen asleep on a squishy couch, his paws twitchy as if he were galloping through a dream field. Mr. Larsson described his current reading material: “ Burning Boy ,” Paul Auster’s biography of Stephen Crane, and “ Cinema Speculation ” by Quentin Tarantino. (He also liked Andrew Lipstein’s recent novel about a finance-bro-gone-loco, “ The Vegan .”)

He tried film school at the University of Southern California, where he bunked with a bunch of medical students who advised him to hop on a Hollywood tour bus for cultural immersion. “We pull up to Michael Jackson’s house, and the gate’s open, and there’s an ambulance,” he remembered. He snapped a photograph. Soon afterward, he continued, he walked into an H&M, where he saw a man crying. He recalled: “He’s like, ‘The king is dead, the king is dead!’ I was like, ‘What king? The Swedish king?’ And my frat guys are like, ‘You should sell that picture, you should sell it.’”

Fascinating as Los Angeles was, Mr. Larsson dropped out and moved back to Sweden, to Stockholm, and sold fish-oil supplements outside supermarkets. “The experience of talking to 300 people a day — in retrospect, that made me a director,” he said.

He worked on commercials, including one for Adidas starring Justin Bieber, and on a short called “ Vatten ” (“Water”), a sort of “Little Mermaid” in reverse, about a girl who falls in love with an underwater ghost in a swimming pool. It won awards.

For Vogue magazine, he directed two shorts starring the fellow Swede Alicia Vikander and Anna Wintour, borrowing the plot from the “Twilight Zone” episode titled “ Nick of Time .”

“She’s like the last Andy Warhol,” Mr. Larsson said of Ms. Wintour. “That’s what’s left. Icons are slowing fading away — everything becomes boring and generic. It’s weird to be in a time where people care less and less about the craft of filmmaking and more about the instant click or whatever it is.”

But as his new movie opens, despite some gingerly early reviews, Mr. Larsson is remaining hopeful about the future of cinema, with his drawerful of scripts — “plenty, plenty, plenty” — and endless fascination with New York.

“It’s meth clinics and buttons, and that combination is fantastic,” he said of the faded-noir environs outside his big windows. “Like the other day I see this Maybach. It’s 6:30 in the morning, I’m walking him.” He gestured at Ted. “We’re talking a $350,000 car. There’s a 60-year-old guy in a million-dollar suit eating a kebab at the street corner between a flopping plastic scaffolding. I’m like, Where else in the world could I see that? I want to know his story.”

Alexandra Jacobs is a Times book critic and occasional features writer. She joined The Times in 2010. More about Alexandra Jacobs

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  1. Crossroads Student Travel

    Located in the San Francisco Bay Area, Crossroads Student Travel is a nonprofit organization that provides educational travel opportunities for students, parents, and teachers to Taos, New Mexico, and Costa Rica. Crossroads was founded in 2001 by Director Stuart Morris, a teacher who has taught history at the high school level for over 25 years ...

  2. Crossroads Student Travel

    For over 20 years, Crossroads Student Travel has brought students to Taos to experience life with the Pueblo community. The Taos, New Mexico trip is designed as a six-day experience to immerse high school students into Native American culture through direct community service working with the Pueblo community. Throughout the week we also ...

  3. Crossroads Student Travel

    Crossroads Student Travel designs customized school trips for middle school or high schoolteachers to travel with your students to Taos, New Mexico or Costa Rica. Each trip is designed your trip. Community organizers from the local Taos Pueblo Reservation will also be working with your group. In Costa Rica, the trip is led by other teachers who ...

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    8th,9th,10th,and 11thgrade travelers. Join Us For 2024! Summer Teen Travel Tours and Community Service Programs for Students. Summer teen travel programs by Rein Teen Tours: 973-785-1113. As Rein Teen Tours enters our 39th year in the summer teen tour and travel market, our program options have steadily grown to include exciting domestic and ...

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    2024 Travel Dates. Any 9-day period during the year for middle school or high school students. Deadline to Register: Four months prior to departure date. Trip 1: Emphasis on Community Service Download Brochure. Cost for Trip. $2,500 per student includes lodging, ground transportation, and all meals and activities.

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    Crossroads Student Travel is a nonprofit organization that provides educational travel excursions for middle and high school students that highlight: Community Service, Cultural Awareness, and Outdoor

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    Crossroads Student Travel. Hospitality · California, United States · <25 Employees . Crossroads was founded in 2001 by Director Stuart Morris, a teacher who has taught history at the high school level for over 25 years in the San Francisco Bay Area.

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    The perfect summer for students in the New York/New Jersey Metro area and the Philadelphia/Cherry Hill area completing 6th, 7th and 8th grades! Choose from 2, 3 or 5 weeks of adventure. Discover More. Crossroads. 40-DayEast to West tour of the United States. Your Crossroads journey begins by traveling to Syracuse, New York and continues to ...

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    Crossroads Student Travel: Employer Identification Number (EIN) 020537971: Name of Organization: Crossroads Student Travel: In Care of Name: Stuart Morris: Address: 419 Chester St, Menlo Park, CA 94025-2523: Subsection: Educational Organization: Ruling Date: 06/2002: Deductibility: Contributions are deductible:

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  15. Ways to Get to Campus

    Crossroads School is located in a transit-rich neighborhood within the City of Santa Monica. Our Elementary School and K-12 Sports Center are on our Norton Campus (1715 Olympic Blvd.) and our Middle and Upper Schools are just a few blocks away on our 21st Street Campus (1714 21st Street). Both campuses are accessible via bus, train, bike, foot ...

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    OR make check payable to "Crossroads Student Travel" and mail to: Stuart Morris Crossroads Student Travel 3519 S Silver Springs Rd Lafayette, CA 94549. Our Destinations. Taos Taos, New Mexico; Costa Rica Costa Rica; Custom Trips Custom Trips; Contact. Email [email protected]; Phone (650) 208-3120

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    High School Camp: June 29-July 3, 2024. Middle School Camp: July 22-26, 2024. Are you ready for the Best Week Ever?! Crossroads Students are headed to Bowling Green State University for a week of awesomeness. We're excited to learn more about Jesus, hang out together, and have tons of fun! You DO NOT want to miss Summer Camp next year!

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  19. Here's what the work of democracy looks like

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    Students, parents, and teachers are invited to contact me by phone or email any time to discuss specifics about a trip or application. - Stuart Morris, Director Mailing Address. Stuart Morris Crossroads Student Travel 3519 S Silver Springs Rd Lafayette, CA 94549 Phone . 650.208.3120 . Send me an email! Enter your information below. All items ...

  21. Opinion: Before Democrats think about replacing Biden, they should

    With Democratic officials and donors vying for President Joe Biden's withdrawal from the 2024 presidency, Julian Zelizer writes that replacing the Democratic nominee may not have the intended ...

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    Crossroads Student Travel is a registered 501c3 nonprofit organization. All donations are tax deductible to the full extent as allowed by law. Photo Gallery: Taos, NM; Photo Gallery: Costa Rica; Show your support! Thank you for your support of Crossroads Student Travel and the work that we do. Your gift will help meet the educational needs of ...

  23. Niclas Larsson, Film Director, Waits for Success in New York's Garment

    The film director grew up in Sweden with a love of American movies. Now he would like you to see his surreal debut, "Mother, Couch," in a theater.