This still rings true a month later, as the expiration dates on the doses are approaching. Every hospital in the U.S. now is seeing COVID cases. Especially in Arkansas. It s on the rise. It s on the rise everywhere every in the U.S., said Thrower.
North Carolina reported 2,898 COVID-19 cases on July 19. If people don t want to wear a mask for the next six months they need to be vaccinated, said Thrower I ve had people say well, the government s trying to track us and that s so ridiculous. We have got to get this stuff under control. The variants are going to kill a lot of people, said Thrower.
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Students at Gaston County Schools have yet another choice in educational programs and pathways.
Denise McLean, Gaston County Schools’ executive director of student support services, recently announced the launch of the Gaston Early College of Medical Sciences – a healthcare-driven high school with four- and five-year pathways – ahead of the 2021-22 school year.
It’s the school districts 21st student choice program ever to be offered.
Students can earn their high school diploma, as well as an associate degree from Gaston College, while sticking to one of a number of concentrations, which include nursing, human services, human services technology, pre-medicine, biotechnology and medical office administration.
Several years of alleged bullying toward a Forestview High School student came to a head in January when a student who identifies as transgender attacked another in class in an incident classmates videoed and shared on social media.
The video, published to Facebook on Jan. 29, shows Ashley Rose, 15, punching a fellow student, Christian Scaff, 14, who was logging onto his computer ahead of English class. The video shows Scaff falling to the floor, as Rose continues punching and shoving Scaff’s head into the floor.
Forestview administrators initially suspended Rose for 10 days for the attack, said Sheila Rose, the mother of Ashley Rose. Gaston County Schools informed the Rose family Wednesday that Rose will not be returning to Forestview and will instead attend another Gaston County high school, according to Sheila, who was happy with the decision.