Published April 19, 2021
Congratulations to Plymouth Junior, Emma Johnson, and Salem Junior, Evie Cadotte. Emma and Evie were chosen to fill the positions of Program Director and Operations Manager for the 2020-2021 school year.
Emma has been a great leader as 88.1 the Park’s News Director. Her work coordinating the station’s SJ5K programming has been an important part of the coverage this year. 88.1 the Park Station Manager, Bill Keith, said “We’re impressed by Emma’s commitment to the station and staff, and her dedication to making 88.1 better. Her leadership among our Directors will help each of them be more successful next year.”
Volunteers drop off cleaning supplies and masks at the Rea of Hope in Charleston.
Human beings are social creatures and the pandemic is taking a toll on all of us in one way or another. It’s also bringing to light just how important human connection is in our lives.
This week on
Inside Appalachia, we’ll hear from folks who are overcoming these challenges on top of maintaining sobriety and staying on the path to recovery.
As we grapple with the immediate health emergency of the coronavirus pandemic and celebrate the hope found in vaccines and infections going down here in Appalachia we’re also struggling with two other public health crises: the opioid epidemic, and a large uptick in HIV cases. Researchers believe the crises are linked.
(Palm Beach, FL â February 22, 2021) â The 18th annual Palm Beach Show concluded on Tuesday, February 16th after six days of strong attendance and robust sales. The VIP Opening Night Preview kicked-off the Show on Thursday, February 11th with tiered event times, welcoming enthusiastic collectors to the opening of the first, most anticipated live and in-person art, antique & jewelry event.
With extensive planning in cooperation with the Palm Beach County Convention s GBA-Star Rating Standards, producers followed COVID Guidelines and necessary safety protocols, allowing collectors to enjoy the first look at the high-end selection of fine art, antiques and jewelry from over 55 exhibitors. Â
As Plymouth-Canton Community Schools administrators prepared for the first school board meeting of 2021 inside their downtown Plymouth offices Tuesday afternoon, a student-orchestrated rally unfolded on the sidewalk in front of the district s two-story brick building on Harvey Street.
Braving bone-chilling conditions under gray, gloomy skies appropriate for a pandemic-era protest the sign-waving throng reiterated their desperate plea that it was time to return to in-person learning 10 months after the COVID-19 pandemic shut the district s yet-to-reopen middle and high school classrooms. I think it s great that the community is getting together to fight for something we want, and we want to get back in the schools for face-to-face learning, Nina Dorigo, a Plymouth High School senior, said. It s important to us that we get to go back to school, at least for the final semester.