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Recently retired Withrow teacher returns from cross country bike trip

Carter government still discussing broadband opportunities with SkyLink/SkyBest

ELIZABETHTON — Carter County continues to look for opportunities to get broadband into the remote and mountainous sections of the county where there is little or no access to the

Local students pack food boxes for Haitian orphans

Each announcement by May was greeted by a loud cheer that filled the athletic space. The boxes, which will be distributed to orphanages in Haiti, were filled with packages of food. By the end of the day, 84 boxes containing more than 20,000 meals were prepared to be shipped across the Caribbean. “It feeds them for the whole school year, each one of these boxes,” May said. Friday’s efforts were made possible through a partnership with The Champion Group, an organization that organizes fundraisers and food drives for schools in order to address tuition costs and other expenses. The organization also offers its services to PTA groups, band boosters, Greek life activities, sports clubs, ministries and charities.

Tacoma Defiance: 2021 season preview

Tacoma Defiance: 2021 season preview Share this story Photo by Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images On the rise above the near cliff, in the shadow of Tahoma, caressed by the winds of Commencement Bay sits Cheney Stadium. Among the tall trees, along the freeway, within the heart of Central Tacoma this final proving ground of the Seattle Sounders organization provides a home, and hopefully a fortress. In the pandemic season of 2020, Tacoma Defiance finished 12th in the Western Conference of the USL Championship, but a distant 3rd in Group A. Now, a 253 aficionado takes over for a team that simultaneously got younger, and more experienced. Tacoma’s USL Championship team now averages just over 3 years of professional experience per player, and not just because of Taylor Mueller.

Louisa County interpretive center gains traction, but funding concerns linger

Jim Rudisill for The Hawk Eye Supporters of a nearly 30-year-old, eight-phase project that would establish an estimated $6 million interpretive center adjacent to the Langwood Education Center east of Grandview met Tuesday with county officials and other interested individuals to discuss the project’s next step. Al Bohling, president of the Tri-Rivers Conservation Foundation, which has been assisting the Louisa County Conservation Board since about 1991 on the proposed Louisa Interpretive Center, told about 30 people the meeting was intended to provide LCCB members, supervisors and others an update on the effort. Bohling, TRCF Director Jay Schweitzer and LCCB Executive Director Katie Hammond alternated narratives on the project, using a series of slides showing the progress made on the LIC development.

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