Hard to say goodbye
During her visit to the campus last week, she returned to the school s playground where she remembered being terrified to climb the steel jungle gym, which still stands today. She recalled that instead of hesitating, she climbed the bars and carried herself across the tall threshold, proving herself to her fellow classmates.
“I felt something come over me,” Ogilvie-McClain said. “I am at the end of this road, and I don’t want it to end. My heart does not want to say goodbye. I think back over the years, so many of our friends have gone but God had left me for a purpose. They can never replace this building.”
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The Arizona Supreme Court on Tuesday declined to entertain the case of a group of anonymous voters who wanted to toss out the past two statewide general elections, depose the officeholders elected in them and install themselves as temporary leaders.
The state’s highest court, in its ruling, said there was “no legal basis for the relief requested” by the group of 20, who had asked that their names be sealed for security reasons.
The court also said it found no legal basis to keep the names of the 20 people who filed the pleading from public view, citing its open records policy.
Maury County schools to go remote as educators receive second vaccine
The Daily Herald
Maury County Public Schools will temporarily transition to remote learning this month as school district educators and staff are offered the second round of the COVID-19 vaccine.
Middle and High School students at Maury County Public Schools will pivot to remote learning on Friday, March 19, and the entire district will move to remote learning on Monday, March 22 as the school district’s educators receive the second round of COVID-19 vaccinations.
Teachers and staff who received their first vaccine on Friday, Feb. 26, have been scheduled to get their second vaccine on Friday, March 19.