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Agricultural innovation challenge continues for West Virginia students despite COVID-19 guidelines, delay
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Dec 24, 2020
CHARLESTON Secretary of State Mac Warner is pleased to announce that 41 West Virginia high schools registered 85 to 100 percent of their eligible senior class to vote during the 2019-2020 school year, qualifying them for the Jennings Randolph Award.
Celebrating its 26th year, the Jennings Randolph Award program is an effort by the Secretary of State’s office working with county clerks to encourage students to discuss the importance of civic engagement and to register to vote.
The award is named for the late U.S. Senator Jennings Randolph, a West Virginia native, who sponsored the 26th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which reduced the voting age from 21 to 18. It took Randolph 29 years to get Congress to pass the Amendment and to send it to the states for ratification.
WEESE
Mr. Arnold Floyd Weese, 88, a resident of Belington and a life-long resident of Barbour County, departed this life late Wednesday evening, Dec. 16, 2020, at his home. Death was following a period of declining health.
He was born May 2, 1932, at the Mount Liberty Community in Barbour County, a son of the late Harold Custer and Ethel Blanche Booth Weese.
On March 27, 1954, he was united in marriage to the former Patricia June Coontz, his wife of 66 years, who survives.
In addition to his wife, he is survived by two sons, Dr. Lamarr Weese of Belington and Shon Weese and wife, Jill, of Belington; three daughters, Cheryl Kelley and husband, Kevin, of Belington, Lisa Weese and fiancee, Chris Phillips, of Belington and Traci Furby and husband, Gerald, of Belington. Additional survivors include 16 grandchildren, Cameron Kelley, Lacey Kelley, Skylar Kelley, Madison Kelley Kazelyn Bennett and husband, Chad, Sable Hall and husband, KC, Colton Weese, Morgan Lake and husband, Cody, Ga
PHILIPPI – A former student says the Barbour County Board of Education failed to adequately protect him when another student brought a gun to school and threatened a class full of students.
Mason Bruce Campbell filed his complaint in Barbour Circuit Court against the school board, Traeton Long and his parents Vanessa L. and Christopher G. Long.
According to the complaint, Campbell was a freshman at Philip Barbour High School in Philippi during the 2015-16 school year. Traeton Long also was a PBHS freshman, and Campbell says Long had an “extensive history of violent, disruptive and anti-social behavior in school.”
Campbell also says Long placed a great deal of importance on his relationship with his girlfriend, saying he was extremely jealous and took actions to control her movements, decision-making and relationships.
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