Masks now optional in Beaufort Co. public schools By Kristen Rary | May 12, 2021 at 4:23 PM EDT - Updated May 12 at 6:35 PM
BEAUFORT COUNTY, S.C. (WTOC) - Following the executive order from the governor of South Carolina, some school districts in the Lowcountry are lifting more COVID-19 restrictions.
If you have a child who goes to school in Beaufort County, masks are officially optional.
Governor Henry McMaster issued an executive order Tuesday evening requiring schools to allow parents to make a choice on whether their children will wear a mask in school.
In Beaufort County, parents must send a note to the child’s school saying they do not have to wear a mask. The governor stated DHEC will be releasing a form parents can officially sign later.
Frank was a Spanish migrant and Katie was raised on a Christian mission. Documented by their daughter Cindy Solonec, their romance reveals the history of remote northern Australia.
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Beaufort County Schools Get $12.8M Grant for Tech Programs
With money from the Magnet Schools Assistance Program, four schools in the South Carolina county will try to attract students in fields such as cybersecurity, computer science and network engineering.
April 26, 2021 •
Shutterstock (TNS) Seven Beaufort County schools are getting new science and technology programs in 2022-23 thanks to a nearly $13 million federal grant, district officials announced.
The district was chosen by the U.S. Department of Education to receive $12.8 million Magnet Schools Assistance Program grant, which will be distributed over the next five years.
Students from across the county will be able to apply to attend these schools through the district s school choice system to participate in the magnet programs, Chief Instructional Services Officer Mary Stratos said Thursday.
Apr 22, 2021
I was born in civilian housing on the Wursterheide (Germany) Airbase on October 13, 1941, during an Allied bombing raid. My father had been assigned the job of establishing the base and later decided to join the war effort as a combat soldier. A midwife risked her life by driving through the Airbase by motorbike during the blackness of night, bombs raining down, to help bring me into the world by candlelight. My two older sisters later returned to our hometown of Hildesheim for schooling. Upon the bombing destruction of Hildesheim they had to be moved to nearby Marienrode Priory, that was rented out as a farm. We who had remained at Wursterheide later joined them at Marienrode, where we all were housed in the crowded workers’ quarters building which had no indoor plumbing. We later moved to an apartment in Hildesheim. Like with most children, my father perished in the war, and my mother worked hard to raise and educate 5 kids. I graduated from the Gymnasium (High