(Editor’s Note: Meyer is Senior Naval Science Instructor of the NJROTC at CHS)
All Navy Junior Reserve Officers Training Corp programs are required to be inspected by the Area Manager, who is the liaison between the units and the US Navy, at least once every other academic school year to determine whether or not requirements and standards for retention of units in the program are being met. Units not in an evaluation or probation status must complete an “Off-Site Evaluation” during those academic years in which the Area Manager is not performing a Unit Inspection. Off-Site inspection Officers are typically from the local area, and this year, Captain Bob Kerman was invited to perform the inspection for Carson High School. Captain Kerman is the Senior Naval Science Instructor for Churchill County High School’s NJROTC program. Because of limitations due to COVID-19, 22 Naval Science IV cadets, who consist only of seniors, took part in the inspection. This year’s inspection wa
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About the Show
The Tenth Voice is the Kansas City area s only weekly broadcast created by and for LGBTQIA people throughout the metro region. Listeners can tune in each Saturday at 1:00 PM. Each week our team of hosts and producers present interviews, information, music, news and features especially important to Lesbians, Gay Men, Bisexuals, Transgender and Allied collective communities.
Hello everyone and welcome to Trans Talk, this week’s edition of the Tenth Voice!
This week we will kick off the show with the transgender news of the month, then we will interview a new pioneer in the transgender community – Stephanie Byers, who made history twice last month by becoming Kansas’s first transgender elected official after winning her bid for the Kansas House of Representatives 86th District, and she is the first Indigenous trans person elected to any state legislature!
CULLMAN CITY SCHOOLS
From football games to simply having class, 2020 has presented a truly unique set of challenges for schools. So when it came time to figure out how to hold the Cullman High School Bandâs annual Christmas concert in the midst of a pandemic, the staff knew they would need to get creative.
The band had been using the auditorium as a practice space, with students positioned all across the audience seating, as it was effectively one of the only rooms on campus big enough to allow the student band members to properly and safely distance from one another while still rehearsing together. That took care of practice, but what about the holiday concert itself? With the band scattered across the seating area, Fine Arts Department Chair and Director of Bands Christopher Smith said they had to get creative when it came to the audience.