February 16, 2021
Services held for state officer killed in line of duty Written by Nickolas Seibel on February 16, 2021
(Photo by Aaron Rogers for the Daily Press)
Grant County first responders under the direction of Sheriff Frank Gomez and Fire Management Officer Randy Villa lined Interstate 10 last Friday morning to pay tribute to fallen New Mexico State Police Officer Darian Jarrott as his body was escorted to Lordsburg for his memorial service. In addition to the Grant County Sheriff’s Office, also present were members of the Santa Clara Police Department, Bayard Police Department, Sixth Judicial District District Attorney’s Office, Lower Mimbres Volunteer Fire Department, Pinos Altos Volunteer Fire Department and Tyrone Fire Department.
Updated
Friday, 12th February 2021, 7:44 am
Take a look back at the good old days with our selection of photographs from the paper’s archive.
More every week in the Larne, Carrick and Newtownabbey Times.
Here are some from 2006,2007 and 2010.
Pupils of the Olderfleet Primary School with Principal Audrey Stewart and teacher Derek Kyle presenting foodstuffs to Nessie Lennon and Daniel Hargey of the Larne branch of the Salvation Army who will distribute it among the local Larne community.
LT44 001 PSB OLDERFLEET
If you have any old photographs that you would like to share with our readers, we would love to hear from you.
Without staffing, Office of Sustainability faces uncertain future
The Office of Sustainability (OoS) is currently functionally on pause.
Normally run by two full-time staff and a team of three to five interns, the office has been a pillar of the Georgetown environmental community since it was founded in 2013. The departure and movement of the office’s permanent staff, however, leaves the office waiting for direction.
Audrey Stewart, who has led the office as its director since its founding, left the university at the end of January to spend more time with her young son, according to a statement she sent to the
CJ Editorial Board
Jan 30, 2021
Music is a fundamental part of human life â and, along with the rest of the arts and humanities, a fundamental part of a well-rounded education.
In the traditional school setting, there are two primary avenues for music education â band and choir.
Parents and students are concerned about the fate of these programs at Southern Middle School currently. The school is in the process of trying to rearrange the schedule, as Superintendent Patrick Richardson put it to the Commonwealth Journal the other day.
Unlike what one might expect, it s not a Philistine act, dismissive of the arts in general. Students on the band or choir track stay in those courses every semester, and don t get the opportunity, apparently, to take other exploratory classes in their time at the school â where exploratory includes visual art classes, technology, things like that. They also, apparently are unable to take both band/choir and classes that he
By Sherry Hamilton on December 22, 2020
It took five months and a major transformation of the building’s façade, but 5 Star Oriental Medicine finally has the red doors that owner Audrey Stewart wanted. Stewart is a Diplomate in Oriental Medicine and a Licensed Acupuncturist.
Audrey Stewart wanted a red door. Her downtown Mathews business, 5 Star Oriental Medicine, needed a facelift, and she thought a red door would give it just the right touch.
But then, if the door were painted red, everything around it might look a bit bland. So she decided to paint the adjacent wood trim around the windows, as well. The only problem was that the window trim and the wainscoting below had layers and layers of old paint. Who knew how long it had been since someone had actually removed the previous paint before adding another coat? Maybe never. So, of course, the paint around and beneath the windows had to be stripped.