Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Skip to main content
Advertisement
Search Results for “ci

Here’s Looking at You Art and Corky Lynch

“Oh no,” Art Lynch replied when asked if he and his 10 siblings worked to help their father, a Youngstown, Ohio, steel worker, raise 11 children. “This was toward the end of the Great Depression, so jobs weren’t available to teens because they’d be taking away jobs from adults.

HNMS students raise donations for PAWS

Holley-Navarre Middle School students understand that pets need a soft and warm place to sleep, too, and are helping to make the beds of local cats and dogs just a little better. And, what’s even better is that the effort will help support a local animal shelter.

Hurlburt airman first to complete new DOD course

Dr. Jamie Morin, Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Financial Management and Comptroller, presented the Air Force’s first Department of Defense Financial Management Program-certified Airman with a certificate during his visit to Hurlburt Field last week. 

Golf tourney to help local vets

A little more than a year after the local Vets to VA program was restarted, supporters of the Santa Rosa Veterans Memorial Foundation are hosting a golf tournament to benefit the program at Hidden Creek, starting at noon on November 22.  Some of the proceeds from the event will also support The Boys and Girls Club of the Emerald Coast. 

Alzheimer’s Disease Awareness Month

How much of our lives do we actually spend reliving the comforting memories of past experiences? Or what about pondering the appeal of reaching future goals or plans? For families of loved ones with Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, learning to live only in the present is the most important- but often the most difficult- concept they must learn to accept.

Helping families rise out of poverty

Holley-Navarre Primary School has 45 students who are homeless and a student poverty rate that approaches 30 percent.  The greater Navarre and Midway area has a population in which 14 percent live below the poverty level.  However, a program started last summer is making strides toward reducing those numbers.

Half-cent tax adding up

It’s not even a penny per dollar on certain transactions, but funds generated through the half-cent sales tax for schools add up to millions annually for Santa Rosa schools.  The funds are being used toward building and remodeling classrooms, science labs, cafeterias and other facilities throughout the county.

error: Content is protected.