Ernest Ward Middle’s Got Talent; Pie In The Face

October 4, 2008

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Eighth grader Angel Mitchell received top honors Friday night in Ernest Ward Middle School’s Talent Explosion 2008.

Nineteen acts, ranging from singing and dancing to pies in the face, participated in the program.

Angel performed a dance routine to “Got Me Going Crazy” by the Jonas Brothers.

For a complete photo gallery with each act, click here.

For a video with some of the performances, click here.

NorthEscambia.com will have a video from the talent show posted Monday morning.

Performers in the talent show were;

  • Ashton Gibbs, 8th grade, singing and playing guitar “Bring Me Down”
  • Morgan Ward, 6th grade, human video to “Gone Without Goodbye”
  • Arielle Ford, 8th grade, singing “Our Song”
  • Harley Caraway and Hanna Ziglar, both 8th grade, singing “Leave the Pieces”
  • Josh Ingram, playing original guitar piece
  • Tamara Wise, 6th grade, singing “Stay Beautiful”
  • Rachel Presley and Lauryn Walker, both 7th grade, dance routine
  • Lily Townsend, Mason Solchenberger, Danielle Steadham, all 7th grade, comedy, “Redneck Game Show”
  • Reagan Bell, 6th grade, singing “Never Alone”
  • Shalmali Bhadkamkar, 6th grade, singing “Alana Nita Nana” (Portugese Lullaby)
  • Cory Hester, 7th grade, singing and playing guitar “Freebird”
  • Gregory Diggs, 6th grade, dance routine to “Soldja Boy” remix
  • Skye Brown, Jenny Spears, Katelynn Zisa, singing “MyHeart Will Go On”
  • Alison Bardin, 8th grade, singing “I Need You to Love Me”
  • Taiquesha Mitchell, Teamber Moorer, Kassey Redmond, dance routine
  • Joselynn Wiedel, 6th grade, singing “If We Were a Movie”
  • Dezarae Turner, 8th grade, singing “Pressure”
  • Angel Mitchel, 8th grade, dance routine to “Got Me Going Crazy”
  • Danielle Scott, 7th grade, singing “I Am”

Pictured above: Angel Mitchell performs a dance routine to Jonas Brothers song Friday Night during an Ernest Ward Middle School talent show. Pictured below: The “Redneck Game Show” routine included pie in the face. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

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Northview Names NJROTC Officers

October 2, 2008

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Northview High School has named NJROTC officers for the 2008-2009 school year.

They are front row, left to right:

  • Company CDR, c/LCDR Amanda Sellars
  • Weapons Officer, c/SCPO Daniel Jordan
  • Operations Officer, c/LTJG Deniece Jordan
  • Supply Officer, c/ENS Miranda Scott
  • Command Master Chief, c/MCPO Jessica Bloodsworth
  • Executive Officer, c/LT Dalton Cummings

Back row, left to right:

  • Athletics Officer,c/CPO Katie Mann
  • First Lieutenant, c/LTJG Harrison Whitehead
  • Admin Officer, c/ENS Clinton Davis
  • Public Affairs Officer, c/CPO William Conway
  • Chaplin, c/CPO Zachary Lamb

The Northview High NJROTC is under the command of Senior Naval Science Instructor Charlie Code.

Submitted photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Students Of The Month Named At North Escambia Schools

September 29, 2008

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The students of the month for Escambia County have been selected. From North Escambia schools, they are:

Bratt Elementary: Lydia G. Smith, second grade; Claudio A. Santander, fifth grade.

Carver/Century K-8: Markayla D. Bradley, fourth grade; Martavious A. Odom, fourth grade.

Molino Park Elementary: Cheyenne R. Gray, fifth grade; Haley D. Brown, fifth grade ; Demarcus J. Dukes, fifth grade; Tasashera L. Granderson, fifth grade.

Ernest Ward Middle School: Charmayne M. Fountain, sixth grade; Courtney A. Weaver, seventh grade.

Northview High School: Luke F. Killam, senior; Jessica M. Mothershed, senior.

The students of the month are awarded certificates from the Escambia Association for Administrators In Education.

Pictured above: Luke Killam (left) and Jessica Mothershed, both seniors at Northview High School, were among the North Escambia students of the month named by the Escambia Association for Administrators in Education. Submitted photo.

Teams Get Ready For The 2009 Relay For Life

September 28, 2008

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An Early Bird Registration for the American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life was held Saturday, with five teams signing up for next year’s Century Relay.

Byrneville Elementary School, the Century Branch Library, Critter Caregivers, Ray’s Chapel Baptist Church and NorthEscambia.com are all early bird registrants for next year’s Relay for Life.
It’s not too late to register for Relay for Life…teams interested in registering their team for Century’s Relay can still visit the Century Relay for Life website at www.CenturyRelay.com and click “Sign Up” in the left column.

“We would like to encourage people around Walnut Hill and Bratt to register teams for Relay,” Jernigan said. Century’s Relay event, scheduled for April 25-26 is the the closest American Cancer Society Relay event in Florida for residents in Walnut Hill, Bratt and McDavid.

Century’s Relay for Life is also looking for cancer survivors and caregivers to honor at next year’s events. Cancer survivors and caregivers can register online at www.CenturyRelay.com.

Information about cancer, treatments and the American Cancer Society were also available during Saturday’s Early Bird Registration.

The domain www.CenturyRelay.com is provided as a public service by NorthEscambia.com.

Pictured above: Teresa Watford (left) registers the Ray’s Chapel Baptist Church Relay for Life team Saturday at early bird registration day at the Century Whataburger. Event chairperson Paula Jernigan (right) was on hand to take registration information.  NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Local Rotary Making A Difference In The Tri-Cities And The World

September 22, 2008

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The Tri-Cities Rotary Club is looking for a few good members to join the club in making the tri-cities and the world a better place to live, even if it means buying a water buffalo or two.

The local Rotary Club, which includes Flomaton, Century and Jay, is involved in a long list of community projects, according to Bo Brantley, club president.

Locally, the club provides scholarships, Thanksgiving meals, Christmas meals, Christmas presents for needy children, support for the humane society, locator bracelets for alzheimer’s  patients, dictionaries for elementary students and more.

The Tri-Cities Rotary recently sponsored “the biggest thing to hit Escambia County since Ivan,” Brantley said. That event was a  “Bull Riding Blowout” in late August in Flomaton. The family friendly event feature bull riding, country music, food and more. “We worked hard, raised a little money. But, best of all, we brought some family friendly entertainment to the area, and everyone had a good time.”

The local Rotary Club has even had a hand in buying water buffaloes for little girls in third world countries.

“Sometimes the craziest ideas get the best results,” Leon Hirsh from the Pensacola North Rotary Club told local members. “A young girl with a water buffalo gains status in her world in is allowed to go to school to learn to ready. Without the water buffalo provided by Rotary, she would never have the chance to attend school or learn to read.”

Studies have found that the one girl that learns to read will learn to teach as many as five others how to read, Hirsh said, increasing the literacy rate in countries like India.

The 12 Rotary clubs that make up the Combined Rotary of Pensacola, were among the the first in the world to  raise funds for water buffaloes. The group, which includes the local Tri-Cities Rotary Club, raised enough money to buy 50 water buffaloes. With a matching grant from the national Rotary organization, 100 water buffaloes were purchased to increase literacy.

The local club is also supports Rotary’s PolioPlus program.. The program works worldwide with one goal — eliminate all polio from the world. Vaccines are purchased for poor children around the globe, with the program having made dramatic progress against the disease around the world. Polio now basically limited to just four countries across the globe.

“That’s a wonderful example of how a club like the Tri-Cities Rotary Club can make a worldwide impact,” said  John Tice from the Pensacola North Rotary Club. “This club, especially for its size, does a remarkable job.”

Sometimes the club’s efforts pay off in a more personal way.

Just before Christmas a few years ago, Brantley delivered a check to a local woman to buy Christmas gifts for her children and food for the holidays.

“We sat in the swing outside,” he said. “She cried. I cried. This club can having an amazing impact on the people in our community.”

Everything a Rotarian does is suppose to pass the “Four Way Test”:

  1. Is it the truth?
  2. Is it fair to all concerned?
  3. Will it build goodwill and better friendship?
  4. Will it be beneficial to all concerned?

The Tri-Cities Rotary Club meets every Wednesday at noon upstairs at the Escambia County Bank in Flomaton.

You can learn more about the basics of Rotary by clicking here. (700k pdf file)

Rotarians from around the world, including those in the Tri-Cities Rotary Club, partner for PolioPlus to rid the world of the diseases. Pictured above, a child in Moradabad, India, receives the polio vaccine from a Rotary Club member. Courtesy photo.

Thanking Robert Stewart For Her Life

September 19, 2008

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Valerie (Baker) Brock knows that she owes her life to Chief Robert Stewart, the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department and the rest of the emergency workers that worked to remove her from a wrecked car that was literally cut in half.

It’s the call that Stewart said was the most memorable of his 30 year career as a volunteer fireman, because of its severity and  because the victim returned to say “thank you”.

Valerie was just 16 on March 9, 2001. She was at the wheel of a friends car, the friend in the passenger seat, as she drove on Highway 99 in Bratt near Oakshade Road. She lost control of the car and hit a tree. The force of the impact was so severe that the car was sliced into two pieces and Valerie’s seatbelt broke, sending her in the dash. The friend was not seriously injured.

“She ran off the road when she went to pass a truck,” Judy Baker, her mother, said. “She hit some potholes. The car flipped three or four times before hitting the tree, splitting in half and landing upside down.”

When Stewart arrived on the scene, which was just a short distance from his home, he found Valerie severely injured. Her leg was partial severed, a major artery cut. A lung was collapsed, and she had a tear in her spleen. She was at death’s door.

“She was talking to the firemen,” her older sister, Somer (Baker) Bridges, said. “She could even tell them her phone number.”

“When I got the call, we went there,” Judy Baker said. “Sam Stewart (Robert’s son) and the other volunteer firemen were already there. Randy (Valerie’s dad) and I were both in shock.”

“Robert came over to us,” she said. “He kept us calm. If he had not been there, I don’t know what we would have done. He worked so hard.”

Valerie “coded” — went into cardiac arrest — twice on LifeFlight on the way to Pensacola.

The road to recovery was a long one for Valerie. Doctors tried to save her leg, but in the end it was amputated.

During her long ordeal in the hospital, Robert Stewart and his wife Diann visited Valerie in the hospital.

“He’s not just a good person, but he’s a hero,” Judy Baker said, “because he put himself out there to help others like Valerie. He came to the hospital to check on her. It meant a lot to me; he and the others saved her life.”

“If it were not for the firemen making the decisions that they did to put her on LifeFlight, she would not have survived,” Bridges said. “They saved her life, and they cared enough to come back.”

valerie.jpg“I don’t remember anything right after the wreck,” Valerie said. “I remember being in the hospital, and I remember him (Robert) coming to check on me. It is rare to find people like that who care enough to check on you.

“Because of them, I was able to live. They saved my life. I think of them as heroes.

“I don’t have words to say how much it means to me. I just want to thank them for saving my life,” Valerie said. Valerie was recently married to Nathan Brock (pictured left), a marriage she owes to her survival, Robert Stewart and the Walnut Hill VFD.

“Robert is a special person,” Judy Baker said. “He was a good fireman. But more important, he is a good man.”

Chief Robert Stewart has retired after 30 years as a volunteer fireman.

Pictured top: The front half of the car Valerie Baker was driving when she nearly lost her life in March, 2001. Pictured below: The back half of the car. Pictured bottom: More photos of the car in a junkyard. Courtesy photos.

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Clowning Around: Fun Day At The Century Library

September 19, 2008

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The Century Branch Library held a Fun Day at the library Thursday afternoon.

About 60 kids of all ages enjoyed an afternoon of activities. Children had the opportunity to play games, have a balloon animal made, get a temporary tatoo and clown around with the library’s clown.

There were also several animals on hand for the children to get up close and personal with, including an iguana, a python snake, birds, a dog, a pony and a goat.

The children also had the chance to win prizes and enjoyed free popcorn and balloons.

Click here for a photo gallery from Fun Day at the Library.

Pictured above and below: Scenes from Fun Day at the Century Branch Library. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

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Chief Robert Stewart Retires To Battle Cancer, Spend Time With ‘Little Man’

September 18, 2008

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Robert Stewart has retired after 30 years of service as a volunteer fireman in Bratt and Walnut Hill, the last 15 of those years as chief of the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department. He retired to spend more time with his “Little Man” and to fight cancer.

Stewart answered his first fire call in 1967 after the formation of the Bratt Volunteer Fire Department. The Walnut Hill Ruritan Club founded the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department in 1964 and donated a  truck to form the Bratt department three years later.

For 10 years, he served the Bratt community as a volunteer fireman until Bratt VFD’s truck finally “wore out”. Walnut Hill and the Atmore Fire Department began answering calls in the Bratt community in 1977.

He was out of a volunteer fire department for about 10 years, until he joined the Walnut Hill VFD in 1987. For 21 straight years, he served the Walnut Hill department. The last 15 of those years, he served as chief.

“1501 enroute”

March 9, 2001, was the beginning of what Stewart said was the most memorable call of his career.

The call was not far from Stewart’s house. It was a single vehicle accident, car versus a tree, on Highway 99 near Oakshade Road. When Stewart arrived, he and the other members of the WHVFD found a small sports car, literally cut in half,  two pieces of car on the side of the highway. Inside, the passenger was not seriously injured.

But the driver, a 16 year old local girl, was gravely injured. Her leg was partial severed, a major artery cut. Her situation was worse than serious. In fact, she coded at least twice before arriving at the hospital. “Coded”, as in “code blue”, as in cardiac arrest. But Stewart and the rest of the emergency workers that day worked hard to get this young lady on LifeFlight.

In the end, she lost her leg, but she survived. Today, she’s a healthy 23 year old, recently happily married.

“I’ve been to a lot of bad wrecks,” Stewart said. “Sometime, people die. It’s always a good call when you can help someone that doesn’t die.”

But two words made this wreck different than many for the chief.

“Thank you.”

From death’s door, the young girl was able to return to tell Stewart and the rest of the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department “thank you”.

“Sometimes they come back to tell you ‘thank you’,” he said. “It makes you feel good, and you know your department has accomplished something, when they came back to thank you.”

There have been others to return to thank the department over the years. But Valerie Baker’s accident just sticks out in Stewart’s memory.

“The ‘thank you’ means a lot, especially when they came to the department and thank everyone,” he said. “It just means a lot.”

On Friday morning, NorthEscambia.com will introduce you to Valerie and take you back to the day that nearly claimed her life, and you’ll learn what she has to say about Robert Stewart and the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department.

robert12.jpg“Not a Hero”

Chief Stewart doesn’t consider himself a hero. The Walnut Hill volunteers are team, he said, with everyone working together to help the community.

He was labeled a  hero at least once. It was another wreck, this one on State Line Road. A car was upside down in a water-filled ditch with three children inside. Stewart was the first on the scene, responding from his nearby home.

“I managed to get the door open and got the three children out of the ditch,” he said. “Their mom called me a hero. I was just doing my job.”

Cat In Tree? Been there, done that. Twice.

It’s a scene that’s usually in a children’s program…the fireman rescues the cute little kitty cat from a tree. But in real life, it’s not exactly so pretty.

One cat-in-a-tree call was on Highway 97 several years ago. 1501 and his wife, Diann Stewart (a.k.a. 1503) responded to the call.

“She ran the ladder up the tree,” he said. “I knew what I was in for. I put on a bunker coat, and gloves before going up to the cat.”

“The ole cat just froze on the tree,” Stewart said with a chuckle. “I needed both hands to peel it off the tree. It stuck like Velcro on that tree. I had to keep peeling that ole cat off the tree.”

The second time Stewart responded to a cat-in-a-tree call, he was perhaps a bit smarter. He sent his son Sam Stewart, also a volunteer fireman, up the tree. This call was at the home of a local pastor. The pastor told them to drop the cat, and drop it Sam did. The can landed on a lower limb of the tree, uninjured.

Scary Stuff

“When my youngins were in school, I did not like it when you’d get a call in the direction they were suppose to be coming from,” he said. “You were always it afraid it was going to be one of yours.”

“When you live up here, you are kin to somebody,” he said. “You always care about who it is.”

A Time To Work, A Time To Play

Stewart was quick to thank all of those that have volunteered with the Walnut Hill VFD over the years. And he expressed his thanks to the other volunteer fire departments in the area the assisted Walnut Hill, as well the county deputies, state troopers and others he worked with for years.

The biggest thanks went to those Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department members, a group he said he always enjoyed being around.

“I had the best bunch of firemen in the county he said, “and when they were done working and got ready to play, I had the biggest bunch of youngins in the county.”

Time For Little Man

robert13.jpgStewart said his health and his “Little Man” led to his decision to retire. Little Man is his grandson, 14 month old Drew Kennedy, the son of Kelly and Jeff Kennedy.

When NorthEscambia.com sat down with Stewart for this interview, Little Man was in the floor with Nana (Diann), playing with a  toy John Deere tractor. He was wearing fire truck pajamas.

“Do you want Papa’s chair” Stewart asked him. Over to the chair he ran, grinning ear to ear at his Papa.

“He loves fire trucks,” Stewart said. It runs in the family.

“It was just time for me to spend more time with Little Man,” he said.

Battling Cancer

“Little Man is good medicine for me,” Stewart says as he talks about battling cancer. “It’s a nice blessing to have him at all. He goes to Pensacola with me for my treatments.”

The cancer was another factor in his choice to retire.

“It you are going to be in charge, you have to keep up with what was going on,” he said. But the cancer treatments were making him very, very tired.

He started chemotherapy in 2006. “It just had me wore out,” he said. He thought he had been cured. But the cancer returned.

Daily IV treatments began again in 2007 and continued everyday until March of 2008. But it was necessary to being treatments again in July of this year.

“I just had a bad feeling about this knot on my head this time,” he said. Turns out it was malignant, and the battle is proving to be hard.

“1501 Completed Assignment”

“It’s hard not to answer a call,” he said. The fire department pager still goes off in the Stewart home, alerting them of emergency calls. Diann remains with the Walnut Hill VFD as an EMT. “After 20 years, it’s hard not to go help someone.”

“I just always tried to help.”

Pictured top: Retired Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department Chief Robert Stewart and his grandson Drew (“Little Man”) Kennedy watch from the sidelines at a recent accident on Pine Barren Road. Pictured above: Stewart at last year’s Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department fish fry. Pictured below: Stewart makes a call as “Little Man” watches an ambulance crew work. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

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Get About $70 Of Groceries, Including Steaks, For $30: No Strings Attached

September 14, 2008

angelfood.jpgAs the cost of food continues to rise, there is a program available at a local church that can save more than half off the cost of groceries. And, perhaps best of all, everyone qualifies, no strings attached.

It’s called Angel Food Ministries, a program that provides food relief to more than a half million families a month across the nation.

It’s a simple concept…pay $30 for a box of food worth about $70. There are no applications; everyone qualifies. The process is simple too…just stop by the Allen Memorial United Methodist Church in Cantonment, pay the $30 and return on the designated pickup day to receive the box of food. They even accept food stamps.

And, for seniors, there’s a special box of food for just $25 that includes 10 full cooked, low sodium heat and eat meals.

Allen Memorial United Methodist Church has been the local host for the Angel Food Ministries program since October of 2006, according to their program director Katrina Williamson.

“It’s a great program,” Williamson said. “It can really help people out.”

Orders for September can be placed Monday from 10 until noon at the church at 206 Pace Parkway in Cantonment for a food delivery on September 27. The church accepts cash or food stamps.

The $30 September box of food includes 1.5 pounds of top sirloin steaks, two pounds of boneless chicken breasts,  three pounds of breaded chicken chunks, a 1.5 pound pork fillet, a large supreme pizza, a pound of ground turkey, plus other items like french fries, several vegetables and desserts.

Specials are also available each month with the purchase of a regular box of food. For instance, this month, one special is 1.5 pounds of Kansas City strip steaks,, 1.5 pounds of ribeye steaks and two pounds of all beef hamburger for $20.

“Our food is “restaurant grade” meats, frozen vegetables, fruits, dairy products, etc. which we acquire through our involvement with only the best producers/vendors of high quality, “name brand” foods. Never “seconds” or “day old” type products are involved,” according to the Angel Food Ministries web site.

For more information about the program, call Allen Memorial United Methodist Church at 968-6213 or visit www.angelfoodministries.com. To visit the church and place an order…take Highway 20 south into Cantonment. Turn right at the red light onto Muskogee Road. Take the second right onto Pace Parkway.

Other churches in the North Escambia area that might be interested in hosting the Angel Food Ministries program can visit www.angelfoodministries.com for more information.

For a menu with complete information, click here.

A Heroes’ Lunch For 9/11

September 12, 2008

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The crew on duty Thursday at the Century Volunteer Fire Department was treated to a pizza lunch on Patriot’s Day to honor them for their service. Pictured (L-R) are Nathan Berry, Lt. Greg Sims, Greg Therrell, Donald Merritt and Kyle Kraatz. The lunch was provided by an group of Century area citizens that wished to remain anonymous. Submitted photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

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