TARBORO —
RALEIGH — Mallory Byrum, a senior at Tarboro High School, has been awarded a Girl Scouts – North Carolina Coastal Pines Memorial Scholarship. The $500 scholarship award promotes further education for graduating Girl Scout Ambassadors who have been actively registered Girl Scouts for at least three years. Recipients must demonstrate leadership within and outside of Girl Scouting, as well as individual growth through Girl Scout experiences.
Byrum is the daughter of Bobbie and Scott Byrum and has been in Girl Scouting for 13 years. She completed her Girl Scout Gold Award in 2011, as a member of Girl Scout Troop No. 480 led by Angela Bridgers and Bobbie Byrum.
She will attend East Carolina University in the fall. After completing her education, she plans to become a nurse practitioner.
Byrum credits Girl Scouting with helping her decide about future career plans. “Participating in the Girl Scout program has allowed me many opportunities to learn about various careers and to serve my community. Through those volunteer experiences, I have realized that I want to be a role model for younger children in my future career.”
For her Gold Award project, Byrum wrote a fun, easy-to-read children’s story—which was published into a book and distributed to children during Tarboro’s 250th Birthday Celebration. She also visited three afterschool day care programs in the community and emphasized the importance of reading. She continues to reinforce the importance of literacy awareness by volunteering with the local elementary school’s “Reading Buddies” program.
In her scholarship application, Byrum wrote, “I believe in making the world a better place by influencing future generations. Getting children to realize the importance of learning to read well, I believe, is the foundation for their future, and as a result, the future of the entire world.”
Local News
Tarboro Girl Scout awarded memorial scholarship
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“Please join us as Tarboro prepares for the visit of national AIB judges on June 17 and 18,” said AIB co-chair Connie Sherrill in a competition planning update. “Help us bring out the beauty of our exceptional town.” -
Local Principal Completes Leadership Program
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Woman faces 32 charges
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According to a Tarboro Police Department report, Jennifer Ann Carr, 29, 1609 Barlow Rd. Apt. 9, took out loans in the names of 16 customers of a local business from January through April. Carr was employed through a temp agency with a local business, said Tarboro Police Sgt. Al Braxton. Braxton said the total loan amount netted $4,300.
Carr was charged with 16 counts of identity theft and 16 counts of obtaining property by false pretenses. She was place in Edgecombe County Detention Center under a $10,000 secured bond.
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After executing a search warrant Thursday on a residence at 500 W. Johnston St. in Tarboro, police officers arrested two suspects for possessing a small amount of marijuana and issued a third suspect a citation for possessing a glass pipe to smoke the drugs.
After the marijuana was found, officers notified two of the three suspects that they also had additional warrants on them from the department's "Spring Fling" drug campaign where they had sold marijuana to undercover officers. -
Introductory Latin class beginning Tuesday
Want a leg up in a medical terminology course? Anatomy? Physical science? Take a look at Latin, perhaps the best grounding for all education.
Not convinced? Just ask Stephen Herring, instructor of religion, geography, and developmental studies at Edgecombe Community College (ECC). He will teach an Introductory Latin class beginning Tuesday. The class will meet at Fleming 218 on the Tarboro campus. -
NTSB wants to lower DWI blood alcohol levels
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Measles cases have state health officials concerned
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“It (measles) is a highly contagious disease that is spread in the air by coughing and sneezing,” said Susan Rogerson, nursing director at the Edgecombe County Health Department. Outbreaks of measles in the United States are rare because of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine. -
County still looking for bids on 41 properties
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County Planning Director Brian Hassell said interested parties may submit bids for commissioners to consider. If a bid is approved and another party is interested, they may submit an upset bid. -
Scouts honor ‘Buddy’ Hooks
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Sheriff's Department to host junior academy
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