EDMOND —
Deer Creek residents turned out as snow fell all day to cast their vote for the candidate of their choice for Ward No. 3, although there was not a candidate who received 50 percent of the votes cast.
A runoff election will be April 2 between Jerrod Roberts and Keri Shipley. The third candidate, Tim Laubach, came in behind the other two candidates in votes cast.
“This has been a great opportunity and a good experience,” Roberts said. “We ran a great campaign and I am looking forward to April and the opportunity we will have there.”
Shipley said, “I am excited that we had such a turnout for the election, considering the weather today. I hope we can educate the voters and I can win it April 2. I am still staying positive and I want to represent and be a voice for the patrons in our district.”
According to the Oklahoma County Election Board, out of the 640 votes cast, Roberts received 260 votes or 40.6 percent. Shipley received 232 votes or 36.3 percent, and Laubach received 148 votes or 23.1 percent.
“It has just been exciting to get back in the district and go through the campaign,” Laubach said. “I have met a lot of fine people throughout the district, and I look forward to being able to run for school board again.”
Education
Deer Creek board candidates to meet in run-off
Roberts, Shipley will face each other
- Education
-
-
Award ceremony honors 2 local youth
Oklahoma’s top two youth volunteers of 2013, Perrin Duncan, 18, of Edmond and Mason Harvey, 13, of Guthrie, were honored in the nation’s capital recently for their outstanding volunteer service during the 18th annual presentation of The Prudential Spirit of Community Awards. Perrin and Mason — along with 100 other top youth volunteers from across the country — each received $1,000 awards and personal congratulations from Academy Award-winning actor Kevin Spacey and Olympic gold medalist Allyson Felix at an award ceremony and gala dinner reception at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History.
-
St. Mary's students make prayer blankets
Fourth- through seventh-grade students at St. Mary’s Episcopal School were expediting their effort this week to make as many “prayer squares” as possible before Friday — the last day of school — for tornado victims.
-
OETA broadcasts academic awards banquet
Five outstanding Oklahoma educators and 100 of the state’s top public high school seniors will be recognized when OETA premieres its statewide broadcast of the Oklahoma Foundation for Excellence 27th Academic Awards Banquet at 8 p.m. Saturday.
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Thomas Friedman, who served as keynote speaker for the banquet, also will be featured on the program. The broadcast will air on OETA Channel 13 in Oklahoma City and Channel 11 in Tulsa. Subsequent broadcasts will be shown on OETA’s OKLA digital channel. For digital broadcast listings, visit the station’s website at www.oeta.tv.
The gala celebration, taped May 18 at the Cox Convention Center, is sponsored by the Oklahoma Foundation for Excellence, a nonprofit organization that recognizes and encourages academic excellence in Oklahoma’s public schools. The program is emceed by foundation chairman and founder David L. Boren -
Schools lose teachers to retirement
St. Mary’s Episcopal School will be saying good-bye to Headmaster Nancy Hetherington. Hetherington will be leaving after serving the school, which contains grades kindergarten through eighth-grade for the past 30 years. Pamela Docktor will begin next school year as headmaster.
Connie Westof and Billye Palmer also will be retiring from St. Mary’s School. Westof has been in education for 30 years with the last 23 years at St. Mary’s. Palmer also has been teaching for 30 years with the past 23 years at St. Mary’s.
Deer Creek Public School District will have numerous changes in the classroom as well as in administrative positions for the 2013-14 school term, but only two will be from retirements.
Ann Thompson and Deborah Vaughn both left the system at the beginning of the school year. Thompson was a counselor at Deer Creek High School. She had spent a total of 27 years in education. Five of those years had been in other school districts and the past 22 years had been in the Deer Creek School District. Vaughn retired as a classroom teacher at Deer Creek Grove Valley Elementary. She had spent the past five years in the Deer Creek School District and 17 years in other school districts. -
Local students shine in House page program
Local students shined at the State Capitol as they served as House pages for state Rep. Anastasia A. Pittman.
-
Deer Creek High School’s $2 million library open for business
Taxpayers in the Deer Creek School District are beginning to see the completion of the district’s projects being paid for from the October 2009 $142 million bond issue.
-
SEAS ranks No. 1 in Oklahoma in First in Math online program
Students at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton were rewarded for their mathematics skills Monday in an all-school assembly as they received the No. 1 spot in a national online math program. In addition to the students, two teachers were also recognized for the number of math problems they solved correctly.
-
Edmond schools receive Healthy Schools Incentive Grant
Edmond is one of 26 school districts to be awarded a Healthy Schools Incentive Grant from the Oklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust.
-
Edmond Memorial alumni provide scholarships
The Edmond Memorial Alumni Association offers two scholarship each year to two graduating seniors from Edmond Memorial High School who plan to attend the University of Central Oklahoma.
-
Parents Helping Parents schedules meeting
The Edmond Chapter of Parents Helping Parents will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Oklahoma Blood Institute’s private meeting room at 33rd and Broadway. Scott Van Krevelen, CADC and director of “The Van’s House” (www.vanshouse.com), will speak on the topic of “Enabling vs. Helping.”
- More Education Headlines
-
Award ceremony honors 2 local youth



