Zachariah Smith, one of the top five contestants from American Idol’s latest season, will return to his hometown of Wabash for a special performance on June 3 at 7:30 p.m. at the Honeywell Center.
The Manchester boys track and field team placed second at the Plymouth Sectional Thursday, May 18, and will be well-represented at the Goshen Regional this Thursday.
Kyler Dale won the 3200 meter relay with a time of 10 minutes 17.44 seconds, and was part of the third-place 4x800m relay team, along with Raven King, Liam York, and Clark Showalter with a time of 8:45.32.
Manchester’s dream season came to a stunning end Saturday morning, May 20, as the host Lady Tigers reversed a 3-2 loss to the Lady Squires a week earlier to claim the 2023 Peru Sectional title.
Peru forfeited the No. 1 doubles match giving Manchester a 1-0 lead before the first serve was even thrown up.
The Manchester girls track and field team won their third consecutive Wabash County meet at Wabash Wednesday, May 10.
The Lady Squires scored 104 points followed by Wabash with 60, Southwood with 44, and Northfield with 34.
By Joseph Slacian
jslacian@thepaperofwabash.com
Jennifer McCormick, who recently declared her candidacy for the Democratic nomination for Indiana governor, spoke recently to party faithful in Wabash.
McCormick, an educator and former Superintendent of Public Instruction for the state, also served as interim superintendent for the Oak Hill School System.
“We launched about two weeks ago, and it has been amazing,” she told The Paper of Wabash County prior to her remarks at the Wabash County Democratic Party meeting. “We’ve had Democrats, Republicans, Independents, Libertarians, a lot of people are really excited.
“We said we’re going to run on common sense. We’re going to be bipartisan. I proved that the four years I was at the statehouse.
“But, really, I’m running because I went across the state and listened to a lot of issues. It’s time that we had a public servant in that office instead of a politician. We put people before politics. We empower people and we strive for a government that is efficient and effective with our dollars.”
Education, including the childcare, universal Pre-K, K-12 and post-high school, is one of the leading issues Hoosiers are concerned with, McCormick said.
“Healthcare, access and affordability is a key one,” she continued, adding that improved infrastructure also is a concern for Hoosiers.
A lot of issues dealt with by the Legislature in recent sessions “are national pushes that really have nothing to do with Indiana,” McCormick said. “For instance, the big push about pornography in our classrooms. I was a teacher. I’ve been in a lot of schools and there’s not all this pornography in the classrooms, but yet they focused on that, on litterboxes, on LGBTQ community.
“So, they targeted just a focus area that nationally they’re targeting for purposes that I think are quite hateful, and leaving the real issues that are very complex and very expenses that didn’t get as much attention as they should have.”