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Johnson City Record Courier

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The current issue of Johnson City Record Courier is available to read with an online subscription. Keep up-to-date with news.
Inspiring a community of artists across the Texas Hill Country
By Amy Taylor While artists continue to flock to the highland lakes area, the momentum builds for the 2021 Highland Lakes Creative Arts visual arts initiatives, Paint the Town and Sculpture on Main, with local artist, Janey Rives at the helm. She helps bring two major visual arts celebrations to life annually, Paint the Town that will takes place on May 2-8, 2021 and Sculpture on Main, which is a yearlong public art exhibit down Main Street in Marble Falls. The annual Paint the Town and S ...
JCCEF Valentine Gala The 4th Annual JCCEF Valentine Gala will be held on Saturday, February 13. Tickets are $15, and door prizes are $5. The three-course meal will be offered for curbside pickup at LBJHS from 5-7 p.m., or delivery within 10 miles for a $10 fee. All proceeds benefit the JCCEF scholarship fund.
$1 million from Mabee Foundation
Thanks to overwhelming response to its Give Wellness campaign, Hill Country Memorial met its fundraising goal to qualify for a $1,000,000 challenge grant from the J.E. and L.E. Mabee Foundation. According to Amanda M. Stevens Executive Director for the Foundation for HCM, Hill Country Memorial has exceeded the target of raising $5.1 million by spring of 2021 for the renovation and expansion of the HCM Wellness Center.
As soon as the army forced the Plains Indians to the reservation, the movers and shakers of the Texas Hill Country focused their energy, their money and the power of their imaginations on the problem of transportation. Now that the Indian wars were over, the difficulty of moving passengers and freight from point A to point B over miles of rough territory was the single biggest obstacle to progress.
The number of people in Texas hospitalized with COVID-19 has declined more than 28 percent in the past month, according to the Texas Department of Health Services. As of Feb. 7, Texas hospitals were treating 9,957 COVID-19 patients, down from nearly 14,000 a month ago. The number of new cases in the past week was 123,239 — a 22 percent drop from the record high of 158,922 the week of Jan.
Over $440,000 raised for county’s youth
The 2021 Blanco County Youth Show turned out to be a great success and meaningful experience for the youth of Blanco County due to the help of countless volunteers and the Blanco County 4-H and FFA Youth Council Board. Exhibitors, parents and other volunteers showed up for a workday on December 5 at 8 a.m.
Driftwood— On Monday, Representative Erin Zwiener filed three more pieces of legislation, House Bills 1506, 1512 and 1513, continuing her work to advocate for House District 45 constituents. Rep. Zwiener has now filed 15 pieces of legislation during the 87th Legislative Session. “These three bills came to be due to direct conversations with constituents of House District 45,” said Rep.
From a Master Naturalist
The title probably reminds you of the old saying, “That’s like spitting in the ocean.” A few weeks ago, I wrote a column listing the data Attenborough had summarized showing the world’s population, the carbon in the atmosphere, and the percentage of wilderness area remaining from 1911 until 2020. I expect that everyone understood why Attenborough would include the data on the human population and also the amount of atmospheric carbon, but some may have wondered about the significanc ...
Homeschool Day - Engineering Ready to tinker, test and tackle new challenges? Homeschool Day at the Science Mill this month is focused on careers in engineering, and will be held on Feb. 3 and Feb. 19 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Construct a robotic hand with moving fingers, race balloon-powered rockets and design an earthquake-proof tower that can stand up to the shake test.
Vaccine pace picks up slowly The rate of COVID-19 vaccine administration is slowly increasing in Texas as we enter the second full month of shots going into arms. The Texas Department of State Health Services last weekend reported that about 1.6 million Texans — overwhelmingly frontline health workers, people over 65 or those with chronic health conditions — have received the first dose.

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