Welcome Visitor
Thu, Jan 30, 2025
466 members
Breaking News
FRONT PAGE
LOCAL NEWS
EDITORIALS
ENTERTAINMENT
DEATHS
SPORTS
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
CHURCH CALENDAR
SEARCH ARTICLES
PAST ISSUES
SCORE
Town of Nashville
Braswell Memorial Library
Harold D. Cooley Library
Nash Arts
Nash County
Nashville Chamber of Commerce
Nash Community College
Nash County Relay for Life
Nash-Rocky Mount Schools
N.C. Wesleyan College
Rocky Mount Area Chamber
Rocky Mount Children's Museum
Rocky Mount Travel & Tourism
Boys & Girls Club of Nash/Edgecombe Counties
State of N.C.
The Dunn Center for Performing Arts
Town of Castalia
JOIN SITE
LOGIN
LOGOUT
EDIT YOUR PROFILE
SEARCH
PAST ISSUES

Search The Nashville Graphic

search for
and than
or between and
My recent searches ↓

You searched for "Most recent"

results 1 through 3 of 3 sorted by relevance

Nash pushes for raising age of tobacco sales (relevance: 100%, date: Jan 29, 2025)
A Nash County advisory board says North Carolina is remiss in not raising its minimum tobacco sales age to 21 to match federal law, and is looking for legislators willing to take up the cause to get state law changed.
The Nash County Health Department issued a recent press release on the topic, which was also brought up by Gwen Wilkins, commissioner, a member of the Nash County Human Services Board.

DNSAB holds controversial first meeting (relevance: 87.9%, date: Jan 29, 2025)
NASHVILLE - The first meeting of 2025 for the Downtown Nashville Strong Advisory Board (DNSAB) was a bumpy one for its newest members present, as board members came out swinging at town planner Shawn Lucas and the Nashville town council and asking for a joint meeting.
At issue are recent town council decisions on DNSAB appointments, the purchase of Christmas decorations, and the use of Municipal Service District (MSD) money to pay for the repair of a fence railing near merchant stores on W. Washington Street.

More funds allocated for detention center (relevance: 81.9%, date: Jan 29, 2025)
NASHVILLE- What is currently an open dorm room will be renovated into a "pod" situation at the Nash County Detention Center, now that commissioners have approved a capital project ordinance to fund the change.
Melanie Eason, the newly-appointed Finance Officer, asked and received approval for the project ordinance amendment at the Nash commissioners' Jan. 21 meeting, which involved budgeting $250,000 for phase one of the 'Detention Facility Renovation Project.'


results 1 through 3 of 3 sorted by relevance


Powered by Bondware
News Publishing Software

The browser you are using is outdated!

You may not be getting all you can out of your browsing experience
and may be open to security risks!

Consider upgrading to the latest version of your browser or choose on below: