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Editor’s Note: These are unofficial early voting numbers.
Read moreEarly voting for the March primary ends Friday, March 1, and the filing deadline for the May 4 election ended Feb. 16.
Read moreA Navasota basketball legend is taking her skillset from the court to the gridiron. Alexus Freeman signed to play professional football with the Houston Mambas in the Women’s National Football Conference.
Read moreIola PTO auctioned off the ride of a lifetime as part of one of their fundraisers. The auction winners were picked up from school by Iola Fire Department and given a special ride home. Pictured are Jameson Loggins and her brother Parker. Their good friend, Jeremiah Walker, sits in the front seat of the fire truck.
Read moreThe community was revved to experience the timeless classics of the Sam Houston Corvette Club Showcase at the P.A. Smith Hotel in Navasota Feb. 24. Numerous Corvettes visited historic downtown to show off their sports cars to the community.
Read moreThe Music Study Club of Navasota shared the “Gift of Valentine Music” with residents of Golden Creek Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center Tuesday, Feb. 13. Those participating from left: Laurine Elkins-Marlow, Jeanette Tanski, Marilyn Bettes, Karen Eblen, Carol Gessner, Bonnie Harris-Reynolds, Cynthia Todd, Susan Rice and Laura Purcell.
Read moreThe City of Navasota locked in ballot positions for the May 4 city election at a ballot draw Thursday, May 22. Conducting the draw (center) was Michelle Savensky, Executive Administrative Assistant, who is shadowing longtime City Secretary Susie Homeyer.
Read moreIn 2018, Texas A&M American History chair and author Elizabeth Cobbs presented an overview of her book, “The Hello Girls: America’s First Women Soldiers,” to the Robert Raines Chapter-National Society Daughters of the American Revolution in Navasota. Cobbs heavily researched book shares the experiences of the forgotten female telephone operators known as The Hello Girls, the first women to serve in the U.S. Army Signal Corps and “selected to operate the vital communication network that helped win World War I.”
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