Foundation board sheds light on center plans Nicky Boyette A robust and vocal crowd of more than 100 showed up on a chilly last Sunday afternoon at the Inn of the Ozarks for a public meeting conducted by the Eureka Springs Highlander Community Center Foundation. Before the meeting, foundation members conducted tours of the old high school property to explain their vision for the site. The building with the gymnasium will become the community center, according to Diane Murphy, chair of the foundation board. She expects the gym to become the multi-purpose facility the town needs. With a rollout floor option to protect the gym floor, even the farmers’ market could open there in inclement weather. Board member Jack Moyer said the foundation wants to create a space where the town can gather. The community center would become the hub of the urban trail system. The building has a small commercial kitchen and plenty of meeting space. The former band room will be remade to accommodate fairly large events. Moyer said the room could host traditional community center activities such as yoga classes or senior activities, and the former EAST lab could continue its technical history and become a satellite center for technical training. Al Larson of the board told the tour group B-100, the building closest to US 62, will be razed except for the front corner, which will remain as a tribute to former students and function as the backdrop for a stage facing the outdoor space. With the building gone, the space will be transformed into an outdoor plaza for
And over here where some of you studied Algebra there will be a plaza – Highlander Community Center Foundation board members gave tours and presentations to about 100 people Sunday afternoon to clarify plans for the former Eureka Springs High School property. A trail system hub, farmers’ market, events venue, office space and aquatic park were all mentioned in the $2.5 – 5,000,000 project that could start in April. Photo by Nicky Boyette
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This Week’s INDEPENDENT Thinker
Photo credit: EarthPorm
Jonathon is the world’s oldest living land creature, but he was starting to feel his age. He was losing his senses and verve and just wasn’t at himself. The 183-year-old tortoise was dragging, couldn’t see or smell, and kept eating twigs and leaves and anything he bumped into. His vet on St. Helena Island (remember where Napoleon died?) in the South Atlantic Ocean simply changed Jonathon’s diet. Now the herbivorous turtle is eating apples, cucumbers, carrots, bananas and guava, and feels great. He has recaptured his senses and is gaining weight and acting the way a tortoise should act, messing around with his friends in the neighborhood where he has lived since 1882. The vet is the real independent thinker, but he’s publicity shy.
Inside the ESI CAPC 3 Hospital 4 Planning 5 Art of Promotion 6 Mayor’s Task Force 7 Independent Editorial 9 Constables on Patrol 10 Quorum Court 12 Airport 13 Astrology 16 Indy Soul 18 Crossword 21 Classifieds 22
This isn’t just a pile of words. It’s base camp.