62°F
weather icon Cloudy

How do we love Nevada? Let’s sing the ways together …

Keifer Reinhart stood next to his classmates and belted out “Home Means Nevada” on the footsteps of City Hall as the students of Grace Christian Academy celebrated the state’s 150th birthday the morning of Oct. 30.

“It’s home to all my friends and family,” said Reinhart, a fifth-grader at the academy.

Grace and Olivia Carnes, sisters who also attend the academy, said they don’t want to live anywhere else.

As part of an attempt to establish a world record for the most people in a state to sing their state song at once, the academy’s 32 students were joined by city officials and a few other residents as they bellowed out the tune.

Deputy City Clerk Tami McKay received an email about the statewide sing-along celebration known as Nevada Sings! and passed it on to the academy in an attempt to get more people in town to participate. Groups from across the state recorded videos of themselves singing the state song at 10 a.m. and sent it to Record Setters, the entity in charge of the world record.

Grace Christian Academy Principal Marcia Harhay said her students spent a few days working on the second verse of the song. The first verse was no problem.

“It is special to us because at our school we’ve always celebrated Nevada Day,” she said. “We would practice at school, and when they sang it just came from the heart. And for them, home means Nevada. They are very proud to be Nevadans.”

Harhay has lived in Nevada for 32 years. Originally from Ohio, she’s called Boulder City home since the early 1980s.

“A few years after we moved here, our boys enjoyed the lake and Mount Charleston and the warmer winters so much that they actually thanked my husband and I for relocating our family here,” she said.

Though McKay moved to Boulder City in the first grade, she considers herself a native Nevadan. For her, the landscape and the connection with the people she’s surrounded by separate Nevada from everywhere else she’s been.

“Nevada has the most beautiful mountains, and I love the people here,” she said. “I just think everyone seems to get together here and want to do the best things for the state.”

Along with the students of Grace Christian, members of the City Council, and other department heads, McKay sang the song of the state she’s called home since she was a child.

Harhay said she has emphasized the importance of teaching Nevada’s history to her students. On Friday, all of them dressed as old miners and participated in a simulated gold and silver rush to help them gain a hands-on experience of Nevada’s history early.

She hopes some of her students will one day want to engage in civic leadership after gaining an appreciation for the state they live in.

“It is their state,” she said. “I also think that with voting, we can make them aware of their state, and their state’s place in the nation. I really think that’s helped them to become better citizens, not only of their city but their state and country.”

Contact reporter Steven Slivka at sslivka@bouldercityreview.com or at 702-586-9401. Follow @StevenSlivka on Twitter.

MOST READ
LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
THE LATEST
Boys volleyball wins first league game

Boulder City High School started league play with a victory, defeating The Meadows 3-0 on April 1.

From Garden to Grave

Last week, the Christian Center Church hosted four showings of Garden to Grave: Live Stations of the Cross. Pastor Deborah Downs said the Stations of the Cross “are a contemplative practice of walking the way of suffering with Jesus. If one were to visit the city of Jerusalem, they would discover all 14 stations on what is called the Via Dolorosa – The Sorrowful Way – a path from Pilate’s court to Golgotha to the tomb.”

Community gives input on possible consolidations

Dozens of parents, teachers, administrators and a handful of students turned out last Wednesdays for the first of two public meetings to discuss possible school consolidations.

Early risers

Photos by Ron Eland/Boulder City Review

What’s on the table

While changes can be made between now and when the CCSD Board makes its decision this fall, here are the potential options from the Facility Master Plan for public schools in Boulder City:

Jenas-Keogh shines again on track

Competing in a home weekday event on April 1, Boulder City High School girls track and field showed why they should be considered a real threat in the 3A classification.

Eagles continue to win on the diamond

Boulder City High School baseball has started league play off hot, sweeping a series with The Meadows this past week.

Challenging (budget) forecast ahead

Have you ever called for emergency services in Boulder City? Did you know that on medical calls, the fire department typically sends two or more first responders? The American Heart Association recommends one responder manages the patient’s airway; another monitors cardiac activity; another is responsible for administering medication; and two provide cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) or lift assists as needed. On a heart attack or stroke, up to six responders may be needed.

Sylvanie case gets 30-day continuance

The preliminary hearing for longtime Boulder City resident Terry Sylvanie was continued Tuesday, with a possible resolution the next time he appears in Boulder City Justice Court.