CityView Magazine

November 2021

CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC

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18 November 2021 New science/STEM wing and junior high classrooms Non-denominational Selective enrollment Great athletic, performing and fine arts programs Pre K through 12th grade 422 Ireland Drive, Fayetteville, NC 28304 www.fayettevillechristian.com (910) 483-3905 Voted Best Private School 9 Consecutive Years 100 Bragg Blvd. | Fayetteville, NC 28301 | (910) 643-2778 Email us: info @ asomf.org | @ASOMF asomf.org/event/d-day/ O C T O B E R 1 9 , 2 0 2 1 — M A R C H 1 4 , 2 0 2 2 Experience the invasion of Normandy through the eyes of the 82nd and 101st Airborne Division paratroopers using "HistoPad" technology. The premiere of this exhibit, for only the second time in the U.S. and the first time in the southeast, is made possible with generous support from the Airborne & Special Operation Museum Foundation in association with HistOvery of Paris, France, and the Airborne Museum in Saint-Mere-Eglise, Normandy, France. MADE POSSIBLE IN PART BY A GRANT FROM "I want people to know that we are paving a path for families. We want them to come up to our truck and see my Miller, who has autism, and say, 'Oh my gosh. There is hope.'" "I am projecting that between November and April, we will have our programming down pat. By the one-year mark, it will be a well-oiled machine," she said of the aggressive timeline to meet the needs of the community. "I have to organize and pace it so that I can get to these families and fulfill their needs, but programming takes a while," she said. "I know we can help them with the growth and development of their special needs loved ones. I want to jump quickly, but I want to do it right." In the many hours spent coordinating services for eager participants, and in the blistering 105-degree heat of the mobile training unit, it became clear that Miller's Crew will need a brick-and-mortar lab in the next couple of years. Not everyone who needs their help is cognitively ready for the truck, not everyone enjoys the heat, and the truck can train only a few workers at a time. "We want to provide more people with more opportunities every day, not just on food truck day," said Molnar, who always seems to be ready to tackle the next obstacle with "faith, not fear." In the meantime, what happens when a crew member has mastered every objective of the mobile training unit? "I always have a plan," Molnar said. is summer, Miller's Crew entered partnership with local Jersey Mike's Subs owners Daniel and Jamie Terracciano to give crew members the opportunity to work real jobs in real restaurants. "We have trained them very specifically to work in the community, and that's why we call it the Community Crew," Molnar said, as she proudly recounted a story of one of her faithful workers, JB, and his excitement to soon work in Jersey Mike's. For the Terracianos, who own several locations in the area, it will be a mutually beneficial relationship. "We see the pride and potential in the Miller's Crew team members

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