September 1, 2022

Page 1

*Business Spotlight: Bouvi’ J Suites (Agatha and John of the De Lambert, Charles Blackmon the

velopment (CC

BY TEVIN STINSON THELeadingCHRONICLEupto the start of the 2022-2023 school dozens of other orga held school sup plies and book bag give aways for local students. Instead of opting for the norm, Rally Up WinstonSalem invited the com munity to come together and pray for local students before the start of the new school year.

The awards reception for the Triad Minority Business Expo was held at the Anderson Center on Friday, Aug. 26.

BY TEVIN STINSON THEOneCHRONICLEofthe toughest challenges for minor ity business owners is the limited access to business networks. Nine years ago Maximum Enterprises set out to help local business owners expand their cus tomer base with the Triad Minority Business Expo. This year, encompassing three weekends and three different cities - High Point, Greensboro and Winston-Salem - the Expo was bigger than ever. When Reginald Mc Caskill, president and CEO of Maximum Enter prises, started the Expo in 2013, his goal was to cre ate a space where business owners could gain expo sure and also network with other entrepreneurs. The first year, about 25 busi nesses participated in the event; this year nearly 200 different businesses were showcased.McCaskill said he was overwhelmed by the sup port the Expo received this year. He said you could feel the energy in the building. “It was truly overwhelming to see those businesses come out to be exposed to the Triad and gain all that we promote and that is lending to our motto, which is to create, connect, and cultivate,” McCaskil“Ultimately,continued.we know that when small businesses survive our economy sur vives and our world sur vives. I share with people the foundation that this country was built on was actually entrepreneurship and small businesses and our goal is to continue to make sure that people are aware that these business es doTheexist.”last leg of the Expo was held in WinstonSalem and began on Fri day, Aug. 26, with the an nual awards reception held at the Anderson Center on the campus of WinstonSalem State University (WSSU). During the soldout event, entrepreneurs and business owners from Winston-Salem, Greens boro and High Point re ceived awards for Busi ness Spotlight, Non-Profit of the Year, Newcomer of the Year, Minority of the Year, Kid Biz of the Year, and Pioneer Award winner.

nizations

Photo by Tevin Stinson

and Eric*NewcomerFoushee) of

year,

Grimes

On Sunday, Aug. 28, the grassroots organiza tion geared toward ending street and gang violence, held a back-to-school prayer and march. After gathering for prayer near the corner of Liberty and 25th Streets, the group marched through Cleve land Avenue Homes, spreading words of en couragement and calling for an end to violence. When discussing the event, Corey McCann, cofounder of Rally Up Win ston-Salem, said they felt it was necessary to come together and pray for a safe and prosperous school year for every student in the local school district. “We see so many times in our community, we do these back-to-school backpack drives, back-toschool supply drives … and while that is necessary, especially for our children in low income areas and our Title I schools, that’s not the holistic thing. We want to send our children back to school holistically complete,” McCann said. “We want to touch their minds, we want to touch their spirits.” By The Downtown Winston-Salem Partnership

Photo by Tevin Stinson

SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 3 7-10PM 638 W. FOURTH ST. FOOTHILLS BREWING PAYING TRIBUTE TO “DURAN DURAN” VAGABOND SAINTS SOCIETY Produced

*Business Spotlight: Empyrean Reality (Debbie Overby)

FOURTHFOOTHILLSPARTYBLOCKBREWING’SSTREET downtownws.com SCAN

Winners are chosen by an advisory council which is composed of representa tives from all three cities. awardWinston-Salemwinnersare:

Year: Black Lamb

Year: Wylies Gourmet Cafe (Sonya *MinorityWylies)ofthe Year: Stillshots Photography (Ashley*KidzCrawley)Bizofthe Year: Qween Kollection (Bailey Reese*PioneerMoore) Award: Hargett Funeral Home (Nate Hargett and Brian Greene) High Point Award Winners are: *Business Spotlight: Get Stitched Up (Donovan Mills) 75 cents WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. THURSDAY, September 1, 2022 8907632439 6 7 •Inside:SeeOpinion/Forum pages on A4 & A5 • • See Sports on page B1• 3 cities, nearly 200 exhibitors - Triad Minority Business Expo grows with record numbers Volume 48, Number 52 Praying for a safe school year

Grimes) *Non-Profit

*Non-Profit of the Year: Neighborhood Hands (S.D.

*NewcomerPatterson)of the Year: Chilly Philly (Frank Robinson)*Minority of the Year: Taste of the Triad (Sabrina Wingo)*Kidz Biz of the Year: Gamani’s Fresh Squeezed Lemonade, LLC (Gamani Martin)*Pioneer Award: Ervin Beauty Service (Minnie Ervin) Greensboro Award Winners are:

nonprofits, businesses and

Ahead of the start of the new school year Rally Up Winston-Salem held a back-toschool prayer and march. See Expo on A3

BY TIMOTHY RAMSEY THETheCHRONICLEWinston Lake Golf Course played host once again for the annual fund raising golf tournament for the Winston-Salem Steal ers basketball organiza tion on Aug. 20. Organiz ers, led by the Robinson Group, Beautiful Counte nance and others, wanted this year’s tournament to be the best one yet. Alvin Robinson, one of the tournament organiz ers, began the tournament originally as a fundraising effort for a team he was coaching at the time. Af ter his daughters became a part of the Stealers’ organi zation, Robinson connect ed with Brian Robinson, head coach of the Steal ers, and they began raising money for the girls and the rest is Accordinghistory. to Alvin Robinson, the tournament had their biggest turnout ever this year. Robinson and Dan Motsinger, owner of Cahill & Swain, put a lot of effort into bringing in players, sponsors and special guests. This year’s guest was Jim Caldwell, former head coach of Wake Forest University, the Indianapolis Colts and DetroitRobinsonLions. has a heart for giving and is truly a man of the people. Putting this tournament together is an arduous task to take on each year, but he enjoys doing things for others.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Chronicle, P.O. Box 1636 Winston-Salem, NC 27102-1636 N.C. 27101 336-722-8624

The Chronicle (USPS 067-910) was established by Ernest H. Pitt and Ndubisi Egemonye in 1974 and is published every Thursday by Chronicle Media Group, LLC, 1300 E. Fifth St., Winston Salem, N.C. 27101. Periodicals postage paid at Winston-Salem, N.C. An nual subscription price is $30.72.

Main Phone Number:

“Sometimes you think you want to give up but since we are helping young ladies in basketball and a scholarship, you forget about the time and work and instead think of how you are helping the young ladies,” said Alvin Robin son.Robinson doesn’t do things for others to be cel ebrated by others, it’s just in his nature to do so. He says God put him on this earth to help others and he is just fulfilling God’s will. “I never got a pat on the back from it, except from my wife and my kids,” he said. “My kids really sup port me with this, even after they left the Stealers. My sons and my daughters ask me if I am tired or if I need to sit down, but I tell them that ‘I got this.’ “It’s something that’s embedded in my spirit now to do. My old Apostle Brenda McCloud always said that I was a giver and that I was a community person. After she passed away, that embedded in my spirit to always be there for the community because that’s what she prophesied to me.”Robinson was thank ful to all of the sponsors and vendors that donated to the tournament and con tinue to do so year in and year out. He also wanted to thank Motsinger, Jim Caldwell, Cooper Realty and Julius Reese “I basically call them and say, ‘Hey, it’s that time of year now, can you help?’ and they don’t mind help ing,” Robinson said about the sponsors and vendors. “They really make things a lot easier when you ask them for something, and they just keep on giving and giving. I am at a loss for words.”Thebiggest joy for Robinson is helping out the young ladies of the Stealers, but he says he also enjoys seeing every one come out and enjoy the tournament.

Advertising: Ext. Circulation/Subscriptions:113 Ext. 101 Editor: Ext. 108 To send news items: email news@wschronicle.com To send a Letter to the Editor (350 words or less) or column (550 words or less): email letters@wschronicle.com For advertising: Foradv@wschronicle.comemailsubscriptions:email office@wschronicle.com Like us on facebook.com/WSChronFacebook:icleFollowusonTwitter:WS_Chronicle CONTACTING THE CHRONICLE Have a Story Idea? Let Us Know! News@wschronicle.com A2 S eptember 1, 2022 t he C hroni C le Annual golf tournament reaches 20-year mark Submitted photo Winston Lake Golf Course was host to the 20th annual fundraiser golf tournament. Tickets on Sale facetoface.wfu.eduNow september 14 at 7 p.m. PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH WITH JON MEACHAM Presented by LJVM Coliseum

1300www.wschronicle.comE.FifthSt.,Winston Salem,

I’ve just been released from prison. Chaos and frustration consume my days as I wait in long lines to get a state identification card, see my probation of ficer and try to find work, the whole time relying on an inefficient public transportation system to get around. And if I don’t make it back to my half way house by curfew, I face a return to prison. I was used to being told what to do in prison. Now I have to figure it all out on my own, often on the internet, which I’ve grown rustyThat’son. the world I got a glimpse of on Aug. 16 when I took part in a re entry simulation at the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office. With more than 50 others – including lawenforcement officers and social service workers – I spent a morning rac ing around a large room, bouncing back and forth from one table set up as a probation office, to another set up as a drug treatment center, to still another set up as a halfway house. Be fore that day, I had some idea of what released of fenders go through from interviewing them for my job at Winston-Salem State University’s Center for the Study of Economic Mobility (CSEM), where reentry is a research bed rock. But the simulation gave me a real handle on what released offenders encounter.Getting out of prison is hard and frustrating. Ev ery complex turn is chal lenging and can lead to failure - a return to prison that is costly in financial and human terms. “Many of these men and women are so barren of role mod els and mentors,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Rob Lang of Winston-Salem told me recently. “They lack inter net skills. Some can hardly read, or have reading defi cits. Some don’t have any food and are hungry. They need a little help.” Lang’s job as a pros ecutor involves sending those convicted of crimes to prison. But he has long realized released offend ers need a path back, and has worked toward that as the Project Safe Neigh borhoods and Reentry co ordinator for his office. That effort continues with the reentry simulations. Lang’s office partners with Rebecca Sauter’s Project Reentry, which she leads, and along with other com munity partners on the simulations to help those who work with released offenders - or want to do that work - better under stand the maze released of fendersTheseconfront.eventsare sorely needed. Reentry work is a bed rock for CSEM, which realizes the heavy finan cial and human costs of recidivism.

Experiencing a bit of what released offenders go through

BY JOHN RAILEY “You never really un derstand a person until you consider things from his point of view … until you climb in his skin and walk around in it.” — Atticus Finch in “To Kill a Mockingbird”

John Railey (raileyjb@ gmail.com) is the writerin-residence for Center for the Study of Economic Mobility, www.wssu.edu/ csem.

family meals ready when you are

Transportation is an other big challenge. “Over and over, transportation is one of the biggest bar riers,” Lang said. For ex ample, he said, a released offender lacking a driver’s license might depend on a coworker to get to his job. But the coworker loses his job, and the released of fender relies on cabs to get to work. “So he’s spending $18 to get to an $8-an-hour job,” Lang CSEM’ssaid.research has documented similar chal lenges among those in the general population, including the fact that rid ers who use city buses to get to work spend an average of 12 hours a week on buses, helping to lead The Winston-Salem Foundation and Forsyth Technical Community College to tackle the is sue. Reform of the public transportation system can especially help released offenders. In other areas of the state, Lang said, a factory, realizing problems with public transportation, started shuttle services for released offenders, and a city tweaked its bus lines to help them get to work. In Forsyth County, Lang encourages released of fenders to use the driver’s license restoration project offered by the district at torney’s office. The released offend ers often turn out to be good workers, Lang said. “They’re motivated by not wanting to go back.” Project Reentry is mak ing a difference. The state wide recidivism rate is 32%, according to Project Reentry, but for released offenders who take part in their programs, that rate is 10.7%.The reentry simulation events can help. “People who have been through the system talk about who helped them and how,” Lang said, and participants learn how to better help re leased offenders, including through enhanced coor dination among everyone from probation officers to food bank operators. “We can do our jobs better,” Lang said. “Many released offenders do want to change, if we can just help a little bit.”

T he C hroni C le S ep T ember 1, 2022 A3

*Non-Profit of the Year: Growing the Dis tance (Sharina Stable and Aniya*NewcomerMayo) of the Year: CMB Studios (Christopher*MinorityBray)ofthe Year: Gallery on Main (Sabrina Tillman)*Kidz Biz of the Year: Blair’s Closet (Blair No elle)*Pioneer Award win ner: Made You Look Sa lon (Jennifer Taylor) The main event, the Expo, was held at the Ben ton Convention Center on Saturday, Aug. 27. In ad dition to more than dozens of vendors, there were also performances by local art ists and WSSU’s Red Sea of Sound Marching Band. While making her way through the maze of vari ous businesses, Alice Pit tman, who was attending the Expo for the first time, said she was shocked at how much the Expo had to offer.“There really is some thing for everyone,” Pitt man said. The McCaskills and Maximum Enterprises have already set the stage for the 2023 Triad Mi nority Business Expo. It will be held Aug. 26 at the Benton Convention Center. Leading up to the landmark event, Mc Caskill said they plan to host smaller events ev ery month, such as train ing sessions and business mixers.“This year’s Expo was just a launching pad for everything we’re going to do. We’re going to do something every month,” McCaskill said. “In prepa ration for that 10th year, the momentum has to start early.”For more information about the Triad Minor ity Business Expo, vis it prisesinc.com/.https://maximumenter

Place your order by filling out the order form online or in-store. Pick up your order from the deli at a time that works for you. Visit foodlion.com/catering or stop by the deli at your local store.

Douglas Bates, a CSEM Research Fellow and assistant professor in WSSU’s Department of Social Work, is develop ing a survey that will help employers and released offenders better adjust to the workplace. Among CSEM’s partner organiza tions are the Do School, whose participants can include released offend ers learning the construc tion trade, and Project M.O.O.R.E., which helps at-risk youth and is run by David Moore, who did time in prison decades ago before turning his life around.CSEM’s Associate Director, Alvin Atkinson, worked with Lang on reen try efforts when Atkinson was with WSSU’s Center for Community Safety in the early 2000s. The simulation events are part of a nationwide initiative and is the latest of several to be held in our state and area. Participants, taking on the roles of re leased offenders, deal with challenges of medical care, mental health, substance abuse, child support and employment. “We create different scenarios,” Lang said. “This is modeled on real-life experiences and barriers that these guys have. We show the chaos.”

Expo From page A1

Photo by John Railey Participants in the Aug. 16 reentry simulation en dured long lines, much like those released offenders go through daily.

To The Editor: The Greensboro Business League represents hundreds of Black-owned small businesses that work with our local governments to improve business conditions in our underserved communities. While our advocacy has been very successful, our democracy and thus our votes enable us to get the ears of elected officials. That’s why we are concerned about efforts to turn our democracy into an autocracy in which the will of the people is not recognized and the voices of small businesses are not heard. This election season, we will make our voices heard and hope to make protecting democracy a votable issue this fall. Our democracy - including the economy, fairness, and equality of rights for many African Americans - is at stake. GerryGreensboroMcCants

OPINIONLETTERSTOTHE EDITOR Have The Chronicle conveniently delivered to your mailbox!Order your subscription today by

A4 S eptember 1, 2022 t he C hroni C le Our Mission The Chronicle is dedicated to serving the residents of Winston-Salem and Forsyth Coun ty by giving voice to the voiceless, speaking truth to power, standing for integrity and encouraging open communication and lively debate throughout the community Managing Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor/Religion Senior AdvertisingReporterManager Office Manager Graphic Designer James Taylor Jr. Publisher Bridget Elam Judie WeGreggDeannaShaynaTevinTimothyHolcomb-PackRamseyStinsonSmithTaylorPennWelcome Your Feedback Submit letters and guest columns to letters@ wschronicle.com before 5 p.m. Friday for the next week’s publication date. Letters intended for publication should be addressed “Letters to the Editor” and include your name, address, phone number and email address. Please keep letters to 350 words or less. If you are writing a guest column, please include a photo of yourself, your name, address, phone number and email address. Please keep guest columns to 550 words or less. Letters and columns can also be mailed or dropped off at W-S Chronicle, 1300 E. Fifth St., W-S, NC, 27101; or sent via our website: www.wschronicle. com.We reserve the right to edit any item submitted for clarity or brevity and determine when and whether material will be used. We welcome your comments at our website. Also, go to our Facebook page to comment. We are at facebook.com/WSChronicle.

or order online at www.wschronicle.com and click Order Subscription.

WHO wants name change for ‘monkeypox’ virus, calling it ‘discriminatory and stigmatizing’

Back to school, back to fighting far-right attacks on education

Voting can make voices of small businesses heard

BY LOUISIANA TRICEEDNEYWIRE.COM/GLOBALWEEKLY INFORMATION NETWORK

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebr eyesus, in a briefing on the matter, said the virus is no longer behaving as it did in the past and therefore should be renamed. But a public narrative persists in suggesting the cur rent outbreak is linked to Africa, West Africa or Nigeria, noted a group of 29 biologists and other researchers. That builds on an existing stigma, although the virus has been detected without a clear link to Africa. The major ity - 84% - of confirmed cases are from the European region, followed by the Americas, Africa, Eastern Medi terranean region and Western Pacific region.

“The most obvious manifestation of this is the use of photos of African patients to depict the pox lesions in mainstream media in the global north,” the researchers said. Ahmed Ogwell, deputy director of the Africa Cen ters for Disease Control and Prevention, and more than a dozen infectious disease experts in the U.S. and Eu rope, are soliciting suggestions for a new name using the website virological.org.

ext.

Children learn better when they can see them selves in others and see their communities as part of the great American sto ry. At the same time, sci ence tells us that learning how to understand and em pathize with people across differences is essential to children’s healthy devel opment. Looking honestly at our past helps students develop critical thinking skills that are desperately needed when every smart phone is a gateway to dis information.Democracy, too, de pends on informed citi zens to function. It’s no coincidence that the crowd that stormed the Capitol in 2021, was acting on lies andAuthoritarianismmisinformation. feasts on ignorance. Elec tion deniers and censors of history are in the same camp, and should get no where near our schools. We cannot begin to heal our divisions until we acknowledge and teach our whole history - good and bad. And we know that standing up for the freedom to learn will be a challenging task. This school year follows one in which reports of book bans and censorship reached re cord levels according to the American Library As sociation. Far-right groups and politicians are offering rewards and setting up tip lines to “report” teachers who cover “divisive” top ics. School board members are receiving death threats. But we don’t shy away from these challenges when we act from a place of love. Loving our chil dren means being advo cates for them when po litical extremists want to limit what they can learn. It means showing up to school board meetings and organizing to make our selves heard. It means run ning for the school board. It means rejecting one of the censors’ most harm ful assumptions: that stu dents are too fragile to hear the history our people have lived. Millions of families are getting ready to send their kids back to school. Let’s also get ready to defend the freedom to learn. Be fore the dictionary ends up on your district’s bannedbooks list. Ben Jealous serves as president of People For the American Way and Profes sor of the Practice at the University of Pennsylva nia. A New York Times best-selling author, his next book, “Never Forget Our People Were Always Free,” will be published by Harper Collins in De cember 2022.

Just when you thought far-right attacks on pub lic education couldn’t get any more absurd, we hear about something new. For the first time in almost 15 years, Sarasota schools this fall are turn ing down hundreds of free dictionaries from the local Rotary Club. Why? Be cause the district is afraid of violating a radical new law that’s part of Flori da Gov. Ron DeSantis’s crackdown on inclusive curricula. The district can’t buy or accept any new books until it hires some one to make sure they comply with the state’s draconian censorship reg ulations. So, the dictionar ies sit on the shelf. The idea that dictionar ies might be hazardous to kids would be laughable if it weren’t so dangerous. This new school year is starting as more states are passing laws to make it easier to ban books. States are also passing laws to stop teachers from talking about topics like racism; according to Education Week, 42 states have now enacted limits on what teachers can say about rac ism or sexism in the class room.These same politi cal forces want to make schools teach a white washed version of our his tory and our current reality in the name of “patriotic” education. They’re trying to take over school boards to impose their political ideology on teachers and students. That’s bad for our kids. And it’s bad for our Thecountry.freedom to learn is at risk.This fall it’s more im portant than ever to stand for the rights of teachers to teach, and students to learn, about the full spectrum of the American experience. That means lessons that in clude and celebrate diverse communities. It means history that doesn’t erase the experiences of Black people, brown people, LGBTQ people, women, immigrants, people with disabilities, and other com munities that have been historically marginalized. The director of the non profit EveryLibrary warns that the current wave of book bans amounts to “the silencing of stories and the suppression of informa tion” that will make “the next generation less able to function in society.”

The World Health Organization (WHO) has an nounced plans to find a new name for the viral disease informally known as ‘monkeypox’ which, says the world body, is “discriminatory and stigmatizing.”

ColumnistJealousBenGuest

“We are removing the distinction between endemic and non-endemic countries, reporting on countries to gether where possible, to reflect the unified response that is needed,” the WHO said in its outbreak situation update sent out on July 23. As for what the virus should be called, the scientists suggest starting with hMPXV, to denote the human ver sion of the monkeypox virus. Rather than geographic locations, they say, letters and numbers should be used, based on order of discovery. In that system, the lineage behind the current international outbreak would be dubbed B.1. It has been reported in 39 countries so far in 2022, and most of them are having their first-ever cases of the disease, according to the WHO. Worldwide, it says, there are around 3,100 confirmed or suspected cases, including 72 deaths. The normal initial symptoms in clude a high fever, swollen lymph nodes and a blistery chickenpox-like rash. Between January 1 and June 15, 2,103 confirmed cases, a probable case and one death have been reported to the WHO in 42 countries, it said. Global Information Network creates and distrib utes news and feature articles on current affairs in Africa. calling 336-722-8524, 100

Dr. James B. Ewers ColumnistGuestJr.

Antoine M. Thompson is the executive director of the Greater Washington Region Clean Cities Co alition (GWRCCC) and a former New York state sen ator and the former chair of the New York State Sen ate Committee of Environ mental Conservation.

“Your blood work shows your Vitamin D levels are low,” my doc tor admonished me. “Start takingNotsupplements.”evensure what vitamin D was for, I fol lowed her advice. Within a week, the pain in my knees had gone away. Amazing! I thought. How often can you solve a problem by simply swallowing a pill? I loved the simplicity of the solution … and the reality check it provided. Few things in life are that easy to fix. Inflation, floods and fires, mistrust in elections – all of these are significant national issues which require work from many angles. They require complex thinking. But both our neuro biology and our culture drive us toward simplified thinking.Weare wired to tune out information that con tradicts what we already believe (confirmation bias). It also takes effort to process information ra tionally, so we fall back on the familiar and the clear, such as statements that have been repeated until they seem commonplace, or even words printed in a bold font (cognitive ease). Our culture also drives us toward simplicity. We often absorb news in soundbites or headlines. We usually reduce issues to binaries (pro- or anti) and eliminate potential middle ground. It feels safer when “answers” are simple.But most answers no longer are simple, as a recent report warned. En vironmental and security emergencies are merging and magnifying around the globe and in our own country. For example, we see extreme temperatures grounding planes for com mercial and personal trav el, and even adversely af fecting military operations andToexercises.meetthis moment, we need to build our ca pacity as a nation to “think fast, think ahead, and act now.” We need to “expect the unexpected – and be prepared to adapt.” But how? We can start with our selves, and then demand it of ourOneleaders.wayis to deepen, widen, and lengthen our thinking, as one CEO puts it. We can challenge ourselves to deepen our understanding of an issue by overcoming our blind spots: “How might some one on another side of this issue see this situation?” or “What assumptions about the world am I rely ing on?” We can widen our thinking by actively ask ing for others’ opinions. And we can lengthen our thinking with the question - to ourselves and our lead ers - “What are the effects now, and what might they be a year, or ten years from now?” Since we filter infor mation through our emo tions, we should take our emotions into account –but also complexify how we understand those emo tions. If we simply say a situation made us mad, we lose information about what made us angry. Peel back the layers of emo tions. Does an angry out burst actually mask fear? The term “hangry” is a great example of how a more complex understand ing of our emotions brings power to control them. When we realize we’re an gry because we’re hungry, we know that food is part of the solution. In our dynamic world, we need to get comfortable with complexity. Good so lutions to our myriad prob lems require it. Is that the 21st century version of pa triotism?Ifwe love our country and want to help it suc ceed, is our best tool our choice to be inquisitive about people and issues? Melinda Burrell, Ph.D., @MelindaC Burrell, syndicated by PeaceVoice, is a former humanitarian aid worker and now trains on the neu roscience of communica tion and conflict. She is on the board of the National Association for Communi ty Mediation, which offers resources for community approaches to difficult is sues.

Antoine

Isn’t that the way it shouldKidsbe? and parents shouldn’t have to worry about mayhem and confu sion. That sounds incom prehensible to think that a child could go to school and be harmed. As we know, that is what happened on May 24 in Uvalde, Texas. An armed gunman walked into Robb Elementary School and killed 19 stu dents and two teachers. Could this tragedy have been avoided? There are multiple answers to this question. School critics and pundits have their opinions. It is the response to the shoot ing that has the Uvalde community up in arms. Upon learning that a shooter was at the school, the systems were acti vated. Law enforcement arrived and were ready to move in on the target. The moving in on the target portion is where the sys tem was compromised. This is my opinion and the opinion of others who have been keen observers of thisMayevent.24, 2022, should have been just another school day for the dis trict’s students and teach ers. It Lastwasn’t.week Uvalde po lice chief, Pete Arredondo was fired. He oversaw the police response on that day. The Uvalde Consoli dated Independent School District’s board of educa tion voted to void his con tractReportsimmediately.saythat there were 376 law enforcement officers at the school on that day, all supposedly with Mr. Arredondo in charge. The non-actions of law enforcement were squarely on the shoulders of the former police chief. The firing of former chief Arredondo was con tentious. Brett Cross, the uncle and guardian of one of the slain children, at a school board meeting in July said, “Stand with us or against us, because we ain’t going nowhere.” Parents and supporters of the victims have been upset about how the pro cess has played out. Some of the meetings involving Arrendondo’s termination were held in executive ses sion or However,canceled.the former chief still maintains that he did nothing wrong or inap propriate.Hislawyer, George Hyde, wrote in a state ment, “Chief Arredondo is a leader and a courageous officer who with all of the other law enforcement of ficers who responded to the scene should be cel ebrated for the lives saved, instead of vilified for those they couldn’t reach in time.”School systems are now more than ever on the alert for incidents of all kinds that will threaten the lives of students and teach ers. Now, because of what has been occurring, school districts have employed grief and family counsel ors to console grief-strick en family members. Police and security personnel are more visible in and around schools. Increased and im proved surveillance is now commonplace in today’s schools.The same is true with colleges and universities across America. They, too, have stepped up their se curity forces for students living both on and off campus.These are the times that we are living in during this period in our country. Will these times change and get better? That’s a good ques tion with no good answer now.I never thought I would live to see the day when police and schools would go together.Yet,here I am, as schools and police do go together.

Law enforcement officer is fired amid lost lives of students and teachers in Uvalde

Have The Chronicle conveniently delivered to your mailbox! Order your subscription today by calling 336-722-8524, ext. 100 or order online at www.wschronicle.com and click Order Subscription.

James B. Ewers Jr., Ed.D., is a former tennis champion at Atkins High School in Winston-Salem and played college ten nis at Johnson C. Smith University, where he was all-conference for four years. He is a retired col lege administrator. He can be reached at gie.2020@yahoo.com.overtimefer

“Save The Children” was a popular song by mu sic legend, Marvin Gaye. It was a big hit in the 1970s. Now in a strange way, this song rings true today. There is a responsibil ity that all of us must keep our children safe. Histori cally, schools, homes and places of worship have been safe places for them. You just don’t equate kill ings with these places. Going to school was an enlightening experience. We saw our friends and our teachers provided us with instruction. Our par ents had no anxiety or fear about sending us there.

The US needs more electric school buses

Is curiosity the new form of patriotism?

ColumnistThompsonM.GuestMelindaBurrellGuestColumnist

A child rides a bus to school every day - the tra ditionally big yellow one that runs on diesel gas. Day in and day out, children are exposed to the fumes emitted by the bus, breathing car bon dioxide like it’s fresh air on what should be an otherwise safe journey to school. After several years of this toxic expo sure, some children de velop asthma. They can no longer play sports, face a heightened risk to infec tions like COVID-19, and lose three years of their av erage life expectancy. The worst part of this tragedy is that it all could’ve been avoided. Had the school bus been electric instead of diesel, its passengers would have faced no toxic emissions and been spared of irrepa rable lung damage. Shared by countless others across the nation, especially those in under served communities, this story highlights the urgent need for school districts to convert their fleets to elec tric school buses and pro tect the health of students and surrounding commu nities. Furthermore, thanks to President Biden’s Bi partisan Infrastructure Law, which designates $5 billion in federal funding for clean school buses, it has never been easier for school districts to take a step toward the future and transition from dieselpowered school buses to fully electric ones. By electrifying their bus fleets, school dis tricts will be prioritizing the health of both their students and the commu nity at large, contributing to environmental justice, and saving money down the road. According to the Healthy Schools Cam paign, the exhaust from diesel buses contains “40+ toxic air contaminants, carcinogens, ozone smogforming compounds, and fine particulate matter,” all of which can have dev astating impacts on the health of students as well as the surrounding en vironment. Diesel buses not only pollute the lungs of their passengers, but they also affect air quality through their emissions, especially considering that large portions of the day are spent driving and wait ing Rossidly.

Cities estimates that full electrification of the national school bus fleet would lower green house gas emissions by eight megatons per year, which is significant as transportation is the larg est contributor to total U.S. emissions. Addition ally, the impacts of elec trification would be felt most in low-income and minority communities, who have been exposed to toxic contaminants dis proportionately more than any other group. Aside from the humanitarian im pact, electric school buses also offer direct benefits to school districts. Based on data from the Modesto Unified School District, they can save $10,000 a year on gas per bus. Elec tric school buses can even be plugged into an excess power source in the event of a grid failure. Because of electric school buses undeniable advantages, districts must utilize this immense opportunity to electrify their fleets cre ated by the Infrastructure Bill.At the Greater Wash ington Region Clean Cities Coalition, we host a series of events and projects to showcase electric school buses, assist with project planning and grant writ ing, as well as education and training for school dis trict staff, board members and other stakeholders. Our multilayered approach helps to achieve the goal to not only connect schools with dealers and manufac turers, and electric vehicle supply equipment provid ers, but to also increase familiarity between school districts and the electric school bus industry. The best example is our Mid-Atlantic Electric School Bus Experience Project (MEEP), which provides school fleets with free electric buses to test over a six-to-eight-week demo period. Through practical experience, tech nical training, and proper planning with electric buses, school districts can better acquaint themselves with the processes of elec trification and upkeep of their fleets. MEEP bridges the gap of understanding between districts and elec trification, often giving the necessary information on questions such as how to acquire charging stations and how to retrofit or re power existing diesel bus es to make them electric. As the need for elec tric school buses becomes more and more pressing, the Greater Washington Region Clean Cities Coali tion is dedicated to facili tating and advocating for the electrification of elec tric school buses locally, regionally, and nationally.

T he C hroni C le S ep T ember 1, 2022 A5 FORUM

Charles Crouch

A6 S eptember 1, 2022 t he C hroni C le Walk with a Doc Join us for “Walk with a Doc!” This doctor led group is a fun and safe place to go for a walk, learn about health and meet new friends. The event is free, and all are welcome! Walk with a Doc Every Second Saturday Starting September 10 | 9 – 10 a.m. Newell Massey Greenway 901 Waterworks Road Winston-Salem, NC 27101 Meet at the park right by the Ray Agnew Baseball Fields To learn more and pre-register, visit events.aarp.org/WWAD-NC * Please consult your physician before starting a new exercise regimen. ** Please note that event dates, locations, times and format are subject to change due to AARP Covid-19 protocols with little to no notice. By registering for this event or program you agree to assume all Covid-19 risk. BUSTA’S PERSON OF THE WEEK

Charles became an ad vocate for depression and in 2019 he and his business partner, Corbin Coleman (4C Visuals Group), did a documentary entitled, “I’m Good Bro: Unmasking Black Male Depression.’’ The topic has always been taboo in the Black com munity, especially with Black men, so Crouch’s documentary takes us back to the historical effects of depression, as far back as slavey, and how it contin ues to affect Black men in corporate America, mar riage, and the era of social media. The Amazon best-sell ing author also shares the spiritual aspect of mental health in Black men and denial. “If I see you and say, ‘Hey, Busta, how you doing bro?’ And no matter how you’re feeling, you’re gonna say, ‘I’m good bro.’ And in most cases, it’s the exact opposite of that. That’s the mask that many Black men wear. We as Black men must stop being ashamed and realize de pression is a problem and seek help. So that’s why it’s the title of my docu mentary,” shared Charles. “I’m Good Bro: Un masking Black Male De pression’’ has won mul tiple awards. You can find it onStandingYouTube. firm and strong by the side of every strong and successful man is an equally successful, strong and phenomenal woman. The Twin City native also credits his fian ceé, LaShawnda Fortune, for keeping his depression in check. “I was telling my fianceé the other night that every man knows what he wants in a woman, but not many men know what they need in a woman. I was blessed to have the best of both worlds. I found what I wanted and more importantly, I found what I needed in a woman with Lashawnda. She brought so much peace and love into my life,” said an emo tional Charles Crouch. I asked his beautiful fu ture wife if it’s a challenge to always put her feelings aside to avoid what trig gers Charles’s depression. She looked into my eyes with a warm and confi dent smile. “No, it’s never a challenge. I don’t have those moments because a woman is naturally nurtur ing. We’re always thinking about the household and the kids. We have that abil ity built in us to care and be that support system. But Chuck really loves and cares about me as well, so we both serve each other well. So it balances out my ability to always make sure he’s OK.” That was one of the most beautiful, sweet and loving comments I’ve heard in my 59 years of living. It took every bit of strength I had to hold back my tears. As each of the lovebirds were speaking, I could see the love, respect and adoration they have for each other. As the Spinners said in their 1973 classic, Charles and LaShawnda have “A one of a kind love affair.” Watching the two of them was an absolutely wonderful sight to see. The couple met just four months ago, but like the Stylistics said in their 1971 classic, “Betcha by golly wow, you’re the one that I’ve been waiting for for ever. And ever will my love for you keep grow ing strong. Keep growing strong.” Charles is a poet and music producer as well. “Both are a source of therapy for me. I have so many compositions, I can use them in my upcoming documentaries.” His accolades are plenty.

Black

In his book, “Hate My Face: The Struggle Between Black Men and Love,” author Charles Crouch wrote, “I feel like Black men have gotten so far away from love, even with the music and our representation in films. It wasn’t cool to be compas sionate. But love doesn’t make you soft, so I wrote about why Black men do need love and compas sion.” Crouch said he wrote that in 2010, but he’s still very proud of his work. In 2017 he wrote “Cape With Holes - How to be a Super Daddy.” The father of one shared some of the chal lenging myths and stigmas linked to fatherhood, par ticularly African American fathers.

“I believe Black men need to be there to nurture their sons, yet if you’re really involved, it can be challenging sometimes,” said Charles. He experi enced one of those chal lenging moments first hand. “I wrote ‘Cape With Holes - How to be a Super Daddy’ because my son went viral when he was four years old, because he was extremely gifted musi cally. He was doing music production,” said Charles. Music and Hollywood A-list artists such as Quest Love, Jamie Foxx, Erykah Badu, Anthony Anderson, The Legendary Bootsy Collins and more, were so impressed they shared the video on their social media platforms, which helped his videos reach over 20 million views. What genu inely connected with the viewers was his love and compassionate interaction with his son. “I would hug him, kiss him and encour age him, and I received so many messages of love and support, and I couldn’t respond to them, so I de cided to write a book. I wanted Black men and boys to know, although society doesn’t care about your tears, it’s OK to cry and vent. But you must keep pushing forward,” he said. The book became an Amazon best seller for weeks. This past Monday, Jordan started his first day as a 5th grader. Congratu lations!Although Charles Crouch is an amazing fa ther, with a son equally as amazing, there’s another battle he fights daily. De pression. I asked Charles if there was anything spe cific that caused him to become depressed and his reply was open and hon est. “Some people are just born with it or experienced some sort of trauma. Mine is a mixture of both.” He added that his battle with depression started in mid dle school. “Nobody was talking about it at that time in the Black community, so it became the norm for me,” said the 46-year-old. At the age of 26, he decided to seek therapy. “They helped me pinpoint the things that triggered my depression and I was able to control it and I’m in a very good place in my life now. Depression is like cancer, it can come back at any time, so it’s a daily process.”

Submitted photo

2020 Baltimore In ternational Film Festival Official Selection 2020; Mental Filmness Film Festival Official Selection 2020; African American Film Marketplace Official Selection 2020; Down East Film Festival Official Selection 2020; Raleigh Film and Art Festival Offi cial Selection 2020; Social Distancing Film Festival Official Selection 2020; Blackbuster Movie Trailer Competition Finalist; 2021 Cane River Film Festival Official Selection; 2022 LA Black Film Festival Official Selection Awards; Cane River Film Festival Judges Top Five; Mental Filmness Film Festival Realism Award Winner; Down East Film Festival Community Impact Award; Down East Film Festi val 1st place Best Docu mentary; SE Manly Short Film Showcase (BHERC) Documentary Award; and Black Independent Web Series & Filmmakers Soci ety Film of the Year Award 2020. He’s also one of this year’s “Men That Win” recipients. I’ll have more details on that event com ing soon. My phenomenal Per son of the Week is Charles “Chuck” Crouch.

BY BUSTA BROWN FOR THE CHRONICLE

Author and filmmaker advocates for fathers and educates about depression in Black men

14 4:00 pm - 6:30 pm

Submitted photo Demario Mills Have LetIdea?StoryaUsKnow News@wschronicle.com

Street, Suite 2E, Winston-Salem, NC 27101 In this session you will have the opportunity to give your input on the services provided in the Downtown WinstonSalem Business Improvement District. If you are unable to attend the meeting, you can also provide feedback via these other outlets: E-mail: jason@dwsp.org, phone: (336) 354-1500 x1, or on-line: www.downtownws.org (look for public input tab)

Wednesday, September

SUBMITTEDDemarioARTICLEMills was introduced to the SECU Family House on Jan. 19 when he volunteered with the City of Winston-Salem as a part of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service. He was drawn to the Fam ily House because of its “atmosphere and good people.” He says you get the “feeling like you are at home” at the Family House.Maybe that is why he keeps coming back to vol unteer month after month, because he has become a part of our Demariofamily.wasborn and raised in Winston-Salem and has been employed by the City of Winston-Salem for over 25 years. It’s this sense of loyalty and dedi cation that you see in all of Demario’s activities. While not a glamorous vol unteer role, Demario helps with the maintenance and behind-the-scenes nuts and bolts that keep the Family House operating smoothly. He cleans A/C and refrig erator filters, dusts and replaces the light fixtures, checks cabinetry for sta bility, and the list goes on and on. The Family House is a more safe and secure place because of the time and energy Demario de votes to its upkeep. If you would like more information on how you can volunteer at the Fam ily House, visit www.fam ilyhousews.org and click on the Get Involved tab. MLK Day of Service turns into a long-term volunteer gig for city employee

the Downtown Winston-Salem Partnership Offices at 305

T he C hroni C le S ep T ember 1, 2022 A7 You are invited Public I nput Drop- I n Session for t he Downtown Wi nston-Salem Bu si ness I mprovement District

At W.Fourth

How to submit items to the community calendar: We appreciate your community news. Here’s how you can help us to process your news more efficiently: *Please give us com plete information about the event, such as the sponsor and address, date, time and place of the event and contact in formation so that the pub lic can contact someone for more information if needed.*Please submit items in document form in an email or Word or PDF at tachment. wide by 6 inches deep rather than sent on docu ments. Please send cap tions with *Pleasephotos.donot send jpeg fliers only, since we cannot transfer the in formation on them into documents.Thedeadline is Sun day at 11:59 p.m. to have all calendar items submit ted for that week’s paper. Send your calendar items to news@wschron icle.com. You can also drop them off, Monday through Friday before 5 p.m., or mail your items to Winston-Salem Chroni cle, 1300 E. Fifth St., Win

Community Calendar

Sept. 2, 14 Cinema Under the Stars Reynolda House Mu seum of American Art is excited to announce the line-up for the 2022 sea son of Cinema Under the Stars. The films show cased this season have been curated by a/perture cinema and evoke the im agery and expression of Reynolda’s fall exhibition, Chrome Dreams and Infi nite Reflections: American Photorealism.OnFriday, Septem ber 2, the spotlighted film is “The Apartment,” the 1960 romantic comedy starring Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine. The season concludes on Friday, September 14, with “La La Land.” Re leased in 2016, this color ful, whimsical and musical film chronicles the highs and lows of struggling art ists in Los Angeles. Beer and wine will be available for purchase on the grounds begin ning at 7:30 p.m. and the movie will begin at sunset, around 8:30 p.m. Guests are encouraged to bring their own chair and/or blanket. In case of inclem ent weather, the showing will move indoors with limited seating.

Sept. Retirement6 workshop registration deadline

Your Next Chapter: A Workshop for Those Con templating Retirement is a three-session workshop being offered by the Shep herd’s Center of Greater Winston-Salem. The work shop is for anyone who is contemplating retirement or is recently retired. The dates for the workshop are September 13, 20 and 27, 2022 from 6:30 – 8 p.m. Workshop limited to 18 participants. Reservations are required by September 6. Registration fee of $25 for the workshop covers the cost of resource ma terials and refreshments. If you have questions, or wish more information on the workshop, contact the Shepherd’s Center at 336748-0217 or herdscenter.org.Info@Shep

Dr. Bronnie Harris Daniels

Sept. Festival10 for the home less Living Is Finally En joyable W-S, Inc. will present the seventh annual Festival for the Homeless 2-6 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 10, at Gateway Commons Park, 1580 Oak St. Ser vices that will be provided to the homeless population during the festival include showers, food, bags (with useful items to take away) and entertainment. The Forsyth County Health Department is providing COVID-19 vaccinations. The Winston-Salem State University Mobile Health Care Unit will be on site to do vital signs testing and provide health-care information. V-tae McMil lan will once again run the Kids’AdmissionZone. to the event is free. Donations to sup port the Festival and to help L.I.F.E. W-S, Inc., continue its mission may be sent to Living Is Finally Enjoyable W-S, Inc., P.O. Box 1, Winston-Salem, NC 27102. For more in formation, call 336-8430522.

Sept. Volunteer7 sign-up deadline

This exhibition has been made possible in part by the Winston-Salem (NC) Chapter of the Links, Incorporated and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Treva Hazlip Stimpson and Thomas Warren photographed in Five Row at Reynolda, 1950.

ActingNOW classes The Little Theatre of Winston-Salem is pleased to offer a wide array of act ing and technical theatre classes for children, teens, and adults during its 202223 season. Fall semester courses include Fractured Fairy Tales, The Brothers Grimm Spectaculathon, Your Presence – Stage & Screen, Costuming a Fairy Tale, and Improv Intensive. Previous expe rience is not required and everyone is encouraged to participate. Information and registration forms are available online at www. LTofWS.org or by calling (336) 725-4001.

This exhibition examines the lives of the Black women and men who helped shape Reynolda as it evolved from a Jim Crow era working estate into an American art museum. Through art, letters, photographs, and audiovisual recordings, Still I Rise: The Black Experience at Reynolda examines Reynolda’s complicated past in a space designed for reflection and healing.

LIFE AND LEGACY

September 7 · 5:30 p.m. · Free Reynolda House Museum of American Art reynolda.org

Dr. Bronnie Harris Daniels transitioned to her heavenly home August 22, 2022. A celebration of Christian Victory was held Saturday, August 27, 2022. Mrs. Daniels was God's faithful missionary. She served alongside her husband, the late Rev. Dr. B. F. Daniels, senior pastor of Union Baptist Church of Winston Salem,N. C. She was an educator retiring from the Winston Salem/Forsyth County School System after 35 years of service. As a missionary, she served in several organizations locally, in the state and abroad impacting lives of senior citizens, young adults and youth.

Oct. Oktoberfest1 Historic Körner’s Fol ly, 413 South Main Street, presents the Kernersville Oktoberfest, Saturday, Oc tober 1, from 3-6 p.m. This year will be the 12th annu al fundraising event in the spirit of a German Okto berfest, featuring tastings of local beers and foodie favorites. Tickets went on sale July Tickets20! include selfguided tour of the house, beer, wine, and food sam ples, as well as a Körner’s Folly souvenir tasting glass. Early Bird Tickets are $35 and will be sold through September 2; Af ter September 2, Ticket price will increase to $40. For more information, vis it www.kornersfolly.org or call (336) 996-7922.

Sept. Medicare26 workshop The Shepherd’s Center of Greater Winston-Salem is offering a workshop for individuals turning 65 (as well as those who already have Medicare) to learn about the different insur ance options available. The session is provided at no cost. Because space is limited, reservations are required. Contact the Shepherd’s Center at 336748-0217 or ainformationherdscenter.orgInfo@shepformoreortoreserveseat.

Now on Display HISTORIC HOUSE EXHIBITION

Dr. Daniels served as 11th President of The Original Forsyth County Missionary Union, President of the Rowan Auxiliary, Chairperson of District IV, Group 1 that included Forsyth, Rockingham, Stokes,and Surry Counties. She also served as the 15th President of the Woman's Baptist Home and Foreign Missionary Convention of North Carolina, Inc. and a member of the Executive Board of the Lott Carey Baptist Foreign Missionary Convention Women's Auxiliary. These organizations serve to connect the Baptist Churches and Faith Communities to present God's Mission around the globe through stewardship, training, healthcare, disaster relief, leadership development, spiritual growth, evangelism and fellowship. She traveled extensively to Brussels, Belgium, Paris, Switzerland, Africa and the Holy Land. Dr. Daniels volunteered with Crisis Control, Habitat for Humanity, the Forsyth Women's Shelter and the League of Women's Voters. She was recognized by the NAACP. Mechanics and Farmers Bank presented her with the Russell Funeral Home Lifetime Achievement Award. May her life and good deeds follow her. She is deeply missed.

North Carolina Coop erative Extension (NCCE), Forsyth County Center will host a public evening volunteer workday at the Arboretum at Tanglewood in conjunction with the Forsyth County Exten sion Master GardenerSM Volunteers (EMGVs) on September 8 from 5:45 - 7:30 p.m. Registration is required to attend the workday, please regis ter through bewalk-inpriortrationforsyth-eventbrite.go.ncsu.edu/Regiswillclosethedaytotheevent,andnoregistrationswillaccepted.

VolunteersNOW needed Samaritan Ministries needs volunteers to help with lunch and dinner sev en days a week 365 days a year. The lunch shift for volunteers is from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday and from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on Sundays. The dinner shift is from 4 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. every night. For more in formation about Samaritan Ministries and to sign up to volunteer, please visit samaritanforsyth.org. Sa maritan Ministries is locat ed at 414 East Northwest Boulevard near downtown Winston-Salem.

A8 S eptember 1, 2022 t he C hroni C le

Inspired by Still I Rise: The Black Experience at Reynolda, facilitator and artist Jacinta V. White will perform readings of select poems by Maya Angelou, along with quotes on the relationship between poetry and visual art. White is the publisher of the international quarterly, Snapdragon: A Journal of Art & Healing, and through The Word Project has been leading workshops for more than twenty years. This program has been made possible in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities: Democracy demands wisdom. Still I Rise: A Poetry Reading

Brandon Davis, standout shortstop, speaks about his path to scholarship

Photo by Robert Hill Photography Davis earned a scholarship to the University of North Carolina at Charlotte for his stellar work both on the field and in the classroom. See Baseball on B2

“I have been called racial slurs at least five times every year since I have been in middle school, all the way up to high school,” he said. “Mentally, to block out something and to not be the angry Black man is the hardest thing you’ll ever do in life.”Davis says one of the things that helped him through those tough times on the field was his father. Davis stated his father was one of the most “brutally honest” people he has ever met, and his father made him have tough skin that helped him ignore the igno rance he faced on the field.

Photos by Alphonso Abbott Jr. See BY TIMOTHY RAMSEY THEBrandonCHRONICLEDavis accomplished a lot during his time with the Reyn olds Demons baseball team. He collected a host of accolades and honors that has garnered him a lot of attention from the next level. After serious consideration, Da vis has chosen to play his college baseball at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte (UNCC). Davis is one of the best base ball players in the Triad area. He is a shortstop with tremendous skills at the plate and in the field. Those talents made him a desirable re cruit for several schools, but the 49ers won the Davis sweepstakes. “To start off, I always wanted to go somewhere where it could feel like family,” said Davis about UNCC. “I got a very family feel from UNC Charlotte and the coaching staff made me a priority the first day on campus. “I wanted to go somewhere I could trust, and I don’t have to ex pect surprises. I feel like Charlotte has been very honest with me. I wanted to go somewhere where I can go from there and then play at the next level, because even tually you won’t be able to play baseball. The facilities are there and the coaches are there and they have just about everything that can make you better.” There were other schools on the radar for Davis’s services. He originally committed to George town University; however, he opted to open back up his recruit ing during his senior season and UNCC became a viable option be cause of its proximity to WinstonSalem.“My mother and father are older and they both have preex isting conditions, so I needed to be somewhere closer to home,” said Davis. “I need to be able to still support them, especially my mom. Me and my mom have been through thick and thin together.” Being an African American baseball player is not lost on Da vis. He realizes that the number of Black players has dipped severely over the last 25 years and wants to be a part of making the sport popu lar with Black youth once again. “I am not only excited for me, I am excited for any other minority that sees me play,” he said. “That’s also a big part of any time I don’t want to do something, I have to remember that as well. I am not just doing it for me, I am doing it to motivate younger minorities to stay in the game and do what they do and show what they got. I real ized that it’s definitely bigger than just me and that helps motivate me everyDavisday.”excelled at several sports as a youth. He got into baseball by watching “The Sandlot” movie on television with his grandmother when he was a kid and fell in love with the game. “I wanted to be like every per son in The Sandlot and it was as simple as that, and it never stopped sticking and I always wanted to do it,” he says about how he fell in love with baseball. “Every day, every night, that’s all I thought about and that’s all I ever wanted to do. I have a passion for it.” Baseball came easy to Davis because of the hard work he put into his preparation. As a sevenyear-old, he was playing up in age against 11-year-old kids and was still the best player on the field. He played up in age all the way until he reached high school. Once he reached high school, he played at the highest level of AAU baseball from the start. He was able to play at such a high lev el due to the work ethic his father instilled in him. It was nearly an every night occurrence for them to hit and catch balls well after the sun went down.

ers faced off against one of the best football programs in the Triad last week in Grimsley High School out of Greensboro. The Raiders defense held the Whirlies JV offense in check all game and came away with a 21-8 victory.

THURSDAY, September 1, 2022Also Religion, Community News, For Seniors Only, and Classifieds

The Bills finished last season with an 11-6 record and won the AFC East. They were bounced out of the playoffs in a thriller against the Kansas City Chiefs. That was a game that none of us will soon forget. As we head into the 2022-23 season, the Bills are one of the bet ting favorites to not only win the AFC East, but to also represent the AFC in the Super Bowl as confer ence champions. It would be hard to argue with that due to what the Bills have coming back and the ad ditions they made in the offseason.TheBills added play ers such as Von Miller, Tim Settle, O.J. How ard, Shaq Lawson and Jamison Crowder to their roster this offseason. I think that Miller and Crowder will have the most impact. And another year of growth for Josh Allen and Stefon Diggs will only mean better re sults for the tandem. The Bills will have more com petition for the AFC East crown this year as Miami and New England have gotten better; however, there is too much talent in Buffalo, and they will repeat as division champs.

J.K. Dobbins and Gus Edwards should both be back at some point early on in the season to solid ify the Ravens’ backfield. The Ravens did trade wide receiver Hollywood Brown to the Cardinals, but Rashod Bateman should be able to step into that No. 1 wideout posi tion for Jackson. By no means will the Ravens run away with the division as the Browns will be competent and the Cincinnati Bengals, last year’s AFC representative in the Super Bowl, will be back and better than ever with their upgrades on the offensive line. Pittsburgh will also be a team to look BY TIMOTHY RAMSEY THEReagan’sCHRONICLEJunior Varsity football team is off to a hot start to the sea son. After defeating North Davidson the opening week 27-12, the Raid

“It’s no reason to be denied and he made me realize that at a very young age,” Davis said about the work ethic his father instilled in him.Due to his high skill level, there were a lot of expectations placed on the shoulders of Davis during his time at Reynolds. He says Reynolds was never a “pow erhouse” school when it comes to baseball and they had to fight to make it to the playoffs each and every

ColumnistTimothyRamseySports

AFC North: Balti more Ravens Earlier this offsea son, I was leaning toward the Cleveland Browns to win the AFC North. With the suspension of Deshaun Watson, I am going to have to choose the Ravens as winners of the AFC North. Ra vens’ quarterback Lamar Jackson missed several games last year and has been subject to a lot of unwarranted scrutiny this offseason due to contract negotiations, so I envision he will come out with a vengeance and shut a lot of people up. The Ravens were also decimated with injuries to their running back corps.

2022 BillspredictionsDivisionNFLwinnerAFCEast:Buffalo

NFL on B4

“Simplyyear. put, I had to be great and it’s been like that since my freshman year,” he stated. “They expect me to go four for four ev ery game with four doubles, make six diving plays and that’s just the expectations. Expectations have always been very high for me and I hope I met them. I felt like I did prettyUnfortunatelygood.” for Davis, his time on the field hasn’t been all peaches and cream. He says he has had to endure racial slurs on the field from fans, opposing players and even teammates.

page

SUBMITTED ARTICLE The Winston-Salem State University depart ment of athletics has an nounced the following procedures and prices for parking during the 2022 footballParkingseason.tickets will be sold and issued upon the entry to the parking area. On Game Day, no re-entry is permitted.Homecoming day parking lots will open at 6 a.m. The cost is $40 per space in the south lot; east/ west/driver’s ed lots are $30 per space; and Ander son Center is $20. Motor cycle parking is $10. To reserve parking in the south lot and handicap spaces prior to October 1, please call the WSSU tick et office at 336-750-3220. Game day entrances are open to all general parking lots three hours prior to Pleasekick-off.note, vehicles parked in the south lot af ter 5 p.m. before game day will be towed. The tow fee is $125. Any RVs that need overnight parking before game day should contact parking services for ar rangements at 336-7502905. Parking fee is a min imum of four spaces. All parking tickets should be displayed on the dashboard of your vehicle. For more information on parking, visit www.ws surams.com or call campus parking at 336-750-3230.

Another struggle for Davis throughout his ca reer was coaches attempt ing to change his position. Because he is such a good athlete, he says coaches would move him to the outfield routinely. Davis, however, wanted to play the middle infield at short stop. He says he never told a coach no and made the most of the position chang es, but his talent at short stop stood out so much he stuckDavisthere.doesn’t model his game after just one player. He has guys that he likes for their individual skill sets on the diamond. “My dream is to be like Ozzie Smith, but I can’t do a million flips,” he said jokingly. “I always wanted to be like Francisco Lin dor because we play the game the same way. I al ways wanted to have the passion of Javy Baez. I always wanted to have the speed of Billy Hamilton. I always wanted to have the triple crowns of a Miguel Cabrera. I’ve always watched a different person for a different aspect of the game, so I could never like spot one guy.” Davis gives a lot of credit to his parents for all of their dedication to his love of the game of base ball. They have slept in the car, driven all across the country and made many sacrifices to ensure Davis had every opportu nity to succeed. He says he couldn’t have done it with out their Brandon’sefforts.mother, Ka trina Davis, says they have faced some impossible situations, but God has led them to this point to have Brandon receive a scholar ship to “Withcollege.Brandon, my last child, it was more respon sibility on me,” said Mrs. Davis. “Now, my husband is in a position to take care of everything financially, so my life is about the chil dren and he is the last one and I couldn’t fail. Fail ure was not an option and whatever sacrifices needed to be made on my part wasn’t a question, because my children are my life. “To hear him speak of the sacrifices, our input and our methods is sound ing like it paid off and we didn’t do too bad. God has plans for us and we always can’t see through them. It’s nothing other than the manifestations of God.” From B1

B2 S eptem B er 1, 2022 t he C hroni C le Welcome to THURS, SEPT 1 AT TRUIST FIEL D WAKE FOREST VS VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE ENJOY FOUR TICKETS AND A PARKING PASS FOR ONLY $69 WHILE SUPPLIES LAST. O PENING NIGHT TICKET PAC K AGE $69 Points For Points Against 1. E. Forsyth (2-0) 96 38 2. Grimsley (2-0) 82 48 3. E. Surry (2-0) 69 19 4. Eastern Alamance (2-0) 70 42 5. Mt. Tabor (2-0) 97 14 6. Dudley (1-1) 33 30 7. Reidsville (1-1) 58 29 8. Thomasville (1-0) 14 0 9. Northern Guilford (2-0) 100 34 10. Oak Grove (2-0) 46 34 11. Ledford (2-0) 98 21 12. Walkertown (2-0) 75 0 13. Southeast Guilford (2-0) 67 20 14. W. Stokes (2-0) 65 14 15. Reagan (1-1) 65 64 Honorable Mention: High Point Andrews (2-0), Cummings (1-1), Mt. Airy (1-1), Salisbury 1-1) Friday Night Fowler’s Top 15 Triad Area Teams JamaalFowler Points For Points Against 1. Butler (2-0) 67 7 2. Kings Mountain (2-0) 52 26 3. Charlotte Catholic (2-0) 76 60 4. Havelock (2-0) 103 0 5. Wallace Rose-Hill (2-0) 96 25 6. Chambers (1-1) 48 40 7. Tarboro (1-1) 89 61 8. Scotland (1-1) 58 18 9. Hough (1-1) 57 33 10. Seventy First (2-0) 66 6 11. New Bern (2-0) 101 3 12. South Point (2-0) 76 19 13. Wake Forest (2-0) 52 8 14. Burns (2-0) 77 12 15. Mallard Creek (1-1) 28 59 Honorable Mention: Cleveland (2-0), Weddington (1-1), Independence (2-0), Olympic (2-0), Lee County (1-1) Friday Night Fowler’s Top 15 Teams Outside the Triad

WSSU announces parking procedures, prices during football season

Baseball

CALENDAR

Faith Calls for PerseveranceRELIGION

Alpha and Omega Church of Faith, Inc., the national headquarters of the Churches of Faith, Inc. celebrated its 75th anniver sary and the 2022 South eastern Regional Confer ence in Winston-Salem, July 29-31. The theme for the gathering comes from Deuteronomy 10:11-22: “Possess the Land.”

The Forsyth County Missionary Union will celebrate its 112th Anniversary and have a memorial service on Sunday, Aug. 28, at 3 p.m. The host church will be Zion Memorial Baptist Church. Rev. Randell Cain is the se nior pastor. Services will be in-person and on Facebook. COVID protocol measures will be taken. If you plan to attend in person, please wear white attire. How to submit items to the Religion calendar: The deadline is Sunday at 11:59 p.m. to have all calendar items submitted for that week’s paper. Send your calendar items to news@wschronicle.com. You can also drop them off, Monday through Friday before 5 p.m., or mail your items to Winston-Salem Chronicle, 1300 E. Fifth St., Winston-Salem, N.C. 27101; or send them via our website, www.wschronicle.com.

Aug. 28 First Waughtown Baptist Church (FWBC) Dr. Dennis W. Bishop, Senior Pastor of First Waugh town Baptist Church (FWBC), will continue the series, Characteristics of the Holy Spirit (reference scriptures - 1 Corinthians 2; 1 Thessalonians 5:16-22, John 16:1214). Front doors will open at 9:15 a.m. for screening, devotion, and announcements prior to the 10 a.m. ser vice. Completed waiver forms and masks that cover the nose and mouth are required. The form can be submitted electronically on the FWBC website – www.firstwaugh town.org -- click on RE-ENTRY 2022, and printed cop ies are available in the lobby. Other in-person protocols and information about 6 p.m. virtual Sunday School are accessible via the FWBC homepage RE-ENTRY link. Persons who prefer to worship virtually can find the service on YouTube, https://www.youtube.com (First Waughtown); Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/ FirstWaughtown/; and the First Waughtown website, https://www.firstwaughtown.org. (NOTE: Services are posted on a one-week delay.)

See Faith on B4 SUBMITTED ARTICLE

Aug. 112th28anniversary

“There were very few African Americans build ing their own homes in the 1940s. People trav eled from miles around just to see the house built by the Preacher Lady on Gray Avenue. Even today, people stop by just to look at it,” said Brenda Redd. “At one time, we consid ered selling it because we thought that one of the Al pha and Omega members might want to live in it, but we have decided that this will be the last home we will buy. We love it.”

T he C hroni C le S ep T ember 1, 2022 b 3 RichardElderWayneWoodSundaySchoolLesson

On Friday night, church mem bers from Alpha and Ome ga Church of Faith and from Sacred Heart Church of Faith in Brooklyn, New York, enjoyed a meet and greet reception, a dramatic tribute to the founder of the organization, Bishop Belva Jeffreyes Williams Fair, and the ministry of the Word by Dr. Felecia Piggott-Anderson.OnSaturday the at tendees participated in three workshops: “Men tal Health in the African American Community” by Marcia Piggott, Daymark Recovery Services, Min. Taneisha Sanders, coun selor, Thomasville City Schools, and Sonji Ander son, psychology scholar, Carter G. Woodson School of Challenge. They fo cused on the symptoms, causes and preventive measures for suicide in the Black community. Allan Younger, award-winning business management in structor from IDEA in Durham, spoke on “Small Business Management in the Black Community.” Pastors Joseph and Fele cia Anderson spoke on the topic “African American Village Consciousness.” Elder Grover Reed, Jr., pastor of Sacred Heart Church of Faith, Inc., min istered the Word of God on the theme. On Sunday, Bishop Robert Williams of Sacred Heart Church of Faith, Inc. ministered the Word of God. The play titled “A Tribute to the Founder of Alpha and Omega, Bishop Belva Jeffreyes Williams Fair,” by Dr. Felecia Pig gott-Anderson and trustee Belva Marlin was present ed. Bishop Williams Fair is the namesake of Belva Marlin. When Marlin’s mother Evangelist Mary A. Lawson Vincent joined Alpha and Omega Church, she was carrying a daugh ter, and Vincent decided to name her child after Mother Williams. Mother Belva Williams started the Metaphysical Churches of Faith, Inc. as a prayer circle in When1947.Mother Wil liams sought refuge in Detroit, Michigan, in the 1940s, she was suffering from a severe heart condi tion. While in Detroit, she was a member of the Un denominational Churches of Faith, where the head quarters of the organiza tion stood. For several years her affiliation with this body continued as she sought the Lord for pur pose, direction and heal ing. She fasted and prayed and studied. During this time, she received a call ing to ministry through a vision from God. In this vision, she saw herself as the statue of Liberty car rying a torch in her right hand. God commanded her to “Go forth and bless the world.” She became a Truth student. After she believed she had enough preparation for ministry, she decided to return to Winston-Salem.Withthehelp of El der William Cornelius Thomas, Mother Williams founded The Blessed Mar tin Circle in the basement of her home at 1720 Gray Avenue. Brenda (George) Redd, the current owner of the home since 1974, said that the house has always been a major attraction in the city of Winston-Salem.

Alpha and Omega Church of Faith offers tribute to the founder during regional conference

Williams

Have The Chronicle conveniently delivered to your mailbox!Order your subscription today by calling 336-722-8524, ext. 100 or order online at www.wschronicle.com and click Order Subscription.

Submitted photo Jeffreyes

Each WorshipSundayservices Green Street United Methodist Church, 639 S. Green St., Winston-Salem, invites you to join online worship services on Sundays at 11 a.m., or in-person services at 8:45 a.m. The 11 a.m. service, which is available via Facebook and YouTube, is a celebration of the diversity of the human family, a no-frills service that is thought ful, personal, and deeply spiritual. The 8:45 a.m. service is a quiet, contemplative space including prayer, scrip ture, preaching, and communion; masks and social dis tancing will be in effect in the sanctuary. Join us at www. greenstreetumc.org, on YouTube, or on Facebook.

Each SundaySundayservice Transformation Ministries will have service every Sunday at 10 a.m. We are located at 4880 Burnette Drive. Masks are required.

3rd Friday of each month Women’s fellowship The Antioch Baptist Church (ABC) Women, 5061 Lansing Dr., cordially invites all women to join us the third Friday of each month at 7 p.m. for conversation as we share and embrace each other in these challenging times. Join us via conference call. Dial in: 267-807-9601 Access Code:189545592#. Rev. Frederick L. Barnes, Jr. is the senior pastor. For more information, call 336-9923751.

In the production, Mother Williams kneels in prayer as she answers the call to start the prayer circle. They use various methods to reach out to God, including rosary beads that called upon them to cite Hail Marys, several “Glory Be’s,” and the Apostle’s Creed. They had prayer daily and the circle was integrated. Mother Williams taught the members the value of faith and spiritual laws. “God is teaching us how man can release his mind from the limitation of matter and soar into the inspiring lofty realm of spiritual dimensions of life. God is showing us how we can magnetize and attract to ourselves money, jobs, and other material things we stand in need of,” said Mother Williams. Many of the high school students secured scholar ships and other valuable opportunities as a result of their prayers. Also, many people were healed and saved.Mother Williams still is greatly respected. She departed this life on April 1, 1969.

Belva

Scriptures: Hebrews 10:19-31 By the end of this lesson, we will: *Know Jesus’ sacrificial death opens the way to the presence of God; *Feel the importance of holding on to faith in Jesus; *Share our faith with others. Background: The book of Hebrews was written to exhort believers not to fall away, but to persevere in Christ. It was written to connect the Christian faith of Jews and Gentiles with all that God had done to reveal Himself and His promises throughout the Old Testa ment. The writer shows that Jesus is greater than every thing that came before Him and because Jesus is great, the people would be foolish to neglect such a great sal vation and return to lesser forms of worship. The intent of the book is to protect the first Christians from apos tasy and to foster their passionate worship of the One who is greater. Lesson: The Priesthood of Christ is Superior (He brews 10:19-21). “Having therefore, brethren, boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus” (verse 19). The previous verses 16-18 make this verse a point of fact. The point is Jesus’ blood – “because it cleanses conscience and inaugurates a new covenant” - makes entry into the holiest possible. The High Priest entered the holiest place of all with fear and trembling, but we can enter the holiest with boldness “by the blood of Je sus.” “By a new and living way which He hath conse crated for us through the veil, that is to say, His flesh;” (verse 20). The “way” designates the Christian move ment and it is “new” because the covenant is new and “living” like God’s Word, Now under the New Cov enant we have access because of the perfect sacrifice of the sinless Son of God, and it is as if the living resur rected Jesus ushers us into the throne room of God. “… through the veil, that is to say, His flesh,” When Jesus’ flesh was torn at His crucifixion, so was the temple veil that symbolically separated men from God’s pres ence. “And having a high priest over the house of God” (verse 21). Jesus is our high priest who presides over the heavenly courts to make certain that we, the believ er, have total access. The Priesthood of Christ and Our Profession of Faith (verses 22-25). “Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith …” (verse 22a). It is the work of Jesus that makes us able to draw near in full assur ance of faith. “Having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water” (verse 22b). The “heart sprinkled“ could refer to a pu rification ritual from Leviticus mentioned in Hebrews 9:13, “bodies washed” referred to baptism, which is the outward rite cleansing the ritual defilement in biblical days, and is now an outward sign of an inward cleans ing. “Let us hold fast the profession of our faith with out wavering; …” (verse 23a). In light of what Jesus did, let us hold fast to the truth – temptation will come, but God is faithful to provide an escape. “… for He is faithful that promised;” (verse 23b). God’s promises are reliable - it is far better to trust in His faithfulness rather than ours! “And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works” (verse 24). He brews was written during a time of persecution of the church. The believers avoided community at the very time they needed it most. So the word provoke was not the negative form – for the Greeks it was a notion of the moral life as a contest, but a broader view could be to Thursdays and Saturdays Free Meals Christ Rescue Temple Church, 1500 North Dunleith Ave., will serve hot meals as part of the People Helping People Feeding Program. Meals will be served every Thursday and Saturday from noon until 1 p.m. at the church’s location. For more information, call 336-7229841.

The Dallas Cowboys ran away with the division last year, going 6-0. This year it will be a differ ent story as the Cowboys have lost some significant pieces from last year’s team, like Amari Cooper and Randy Gregory. The Eagles, on the other hand, have added necessary pieces to their team that should get them the divi sionFormercrown.

Tennessee Titan wide receiver A.J. Brown is one of the best young pass catchers in the league and his presence should make Jalen Hurts’ job a lot easier. The Eagles were also the No. 1 run ning team in the league, so they should remain one of the leagues’ best this sea son. Their defense is also a solid unit and probably the best in the Historicallydivision.the NFC East has been one of the best divisions in football but has been down in re cent years. All four teams are making strides to be come respectable once again, but this year the Eagles should take the division, with Dallas and Washington fighting for second place and possibly a playoff spot.

B4 S eptem B er 1, 2022 t he C hroni C le out for as well, so there will be no easy wins in this division.

I have my reservations about choosing the Rams because of the shoulder injury concerns of quar terback Matthew Stafford. The defending Super Bowl champions are the best team in the division, hands down, but shoulder con cerns to a starting quarter back are Seattlescary.isa non-factor and I don’t think Arizona will be a threat due to the suspension of DeAndre Hopkins. San Francisco could be an intriguing team. The 49ers were just in the conference champi onship game a year ago, but we are all waiting to see how good new starting quarterback Trey Lance really is. If Lance is as ad vertised, the Niners could challenge the Rams for tops in the division.

FYI: Forsyth County Sunday School Union will meet “virtually” ev ery third Sunday, at 3 p.m. with teaching and pro grams. You may join us ing the following “Zoom” credentials: ID 819 7872 9662, Passcode 787444, Phone: 1-301-715-8592.

NFC South: Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The Green Bay Pack ers have been the class of the division for years and I see no change for this upcoming year. The Pack ers did lose Adams and Scantling, but with reign ing two-time MVP Aaron Rodgers still at the top of his game, I think the Pack ers will be just fine. I don’t have much faith in the Vikings or the Bears to try and make a push for the division and the Lions are still a long way away from competing. Rodgers is still one of the best two quarterbacks in the league and he should make up for any deficiencies that the Packers have on offense.

The Colts were a good team last year led by now Washington Command ers’ quarterback Carson Wentz. This season the Colts have former Atlanta Falcons’ MVP winning quarterback Matt Ryan leading the charge. Run ning back Jonathan Tay lor had a breakout year in his sophomore season and wide receiver Michael Pit tman Jr. is emerging as one of the young stars at the position.Their defense was a solid unit led by Shaquille Leonard and newly ac quired Stephon Gilmore. The Colts should be good on both sides of the ball that will probably lead to a better record than their 9-8 record of last season. They were on the verge of a playoff spot last season, but this year I feel they will make it.

NFC West: Los Ange les Rams

NFC North: Green Bay Packers

The Bucs finished the regular season last year with a 13-4 record and they were close to yet an other Super Bowl berth with Tom Brady under center. Fortunately for Tampa Bay, none of the other teams in the divi sion made any significant strides to challenge their status as the best in the di vision.Iwill admit that I am interested to see how the New Orleans Saints play this year. Their offense should be scary this year. Jameis Winston has weap ons all over the place with Michael Thomas, Jarvis Landry and rookie Chris Olave at wideout. He also still has Alvin Kamara in the backfield as one of the most versatile backs in the league.Atlanta and Carolina are still rebuilding so they pose no threat to Tampa. With question marks still in New Orleans, I feel the Bucs will take the NFC South, but not by a land slide as many think.

The AFC West is the best division in all of pro fessional football. I think all four teams should have a winning record and all four have a shot at a play off berth. One could make a case for all four teams as division winners be cause every team made significant upgrades in the offseason. I went back and forth for a while, but I think the Chiefs will once again win the division. Yes, I know the Chiefs lost Tyreek Hill to Miami, but Kansas City brought in some quality alternatives in the offseason. Players like JuJu Smith-Schuster, Marquez Valdes-Scantling and Mecole Hardman should pick up a lot of the slack left by the departure of Hill. The Chiefs also drafted Skyy Moore out of Western Michigan. Moore is a shifty wideout that runs good routes. They still have Travis Kelce and Clyde Edwards-Hilaire as reliable playmakers at the skillTheposition.AFCWest is going to be the most competi tive division in the league with Las Vegas bringing in Davante Adams to pair with Derek Carr. Denver brought in Russell Wilson to be their signal caller and the Chargers brought in Khalil Mack to play oppo site of Joey Bosa, making them one of the best pass rush tandems in the league. Until otherwise, the Chiefs are still the class of the di vision.

AFC South: India napolis Colts

NFC East: Philadel phia Eagles

For Your Consider ation: Why was the rent ing of the veil of the tem ple of great significance for the New Testament be lievers, then and now? Application: Make a daily affirmation to share your faith. Ask God for boldness to share your faith with others. God will give you the opportunity and lessen your desire to be faithful. (UMI).

NFL From page B1 “stir up” or “incite “ – lov ing one another will not just happen! There needs to be action. Jesus meets us in one another to stir up love and good works. “Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together … but exhorting one another …” (verse 25a). Forsaking fellowship is a sure way to give place to discourage ment. Meeting with other believers regularly will foster encouragement, ac countability, worship and prayer. “… and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching” (verse 25b). As the day of Jesus’ return draws nearer, we should be more committed to the fel lowship of God’s people. The Priesthood of Christ and Knowledge (verses 26-27). “For if we sin willfully after that we have received the knowl edge of the truth, there re maineth no more sacrifice for sins,” (verse 26a). This is a warning against apos tasy, an intentional falling away, or defection. Apos tates are those who move toward Christ, hear and understand His gospel, and are on the verge of saving belief, but then rebel and turn away. “It has noth ing to do with backsliders in our common use of the term. A man may be over taken in a fault, or he may deliberately go into sin, and yet neither renounce the Gospel, nor deny the Lord that brought him. His case is dreary and dangerous, but not hope less.” (Clarke). “… there remaineth no more sacri fice for sins” (verse 26b). If Jesus’ sacrifice for sin is rejected, there remains no other sacrifice that can cleanse. Verse 27 points to judgment resulting in an eternity in the lake of fire. The Priesthood of Christ and How God will Judge His People (verses 28-31). “He that despised Moses’ law died without mercy under two, or three witnesses:” (verse 28). Blasphemy and idolatry required two or three wit nesses for any conviction of the death penalty. “Of how much sorer punish ment, suppose ye, … an unholy thing, and hath done despite unto the Spirit of Grace?” (verse 29). By rejecting Jesus’ work on the cross as suf ficient, we have trampled the Son of God underfoot, considered Jesus’ blood of no greater importance than the countless animals sacrificed under Old Cov enant, offended the Holy Spirit, whose purpose is to present Jesus and His work to us when we reject Jesus and His finished work on our behalf.

FromFaithpage B3 EXPERIENCE THE MAGIC OF LIVE uncsa.edu/performancesENTERTAINMENT | 336-721-1945 | boxoffice@uncsa.edu Scan for the entire performance calendar ASTICKETSLOWAS$20

AFC West: Kansas City Chiefs

Verse 30 “… Vengeance belongeth unto Me, I will recompense, saith the Lord. And again the Lord shall judge His people” (verse 30). There will be a full meeting out of justice to all parties. We can leave judgment and re payment up to God. “It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God (verse 31). Falling into the hands of God can be posi tive, but when divine judg ment is involved, it can be fearful, especially for those who have resisted His love, refused His sal vation, despised the warn ings of His Holy Spirit and persistently past the point where God can consistent ly show grace.” (Newell). (The UMI Annual Com mentary 2021-2022, The King James Study Bible, The Modern Life Study Bible, The MacArthur Study Bible, The New In terpreters Study Bible, and The Oxford Bible Com mentary).

This the 16th day of August, 2022--. Vanglee Jones Jr. Administrator for Vanglee Jones, Sr., deceased 2031 Christian Lane Kinston, NC 28504

The Chronicle August 18, 25 and September 1, 8 2022

§ 160D-1121 AND SECTION 10-36.4 OF THE CODE OF ORDINANCES OF THE CITY OF WINSTON-SALEM

An administrative hearing is hereby set for 2:00 P.M. on Thursday, September 8, 2022. Please meet in the lobby of the Bryce A. Stuart Municipal Building located at 100 East First Street in Winston-Salem, at which time all parties will retire to a private conference room. You shall be entitled to be heard in person or by legal counsel regarding all legal and factual questions relating to the matter. At this time, you and/or counsel shall be entitled to offer such evidence which is relevant or material to the questions sought to be determined or the remedies sought to be effected. Pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 160D-1121, following the hearing, the Building Inspector may issue an order to repair, close, vacate, or demolish the building as appears appropriate.

CallAdvertisewithus!722-8624

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Gaynelle AdministratorShaversfor Tasha R. Shavers, deceased 5160 Britt Road Winston-Salem, NC 27105 August 25, and September 1, 8, 15, 2022

Carolyn Brown KelvinAdminstratorCovingtonforJermaineBrown,deceased3836WabashBoulevardWinston-Salem,NC27106 Chronicle September 1, 8, 15, 22, 2022

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM PUBLIC NOTICE

The Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Housing Consortium has prepared its Consolidated Annual Performance and Evaluation Report (CAPER) consisting of the Community Development Block Grant, HOME, Emergency Solutions Grant, and Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS annual performance reports for FY 2021-2022. Reports on COVID-19-related funds are also included. Copies will be available for public review and comment beginning September 1, 2022 through 5:00 PM on September 15, 2022. Comments can be submitted by email to HCSD@cityofws.org (CAPER Comments in subject line) or mailed to Mellin Parker, CAPER Comments, Community Development Department, City of WinstonSalem, P.O. Box 2511, Winston-Salem, NC 27102. The draft may be viewed at September 1, 2022

NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Vida Joann Combs Self (22 E 1460), May 22, 2022 DATE, Forsyth County, North Carolina, this is to Notify all persons, firms, and corporation having claims against the Estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned on or before December 5, 2022 this Notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery. All persons indebted to the said decedent or estate shall please make immediate payment to the unThisdersigned.the1st day of December, 2021. David Barry Self Executor for Vida Joann Combs Self, deceased 325 Gloucestershire Rd. Winston-Salem, NC 27104 September 1, 8, 15, 22, 2022

MISCELLANEOUS TOP CA$H PAID FOR OLD GUITARS! 1920-1980 Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker, Prairie State, D'Angelico, Stromberg. And Gibson Mandolins / Banjos. DIAGNOSED833-649-2292WITH LUNG CANCER? You may qualify for a substantial cash award - even with smoking history. NO obligation! We've recovered millions. Let us help!! Call 24/7, 844-641-0129 Prepare for power outages today with a GENERAC home standby generator $0 Money Down + Low Monthly Payment Options. Request a FREE Quote – Call now before the next power outage: 1-844Denied938-0700Social Security Disability? Appeal! If you're 50+, filed SSD and denied, our attorneys can help! Win or Pay Nothing! Strong, recent work history needed. 877-553-0252 [Steppacher Law Offices LLC Principal Office: 224 Adams Ave Scranton PA 18503] Replace your roof with the best looking and longest lasting material – steel from Erie Metal Roofs! Three styles and multiple colors available. Guaranteed to last a lifetime! Limited Time Offer - $500 Discount + Additional 10% off install (for military, health workers & 1st responders.) Call Erie Metal Roofs: 1-855-585-1815 Safe Step. North America’s #1 Walk-In Tub. Comprehensive lifetime warranty. Top-of-the-line installation and service. Now featuring our FREE shower package and $1600 Off for a limited time! Call today! Financing available. Call Safe Step AUTO1-855-931-3643INSURANCE STARTING AT $49/ MONTH! Call for your fee rate comparison to see how much you can save! Call: 833-472-0580 DISH Network. $64.99 for 190 Channels! Blazing Fast Internet, $19.99/mo. (where available.) Switch & Get a FREE $100 Visa Gift Card. FREE Voice Remote. FREE HD DVR. FREE Streaming on ALL Devices. Call today! 1-877-920-7405 Get your FREE Information Kit Product not available in all states. Includes the Participating (in GA: Designated) Providers and Preventive Benefits Rider. Acceptance guaranteed for one insurance policy/certificate of this type. Contact us for complete details about this insurance solicitation. This specific offer is not available in CO, NY; call 1-800-969-4781 or respond for similar offer. Certificate C250A (ID: C250E; PA: C250Q); Insurance Policy P150 (GA: P150GA; NY: P150NY; OK: P150OK; TN: P150TN). Rider kinds: B438, B439 (GA: B439B). DENTAL Insurance If you’ve put off dental care, it’s easy to get back on track. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company now for inexpensive dental insurance. Get help paying for the dental care you need. Getting back to the dentist couldn’t be easier! CALL TODAY 1-844-496-8601Dental50Plus.com/ncpress reservedspaceThisforyou!Call722-8624 BEAUTIFUL BATH UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY! Superior quality bath and shower systems at AFFORDABLE PRICES! Lifetime warranty & professional installs. 833-987-0207 Eliminate gutter cleaning forever! LeafFilter, the most advanced debris-blocking gutter protection. Schedule a FREE LeafFilter estimate today. 15% off Entire Purchase. 10% Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1-877-649-1190 We Cancel TIMESHARES for You Every year 150,000 people reach out to us for help getting rid of their timeshare. In 2019, we relieved over $50,000,000 in timeshare debt and maintenance fees. We can help. Get your free information kit and see if you qualify: 844-213-6711 FROM $2,549 $2 1-855-874-7693,299promocodeN7017 Prices are per person based on double occupancy plus $299 in taxes & fees. Single supplement and seasonal surcharges may apply. Add-on airfare available. O ers apply to new bookings only, made by 9/30/22. Other terms & conditions may apply. Ask your Travel Consultant for details. Oahu • Hawaii Island • Kauai • Maui — Enjoy a fully guided 4-island Hawaiian vacation with centrally located lodging in Waikiki on Oahu, and beachfront lodging on the “Big Island” of Hawaii, Kauai, and Maui. Guided throughout by our friendly Tour Directors— your local experts. Includes 3 inter-island flights. 12 days, departs year-round BEST OF HAWAII FOUR-ISLAND TOUR CARRIES THE MOST LOCAL MLB GAMES † 855.548.9839 IV SupportHoldings ContactyourlocalDIRECTV dealer! No annual contract Pricesubjecttochange. $89 99MO. CHOICE PACKAGE 90+ Live TV Channels 722-8624Call to SubscribeTHE CHRONICLE www. wschronicle .com adv@wschronicle.comis:addresse-mailChronicle’sThe

Having qualified as Fiduciary of the Estate of John Wesley Leavy, Sr. (22 E 1669), deceased July 7, 2022 Forsyth County, North Carolina, this is to Notify all persons, firms, and corporation having claims against the Estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned on or before November 15, 2022 this Notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery. All persons indebted to t he said decedent or estate shall please make immediate payment to the unThisdersigned.the11th day of August, 2022.

John Wesley Leavy, Jr. Fiduciary for John Wesley Leavy, Sr. deceased 3779 Carver School Road Winston-Salem, NC 27105

This the 25th day of August, 2022.

Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Vanglee Jones, Sr. (21 E 1775), also known as Rev. Vanglee Jones, Sr., Rev. Van Jones Sr., deceased April 14, 2022, Forsyth County, North Carolina, this is to Notify all persons, firms, and corporation having claims against the Estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned on or before November 21, 2022 this Notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery. All persons indebted to the said decedent or estate shall please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

Jimmy KrystalAdministratorKennedyforMichelleKennedy,deceased1944MarylandAve.Winston-Salem,NC27101

T he C hroni C le S ep T ember 1, 2022 b 5 CLASSIFIEDS LEGAL NOTICESDEADLINE: MONDAY 5:30 PM • CALL CLASSIFIEDS AT (336) 722-8624 We accept major credit card payment on all classfied Ads. Email us your ad by Monday...see it on Thursday: adv@wschronicle.com LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES T HE C HRONICLE O C T O B E R 2 5 , 2 0 1 8 B 7 MISCELLANEOUS

acriminateThePhttps://www.cityofws.org/213/Annual-erformance-Reports,oratthefollowinglocations:CityofWinston-SalemCommunityDevelopmentDepartment–StuartMunicipalBuilding,Suite423,100E.FirstStreetCityClerk’sOffice-Room140,CityHall,101N.MainStreetForsythCountyCommunityandEconomicDevelopment–201N.ChestnutStreet,5thFloorCityofWinston-Salemdoesnotdis-onthebasisofrace,sex,color,ge,nationalorigin,religion,ordisabilityinitsemploymentopportunities,pro-grams,orservices. The Chronicle

The Chronicle

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

The

This Notice is drawn and given under the provisions of N.C.G.S. § 160D-1121 and Section 10-36.4 of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Winston-Salem. This notice is to inform you that, pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 160D-1121 and the Winston-Salem Code of Ordinances Sec. 10-36.1(a), the building located at 1411 North Liberty Street (also known as Parcel ID: 6836-52-4486.000) in Winston-Salem, NC has been declared unsafe by the Building Inspector and appears to meet one of more of the following conditions: (i) constitutes a fire or safety hazard; (ii) is dangerous to life, health or other property; (iii) is likely to cause or contribute to blight, disease, vagrancy or danger to children; or (iv) is considered by the city to have a tendency to attract persons intent on crim inal activities or other activities that would constitute a public nuisance.

This notice applies to all next of kin of the property owner(s) of the address at 1411 N. Liberty Street including known or unknown heirs, devisees, successors, transferees, legal representatives, (deceased) or any other assigns whether in being or not in being, or en ventre sa mere, including those under mental disability, in the military service, minors, the spouse of each, if any, the beneficiaries or trustees of each, if any, all other persons, firms, or corporations, active or dissolved, foreign or domestic, who now have, or might in any contingency have, or claim, or may hereafter claim, any right, title or interest or estate this DateCityBuildingJamisonproperty.RoeInspectorofWinston-SalemIssued:

Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Kelvin Jermaine Brown (22 D 1659), deceased on May 28, 2022, Forsyth County, North Carolina, this is to Notify all persons, firms, and corporation having claims against the Estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned on or before December 5, 2022 this Notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery. All persons indebted to the said decedent or estate shall please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 1st day of September, 2022.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Tasha R. Shavers (22 E 1119), deceased August 21, 2021, Forsyth County, North Carolina, this is to Notify all persons, firms, and corporation having claims against the Estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned on or before November 28, 2022 this Notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery. All persons indebted to the said decedent or estate shall please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

This the 16th day of August, 2022.

The Chronicle August 11, 18, 25 and September 1, 2022

The Chronicle August 18, 25 and September 1, 8 2022

Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Krystal Michelle Kennedy (22 E 1809), also known as Krystal Kennedy, Krystal M. Kennedy, deceased July 28, 2022, Forsyth County, North Carolina, this is to Notify all persons, firms, and corporation having claims against the Estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned on or before November 21, 2022 this Notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery. All persons indebted to the said decedent or estate shall please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

August 25, 2022 The Chronicle August 25 and September 1, 2022

NORTH NOTICEFORSYTHCAROLINACOUNTYPURSUANTTON.C.G.S.

In the Matter of: 1411 North Liberty Street Winston-Salem, North Carolina Known as Pin No. 6836-52-4486.000 TO: ARTHUR DAVIS, JUDY JOYNER HARPER, STEPHEN JOYNER, AND THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF WILL WIL SON DAVIS, LOIS QUINN, GLADYS SMITH, ARTHUR DAVIS, EDWARD JOYNER, IMOGENE JOYNER, RAY JOYNER, AND EDWARD BEVERLY JOYNER

The Chronicle

*Writing Stories from your Life - Every second Monday from 10 a.m.-12 p.m. For additional classes held at this center, visit https://lewisvillenc.net/MAWCC and click on Classes Offered. Brown & Douglas Active Adult Center, 4725 Indiana Avenue: Various activities for seniors. Contact Serena Mumford at 336-661-4998 or email serenam@cityofws.org for more information.

*Tuesday, Sept. 6, 10-11 a.m., Get help with your technology

*Adult Children of Aging Parents meeting, (third Tuesday), will be held Sept. 20 from 5:30-7:00 p.m. on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/ groups/1623251384697687. All are welcome, but the focus will be on the needs of adult children who are caring for their aging parents. For more information, visit www.ACAPcommunity.org and look for Winston-Salem under the “Find your chapter” tab, or join our Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/ groups/1623251384697687.*SalemBandFallConcert, Sept. 25, 3 p.m. in Hanes Auditorium, Elberson Fine Arts Center, on the campus of Salem College. Join Salem Band for an afternoon of your favorite classics from the popular Looney Tunes cartoons! Music by Brahma, Johann Strauss, Franz Liszt, and more. Hear Barber of Seville, Dance of the Co medians, Blue Danube Waltz and other selections to accompany some of the most popular cartoon episodes. Free!

*Thursdays, 1:30 – 4:00 p.m., Chess with Paul Sluder.

*Thursdays at 3 p.m., Thinking Outside the Box Discussion Group. Meets in person on lower level. Mary Alice Warren Community Center, 7632 Warren Park Drive, Lewis ville:The classes below are presented by Shepherd’s Center of Greater WinstonSalem:

*Thursdays at 1 p.m., Game Day with Fay and Kristin. We play different games every week, such as Boggle, Scattergories, Trivia, Pictionary and more. Come join the fun! We ask that you please arrive by 1 p.m.; once the game begins you will not be able to join. Via Zoom.

*Tuesdays,

*Thursdays,

*40+ Stage Company opens its 2022-2023 season with “Rhonda’s Rites of Pas sage,” an original work by local playwright Grace Ellis, on Friday, Sept. 30, in the Mountcastle Forum at the Milton Rhodes Center for the Arts. The show will run for two weekends, Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and a Sunday matinee at 2 p.m. For ticket information, visit intothearts.org/events-info or call the box office at 336747-1414. Tickets are also available at the door. Senior centers, recreation and community centers and other organizations: Shepherd’s Center of Greater Winston-Salem, 1700 Ebert Street: Some of the ongoing Shepherd’s Center activities are listed below. Call the Shepherd’s Center at 336-748-0217 for information. Contact Kristin Larson at klar son@shepherdscenter.org to register and for Zoom meeting information. More of their programs, including those on off-campus sites, can be found on their website at www.shepherdscenter.org.*Mondays10-11a.m.,line dancing for fun and fitness with Brenda Holcomb. $7 per class. Meets on the upper level. Please arrive by 9:15 a.m. as class begins promptly at 9:30 a.m.

*First

Walk With A Doc adds health tips to monthly walking group

*Wednesdays,

*Thursdays, 12-1 p.m., Tai Chi for Arthritis and Fall Prevention, forms I and II with Wanda Patterson. $2 donation.

*Mondays and Wednesdays, 9-10 a.m., yoga. and Thursdays, 12:30 p.m., Hebrew dance class noon, Active Living Every Day and Thursdays, 11 a.m., chair exercises. 12 noon, Cooking Matters 1 p.m., Basketball Shoot Around 2 p.m., Tai Chi 1 p.m., Chair volleyball 9 a.m. and 2 p.m., Nature Walk & Talk 5 p.m., T.O.P.S. weight loss class 6:30 p.m., Let’s Jam with Jamita step aerobics 1 p.m., Game Day - Corn hole, golf putting, various games Salvation Army Senior Center, 2850 New Walkertown Road: 10 a.m., line dancing 10:30 a.m., chair yoga 11 a.m., chair volleyball 11 a.m., drumming exercise 12 p.m., spiritual development 1:30 p.m., REACHE Program 10 a.m., hand bells music 11 a.m., educational program 12 p.m., Lunch (please sign up by calling Captain Raquel Lorenzo at 336-499-1196)

Before each walk, a doctor will talk about a health topic for five to eight minutes. Then as the group walks the greenway, the partici pants are encouraged to ask the doc tor questions they may have about health issues. Dr. Eli spoke about the importance of walking which leads to improved health, better weight control, and lessens anxiety. It is rec ommended that we exercise for 150 minutes a week, but this can be bro ken down into segments throughout the week and can include activities like house cleaning, vacuuming, gar dening, lawn care – even dancing!

*Tuesdays,

BY JUDIE HOLCOMB-PACK THE CHRONICLE

*Wednesdays, Fellowship and Games, 1:30-4 p.m., meets on the lower level.

*Thursdays,

September Senior Events Calendar:

*Tuesdays,

*Wednesdays,

*Wednesday, Sept. 7, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m., popcorn and a movie, “The Bat man”

Special events or meetings:

*Poetry reading by local poet and author Jacinta White at Reynolda House, Sept. 7, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Jacinta will read from Maya Angelou’s work on the Lake Porch of Reynolda House. Inspired by “Still I Rise: The Black Experience at Reynolda,” this is a free event but registration is required by going to Reynolda.org and clicking on the events calendar for details.

*Tuesdays,

B6 S eptem B er 1, 2022 t he C hroni C le

BY JUDIE HOLCOMB-PACK THEWalkCHRONICLEWithA Doc, the AARP ini tiative to encourage seniors to walk for health, chose the perfect summer morning to kick off their new pro gram. On Saturday, Aug. 13, over two dozen people gathered at the Newell-Massey Greenway on Water works Road to walk and talk with Dr. Elijah Beaty, who is in the Depart ment of Cardiology at Atrium Wake Forest Baptist Health. According to Harriet Miller, the AARP co-lead for the NewellMassey Greenway walk, there are only six Walk with a Doc initiatives across the country, with two others in North Carolina and this being the only one sponsored by AARP. Dr. Eli, as he is known, is presi dent of the Twin City Medical Soci ety and is excited to be part of this new collaboration with AARP. This is a local version of a national ef fort of AARP’s goal to spread Walk With A Doc programs to underserved communities. Dr. Eli said the Medi cal Society looked at Walk With A Doc as a way for doctors to represent the East Winston community and support an activity that promotes bet ter health. The program targets older adults but all are welcome to come out to the Newell-Massey Green way on the second Saturday of each month to walk with the group. The walk is open to all ages and physical abilities.

Carver School Road Public Library, 4915 Lansing Drive: Tuesday Get Together, Sept. 6, 11 a.m. – 12:30 p.m., arts, crafts and sea sonal cards, hosted by Sandra Smith. *Adult games the last Thursday of each month, Sept. 29, 11 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Come play cards, board games and dominos and make new friends!

*Tuesdays,

*Senior Soiree! Brown & Douglas Recreation Center will host “Eat, Drink, Dance” at the Senior Soiree on Saturday, Sept. 17, from 4-7 p.m. at Salem Lake Ma rina, 815 Salem Lake Road. Music by DJ Lemon Lyme. Tickets are $15 each, which include a catered dinner. Purchase tickets at Brown & Douglas Recreation Center, 4725 Indiana Ave. Contact Serena for more information at serenam@cityofws.org or call 336-661-4987. Dress to impress!

*Fridays,

*Praize Kraze, Mondays, 6:30 p.m.

Any aerobic activity that encourages you to get moving helps maintain goodDr.health.Elisaid he would like to see a hundred walkers come out to not only improve their health, but to make new friends by participating in thisMicheleprogram.and Kelvin McCormick were two of the over two dozen walkers at Walk With A Doc. Mi chele said, “We came out to see what it’s all about. We need to keep fit.” Asked if she brought her husband with her, he was quick to say, “I brought her!” They were invited by a friend to come to the walk and will probably come back next month. Currently the walk begins at 9 a.m. on the second Saturday of each month, but the time will change in the fall when the weather becomes cooler. AARP provides water and snacks, as well as giveaways to par ticipants.Deb Burcombe, the program director for outreach for the Sticht Center for Alzheimer’s Research and Healthy Aging, said she walks ev ery day. Commenting at the end of the walk, Burcombe said, “This is a great way to jump-start your exer cise program. I challenge everyone to bring five friends with you next month!”Register for the Sept. 10 Walk With A Doc by going to https:// events.aarp.org/WWAD-NC.

Photo by Judie Holcomb-Pack Annette Nichols with her app for type 2 diabetes. See App on B7

*Thursday, Sept. 22, 11 a.m. – noon – Boost Your Digestion

*Tuesdays

*Thursdays,

*Tuesdays,

If you have an item for the Seniors Calendar, please email news@wschroni cle.com and put Seniors Calendar in the subject line. Items must be submitted by the 20th of the preceding month for the next month’s issue.

Photo by Judie Holcomb-Pack Dr. Elijah Beaty led the walkers in the Aug. 13 Walk With A Doc pro gram.

The next Open Mic is Sept. 6, registration at 6:45 p.m., readings begin at 7 p.m., via Zoom. This event offers beginning and experienced writers an opportunity to read five to seven minutes of their work to a friendly audience. All genres accepted including, fiction, nonfiction, poetry and essays. Audience members welcome! To participate in the Zoom Open Mic, visit www.wswriters.org and click on the current newsletter to get the link or email Judie Holcomb-Pack at judiehp@triad.rr.com.

*Thursday, Sept 29, 10-11 a.m., Fall Festival activities

*Thursdays,

Humana Neighborhood Center, 1045 Hanes Mall Blvd. Call 336-293-0122 to register as space is limited. (Note: the Center will be closed Sept. 5, 12, 13 and 14)

*Wednesdays,

*Tuesdays,

*Wednesdays, 1:30-4:00 p.m., Artistic Expressions. Bring your art/craft projects to work on; some coloring supplies available.

*Tuesdays, 12-1 p.m., Tai Chi for Arthritis and Fall Prevention with Wanda Pat terson. $2 *Tuesdays,donation.2-4p.m., The Shepherd Center Singers. Donations accepted. Please contact Carmina Jenks at pegjen2@gmail.com to join.

*AARP chapter meeting will return in person on Sept. 13 at Senior Services, 2895 Shorefair Drive. For information about the local AARP chapter, email Alberta Powell at powellalberta0@gmail.com. Open to all seniors age 50 and above with an AARP*Agingmembership.Wellseries presented by Wake Forest Baptist Sticht Center for Healthy Aging & Alzheimer’s Prevention, (the second Tuesday of each month) will be held on Sept. 13 at 5:30 p.m. virtually online. The webinar includes a cooking segment by a local chef, a tour of a local place of interest, and an educational session on a health topic. To register and receive the link to access the program, email bhealth@ wakehealth.edu .

*Thursday, Sept. 15, 10-11 a.m., Birthday Celebration

*Way Back Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m. with Paul McCraw, a local historian and retired history teacher, who will discuss local and world history and relate it to to day’s events. Via Zoom.

*Thursdays,

Sometimes adversity brings new insight into old dilemmas. Such is what happened when Annette Nichols lost her brother to complications from diabe tes on Dec. 3, 2013. Diabetes and heart dis ease were familiar illness es in Annette’s family. She has lost both her parents and three of her five sib lings to these diseases; no one in her family has lived past the age of 63 and her sister is now beginning di alysis. What distressed her most about her brother’s death is that it didn’t have to happen that way. Her brother was only 57 years old, but had the body of an 81-year-old. He could not get control of his diabetes; he was stubborn, frustrated and bitter. But most of all, he didn’t understand what his doctors told him to do because he was unable to read.This fact plagued An nette the most because she knew there were others who were also suffering with diabetes and lacked the understanding of how to manage the disease. That nagging thought made Annette determined to figure out a way to help others so they wouldn’t face the same fate as her brother. Watching how people used their digital devices, especially smart phones, Annette saw that they responded more to videos than to documents. She also knew that some of the newer devices for diabetes patients, such as the continuous glucose monitors with sensors that attach to the arm and are Local woman creates app for type 2 diabetes patients

*Open Mic, hosted by Winston-Salem Writers, (first Tuesday of each month).

*Thursdays,

*Thursday,(2022) Sept. 8, 10 – 11 a.m., Full-themed Bingo

*Mondays

*Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, TechWise. Get help with all your digital devices. Call Serena for appointment.

*Wednesday, Sept. 28, 11 a.m. – 1 p.m., popcorn and a movie, “Sing 2” (2021)

*Wednesdays,

*Tuesday, Sept. 20, 10-11 a.m., Get help with your technology

*Wednesday, Sept.21, 10-11 a.m., popcorn and a movie, “West Side Story” (2021)*Thursday, Sept. 22, 10-11 a.m., Train Your Brain

The Shepherd’s Center co-ordinates the Seniors’ Health Insurance Informa tion Program (SHIIP) for Forsyth County. SHIIP is a program offered by the N.C. Department of Insur ance.We assist individuals as they initially enroll in Medicare, as well as with questions or concerns with their coverage. We offer a free monthly Welcome to Medicare workshop for those new to Medicare and assist beneficiaries during Medicare Open Enroll ment from Oct. 15 – Dec. 7 each year. For more information or assistance, please call The Shepherd’s Center at 336-748-0217 and ask for Medicare assistance or visit our website at ing.shiip-medicare-counselwww.shepherdscenter.org/https://Thisserviceisfree.

SUBMITTED ARTICLE

Have questions about Medicare?

retirement?

SUBMITTED ARTICLE

Country Village 201 Park Ridge Cir. 336.765.4354 Community room, computer lab, resident activities, laundry room, 24 hour on-call maintenance, pool tables, and hot tub Assembly Terrace 3731 University Pkwy. 336.759.9798 Garden space, community room, computer lab, resident activities, laundry room, and 24 hour on-call maintenance

Open Enrollment begins Oct. 15.

This Next Chapter workshop focuses on the non-financial side of retirement planning. Explore how to decide on when or if to retire; what to do with all that time you’ll have when you’re not working; the best part-time work options or volunteer opportunities; and answer the question: who am I without my title? All this and much more will be covered. Workshop dates: Tuesdays, Sept. 13, 20 and 27, 6:30-8 p.m. Participants should attend all three sessions. The Shepherd’s Center is located at 1700 Ebert Street. The cost to attend is $25 which covers all workshop materials and refreshments. Workshop leader is Pamela Karr, M.Ed., N.C. licensed professional coun selor and certified professional retirement coach.Workshop is limited to 18 individuals. Registration is required by Sept.6. For questions or to reserve a seat, call 336748-0217 or email info@shepherdscen ter.org.

Spacious One Bedroom Apartments for Seniors Community Management Corporation takes pride in offering affordable, professionally-managed apartment communities for seniors Managed By Community Management Corporation Managed By Community Management Corporation read with a smartphone app, sometimes didn’t work well or fell off, ne cessitating putting on a new sensor before the old one had been used up. The sensors were expensive and replacing one too soon created even greater ex pense.Annette, who has had diabetes for 20 years, knows the importance of eating right, watching her blood sugar counts, and adjusting her insulin to maintain her health. How could she communicate what she knew to others who may not comprehend written directions or be able to read complicated medical information? One day as she was talking with Carol An drews at Forsyth Tech’s Small Business Center about her dilemma, Carol asked Annette, “Have you ever thought about an app?” That’s when the idea of an app for patients with type 2 diabetes began to form in Annette’s mind. As she researched how to design an app, Annette noticed that people who may not read well or at all were able to recog nize numbers. They knew their address, their phone number, the cost of items, and other numbers that we see on a daily basis. She thought if she could design an app where the patient just had to check their blood sugar and key in the number on the app, that they may be able to better control their diabe tes. If the app could retain the numbers in a record that could be shown to their doctors during every visit as a way of trending the counts, that would also be helpful to the doctor as they treated the patient. If the count was good, the app would show a thumbs-up icon. But what if the count was too high and the patient needed to make adjustments?

ARTICLE

T he C hroni C le S ep T ember 1, 2022 b 7 1240 Arbor Road, Winston-Salem, NC 27104 336 -724-7921 www.arboracres.org Beauty Flourishes Here I N OUR FULLY EQUIPPED STUDIO, artist Steven loves to share his experience and guidance with fellow residents as they tap into their creative spirits. At Arbor Acres, our residents celebrate the endless variations and possibilities of beauty. What is beautiful to you? Affordable Senior Communities w/ Rental Assistance & Section 8 Assistance Available Income Restrictions Apply Wachovia Hill 100 S. Spruce Street 336.251.1060 24 hour on-call maintenance and laundry room Cherry Hill Apartments 840 West 14th Street 336.723.7524 24 hour on-call maintenance and laundry room Spring Hill 618 N. Spring St. 336.251.1060 24 hour on-call maintenance and laundry room Azalea Terrace 100 Azalea Terrace Ct. 336.723.3633 Community room, computer lab, resident activities, laundry room, and 24 hour on-call maintenance Alder’s Point 590 Mock St. 336.725.9021 Garden space, community room, computer lab, resident activities, laundry room, 24 hour on-call maintenance, exercise room, and beauty salon St. Peter’s Heritage Place 3727 Old Lexington Rd. 336.771.9028 Community room, computer lab, resident activities, laundry room, and 24 hour on-call maintenance

Contemplating

An nette decided that a high or low number could trig ger an educational video that would show the pa tient what they needed to do. She then decided that more education on con trolling diabetes would be helpful, so she added tips and recipes to her app de sign.Working with an app designer in Greensboro for about a year, the app for people with type 2 dia betes slowly came to frui tion. After over a year of tweeking and testing, the app launched in 2016. It is available for both Apple and Android devices. Once the app is downloaded, the patient registers the app using their phone number. There is a monthly charge to use the app, and con tracts are for three, six or 12 months because it takes consistent use to see the benefit of the app. To get the app, go to app.butter fliestouch.com. Payment is by cash app, credit card, or a check sent to Annette. The app can work on smartphones, tablets and laptops.Annette’s goal now is to get information about the app out to people af fected by diabetes. Annette has a radio show on an in ternet streaming testawouldtenich50@gmail.com.978-7598Annettetypemationorpeoplelivingsharessheonwww.WDRBmedia.comstation,Fridaysat8a.m.whereinterviewspeopleandherknowledgeofwithandcaringforwithdiabetes.Ifyouhavequestionswouldlikemoreinforabouttheappfor2diabetes,contactNicholsat336-oremailnetShebehappytoprovidedemonstrationorfreeoftheapp.

The Next Chapter workshop helps you explore and plan

for a successful retirement

FromApppage B6

SUBMITTED

The Shepherd’s Center of Greater Winston-Salem is proudly joining the Harris Teeter Together In Education pro gram for the 20th consecutive year to raise funds to support the organization’s lifelong learning programs for older adults throughout the community. To support the life-long learning pro grams, simply give the cashier the Shep herd’s Center code 4958 and your VIC card when you check out and your VIC card will be linked for the year. It is an easy, one-time link and it’s FREE. Once a card is linked, the Shepherd’s Center will receive a percentage of Harris Teeter brand purchases and prescriptions. This program does not interfere with VIC savings or cost any money! The Shepherd’s Center served over 6,800 aging adults in 2021! Help us con tinue to serve seniors by linking to the Harris Teeter Together In Education pro gram.

Shop at Harris Teeter and support The Shepherd’s Center

The Winston-Salem Recreation and Parks “Teens in Action” Summer Camp spent the day giving back by volunteering with us! They crafted meaningful cards for participants and rolled bags to help volunteers during Mealson-Wheels deliveries. We are grateful for all our volunteers and especially happy when the youngest among our ranks get involved! Find out how your group or organization can get involved at seniorservicesinc.org/volunteer. too many local seniors are alone, hungry and struggling to meet basic needs. your gift will change their lives.

Learn more: bit.ly/7OverSeventyVideo

Teens in Action

B8 S eptem B er 1, 2022 t he C hroni C le INFORMATION AND UPDATES FROM SENIOR SERVICES | AUGUST 2022 our goal helping seniors remain at home living with dignity and aging with purpose Join us by donating or volunteering today! our services meals-on-wheels | home care living-at-home | williams adult day center senior lunch | help line | elder care choices creative connections ask us The AgeWise Q&A is published each Monday—send questions to agewise@seniorservicesinc.org contact us 2895 Shorefair Drive | Winston-Salem, NC 27105 | 336-725-0907 | seniorservicesinc.org Millions of MealsUnderConstructionWe are blown away by the incredible generosity of our community during the 11th annual Christmas in July item drive! Because of you, we will be able to provide vitally needed health, hygiene, and shelfstable food supplies to older adults in our Weprograms.alsowant to thank our partners at Piedmont Federal Savings Bank for their tireless support of this effort! You have made a difference! Thank You for a Very Merry Christmas in July! We had the opportunity to celebrate the 2022 7 Over Seventy award recipients, Richard Davis, Shirley Eaton, Art Gibel, Dr. David Peay, William Reingold, James Rousseau, and Martha Wood at the Millennium Center on August 18, 2022. It was an honor to hear from these seven inspiring community leaders and changers. This year’s event was sponsored by Savers Health and Forsyth Medical Supply and presented by the WinstonSalem Journal and Senior Services.

Congratulations to the 7 Over Seventy Honorees Did you know that our Meals-on-Wheels program is the longest continually operating senior meal delivery program in the southeast!? This year we are celebrating 60 years of Meals-on-Wheels and over 7 million meals delivered to older adults in our community. Join in commemorating this milestone by signing on as a meal delivery volunteer today! Contact Britnee Tellez at 336-721-3411 or by email: btellez@seniorservicesinc.org to begin serving.

A new fence, a sturdy observation deck, and a few excavators are the latest addition to our parking lot and that can only mean one thing— construction on the Intergenerational Center for Arts and Wellness is almost here! This building will serve as the new home of the Williams Adult Day Center as well as several collaborating organizations. The goal of the center is to help build a community that celebrates the value of all people at every stage of life by fostering relationships built on empathy and Followunderstanding.ourprogress as we build towards our future!

We’re sending a huge shoutout to Thomas Yates from Boy Scout Troop 920! He delivered 120 emergency kits to be distributed to older adults in our programs as part of his Eagle Scout Project. These supplies will help ensure community

news & notes seniors are prepared in a crisis. Find out how you can give back to older adults in our community at seniorservicesinc.org! ccc.seniorservicesinc.org

Prepared for Anything

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.