WIZS Radio Local News Audio 11-1-21 Noon
Click Play to Listen. On Air at 8am, 12pm, 5pm M-F
WIZS Radio ~ 100.1FM/1450AM
Click Play to Listen. On Air at 8am, 12pm, 5pm M-F
WIZS Radio ~ 100.1FM/1450AM
In the seven days ending this past Friday, there were 82 new cases in Vance County. The percent positivity rate in Vance County is 5.2%.
In the seven days ending Friday, there have been 81 new cases in Granville County. The percent positivity rate in Granville County is 3.0%.
In Vance County, 66% of those over the age of 12 have received at least one dose of their CV-19 vaccine and 61% are fully vaccinated.
In Granville County, 71% of those over the age of 12 have received at least one dose of their CV-19 vaccine and 67% are fully vaccinated.
71% of the adult population in NC is at least partially vaccinated and 67% of the adult population is fully vaccinated.
Congratulations to Coach Trey Snide and his Crossroads Christian School Cross Country Team! Regular season, conference and state champions!
The State 1A meet began Friday morning at 11 o’clock in the Wilmington area. The season of work and practice and working as a team paid off by early afternoon.
Coach Snide pulled over while driving home to appear on the 5 o’clock WIZS News.
He is, of course, no stranger to the local WIZS airwaves as the SportsTalk Host at 1 p.m. M-F, his live play by play of local sports and The Beach Music Blast program at 12 noon M-F. This in additional to his management level position with the station.
Please enjoy the audio as Trey reflects on the day’s events and season.
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Click Play to Listen. On Air at 8am, 12pm, 5pm M-F
WIZS Radio ~ 100.1FM/1450AM
Eighty years ago, in 1941, Henderson’s population was just under 8,000. The U.S. was finally climbing out of The Great Depression. The attack on Pearl Harbor was less than two months away which would bring about World War II. Amid all of this, Vance Furniture Company opened its doors.
And 80 years later those doors remain open, welcoming customers into the tallest building in Henderson. It’s no skyscraper, but the five-story building does offer a unique shopping experience, complete with an antique elevator, said owner Craig Bailey.
Bailey spoke with John C. Rose on Thursday prior to The Local Skinny! broadcast segment, which can be heard below, following a Henderson-Vance Chamber of Commerce ribbon-cutting to mark the 80th anniversary of the independently owned and operated business located in the iconic building on 325 S. Garnett St.
Bailey said longtime business partner Sam Harper has been serving customers at Vance Furniture for almost 60 years – that’s at least four generations of customers, he said.
“It’s quite an accomplishment to have made it this long,” Bailey said of the family business.
The business model is simple: “We honestly want to help our customers find the items that will make their homes better,” Bailey said.
People come into the store, and instead of seeing one big showroom full of furniture, they get to travel on the elevator to each different level as they search for that perfect piece of furniture.
The furniture is carefully placed to create vignettes and themes to give customers an idea of how the pieces would look in their homes. “We get to know our customers one on one,” Bailey said, as they browse throughout the building with its tin ceilings and hardwood floors.
Eighty years is a long time to do business, and Bailey said they’ve had to change with the times, too. Recent delays brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic have created wrinkles in delivery times, he said. What used to take 4-6 weeks now takes twice as long, if not longer, he said.
Providing customers with quality service and the custom orders Vance Furniture specializes in is just one reason the business has continued to be successful.
And being around for eight decades is a perfect time “to pause and recognize where you’ve been and the people who’ve helped you over the years,” Bailey said. Despite the ebbs and flows over the years, being in downtown Henderson has been a positive experience. And Bailey said he believes the downtown area is on “the precipice of becoming a viable shopping area once again.” New interests, new people with a great vision are all positive signs for the whole community, he said.
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Michael LaChiana knows that old homes can create strange noises – some can be attributed to creaky floors, faulty plumbing pipes or other quirky construction features. And he can tell the difference between a plumbing problem…and the paranormal.
LaChiana has been a licensed plumber for 36 years, but he’s been fascinated with ghosts and paranormal activity for more than 40 years. As the managing director of the Heritage Hunters Society, he is producing a television program called Heritage Hunters: Journey Through The Past.
He is a ghost hunter and he captures sounds during investigations of the paranormal with high-tech equipment.
But he started out as a 14-year-old with a reel-to-reel recorder. He set up the equipment to record, and he said that he was able to capture the voice of a man screaming for mercy. There was no chance the recording picked up any outside interference, LaChiana said. After that, he was hooked.
“From there, I started researching, reading every book I could,” he told Bill Harris on Thursday’s Town Talk. He upgraded long ago to digital recorders and said he has captured much evidence of paranormal activity across North Carolina and in other countries. “I’ve traveled the world…there are so many haunted locations and I’ve captured so many things,” he said.
He’s visited sites in North Carolina like the Devil’s Tramping Grounds, the USS North Carolina battleship in Wilmington and the Country Squire Inn in Duplin County.
LaChiana is a one-man production crew – he is responsible for everything from the investigating and interviewing of local experts to the editing and final production. View the show on Amazon Prime Video. Available now is the episode on the Country Squire Inn. The next episode may be out by Christmas and will feature the Wilkesboro Jail and the true story of Tom Dooley.
He particularly enjoyed working in London, which he said is “very haunted.” Edinburgh, Scotland, is “one of the most haunted cities,” he said, which places it squarely on his bucket list of places to visit in the future.
He doesn’t do much in the way of residential investigations any more – he’s just too busy with the production company, his business and his family – but he said he has helped so many people understand the strange, unexplained activities they experience.
He goes in for a few hours alone to set up recording equipment and then just wait. “If there’s something there, there’s a very good chance we can capture it,” he added. Not literally, but digitally record it.
“I do believe that every old house has some form of former resident,” LaChiana said. He is friendly and respectful during his investigations, and he said that pays off.
“Everything isn’t dark and creepy.”
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Click Play to Listen. On Air at 8am, 12pm, 5pm M-F
WIZS Radio ~ 100.1FM/1450AM
The Henderson Junior Woman’s Club will present its 10th annual fall shopping spree on November 6th at the Henderson Country Club, 300 Country Club Dr. The event will take place from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m., and it is free for the public to attend. Twenty three vendors will be on site.
Henderson Junior Woman’s Club President Amanda Ellis said, “This event is one of our two fundraisers. We have hosted a Spring Portrait Session in the past, but … because of COVID, last year we hosted a virtual $500 cash drawing. We sold 50/50 raffle tickets at the SHOW SHINE SHAG and DINE car show a few weekends ago. In addition to our fundraisers, our members pay quarterly dues. These monies help fund our club year and our scholarships. Our members donate items for community projects – together we can make a difference!”
The Henderson Junior Woman’s Club is a civic organization. Ellis said, “We have multiple “Departments” that fall under our Community Service Programs which include: Arts & Culture, Environment, Education & Libraries, Juniorettes, Health & Wellness and Civic Engagement & Outreach. Two Special Projects: Domestic & Sexual Violence Awareness & Prevention and Advocates for Children. We offer three scholarships each year for eligible local high school seniors (male and female).”
For More information contact the Henderson Junior Woman’s Club at hendersonjuniorwomansclub@gmail.com or find the club on Facebook.
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WIZS Radio ~ 100.1FM/1450AM
Halloween this year in the City of Henderson will see events for children on Friday and Saturday, rather than Sunday which is actually Halloween on the calendar.
Friday, October 29 the long-observed downtown trick-or-treat event is planned, and Henderson Vance Downtown Development Director Tracy Madigan said the event is still on go. She said downtown trick-or-treat will be “on Garnett Street from 4:30 p.m. until 6 p.m.” Children can go door to door dressed in their costumes.
Also Friday, the parking lot of Maria Parham Health will be the site of a COVID-safe, drive-through trunk-or-treat. Children in costumes don’t have to navigate sidewalks or uneven driveways to fill their bags with goodies – they stay in their cars and get their candy and treats handed to them through open windows. The trunk-or-treat will be held from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in the hospital’s back parking lot. All participants should enter through the main entrance and follow signs to the right upon arrival, according to Donna Young, hospital spokesperson.
On Saturday, October 30, Henderson Police Chief Marcus Barrow has confirmed Citywide trick or treating will be 6 p.m. – 9 p.m.