NVHS inducts latest members of NTHS
/by WIZS StaffVance County Schools
For Immediate Release
May 24, 2017
Northern Vance High School students, who are outstanding academic achievers in their Career and Technical Education courses, were inducted into the school’s chapter of the National Technical Honor Society on May 24.
The student recognitions occurred during the school’s annual National Technical Honor Society Induction and Cording ceremony and reception. The event was held in the school’s media center.
They are shown in the first photo holding the framed certificates they received and include, seated from left, Alex Machado, Tobias Mosley, Erin Ramseur and Amber Reid. The remaining inductees are, standing from left, Shyanne Robertson, Kamiya Scott, Jodi Vaughan, Jaylen Webb and Alajhasha Williams. Christopher Stainback also was inducted, but could not attend the event.
Seniors at Northern Vance who have demonstrated high academic achievements throughout their high school careers in Career and Technical Education courses also received honorary cords to wear in their graduation ceremony. They are shown in the second photo and include, seated from left, Antavia Alexander, Jared Bennett, Don’Ye Burwell and Brooks Falkner. Others are, standing from left, Chontara Mason, Shadi Nagi, Courtney Parham, Deriana Scott, Imani Simmons and Jaylen Webb. Also honored, but unable to attend the event, were Caitlin Melvin and Penny Phan.
Southern Vance Hosts Annual Class Night for Seniors
/by WIZS StaffVance County Schools
For Immediate Release
May 24, 2017
Southern Vance High School administrators, faculty and staff members joined parents, additional family members and friends of seniors in the Class of 2017 in honoring the graduates’ achievements during their Class Night on May 23.
A total of 160 graduating seniors were honored.
The event was held in the school’s gymnasium and attended by hundreds who paid tribute to the soon-to-be high school graduates.
Over $3 million in scholarship funds were presented to the graduating seniors to use as they go on to attend four-year colleges and universities. Well over 70 percent of the seniors will go on to attend a college or university, community college or join the U.S. military.
The approximately 90-minute event featured seniors receiving accolades for their outstanding academics, school attendance, citizenship, community involvement and athletic talents.
Those seniors who make up the top 10 percent of the graduating class are Luis Amaya-Villa, Yasmene Clark, Dalton Elliott, Gavin Eutsler, Daniel Faulkner, Kenia Gomez-Jimenez, Cynthia Harrington, Kendall Harris, Brandon Lawrence, Antonia Loyd Jr., Angelica Montano, Vianey Nonato, Tyler Patrick, Jaslin Renteria, Heidy Reyes Morozumi, Yarelic Picaz and Autumn Wortham.
District Attorney’s Schedule June 2017
/by WIZS StaffThurs, June 1 ##Vance District Court (Keith) – Louis, Watson/Hargrove
Granville Dispo Court (Burnette) – Putney, Sellars, Gregory, Allen, Dickerson
Franklin Trial Prep – Gardner, Hunter
Fri, June 2 Franklin Trial Prep – Gardner, Hunter
Mon, June 5 Franklin Trial Court (Holt) – Gardner, Hunter, Johnson
##Franklin District Court (Thompson) – Louis, Roberson
Vance District Court (Davis) – Gregory, Watson/Hargrove
##Granville District Court (Stevenson) – Sellars, Allen
Tues, June 6 **Franklin District Court (Davis) – Sellars, Gregory, Roberson
Vance District Court (Burnette) – Erdmann, Watson/Hargrove
Granville Juvenile Court (Thompson) – Putney
Wed, June 7 ##Granville District Court (Burnette) – Louis, Allen
Warren District Court (Thompson) – Fuller, Raymond
Thurs, June 8 Franklin Juvenile Court (Davis) – Erdmann
##Vance District Court (Burnette) – Louis, Watson/Hargrove
Vance Trial Prep – Pelfrey, Fuller
Granville CMS Prep – Sellars, Putney
Fri, June 9 Vance Juvenile Court (Stevenson) – Erdmann
Vance Trial Prep – Pelfrey, Fuller
Granville CMS Prep – Sellars, Putney
Mon, June 12 Vance Trial Court (Heath) – Pelfrey, Fuller, Brickhouse
Granville CMS Court (O’Foghludha) – Sellars, Putney, Pendergrass, Garrett
Franklin District Court (Keith) – Erdmann, Roberson
##Vance District Court (Stevenson) – Gregory, Watson/Hargrove
**Granville District Court (Burnette) – Louis, Allen
Franklin CMS Prep – Gardner, Hunter
Tues, June 13 Granville CMS Court (O’Foghludha) – Sellars, Putney, Pendergrass, Garrett
Franklin District Court (Stevenson) – Louis, Roberson
Vance District Court (Davis) – Erdmann, Watson/Hargrove
Warren Juvenile Court (Keith) – Gregory
Franklin CMS Prep – Gardner
Vance County Clerk’s Office Hours, Attorneys, 2:00-4:00 pm – Gregory
Wed, June 14 Franklin CMS Court (O’Foghludha) – Gardner, Pendergrass, Johnson
Granville District Court (Thompson) – Sellars, Allen
**Warren District Court (Keith) – Putney, Raymond
Vance County Clerk’s Office Hours, Public, 2:00-4:00 pm – Gregory
Thurs, June 15 Franklin CMS Court (O’Foghludha) – Gardner, Pendergrass, Johnson
Vance Dispo Court (Burnette) – Putney, Sellars, Louis, Watson, Hargrove
Fri, June 16 Granville Juvenile Court (Thompson) – Putney
Mon, June 19 No Criminal Court
Tues, June 20 No Criminal Court
Wed, June 21 No Criminal Court
Thurs, June 22 Franklin County Clerk’s Office Hours, 2:00-4:00 pm – Hunter
Warren CMS Prep – Fuller
Fri, June 23 Franklin Dispo Court (Keith) – Gardner, Hunter, Erdmann, Tart, Roberson
Warren CMS Prep – Fuller
Mon, June 26 Warren CMS Court (O’Foghludha) – Fuller, Pendergrass, Raymond
Franklin District Court (Burnette) – Gardner, Roberson
Vance District Court (Keith) – Hunter, Watson/Hargrove
Granville District Court (Davis) – Putney, Allen
Vance CMS Prep – Pelfrey, Erdmann, Louis
Tues, June 27 Vance Probation Court (O’Foghludha) – Gregory, Pendergrass
Franklin District Court (Davis) – Hunter, Roberson
##Vance District Court (Stevenson) – Gardner, Watson/Hargrove
Warren Juvenile Court (Keith) – Putney
Vance CMS Prep – Pelfrey, Fuller, Erdmann, Louis
Wed, June 28 Vance CMS Court (O’Foghludha) – Pelfrey, Fuller, Louis, Erdmann, Pendergrass, Brickhouse
Franklin Juvenile Court (Davis) – Gardner
Granville District Court (Keith) – Gregory, Allen
Warren District Court (Burnette) – Sellars, Putney, Raymond
Thurs, June 29 Vance CMS Court (O’Foghludha) – Pelfrey, Fuller, Louis, Erdmann, Pendergrass, Brickhouse
**Vance District Court (Burnette) – Hunter, Watson/Hargrove
Warren Trial Prep – Fuller
Fri, June 30 Vance Juvenile Court (Stevenson) – Putney
Warren Trial Prep – Fuller
**mediator available**
##9:30 am regular docket, PLUS POSSIBLE 2:15 pm DWI docket##
Vance County Cooperative Extension to hold pesticide disposal day tomorrow
/by WIZS StaffFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Do you have lawn, garden or farm chemicals you no longer need? Do you have products more than three years old?
Protect your family, your pets and the environment by bringing unneeded chemicals to our pesticide disposal day.
This event will be held on Thursday, May 25th, 10 am to 2 pm at the Vance County Regional Farmers Market (210 Southpark Dr., Henderson, NC).
We will accept all pesticide products, including herbicides, fungicides, insecticides, etc. in original, labeled containers. Both liquids and solids (e.g. granules, powders) are acceptable. For large containers (e.g. 5 gallons or more) or large quantities, please call in advance.
We CANNOT accept: fertilizer, paint, solvents, gasoline, household cleaners, or other household hazardous waste.
This service is offered at no charge in cooperation with NC Department of Agriculture & Consumer Services. For more information, e-mail paul_mckenzie@ncsu.edu or call 252-438-8188.
Vance County Schools seeking proctors
/by WIZS StaffVance County Schools are seeking volunteers to serve as proctors during year-end testing at our middle and high schools. Volunteers are needed each school day May 30-June 8, from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. each day. Interested volunteers may contact Terri Hedrick with Vance County Schools by email at thedrick@vcs.k12.nc.us or by phone at 252-492-2127, extension 2100, to let her know what days you may be available. Thank you so much for your support of our schools!
Northern Vance hosts annual Class Night for Seniors
/by WIZS StaffVance County Schools
For Immediate Release
Northern Vance High School hosted its annual Class Night for members of the Class of 2017 in the school’s gymnasium on May 18.
A total of 180 graduating seniors were honored during the event. They were recognized for their outstanding achievements during their four years of high school. The soon-to-be graduates were presented awards for their high academic achievements, community involvement, outstanding attendance and citizenship and athletic accomplishments.
Approximately $3 million in scholarship awards will be going to members of the graduating class who will go on to attend colleges and universities beginning in the fall.
Well over 70 percent of the Class of 2017 members at Northern Vance High will go on to further their education at a four-year college or university, at a community college or to serve in the U.S. military.
The top 10 percent of academic achievers in the Class of 2017 at Northern Vance include Megan Andrews, Jared Bennett, Brooks Falkner, Charlie Chiem, Tamiya Davis, Holly Hilliard, Sarah Howarth, Hannah Mason, Shadi Nagi, Connor Pendergrass, Michelle Pham, Penny Phan, Jo’el Royster, Deriana Scott, Nathaniel Stevenson, Turner Roberson, Imani Simmons, Bailey Shelton and Jeffery Zheng.
Noted author salutes VGCC Adult Basic Skills graduates
/by WIZS Staff
Graduates of Vance-Granville Community College’s Adult Basic Skills programs were encouraged to adopt a can-do attitude and keep learning at their commencement exercises on May 4. The honorees were among those students who have completed either the Adult High School Diploma program or the High School Equivalency program in the past year.
The principal commencement speaker was Dr. Timothy B. Tyson, an award-winning author and Duke University professor who spent part of his childhood in Oxford and now resides in Durham. Tyson recalled that although he now holds a doctoral degree, he did not usually enjoy school as a child.
“I slowly began to withdraw from school,” Tyson said. “I went less and less, and I found other things to do. I dropped out of high school as a junior. I became a construction laborer and then a cook.” But a young woman he was dating, who was in graduate school, told him that he would like college, arguing that it was quite different from high school. “I started at a community college, where I found intellectual excitement and I did well, and then I transferred to UNC-Greensboro,” Tyson said. “I loved college. It was a place where independent thought and passion were rewarded.”
Over time, Tyson discovered more and more educational opportunities that he did not know existed. He encouraged the graduates not to limit themselves but to keep striving for more. “You’re not stuck in some place that your past performance has put you,” Tyson told them. “You can’t let anybody stop you and put you in a box. Keep looking forward and figure it out. There’s a way to do it. It’s not as though, if you took a wrong turn at the beginning, somehow you’re stuck in that groove. You can navigate this, and you can end up doing what God put you here to do.”
The author said he was “thrilled” to witness this “proud and important moment” for the graduating students. “Your education will affect yourself, your children and people who are yet unborn, but it’s not just about advancing yourself, it’s about lifting up everybody,” Tyson said. “Each of us, day to day, doing our own bit, can change the world and have changed the world.”
Speaking on behalf of the graduating students during the ceremony was Spencer Bojan Boyd of Oxford. Boyd completed the Adult High School Diploma program online. A native of Serbia, he was adopted at the age of six by a family in Johnston County, who later moved to Granville County. He was born without a right leg and with a distorted left leg, which was later amputated. “Throughout my journey, my friends and family, particularly my mother, have stuck by my side, supporting me, saying ‘yes, you can,’” Boyd said.
He said his mother’s insistence pushed him forward, so that now, “I am an adult high school graduate – yes, I am. To be clear, I didn’t become a graduate solely on my mother’s belief that I could. I’m an adult high school graduate because Vance-Granville Community College also believes in ‘Yes, you can.’” He said the online program allowed him flexibility and time to focus.
“Through its resources, VGCC has helped me graduate high school and is in the process of helping me into college,” he said. “By extending my education beyond high school, I will be able to discover new doors and opportunities.” Boyd recently enrolled in the College Transfer program at VGCC. He plans to complete two years at the college and then continue his education at a four-year university to study orthotics and prosthetics to help other amputees. “I hope to encourage, support and take care of those who are less fortunate than myself,” Boyd said. “I hope to use the tools that Vance-Granville provided in the future and really get a hold of my purpose in life.”
He concluded, “No matter what obstacle comes your way or how many hardships in life you face, you can turn the idea of ‘this is impossible; I can’t do this’ into ‘Yes, I can, and yes, I have!’ and the fact that I stand before you as a proud graduate is living proof. Mom, yes, I can. VGCC, yes, I can. Henderson, North Carolina, yes, I can. Serbia, yes, I can. The world, yes, I can.”
In welcoming remarks, VGCC Vice President of Academic Affairs Dr. Angela Ballentine congratulated the graduates. “You saw an opportunity to improve your life through education, and you seized that opportunity,” she said. Ballentine urged them to continue their education and invited them to meet with college faculty and staff at the conclusion of the ceremony. “This could be the first of many commencement exercises for you,” she said.
Following Tyson’s address, Dr. Stelfanie Williams, the president of VGCC, praised the graduates and applauded the Basic Skills faculty for preparing students to succeed. “Commencement, as you know, does not mean ‘an ending’ — it means ‘a beginning,’ and that is especially true for this occasion,” she told the graduates. As an extra incentive for graduates to begin their collegiate studies, Williams announced that each would receive a certificate worth free tuition and fees for one semester of courses in curriculum programs at VGCC, absorbing costs not covered by federal financial aid. “This certificate for tuition and fees is our way of saying ‘congratulations’ and ‘keep going,’” the president said.
After VGCC Adult Basic Skills department chair Greg Nash announced the candidates for graduation, Dr. Ballentine assisted President Williams in presenting diplomas.
–VGCC–