Cooperative Extension with Jamon Glover: Biting, Part 1
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The Duke RAM clinic is returning to Henderson later this month to provide free health, vision and dental care for patients in the community.
RAM stands for Remote Area Medical, and this year marks the third year in a row that the clinic has come to town. Clinic volunteers will set up shop once again at Vance Charter School on Ross Mill Road on Saturday, Feb. 17 and Sunday, Feb. 18. The clinic doors open at 6 a.m. each day to provide care, from routine exams to dental cleanings and extractions, as well as eye exams and eyeglasses. The clinic runs to 4 p.m. on Saturday and until 12 noon or 1 p.m. on Sunday
“We hope to be bigger and better than the last two years,” said Duke junior Anvi Sharvu, one of the event organizers.
Sharvu, a biology and sociology major, has been involved with RAM ever since she arrived at Duke and said she’s excited to see how many patients will get much-needed medical, dental and vision care during the two-day clinic.
She and Duke senior Sajan Patel were guests on Wednesday’s TownTalk to share details about the upcoming event.
Patients can start lining up at 12 midnight on Friday before the clinic opens on Saturday, and Patel said the clinic has “the capacity to see a lot of patients this year, especially on the dental side,” thanks to a team of dentists and student dentists from the
ECU Dental School.
“I’m a graduating senior,” Patel said, adding that he’s been involved with RAM since he’s been a student at Duke. He will graduate in the spring with degrees in biology and global health.
“I’m really excited and proud of our entire team,” he said.
Volunteers from other agencies including the local Granville Vance Public Health and other health care professionals, the duo said the clinic should be able to see even more patients than last year.
Sharvu said the need for essential health care remains high, especially in rural or underserved areas. “We just want to make sure more people can get care,” she said. Last year’s clinic provided dozens of dental cleanings, hundreds of tooth extractions and distributed 140 pairs of glasses.
The clinic requires no insurance or ID; there’s a questionnaire to fill out when you arrive, but even that’s optional, they say.
There will be other agencies on hand to provide resources for patients, including N.C. Legal Aid representatives who can help answer questions about Medicaid and Medicare. N.C. Harm Reduction also will be on site with free Narcan and instructions about how to use it in case of an overdose emergency.
And the Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina will be giving away fresh produce.
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On the Home and Garden Show with Vance Co. Cooperative Ext.
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Information courtesy of VCS Chief Communications Officer Aarika Sandlin
Parents of school-age children are invited to attend an Innovative Schools Night for Vance County Public Schools to learn more about the district’s five innovative schools.
The information session will be held Wednesday, Jan. 31 from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. at the Center for Innovation, 219 Charles St., Henderson.
Applications for the five schools – E.M. Rollins STEAM Academy, STEM Early High, Vance County Early College, Advance Academy, and Vance Virtual Village Academy – will be accepted through Feb. 29 and decisions will be mailed out on Mar. 28, according to information on the district website.
Find the application at vcs.k12.nc.us or click the link “Innovative Schools Application” to download the form.
In the February newsletter, local nonprofit organization Rebuilding Hope shines a spotlight on a volunteer whose creativity adds a special touch to the work that goes into building wheelchair ramps and other home repair projects across the area.
Van Splinter makes wooden crosses, which the Rebuilding Hope volunteers have been distributing when they’ve gone out into the community to do their work.
“From the beginning of the ministry we’ve presented a Bible,” Rebuilding Hope coordinator Randolph Wilson said in the newsletter story. “The generosity of Van Splinter has added greatly to the ministry.”
Splinter, himself retired from his job in construction, said he heard about Rebuilding Hope and its mission when Wilson came and spoke at Splinter’s church, Rock Spring Baptist Church, in Townsville.
He estimates that he’s given away as many as 500 of his hand-crafted crosses, each about a foot tall, and he keeps a good supply in his truck to give away. He’s also made a smaller version for each active member of his church.
The crosses are made from scrap lumber, but he also makes flags, serving trays, cutting boards and more that he sells. He puts all his proceeds from sales of those items toward buying more materials.
You can find Splinter most Saturdays at his roadside stand in Townsville.
Learn more about Rebuilding Hope at www.Rebuildinghopeinc.org.
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The Henderson-Vance Chamber of Commerce will host its annual banquet on Thursday, Mar. 7. Sponsorships are available and tickets may be purchased now for the event, the theme of which is Past, Present, Future, according to Chamber President Sandra Wilkerson.
“Join us as we take a walk down memory lane, get updates on the present and what we expect our future to look like in Henderson and Vance County,” Wilkerson said in information sent to WIZS News. The banquet will be held at the Vance-Granville Community College Civic Center.
The Chamber also will reveal the 2023 Vance County Citizen of the Year at the banquet. Nominations for this award will be accepted until 5 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 2, Wilkerson noted.
Find the nomination form here: https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Henderson-Vance-Chamber-of-Commerce-Citizen-of-the-Year-form-2023.pdf
Completed nominations may be submitted electronically to sandra@hendersonvance.org, dropped by the office, 414 S. Garnett St., Henderson or mailed to Henderson-Vance Chamber of Commerce at P.O. Box 1302, Henderson, NC 27536
Visit the Chamber website at to download a nomination form.
The banquet is the Chamber’s biggest fundraiser; Wilkerson recognized Duke Energy for its continued role in the effort by being the presenting sponsor.
Other sponsorship levels are noted below:
Presenting Sponsor (only 1) Duke Energy $4000
Gold Sponsor $2500
Silver Sponsor $1500
Table Sponsor $1000
Pre-Dinner Social Sponsor $1000
Tickets are $60 each and tables of eight may be purchased as well.
The evening kicks off with appetizers served from 5:15 p.m. to 5:45 p.m. The meal catered by Cook Shack Catering, will begin at 6 p.m.
Henderson-Vance County Chamber of Commerce
The Citizen of the Year award is presented annually by the Henderson-Vance County Chamber of Commerce to an individual whose outstanding service and dedication has made a significant contribution to the community. Qualities and criteria looked for are as follows:
The recipient does not have to be a member of the Henderson-Vance County Chamber of Commerce. A nominee need only be nominated once to be considered. The number of nominations received per nominee will bear no weight in their selection.
(This article was originally published Jan. 12, 2024.)
The holiday season and all its festivities may seem like distant memories for many of us, but for a group of young local athletes, the memories made on a football field on New Year’s Eve are likely to last a lifetime.
Eleven members of the Tri-City Seahawks had the opportunity to play in the Holiday Bowl in Knightdale.
If you’re a Seahawk around here, you’re part of the Henderson-Vance Recreation and Parks Department league that gives young people the opportunity to play organized sports before they get to middle and high school, said HVRPD Director Kendrick Vann.
The Seahawks play in the East Wake Football League and Vann said it was a good experience for the young men all the way around to get to showcase their talent at the league’s post-season bowl game.
“Collectively, they had the best season they’ve had in the five seasons we’ve played,” said HVRPD Programmer Darius Pitt. Kids as young as 4 can come out for the teams, which include flag football for the 4-6 age group and then the 8U, 10U, 12U and 14U.
There were “a lot of eyes on some of our players,” Pitt told WIZS News, and as the season progressed, bowl coaches were assembling their teams from teams across the association.
Pitt and Chris Hardy are directors of the Tri-City Seahawks, which includes a total of more than 100 players on the different squads.
Hardy, who also coaches the Vance County Vipers, said the young men who play with the Seahawks are learning about the X’s and O’s before they get to high school, which has proven to be a good thing.
The young people who wear the Seahawks jerseys are going to come to the middle and high school teams better prepared – in many ways, not the least of which comes through during a game.
“We preach to our kids that (in) student-athlete – student comes before athlete,” Hardy said, adding that Vipers need to conduct themselves correctly at school, not just on Game Day. “You’ve got to have the grades to play football,” he said. “We’re trying to groom young men – you’ve got to be on your A Game and show what you know.”
Tahjaye Fields was one of the Seahawks who played in the Holiday Bowl. “It was a great experience,” Fields said. “I like to be out there doing my thing.”
That “thing” for the STEM Early High School student who plays offense and defense, is getting tackles.
Teammate and fellow STEM Early High student Talik Perry said he had fun, too.
“I felt excited and I was just ready to play,” Perry said. A highlight: “I tackled a dude that was, like, two times my size.”
Being on a team like the Seahawks does more than just expose youth to coaches and playing as a cohesive group. Being a Seahawk also builds confidence – just ask Cameron Giddings.
At 13, he’s one of the older players of the group, but he’s been playing rec league ball since he was 6.
Giddings said he sees his role as helping the younger players build that confidence. “We put in the work and try to win,” he said.
Players who put in the work at practice and through playing other sports – in Giddings’s case, track, also helped his conditioning and improved his stamina.
The payoff? Being chosen to play in the Holiday Bowl.
“It was good – really surprising,” Giddings said of his selection to play in the bowl game. “I didn’t think anybody was watching me.”
Often, watching someone in a game inspires others. For Malachie Hayes, it’s Tennessee Titans running back Derrick Henry.
Hayes said “it felt good” to be out on that field in the Holiday Bowl, doing what he loves doing, “truckin’ and running through the defenders.”
And yeah, he’d love to do it again.
Ahmad Jeffers, playing for the 8U team last season, said he most enjoyed just running with the ball. Jeffers is a Clarke Elementary student and said he made a 10-yard run. He wants to be a receiver.
Hayes, 11, said he got pumped when he played his first play on defense. “I got a pick 6 and took it to the crib – that’s all,” he said.
Like the ad says, “It’s not bragging if it’s true.”
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