KjTfjlffVTQQQjjQQSSCZSSIlKZSSSSZBSSSSBSSCSQSCBSiZS^SI k* See Page BI ???? wwwwBsuedu golfclasaic The Chronicle Volume40,Number31 WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. THURSDAY, April 3, 2014 WRI Photos Tony Dungy greets Wake Forest students during his visit to the campus last week. Dungy talks bottom-up leadership approach BY LAYLA GARMS THE CHRONICLE Tony Dungy shared the trials and triumphs of his storied NFL coaching career at Wake Forest University last week. "It's an honor to be here at Wake Forest to speak to you about leaders," uungy ioia me standing room only crowd that gathered in the 2200-seat Wait Chapel on 1 Wednesday, March 26 to hear him speak. "That's what our country is in need of. We don't need more smart people. We need leaders who will stand on their con victions, and I encourage you to do that ." Dungy, who helmed the Indianapolis Colts from 2002-2008, made history in 2007, when he guided the team to a 5>uper Bowl win. He became the first African American head coach of a Super Bowl-winning team. He said he follows a bottom-up leadership philoso phy that empowers leadership at every level of an organization and creates a strong foundation built on not one, but many leaders. "I really think the best leaders are people who have a vision and have a focus that is not about them, it's about the group that they work with," said the Jackson, Mich, native. "My job as a leader was to help my group be the best that they could be, so I had to take the focus off of myself." Dungy spent more than three decades in the National Football League, first as a player and later as a head coach, the first in the NFL to defeat all 32 teams. The former University of Minnesota quarterback is known for his soft spoken manner and unapologetic commitment to Christian and family values. "Don't feel like you have to leave your personality behind," said Dungy, who is now an NBC Sports com mentator. "...If you have the right message, your voice will be heard." See Dungy on A7 The former coach waves to the packed house. Gone Too Soon Family copes with loss after senseless killing BY LAYLA GARMS THE CHRONICLE Twenty-two year-old Christopher Thompson will never smile again. He will never walk through the door of his Gilmer Avenue home and greet his mother and grandmother with a kiss. He won't hold his infant niece and nephew or play the piano and drums at his church, Mount Carmel Baptist Church. Members of the Thompson family are still struggling to come to grips with the reality of life without "Chris," who was shot and killed in the wee hours of the morning of March 23, just steps away from his own front door. "I know he's gone but it's so un real to me, even at this point," said his mother. Crystal Thompson. "It's like somebody ripped half of my heart out." Thompson, a mother of three, said she and her children shared a special relationship. "It has been hell for me. It really has," she said of losing her only boy. "He just wasn't my son, he was one of my babies. I don't know what kind of bonds other mothers have with their children, but me ?md my thi^e. it's an unbreakable bond." Thelma Thompson, the grand mother to Chris and 20 others, used to call Chris, mt employee at Carolina Arts & Frames of Kemersville. on his cell phone every morning to wake him up forworic. *v ' "1 toojr his number out of my phone becMQUlt WmW I to call it so badly, but 1 knew he wouldn't be there on the other end to answer," she said of her grandson, who sported a tattoo reading "Nona's Man" on his See Thompson on A8 i * i Chris Thompson Photo by Kitrinka (fordon Crystal Thompson wears a t-shirt honoring her late son during a vigil Sunday held in his honor. Trailblazing pediatrician saluted for his service BY TODD LUCK THE CHRONICLE Former patients of retired pedia trician Dr. Charles "Charlie" Kennedy helped to fill a banquet hall at the Holiday Inn University Parkway Saturday. Kennedy, who was the city's pre eminent African American pediatri cian for decades, was honored dur ing the Outreach Alliance for Babies, Inc.'s annual fundraiser. In a videotaped message played for attendees, Kennedy's daughter. Dr. Stacy Kennedy, said it was hard to not run into her father's patients whenever the family went out to eat. "It's an interesting experience because there's always someone working there or eating there who were one of his patients. They always come in and they come up to him and they update him on their educational status or they update him on their careers," she said. A Charlotte native. Dr. Charlie Kennedy attended Meharry Medical College in Nashville after graduating from Johnson C. Smith. He told the crowd that he could not afford to get from Charlotte to Tennessee for the first day of med school. A local gro cery store owner gave him money for an airline ticket, just in time for him to be on hand for the first day's roll call. The financial support he accept ed from the state required that he return to North Carolina to practice medicine for two years in a town with 15,000 people or less. Instead of following that path, he borrowed money from the Winston-Salem Foundation to pay off the state. Untethered, he decided to train at the newly-integrated Wake Forest See Kennedy on All Li Ph<*o by Todd l uck Greg Davis and Wanda Starke share a laugh with Dr. Kennedy (right).. -T" fs. r 8 ? u == k 8 jz sp m =T ? o ? Q N ? o CN "= o O -r d oc K =" gc/>- 2 I. j 03 (J 3 sS? z 1 S i Iiss< I p|li| = ? 2 ? l? $ * > The Fewer of 'tiCan' I , I Wilmot Program helps 'members' come out of shells BY TODD LUCK THE CHRONICLE The iCan House raised funds and awareness at St. Paul's Episcopal Church on Thursday, March 20. The iCan Do Lunch stressed the mission of the nonprofit, which helps local people who have social difficulties caused by mid-to high functioning autism and various other disorders, though no See ICan on A8 Ptnxos by Todd Luck i C a n House Executive Director Kim S huf r a n with her daughter Erica Muller. * ^??ASSURED [??? STORAGE | of Winston-Salem, LLC V ro ??MB MMBcm ? c > ? ON SSSLi V? f S