Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / May 25, 2019, edition 1 / Page 12
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12 - THE CAROLINA TIMES - SATURDAY, MAY 25, 2019 Your Business Guide! Local Services from. local EiAtrepreneurs PERRY, PERRY & PERRY P.A - ATTORNEYS AT LAW - General Practice including: AUTO ACCIDENTS REAL ESTATE WORKERS’COMPENSATION WILLS & ESTATES WRONGFUL DEATH TRAFFIC OFFENS- PHONE: 919-683-8685 601 Fayetteville Street, Suite 300 A Law firm FOCUSED ON OUR CLIENTS First C hronicles Community C hurch I Ths 1 T coin Street Durham, NC 2770I "I eaders of Tomorrow" 1 Another Way Ministries Youth Development Program 2017 1. Al l ING ALL YOUTH AGES 11.17 C.iiiic .mil I cam Traits .mil Skills Set for Sin Skill’s include hui arc not limited to: 'Carpentry * Electriciaa ♦Culinary ♦Technology ♦Car Detailing ♦Job Interviewing Program begins March 18*-April 29*. Saturdays 10 am-l2pm For further information, call (919) 688-7014 Interest meeting A Orientation will be this Saturday at 10 am. STATE OF NORTH CAROLINAk COUNTY OF DURHAM NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Adminis trator of the Estate of Jana Ma son Alshahed, deceased, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the Estate of Jana Mason Alshahed to present them to the undersigned within three months from the date of the first publica tion of this Notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate, please make immediate payment. This the 14th day of May, 2019. Sufian Adnan Alshahed Administrator 801 Lindley Drive Durham, NC 27703 May 25; June 1,8, 15, 2019 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINAk COUNTY OF DURHAM NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Adminis trator of the Estate of Jana Ma son Alshahed, deceased, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the Estate of Jana Mason Alshahed to present them to the undersigned within three months from the date of the first publica tion of this Notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate, please make immediate payment. This the 14th day of May, 2019. Sufian Adnan Alshahed Administrator 801 Lindley Drive Durham, NC 27703 May 25; June 1,8, 15, 2019 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF DURHAM NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Adminis tratrix of the Estate of Melvard Middleton, deceased, this is to notify all persons, firms and cor porations having claims against the Estate of Melvard Middleton to present them to the under- signed within three months from the date of the first publication of this Notice or same will be plead ed in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate, please make immediate payment. This the 30th day of April, 2019. Elaine Middleton Administratrix 815 Jasmine Avenue Norfolk, VA 23502 May 25; June 1, 8, 15, 2019 Couch & Associates, P.C. Welcomes Attorney C. Destine A. Couch Former Durham County Assistant Distant Attorney * Criminal * Traffic Offenses *DWI * Worker's Compensation ♦Personal Injury www.couchandassociates.com 919-688-8786 Serving the community and accepting new clients. C Destine A. Couch 'Attorney at Law University Tower 3100 Tower Blvd., Suite 901 Durham, N.C. 27707 Hammond & Hammond Inc. Bail Bonds 919-401-6911 Private Investigations 919-598-9988 Missing Persons - Witness Location Process Service - Landlord Assistance Janet Owens Hammond Lonnie D. Hammond Jonathan Smith 1801 Chapel Hill Rd “Finding the Truth Is What We Do” DURHAM GREEN FLEA MARKET PRODUCE and MUCH MORE FIRST CHRONICLES CHILD DEVELOPMENT CENTER Is accepting applications for the summer and 2017-18 school year. Following are some of the reasons you should choose FCC -5 star Christian daycare -Small class size -Licensed NC Pre-K and Math teachers -Majority of staff have master degrees and above -Proven track record of over 7 years -i” and 2nd Shifts available FIRST CHRONICLES CHILD MVflOFMENT CIKI ER Contact Factor William or Pebbles Lucas (919) 688-7014 or (919) 641-4516 “Changing our world one child at a time” Please contact Pastor William or Pebbles Lucas for more information at (919)688-7014 or 641-4516 Register Now to Vote in 2019 School safety at forefront of teacher rally after shooting By Amanda Morris and Gary D. Robertson RALEIGH (AP) - North Carolina’s public school teachers and their supporters showed up in force to demand an overhaul of the state’s education priorities, bringing thousands to a march and rally in the state’s capital. Chanting “Whose schools? Our schools! Whose voice? Our voice,” they rallied in Raleigh for the second year in a row. They want more money for student support staff, such as counselors and nurses - features now included in the state House budget written by Republican legislators. A fatal shooting at a college campus one day earlier was on many protesters’ minds, adding a somber note to the energetic demonstration. The march was especially personal for Madhavi Krevat, whose son Jacob is a senior at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. A gunman killed two students and injured four others on the UNCC campus. “I was terrified,” said Krevat, 51, of Apex, a member of the gun-control group Moms Demand Action. “My son was on lockdown for four hours. It’s something I never thought would happen.” No crowd estimate was available for this year’s march and rally. A permit request from the North Carolina Associa tion of Educators estimated 20,000 would attend, about as many as were on hand for last year’s protest. The South Carolina Department of Public safety tweeted that about 10,000 people attended a similar rally at the statehouse in Columbia. Sophomore Kyle Brantley of Blythewood High School told the South Carolina crowd that improving public schools is “not a Republican or Democratic issue. It’s a statewide issue.” “Educators have the right to be compensated fairly for teaching students like me,” he said. South Carolina Republican Gov. Henry McMaster, who previously criticized teachers for marching on a school day, called the rally “instructive.” “These teachers that are here this year need to be in the classroom next year happy teaching. I don’t want them to feel like they have to come back here next year,” McMaster told The Associated Press in an interview. North Carolina teachers also were criticized by Republican leaders, including the state superintendent of public instruction, for leaving school for the rally. In response, demonstrators chanted “We are not skipping school! Today we teach the golden rule!” Krevat said she’s often concerned for her daughter, 16-year-old Leah Krevat, a junior at Apex High School. She said the school has received four threats of school shootings in the past four months. “This march is relevant because ... we don’t need more guns in our schools ... we need more services,” Krevat said. Seventh-grader Aaron Painter said he participated because he wants more mental health services in his school, which he said has one full-time counselor. “We need more help because there are kids that are thinking about suicide and they’re only in seventh grade,” Painter said, adding that he knows some of those students personally. Painter marched alongside his mother, Tonya Painter, a third-grade teacher at McGee’s Crossroads Elementary school in Johnston County. She’s concerned about what she sees as a focus on testing over student safety. “Every mind matters,” she said. “I feel like the school shootings all started years before, with probably bullying or anxiety and depression - things that students are dealing with that they need help working through.” North Carolina Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper told the demonstrators in Raleigh that teachers “are often the first line of defense in crises big and small.” “School safety is vital, and that doesn’t mean putting guns with teachers in the classroom,” he said to loud applause. The North Carolina Association of Educators and its allies are hoping the election of more Democrats last fall will help them get some of their demands. The November election broke the Republican supermajority in the state House and Senate, meaning Cooper’s vetoes can’t be overridden if Democrats stay united. In an interview, Republican House Speaker Tim Moore said he spoke with rally participants from his home county who appreciated the new House budget provisions benefiting education and the previous efforts of legislators. “We have done a great deal. what we are doing is tremendous,” Moore said, adding that tax cuts have ultimately led to more economic growth and more revenue. He said the association’s leadership “doesn’t necessarily speak for all the teachers.” The nearly $24 billion spending package includes money to raise teacher pay on average by 4.6%, with increases weighted toward the most veteran educators. A 10% salary supplement for teachers with master’s degrees, phased out earlier this decade, would be restored. It doesn’t include several NCAE demands, including a $15-per-hour minimum wage for local school custodians and other workers and expansion of Medicaid to hundreds of thousands of people. Republican legislators say the NCAE and its allies ignore strong gains in education spending, teacher pay and graduation rates since they took over the General Assembly eight years ago. The Rev. William Barber, who co-chairs the Poor People’s Campaign and led regular “Moral Monday” protests when he was president of the state NAACP chapter, told the crowd that it was morally right to petition legislators. But it shouldn’t have taken a massive event to get their attention, he said. “It’s an insult to make people have to shut down school systems and get in the street for their legislators to turn a little bit in the right direction,” Barber said. Associated Press reporters Martha Waggoner in Raleigh and Christina L. Myers in Columbia, South Carolina, con tributed to this story.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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May 25, 2019, edition 1
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