Vol. XXXVI No. 3 WINSTON-SALEM, N.C ON _6 ;? " " * * *-5-2!GZT . 2 7 i cas.oii.va sou. rossYTH cry .3iic _i3Hasy 66*5 W 5TH :ST WI-SSTOX aA^2; >C _ 7 _ 27 5o THURSDAY, September 17, 2009 Carver JV team wins tipid match-up ? -See Pane UV DA still taking heat for comments ?Sec Huge A3 Church 75 cents honors C^r3> 9/11 - *35 ' Room Q 7/eam i rsyth County Public Library -/ 10 West FtttH Stteet ,0>^ inctnn-Salem. NC 27101 ''lN Photos by Kc\in Walker Debbie Claxton lowers Trixie Baker into the pool using the new chair. Below: As the first official chair-user ? A n t h o n y Johnson gets the honor of cutting the rib bon on Monday. U pLifted New pool chair helps people with physical limitations enjoy benefits of water BY T. KEVIN WALKKR THE CHRONICLE . ; Jt has been more than three decades since Anthofiy A. Johnson stood upright on his own power. He was only eight when, a speeding car robbed him of that ability. After fighting a ferocious battle to live. Johnson, now 41 . has lived most of his life paralyzed on his right side and relying on a wheelchair. He's found freedom in the immense indoor pool at the Winston Lake Family YMCA. The shimmering water gives Johnson's fragile bones and joints all the support he needs to walk on his own two feet. "The water helps me up so that I can move freely," Johnson said, his speech slurred - but his words crystal clear - as a result of his paralysis. "1 am Sec Pool on A9 Iconic actress recalls breaking color barrier BY TODD LUCK THE CHRONICLE *-? . r ror a generation 01 Hispanic television view ers. the PBS kids show "Sesame Street" gave them their first glimpse of someone who looked like them. When Sonia Manzano was hired to play "Maria" on the show in the 1970s, she knew that she was venturing into uncharted Photos' by Todd Luck Sonia Manzano poses with a young fan on Saturday. waters. "I loved television but I used to Guerrero wonder, 'What am I going to do in this society that doesn't see me?' cause I didn't see me reflected m^any way, in hooks or in television," Manzano told a crowd of local people on Saturday morning at the Millennium Center. Manzano. who is also an accomplished writer, was in town for Saturday's Bookmarks Festival of Books, an annual one-day event featuring a host of Sec Mun/aijp on A5 Mama Mary's House At 78, Mary ; Shuler is keeping up her legacy of caring for kids Mary Shuler BY LAYl.A FARMER THE CHRONICLE If Mary Shuler ever wonders whether the last 29 years of her career have been well spent, she need only walk into her kitchen, where an entire wall is covered with the lives she's touched . "I raised her. and this one..." Shuler said, pointing at one photo graph of a smiling child and then another. She has anecdotes about many of the children she's kept in her in-home daycare over the last three decades as well. Although many of her former clients don't need babysitters anymore, they'll always be her kids. "I was at the fair and this big. hand some dude came up and was hugging around me just like he was five years old," she said about one of her former children "... When 1 see them. I say. 'I put diapers on you!' It just tickles me to death Shuler, 78, has held various occu pations over the years, but says her heart has always, been in caring for children. She raised two children of her own and two of her late sister's children and has cared for several fos ter children and countless relatives and friends over the course of her life. "1 have just always loved children." she related. "I love babies on the tele See Shuler on AtO Disputed school exit tests dropped Competency exams had kept some from setting high school diplomas BY LAYLA FARMER [ill CHRONtCLl A controversial state mandate that prevented some high school students from graduating has been lifted. Members of the North Carolina General Assembly recently ratified Senate Bill 202. a budget bill that included a compon e n t that did away with the pas sage of com petency tests as a gradua tion require ment. The tests had been in place for years as a method of measuring student per formance across the state, and those who did not pass them by the end of their senior year were not given a diploma, regardless of their perform ance throughout high school. The passage of the bill will allow school sys tems across the state to retroactively award diplomas to all those who were denied a diplo ma because they failed to meet the competency testing requirement. said Assistant Superintendent Kenneth Simington. "Essentially, the directive we've got from the state is that any student that did not get a diploma because of the competency tests ... is (now) eligible," Simington explained. "...Ij's a minimal effect (for the greater community) although for some individual students, there will be a great effect." The testing component was only a small por tion of the roughly 300-page document, spon sored by State Senator Linda Garrou of Forsyth County. However. Garrou says she is hopeful it will make a big impression on those who are affected by it. "We heard from teachers across the state, and from parents and students, about the inordi See Tests on ? ? " ~~ Photos by I .i> la I "armor Mary Shuler points at alumni of her daycare center. ^ 1 DON'T PASS THE BUCK BUY LOCAL