KEEPSAKE GRADUATION EDITION TO BE PUBLISHED MAY 25 See Details On Page 3
Volume 116 • Issue 19
CMA-sponsored National Day of Prayer held May 5
Nursing Home Week 2022 all about “Creating & Nurturing Connections”
Theme was to “Exalt the Lord Who has established us”
by MICHAEL E. POWELL
by MICHAEL E. POWELL
Editor michael@cfmedia.info
There’s nothing like being able to get back to some form of “normal”, especially when it comes to our society’s most vulnerable individuals – our senior citizens. And, thanks to how things have progressed so far as the recent pandemic is concerned, Cherryville’s two senior’s residential care centers, Sanstone’s Carolina Care Center and Peak Resources – Cherryville, and their respective staffs and residents are all looking forward to being able to once again celebrate National Skilled Nursing Care Week, which started Monday, May 9 and continues to Friday, May 13. Said Carolina Care’s Wellness Coordinator and Transportation Coordinator, Hunter Avery, “I am excited and looking forward to get back to the normal of what Nursing Home Week was,
with the pandemic and all the changes going on inside of Skilled Nursing facilities, it feels nice to have a week where everything just feels normal.” Activities Director Sheree Jackson agreed, adding, “It is a week that is not only important to the residents but to the staff also. We look forward to all of the connections that are made this week from games at a simple carnival or making friendship bracelets it is a week to really produce real teamwork.” To that end, CCC hosted the following themes: Mother’s Day; Fun Fair Monday; Time Warp Tuesday: 50’s Edition; Wild, Wild, West Wednesday; Tropical Thursday; Fireside Friday; ending the week with an Arms Forces Saturday. Sarah Chambers, Marketing Liaison at Peak Resources – Cherryville, said, “We are having our annual Community BBQ on Thursday, May 12, from 12 noon See NURSING, Page 2
75¢
Wednesday, May 11, 2022
Editor michael@cfmedia.info
The Cherryville Ministerial Association-sponsored National Day of Prayer Service for Cherryville was held last week on May 5 at First Presbyterian Church in Cherryville, from 12 to 12:30 p.m. Cherryville Mayor H.L. Beam, III welcomed everyone to the event by saying, “How thankful we are to live in a nation where we have the freedom to worship God.” He gave a brief history of the NDP, which was created in 1952 by a joint resolution of Congress and signed into law by President Harry S. Truman. In a handout it was noted that in 1988 the law was “…unanimously amended by both the House and the Senate and signed into law by President Ronald Reagan on Thursday, May 5, 1988, designating the first Thursday of May as a day of national prayer.”
Cherryville Mayor H.L. Beam, III, welcomes everyone to First Presbyterian Church of Cherryville, site of the May 5, 2022 National Day of Prayer ceremony. (photo by MEP/The Eagle) The mayor noted it is law in all 50 states and in all U.S. territories. Mayor Beam said also we, as a nation and state, and city should always remember our local leaders, police, fire and EMT personnel in our prayers and ask God to lead them and guide them every day and to protect them as they go about their jobs. Mayor Beam also noted there were to be five prayers offered up during the cer-
emony, each given by a Cherryville pastor or lay individual accordingly. The ceremony’s devotion was given by Rev. Bob Holtsclaw, of Missionary Methodist Church, of Cherryville, who spoke about the National Day of Prayer’s theme for 2022, which was from Colossians 2: 6-7; “Exalt the Lord, Who has established us.” After Rev. Holtsclaw’s message, a prayer for our
nation and its leadership was prayed by Councilwoman Jill Parker-Puett, in which she asked God to continue to give our leaders the strength they need to lead this great nation. Secondly, a prayer for the veterans of our nation, was given by American Legion Post 100 chaplain, Bob Freeman, who prayed a prayer that God would bless each and every veteran who See PRAYER, Page 2
Some important things to know about voter registration Eligible individuals have the following options to register to vote: Existing N.C. Division of Motor Vehicles’ customers may submit a voter registration application online. Learn more at Complete Your Registration Online Through the DMV. All eligible individuals may fill out the English N.C. Voter Registration Application (fillable PDF) or the Spanish N.C. Voter Registration Application (fillable PDF) and mail it to their county board of elections. Learn more at Complete Your Registration by Mail. Individuals who missed last Friday’s deadline may register and vote at the same time during the one-stop early voting period, April 28 to May 14, at any early voting site in their county. County-by-county early voting sites and schedules are available at the State Board’s One-Stop Voting Sites search tool. For early voting schedules statewide, see One-Stop Early Voting Sites and Schedules for the 2022 Statewide Primary (PDF). Registered voters who
want to change their party affiliation for the 2022 primary election must do so by the April 22 deadline. Party affiliation changes are not permitted during the onestop early voting period or on Election Day. North Carolina residents may not register to vote on Election Day, unless they become eligible after the April 22 registration deadline due to becoming a U.S. citizen or having their rights restored following a felony conviction. 17-year-olds who will be 18 years old by the general election on November 8 are eligible to register and vote in the primary. Voters who need to update an existing registration may use the DMV website or a regular voter registration application to do so. DMV customers may update their voter registration residential or mailing address and party affiliation through the DMV service, but may not change their name through the DMV. If using the paper application, it must be signed and sent to the voter’s county board of elections by April 22. Updates to name, address (if within the county), and See VOTER, Page 2
The W. Blaine Beam Falcon Radio Club took the top honor in the School Club Roundup by taking first place in the Elementary Division. (photo provided)
WBBI’s Falcon Ham Radio Club takes top honor in recent Roundup Takes top honor by taking first place in the Elementary Division. by MICHAEL E. POWELL Editor michael@cfmedia.info
It’s no secret among ham radio aficionados… the School Club Roundup is an annual world-wide amateur radio contest and something to be desired as far as “wins”, or great accolades, go.
Why? Because students from all over the United States compete against other school radio clubs from across the nation to make as many contacts on the radio as possible over the course of a few days, said Mark Reep, of W. Blaine Beam Intermediate. Reep, one of the founding members of the club and a ham radio operator himself, said, “This year W. B. Beam Intermediate’s Falcon Radio Club (N2FRC) in Cherryville, NC, took the top honor by taking first
place in the Elementary Division.” The Falcon Radio Club was formed last year, Reep noted, and already has 77 students “…actively involved in learning about amateur radio and how it helps to teach children about science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM).” This past February was the school’s first time competing in the event, said Reep, who added that the 4th and 5th grade club members “…did an incred-
ible job racking up 105 contacts on the radio.” Said Reep, WBBI’s School Counselor, via an email, “The students made voice contact with radio operators in 29 different states, nine school radio clubs, two countries, and two Canadian Provinces, for a total score of 8,190 points. As the club president and trustee, I am extremely proud of the students who participated in the event and all the hard work they have put into making this happen.”
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