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Non-Profit { 67 images } Created 24 Feb 2016

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  • After school tutoring program at Partnership Village.<br />
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Photographed, Thursday, February 22, 2018, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Ruben Sanders leaps from his seat in excitement as he and his classmates learn that they have all been awarded bicycles during the event at Gillespie Park Elementary School in Greensboro.<br />
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Bikes For Kids Foundation, a non-profit based out of California, teamed up with six sponsors and Guilford County Schools to give away anywhere from 50 to 100 bikes at six Title 1 schools. A total of 455 bikes were given away this week. Bikes For Kids Foundation expects to continue the bike giveaway next year.<br />
When completed, a total of seven schools and 505 bicycles will be awarded.<br />
<br />
Photographed, Tuesday, December 18, 2018, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    004_gcs_free-bikes_g-park_0A8A1148.JPG
  • The National Folk Festival held Friday through Sunday, September 11-13, 2015, in Greensboro, NC. <br />
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The National Folk Festival held Friday through Sunday, September 11-13, 2015, in Greensboro, NC.<br />
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Zhengli “Rocky” Xu, left, during a fable with the turtle and the crane puppets.<br />
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For more than 2,500 years, master puppeteers in China have entertained and instructed audiences young and old with their strikingly lifelike rod puppets that star in dramatic, acrobatic stagings of folktales, legends, and opera. Much like Aesop’s fables, the traditional puppet stories, featuring both animals and humans, often include social or moral lessons about kindness, hard work, bravery and patience. Other tales, for instance the popular “clever monkey” stories, have similarities to trickster tales found in diverse cultures worldwide.<br />
Yuqin Wang and her husband and fellow performer, Zhengli “Rocky” Xu, were both leading puppeteers with the famous China Puppet Art Troupe, the first national puppetry school in China, for more than 30 years. They founded their own puppetry troupe called Dragon Art Studio when they came to Oregon from China in 1996. In the past two decades, together with their daughter Brenda, to whom they taught the rod puppetry tradition, they have shared the beauty, wonder, and excitement of Chinese rod puppetry with audiences throughout the United States.<br />
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SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH and JERRY WOLFORD/Perfecta Visuals
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  • The James B. Dudley High School Advanced Vehicle Technologies or “AVT” Team in their shop located on the Dudley High campus, March 5, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C. The unique program prepares students to take part in the Shell Eco-marathon, a competition where student teams from around the world design, build, test and drive ultra-energy-efficient vehicles. The team, lead by program founder and Dudley teacher Rick Lewis, prides themselves on hard work, overcoming challenges, and for creatively building vehicles out of re-used and re-purposed parts.
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  • Last day of school at Ronald E. McNair Elementary School.<br />
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A celebration for retiring principal George A. Boschini.<br />
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Photographed, Tuesday, June 12, 2018, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Music: Guilford County Schools' Arts Integration Academy at Allen Jay Elementary School.<br />
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Photographed, Monday, January 7, 2019, in High Point, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Math: Guilford County Schools' Arts Integration Academy at Allen Jay Elementary School.<br />
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Photographed, Monday, January 7, 2019, in High Point, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Parkview Elementary School 3rd grade student Antwon Lyntch sheds tears of joy after learning he would be getting a new bicycle to replace his broken one.<br />
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Bikes For Kids Foundation, a non-profit based out of California, teamed up with six sponsors and Guilford County Schools to give away anywhere from 50 to 100 bikes at six Title 1 schools. A total of 455 bikes were given away this week. Bikes For Kids Foundation expects to continue the bike giveaway next year.<br />
When completed, a total of seven schools and 505 bicycles will be awarded.<br />
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Photographed, Tuesday, December 18, 2018, in High Point, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Guilford County Schools' All-County band concert performances by middle school and high school students were held at Walter Hines Page high school auditorium. A select group of musicians were chosen to play in Guilford county’s all-county band after music clinics.<br />
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Photographed, Thursday, November 29, 2018, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Guilford County Schools' Arts Integration Academy at Allen Jay Elementary School.<br />
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Photographed, Monday, January 7, 2019, in High Point, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Jerry Wolford and Scott Muthersbaugh / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Cone Elementary third grade students celebrate together as they learn they will all receive bicycles,<br />
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Front: Left to right, Serenity Estevez and Juelz Garner.<br />
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Back: Left to right, Camarion Williamson-Mosley, Ashley Hernandez, Jaden Chambers.<br />
<br />
Bikes For Kids Foundation, a non-profit based out of California, teamed up with six sponsors and Guilford County Schools to give away anywhere from 50 to 100 bikes at six Title 1 schools. A total of 455 bikes were given away this week. Bikes For Kids Foundation expects to continue the bike giveaway next year.<br />
When completed, a total of seven schools and 505 bicycles will be awarded.<br />
<br />
Photographed, Monday, December 17, 2018, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    006_gcs_free-bikes_cone_0A8A0445.JPG
  • Lei Washington, the Principal of Gillespie Park Elementary School hugs Blessings Martin and Jaymi  Murphy.<br />
<br />
Bikes For Kids Foundation, a non-profit based out of California, teamed up with six sponsors and Guilford County Schools to give away anywhere from 50 to 100 bikes at six Title 1 schools. A total of 455 bikes were given away this week. Bikes For Kids Foundation expects to continue the bike giveaway next year.<br />
When completed, a total of seven schools and 505 bicycles will be awarded.<br />
<br />
Photographed, Tuesday, December 18, 2018, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    007_gcs_free-bikes_g-park__35K0687.JPG
  • Colfax Elementary School's Emma Gwyn, 9, right, reads the book, "You Wouldn't Want to be a Slave in Ancient Greece," with her classmates in Maegan Denney's class in the room's "Reading Bubble."<br />
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2017 Guilford County School System's last day of school.<br />
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Photographed, Monday, June 12, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Kadrien Wilson at Simpkins Elementary School, Friday, February 26, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
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Kadrien Wilson is a senior at Bennett College in her hometown of Greensboro, N.C. Besides maintaining her 3.9 GPA and her position as vice president of the Student Government Association,she is a student teacher for a class of second graders at Simpkins Elementary School. After graduation, Kadrien plans to remain with Guilford County school system and hopes to rise through the administrative ranks to principal.<br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Guilford County Schools' Arts Integration Academy at Allen Jay Elementary School.<br />
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Photographed, Monday, January 7, 2019, in High Point, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Seth Burhenn, a junior at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, in the school's simulation lab, Thursday, February 4, 2016, in Greensboro, N.C. In addition to his nursing studies, he is also a member of the National Guard and enrolled in UNCG nursing department’s Veteran Access Program. Post-graduation, Burhenn hopes to specialize in Oncology.<br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Caitlyn Smith is a senior at the STEM Early College at N.C.A&T. She has set her sights on pursuing a mechanical engineering degree at A&T or a material science and engineering degree at N.C. State. She is a Junior volunteer firefighter with the Whitsett Fire Department and the keeper for the Eastern Guilford soccer team.<br />
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Photographed, Tuesday, May 15, 2018, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Irving Allen at the Greensboro Four statue on the North Carolina State University campus, Monday, January 4, 2014, in Greensboro, N.C. Allen's uncle, David Richmond, is on the far left. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • "Half a century after he began collecting memorabilia related to Statesville, his beloved hometown, Steve Hill sheepishly admits, “At some point, things got out of hand.”Not that that’s a bad thing. Hill’s massive menagerie of memorabilia, the Statesville Historical Collection, is a museum-sized scrapbook of life in Statesville and Iredell County, from the approximately half a million vintage photographs he’s amassed — half a million! — to the countless artifacts that offer telling glimpses into the city’s past.The collection abounds with remnants of the three products that propelled the city’s growth in the late 1800s — tobacco, liquor, and medicinal roots and herbs, including what was once believed to be the largest herbarium in the world. Other exhibits pay homage to famous folks who once called Statesville home — from professional athletes to successful authors to NASA astronaut Thomas Marshburn — and to the numerous movies filmed there.Hill began collecting “Statesvilliana” as a teenager, and he never quit.“The basis for the whole thing has been this sense of pride in my community,” he says. “We have a fascinating town, a fascinating history, and it’s a story that needs to be shared.”<br />
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Photographed, Monday, June 7, 2021, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Melissa Kammerer, left, and Brittney Isopropyl dance briefly as art is projected onto the brick wall behind them by Markus Dorninger and Matthias Fritz from the Cheesecakes by Alex's outdoor dining area. Kammerer and Isopropyl were promoting their body painting event in the 17 Days arts and culture festival.
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  • Kindergarten teacher Nancy Close receives hugs from her students, Kharisma Jeter, left,  and Jasmine Bates, as they help her tidy up her room. Close has taught for  nine years.<br />
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2017 Guilford County School System's last day of school.<br />
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Photographed, Monday, June 12, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    013 10_GCS_2017_last_day_school_bc8u...JPG
  • Izzie Durham, age 7, explodes a pumpkin with a wooden mallet.<br />
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Quaker Lake Camp 2021 Pumpkin Festival.<br />
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Photographed, Saturday, October 16, 2021, in Climax, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD / Perfecta Visuals
    016_QLC _Pumpkin_Festival_2021_A7J07...jpg
  • Kay Neal II, examines her evidence.<br />
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Southern Guilford High School students perform tests during the GSR and Tool Marks Lab in Ms. Montgomery’s Honor’s Forensic Science class Friday, November 17, 2017.<br />
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Photographed, Friday, November 17, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Caroline Perez, 8, and her sister<br />
Maggie Perez, 5, get crossed up as Maggie reaches for her rolling pin as the two make Moravian cookies at the First Moravian Church's annual Candle Tea. First Moravian Church’s annual Candle Tea was free and open to the public on Friday and Saturday. The event presented the experience of an old-fashioned, 18th-century Moravian Christmas with snacks, tea, and old fashioned crafts.
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  • Astrophysicist, director of the Hayden Planetarium and research associate at the American Museum of Natural History, Neil deGrasse Tyson, delivers his speech entitled “The Sky is Not the Limit," at Elon University's Spring Convocation in Alumni Gymnasium, Thursday, April 2, 2015, in Elon, N.C.
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  • Latifa Aboeid in her STEM Early College at NC A&T chemistry classroom, Tuesday, November 3, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C.<br />
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JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
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Some kids say they want to be a firefighter, an astronaut or a teacher when they grow up.<br />
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By fourth grade, Latifa Aboeid knew that she would be a surgeon.<br />
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“I go back and forth between neurosurgeon and general surgeon, but I know I’ll go to med school,” she says.<br />
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The dream isn’t very far out from reach. At just 17, Latifa has nearly two years of college credits on her transcript, thanks to the STEM Early College at NC A&T, a new tuition-free Guilford County public high school. She is on track to start medical school by age 19.<br />
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The early college is academically rigorous, and Latifa’s a top student. She is researching insulin resistance in Type 1 Diabetes in addition to her regular course load.<br />
 
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  • Marceline Mukoma, 7, a second-grader at Washington Elementary School, watches the happenings of her neighborhood through the screen of the front door as the sun sets.
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  • O’Donnell, visits the classroom of Dauna Jessup, the school's Chorus/Dance teacher.<br />
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Ged O’Donnell, a British born and Irish proud educator, has become Guilford County’s turn-around principal by employing everything from teacher organization to old-fashioned positive reinforcement to spur students and teachers on. Test scores have increased, discipline problems have decreased, community support has grown and school spirit has spiked first at Montlieu Elementary in High Point and now at Kiser Middle in Greensboro.<br />
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Photographed, Wednesday, December 13, 2017, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Twins Remy and Cameron Phipps were born minutes apart. They’ve always lived within steps of one another. They’ve taken the same classes, rode the same bus, played the same sport and voted last spring at Ragsdale High as Prom King and Prom Queen. Now the pair will attend N.C. State and live two floors apart in Sullivan Hall, the school’s honor dorm. Remy and Cameron were photographed at their Greensboro home and on the campus of Ragsdale High School on July 12, 2016.  JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • North Carolina Central University student Manuhe Abebe during a day on campus.<br />
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Photographed, Tuesday, November 30, 2021, in Durham, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
    016_TFA_NCCU_Manuhe_Abebe_0A8A7386.jpg
  • Tina Pupillo kisses her great great grandson Noah Hunt, 4, during the Greensboro Urban Ministry Feast of Caring fundraiser in the Fellowship Hall at First Baptist Church on Thursday in Greensboro. This year's event celebrates 22 years of fellowship and support for Greensboro Urban Ministry and the 25th anniversary of the William Mangum Holiday Honor Card, which benefits the nonprofit
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  • Alexa Bird, 5, during a prayer at the Greensboro Urban Ministry's 20th annual Feast of Caring held on Thursday, November 17, 2011, in Greensboro, NC, at First Baptist Church.
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  • The 7th annual Running of the Balls, a night run/walk on a 5K(ish) course, winds through the Sunset Hills neighborhood. Participants run through one of the largest neighborhood light displays in the United States. Started years ago, the residents of this neighborhood decorate their 50-foot tall trees with enormous "Lighted Christmas Balls."<br />
Now the third largest race in Greensboro, its 3,500 runners annually raise more than $50,000 for Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest NC. Recognized by Runners World as an internationally unique event, the race draws participants from around the world through allowing them to experience the Lighted Christmas Balls of Sunset Hills at night. Adding to the ambiance of the race, the neighborhood course is filled with 7 stages of music. Homeowners often enjoy the event with friends caroling by campfire and having hot chocolate and cookies in the Start/Finish area.<br />
The 3,500 person field is regularly sold out within one month of registration opening.<br />
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Photographed, Saturday, December 15, 2018, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • The Tucker family pray over their meal of chicken in their single room Pathways Center apartment.  Pathways is a housing program of Greensboro Urban Ministry.
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  • Jean Ann Wood's Little Free Library is located in her front yard near the road. The Little Free Library movement has swept across N.C.
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  • Former QLC counselors Nick Green, Felicia Rich, and Tyler Pugh, decorated the boys 4 cabin. Jolly St. Nick was the theme. Nick Green was St. Nick.<br />
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Quaker Lake Camp held the Christmas Candlelight Service & Cabin Lighting on December 12. This service included music, a brief message, and open worship as an opportunity to reflect on the true meaning of Christmas. After the service, participants were invited to stroll by the cabins that had been decorated by former QLC staff, campers, and friends of QLC, and enjoy hot chocolate, hot apple cider, and s’mores.<br />
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Photographed, Sunday, December 12, 2021, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD  / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Gabrielle Rodgers, a junior at  North Carolina A&T State University, in the Manufacturing Lab in Graham Hall on the A&T campus, January 26, 2016. Originally from Maryland, she is the first person in her family to pursue post-secondary education. In addition to studying at the College of Engineering, Gabrielle is a Resident Advisor and a member of the Honors Program. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Jonathan Smith outside his home.<br />
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It started in 1996 with a couple of lighted Christmas balls hanging in a tree outside Jonathan and Anne Smith’s house in Sunset Hills. It grew and grew.<br />
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Photographed, Tuesday, December 3, 2019, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD / SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH Perfecta Visuals
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  • Page High School Volleyball ACE ALS – For Pete’s Sake Fundraiser. Rodney Hazel, the public address announcer, left, and Page volleyball head coach Trevor Hewitt pour ice on the head of Rusty Lee, the athletic director at Page High School. Lee was challenged by Susan Moffitt to take the ice bucket challenge before the match. Afterwards, Lee challenged the school's principal, Patrice Faison, to meet the challenge. High school volleyball matchup with Southeast Guilford High School at Page High School.
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  • Gini Bell graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2008 with an undergraduate degree in Spanish and linguistics. Since 2014, she has been the Executive director of Farmer Foodshare, a non-profit that serves fresh local produce to over 20,000 people a year with the support of local farmers and volunteers. Farmer Foodshare collects fresh food at donation boxes around the state, like this one at the Carrboro Farmer’s Market. Ms. Bell was photographed at the market, located in Carrboro, N.C. on Saturday, January 30th, 2016.
    027 002_pv_Gini Bell _BC8U5784.JPG
  • Nansili Nie, 4, wraps up her baby doll, named Booboo, at her cousin's home located along 20th St., Wednesday, April 29, 2015, in Greensboro, N.C. Nansili has learned how to wrap her doll in a traditional Montagnard fashion from watching her 7-month old cousin being cared for by family members.
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  • Rachel Spedden, 7, laughs as she and her father, Marc Spedden, work on her Twinkle Twinkle Little Star lesson with teacher Luci White in the Music Center of Greensboro's lesson space located in the Greensboro Cultural Center.  White is teaching Rachel with the Suzuki training method, which involves parents learning the music with their child. Rachel started her lessons in January and is one of White's 55 students ranging from age 4 through senior citizen.
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  • Jeni Kirk, executive director of Bell House, kisses Charles McCauley, 83, after she gave a placement report to residents on Tuesday, October 21, 2014, in Greensboro, N.C.
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  • The Rotary Club of Greensboro Carousel is at the Greensboro Science Center.<br />
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Photographed, Wednesday, December 1, 2021, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • The Guilford College Bryan Series presented virtuoso violinist Itzhak Perlman at War Memorial Auditorium on Monday, March 17, 2014, in Greensboro, N.C. He discussed his life and music and then performed a short recital with pianist Rohan De Silva of The Juillard School.
    033 11_jw_Itzhak Perlman_.JPG
  • Pumpkin flesh flies through the air as Troy Thrift, 5, smashes a pumpkin. Children smash pumpkins at the annual Pumpkin Festival held at Quaker Lake Camp on Saturday, October 18, 2014, in Climax, N.C. The event has hayrides, pumpkin painting, a tower swing, inflatables, canoeing, pumpkin smashing, live music and a children's fishing tournament in the camp's pond.
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  • William Thomas III celebrates his religion degree at Greensboro College's commencement on the lawn.
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  • The National Folk Festival held Friday through Sunday, September 11-13, 2015, in Greensboro, NC. <br />
SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH and JERRY WOLFORD/Perfecta Visuals
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  • Bell House resident Vicky Rhodes receives a hug from Raina Gardner, Administrative Support Coordinator.  Vicky Rhodes is transgender.
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  • Jack Stoops, 7, who was born without a right leg, has gathered up his outgrown prosthesis, walker and crutches to donate to a child amputee in Haiti.
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  • Residents watch the "Resident Collage" performance at Well Springs' new 340-seat theater, which will be open to the public and will feature performances by local theatrical groups. Well•Spring is a Life Plan Community located in Greensboro, NC.<br />
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Photographed, Thursday, January 24, 2019, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • The Phillips Foundation.<br />
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Photographed, Thursday, November 14, 2018, in Greensboro, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Areej Hussein is held on the shoulders of her cheering family after graduation. Her brother, Mohamed Hussein, is at right and cousin, Abeer Ali, lifts her onto her shoulder. Her cousin Mohamed Ellabib, 13, is in the foreground carrying her diploma. Students spend time with friends and family after their graduation ceremony as part of the first graduating class of the STEM Early College at N.C. A&T. Hussein  has big plans too, "I will be studying at the University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill as a pre-med student. I plan on majoring in Biology and pursuing two minors in entrepreneurship and Arabic.  I also plan to study abroad in college. I will then go to medical school. Im still debating between becoming an endocrinologist or general surgeon.  I plan on working here for sometime and later working over seas in the Arabian gulf. I also want to start my own  hospital in Sudan in my later years. Later in life, I also want to join Doctors Without Borders." The commencement ceremony was held in Harrison Auditorium on the A&T campus, Wednesday, May 25, 2016, in Greensboro, NC.  Forty-two graduates completed high school in two years and will enter college with 60 hours of course credits. The science/technology/engineering/math-focused school was founded in 2013 with more than $1 million in support from Greensboro, NC-area companies, foundations and organizations, to prepare students for careers in fields such as engineering, renewable energy and biomedical sciences. Graduates will further their education at schools such as NC A&T, NC State, Duke, Princeton, Cornell and the Naval Academy. JERRY WOLFORD  / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Joyner Library's Ralph Scott, Curator, Printed Books & Maps in front of one of only three original Edward Moseley 1733,  “A New and Correct Map of the Province of North Carolina.”<br />
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Without benefit of aerial photography and satellite imagery, Edward Moseley got a lot right with his 1733 map titled “A New and Correct Map of the Province of North Carolina.” It covers a wide sweep of territory, from the Santee River delta in South Carolina up to southern Virginia and west to the Piedmont. The mouth of the Cape Fear below present-day Wilmington is nearly spot-on, with the coast making a sharp westward turn and the cape thrusting like a dagger into the sea. <br />
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Only three of Moseley’s original 1733 maps are known to exist in the world. One is housed in the Public Records Office in London while another is kept at Eton College in England. The only map in America, and the one likely owned by Moseley himself, is framed on the wall of the Special Collections room at East Carolina’s Joyner Library.<br />
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Photographed in the Special Collections room at East Carolina’s Joyner Library, Friday, March 3, 2017, in Greenville, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Pilot Bill Wilkerson  is helping to rebuild an iconic DC-3 airplane at the North Carolina Transportation Museum in Spencer, NC. <br />
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Photographed, Tuesday, November 21, 2017, in Spencer, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals<br />
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Pilot Bill Wilkerson of Pleasant Garden, North Carolina was among the first black pilots in the country. Wilkerson flew 15 years for Piedmont Airlines, which became a part of US Airways in 1989. In 1980, he became the second black person to earn the rank of captain with the company. The retired pilot still wears his captains’ uniform while he gives tours at the North Carolina Transportation Museum.<br />
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Wilkerson grew up in the projects of Knoxville, Tennessee with his two other siblings and his single mother, who worked as a domestic. She gave her kids the books she received from her clients.<br />
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Wilkerson’s mother purchased “The Library of Universal Knowledge” for her children and young Bill read the chapter called “How to Fly.” The boy ‘flew around the world’ through the articles inside National Geographic and Reader’s Digest. He was so intrigued, he engulfed himself in model airplanes and begged his mother for flying lessons. She initially refused, so Wilkerson and his friend paid $5 for a flying lesson at the Knoxville airport. His mother eventually gave in, and by the time he was 16 years old, Wilkerson was in flight school. Five years later, he obtained his pilot’s license.<br />
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Wilkerson enlisted in the Air Force and served as a mechanic until 1971. Three years later he got the job at Piedmont. While Piedmont was jokingly called the “puddle jumper” airline, Wilkerson was proud to work as one of the first and few black pilots in the industry. He gained much attention as one of the few black men in uniform.<br />
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Wilkerson logged more than 17,000 hours as a pilot for Piedmont. He was finally able to take his family to the places he’d only seen in the National Geographic magazine as a child. In 2011, he was in
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  • The annual Wake Forest Lovefeast at Wait Chapel.<br />
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The crowd sings during the event.<br />
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Photographed, Sunday, December 3, 2017, in Winston-Salem, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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  • Bathabara Village<br />
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Winston-Salem residents view the manger scene Christmas tree.<br />
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Micah Johnson<br />
Heather Johnson<br />
Amaya Johnson, 3.5<br />
Kai Johnson, 1.5<br />
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Photographed, Saturday, December 2, 2017, in Winston-Salem, N.C. JERRY WOLFORD and SCOTT MUTHERSBAUGH / Perfecta Visuals
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