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Dementia risk grows with increased exposure to air pollution, study finds – Daily Press

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Tony Briscoe | Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES — Long-term exposure to one of the most prevalent types of air pollution may increase the risk of developing dementia, a debilitating neurological disease associated with memory loss and reduced cognitive function, according to a new study.

Researchers at the University of Michigan have concluded that people living with higher levels of fine particulate matter, or PM2.5, could face a greater risk of being stricken with dementia, according to a study published recently in the Journal of the American Medical Assn.

Scientists monitored the cognitive health of nearly 28,000 people aged 50 or older living across the United States between 1998 and 2016. Fifteen percent of this group developed dementia, and those who lived in areas with more PM2.5 were more likely to succumb to the neurodegenerative illness.

Based on those results, the study estimates fine particulate pollution may be responsible for 188,000 dementia diagnoses each year in the United States. And evidence suggests the health risk may vary with the type of PM2.5 — a catchall term for suspended material about 30 times smaller than the width of a human hair.

Scientists examined exposure to nine different types of particulate ranging from traffic to coal combustion. Exposure to pollution from wildfires and agricultural dust had the strongest ties to the prevalence of dementia, according to Boya Zhang, lead author and research fellow at the University of Michigan.

“The main reason for this distinction may be due to the different physical or chemical characteristics of the PM2.5 from these different sources. All particles are harmful to you, but wildfires and agriculture [dust] may be more harmful to your cognitive health.”

As people live longer and the global population continues to trend older, the findings underscore the importance of limiting exposure to air pollution to cognitive health. But the study also arrives amid a particularly devastating Canadian wildfire season when smoke and soot drifted across North America and engulfed such cities as Chicago and Detroit, highlighting how these intensifying natural disasters can imperil millions of people thousands of miles away.

The research is also concerning for Californians, who have seen their state ravaged by record-setting wildfires and drought that turned thousands of acres of farmland into dust bowls.

The study also serves as a reminder of the sweeping effects air pollution can have on human health. Particulate pollution has already been found to contribute to lung disease, heart attacks, strokes, low birth weight and diabetes.

And, earlier this month, a new study suggested a connection between PM2.5 exposure and the prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, also known as superbugs. Exposure to PM2.5 can make cell membranes more permeable, making it easier for bacteria to share DNA that would give them immunity to certain antibiotics, according to lead author Hong Chen, of Zhejiang University in China.

The theory that this could accelerate the larger problem of antibiotic resistance has been met with some skepticism, however.

“Just because particulate matter is perhaps increasing the permeability of the cell membrane, that does not necessarily mean that transfer of these antibiotic-resistant genes is going to happen,” said Adam Smith, a USC professor who discovered bacteria in L.A. County wastewater that were resistant to colistin, a last-resort antibiotic.

But the University of Michigan study bolsters a growing body of research linking air pollution to neurological illnesses. In a 2022 study examining the cognitive health of women between 74 and 92 years old, USC researchers found the risk of dementia decreased by 14% in areas with the greatest PM2.5 reductions. In a 2020 study, researchers at UC Davis found evidence that exposure to traffic-related air pollution altered the brain development of rats.

Whether cognitive or cardiovascular, the wide-ranging health effects of PM2.5 have been attributed to oxidative stress — the physical toll from the body’s natural response to the entry of foreign objects, which can lead to inflammation.

The severity of oxidative stress depends on the type of PM2.5 a person is exposed to. In the Michigan study, scientists modeled PM2.5 pollution from traffic, agriculture, windblown dust, coal-fired power plants and various industrial emissions, among other sources.

Except for windblown dust, all other sources were correlated with higher dementia prevalence. Surprisingly, wildfires and farm dust had stronger ties to dementia prevalence than traffic pollution and coal combustion.

“This could be partially explained due to the pesticides or herbicides in agriculture, because some ingredients could be neurotoxic,” said Zhang, the Michigan researcher. “For wildfires, we only think about trees or grasslands burning. But it burns everything in their path, including gas stations and houses, emitting some really toxic components.”

This could spell trouble for residents of the San Joaquin Valley, California’s agricultural hub, which experiences the nation’s highest levels of PM2.5 annually from livestock manure and dust. It also emphasizes the need for California residents to protect themselves from wildfires.

“When you inhale any sort of particle, you’re body is going to have some sort of immune response,” said Suzanne Paulson, a UCLA professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences. “But composition matters because if you’re near the coast, you might be breathing sea salt, which is not that bad for your body to deal with.

“When you have wildfire smoke, you have these big complicated organic molecules that interact with metals very strongly and change their chemistry sometimes … So that’s why we think that things like wildfire smoke are particularly problematic.”

Much of PM2.5 in Southern California is the result of traffic on the region’s notoriously congested roads. But the composition of this pollution has recently changed, according to Paulson.

Paulson examined PM2.5 across more than 50 locations in Greater Los Angeles. Though vehicle exhaust was once the primary source of particulate pollution in the region, metal particles from brake and tire wear are now a significant and growing source of PM2.5, Paulson said.

It has surpassed tailpipe emissions in recent years, as evidenced by higher copper and iron concentrations. While this trend shows how much cleaner vehicle engines have become, it also underscores an emerging concern.

As a growing number of heavy electric vehicles hit the road, there could be an increase in metal particles from eroding brakes and tires — and these substances are more toxic than vehicle exhaust.

“The heavier vehicles are going to produce more tire wear for sure,” Paulson said. “A lot of [EVs] have regenerative braking, which probably mitigates some emissions, but we’re not entirely sure if it goes far enough.”

Paulson’s research has already concluded that disadvantaged communities endure the highest concentrations and most toxic types of PM2.5.

The authors of the Michigan study are among a growing chorus of scientists who say new research demonstrates the health benefits of reducing the annual PM2.5 standard. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has proposed a rule lowering the federal limit for PM2.5 from 12 micrograms per cubic meter, to 9.

The EPA’s Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee has recommended the agency lower it to 8.

Nationally, PM2.5 has been significantly reduced over the past two decades. But some emissions, like those from wildfires, are disrupting this progress.

“Global aging and the problem of dementia is becoming more and more serious worldwide,” Zhang said. “We’ve known for a long time that air pollution is a risk factor for respiratory and cardiovascular disease. But we’re only just beginning to understand more about the impact on dementia.”

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©2023 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

State of emergency declared in N.C. ahead of Idalia; Outer Banks warned to prepare – Daily Press

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North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper on Tuesday declared a state of emergency ahead of potential impacts from Hurricane Idalia later this week.

Meanwhile, officials on the Outer Banks are warning residents and visitors to prepare for the impacts of both Idalia later this week, and Hurricane Franklin, which is churning offshore.

The governor’s declaration mobilizes the state’s emergency operations plan, waiving transportation rules to help the transport of fuel and critical supplies and emergency services.

Idalia strengthened to a Category 1 hurricane overnight, but is expected to come ashore in Florida as a Category 3 system with sustained winds of up to 120 mph, the Associated Press reported.

Northeast North Carolina is already seeing impacts from Hurricane Franklin, which was a major Category 4 storm in the Atlantic with winds of 130 mph on Tuesday afternoon. The storm will remain far offshore, but is creating hazardous ocean conditions with life-threatening rip currents and large breaking surf, Dare County Emergency Management said in a news release.

Hurricane Idalia’s forecast remained dynamic Tuesday afternoon, with impacts to the Outer Banks still unknown, the release said. The storm is expected to move off the East Coast into the Atlantic Ocean after making landfall as a major hurricane in Florida on Wednesday.

The National Weather Service forecast for the Outer Banks calls for “significant rain,” high winds and minor storm surge inundation.

“Most impacts will be realized on Hatteras Island based on the current forecast track. Impacts are anticipated to start late Wednesday, August 30, 2023, into Thursday, August 31, 2023, so now is the time to prepare,” Dare County’s release said.

The N.C. Department of Transportation’s Ferry Division on Tuesday suspended Ocracoke Express passenger ferry service for Wednesday and warned travelers expect statewide impacts to ferry schedules.

“All other routes will suspend operations if and when conditions worsen,” the ferry division said in a news release.

The governor’s office released the following tips to prepare for the storm:

  • Have multiple ways to receive emergency information, including watches and warnings. Make sure emergency alerts are enabled on a cell phone and download a weather app.
  • Have an emergency plan. Know where to go if there’s a need to evacuate. Make a plan to stay with family, friends or at a hotel. Public shelters should be a last resort.
  • Gather some emergency supplies or refresh an emergency kit. Visit ReadyNC.gov for info on how to build an emergency kit.
  • If people live near or are visiting the coast, be aware if you are located in a coastal evacuation zone. Visit KnowYourZone.nc.gov to see if you are located in a predetermined evacuation zone.

Episcopal priest included in Maryland AG report on Catholic sexual abuse resigns – Daily Press

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An Episcopal priest whose name was blacked out in the Maryland attorney general’s report on sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore has resigned his position as priest-in-charge of a parish in Western Maryland.

The Rev. Thomas Hudson, onetime spiritual leader of St. George’s Episcopal Church in Allegany County, left the position between May 26, when the bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland ordered him to take a leave of absence, and July 31, according to Carrie Graves, a spokeswoman for the diocese.

The bishop, the Right Rev. Eugene Taylor Sutton, was to meet with Hudson in July and issue a pastoral directive — a formal written ruling — about the alleged act of sexual abuse by Hudson described in the report that came out in April. The directive could have restricted or terminated Hudson’s ministry.

But the priest, 75, resigned from the job “of his own volition” before the meeting could occur, Graves said. Hudson is no longer “serving in any priestly capacity in any congregation whatsoever,” she added.

Sutton was unavailable Monday for comment, Graves said.

Unlike most of the people included in the report’s “List of Abusers,” Hudson was never a Catholic cleric. He was a public high school teacher, a former Catholic seminarian, and an active member of St. John Catholic Church in Frederick when he met a teenage volunteer in the parish, according to the report and news accounts of the time.

The report alleges Hudson, then in his 20s, invited the 15-year-old high school sophomore on a camping trip in 1976, gave him alcohol and, once the teen became intoxicated, pulled at his belt buckle and tried to take his pants off. The boy pushed Hudson off and left, the report said.

Sutton said in an interview in May that the priest confided in him in April that there had been an incident of some kind in his past.

Until then, Sutton said, he had heard no reports of any misconduct by Hudson, who had passed the Episcopal diocese’s background checks. He said neither the Catholic archdiocese nor the attorney general’s office ever notified the Episcopal diocese of any allegations against Hudson.

Sutton said Hudson had served in a succession of roles in Western Maryland parishes since being ordained an Episcopal priest in 2008. He became priest-in-charge of St. George’s in 2020.

Sutton said in late May that even though Hudson had come to him to discuss a “pastoral concern,” he only learned the full details of the allegations against the priest when he read about them in The Baltimore Sun.

The attorney general’s report covered 156 people that it said abused more than 600 children in the Catholic archdiocese between the 1940s and the early 2020s. The overwhelming majority were Catholic priests and brothers.

The public version of the document, however, contained dozens of redactions ordered by a Baltimore judge. Blocked out, among others, were the names of 15 individuals who the attorney general’s office said either committed or covered up abuse.

The Sun subsequently reported the identities of the 15, including Hudson, who was listed as No. 150. Hudson acknowledged to the newspaper he had been included in the report, but declined to comment, citing the advice of his attorney. He did not respond to a request Monday seeking comment.

Baltimore Circuit Judge Robert Taylor ordered this month that 43 of the 46 names redacted in the report can be released Sept. 26. The identity of No. 150 — Hudson — is to be one of those made public.

The people to be named have an opportunity to appeal the order before the Office of the Attorney General publishes a version of the report with far fewer redactions.

It doesn’t appear, however, that Hudson plans to object. The judge’s order said No. 150 “retained counsel, who reviewed the Report entries specific to him. According to the Report, he was (in 2009) the subject of a single complaint of misconduct, alleged to have occurred in 1976.

“This individual did not respond to the OAG’s renewed motion to publish his name, and withdrew his request to participate in the hearings.”

The Baltimore archdiocese learned of the alleged case involving Hudson when it was conducting a separate investigation into Father Thomas Bevan, who was pastor of St. John in 1976. Bevan pleaded guilty to felony child abuse in Frederick County in 2010.

Hudson has not been charged with a crime.

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©2023 The Baltimore Sun. Visit at baltimoresun.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Maury, Princess Anne runners eye VHSL titles, Walsingham aims to repeat in VISAA – Daily Press

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Storylines

Can Walsingham Academy repeat as state private school champ?

The Trojans graduated three runners from a team that won the VISAA Division III boys state title last season. Juniors Brody Cox and Nick Primich, who finished fifth and 11th, respectively, return, and they also have junior Andrew Robinson, who was 17th. In girls, Shea Mansisidor finished third at the state meet as an eighth-grader.

Hickory program has high hopes

The Hickory girls won region titles in cross country and outdoor track. This season they will be led by the 1-2 punch of senior Emme Malooly and sophomore Morgan Kimener. They also have senior co-captain Kate Michaelson. The boys will be led by seniors captains Jackson Fealy and Alexander Diaz as they try to lead the Hawks to the state meet for the first time since 2017.

Falcons coach reaches milestone

Cox coach Lanny Doan begins his 40th season as coach. “And it is still fun — most of the time,” he said. His boys team should be a region contender, led by Braden Cruz, Rex Lemmon and Mason Holland.

Norfolk Academy girls hope to make some noise

The Bulldogs are led by the sisters Anne and Jane Earp. Anne, a senior, finished runner-up at last season’s VISAA Division I state meet, while Jane, a freshman, finished third. They also have newcomers in sophomore Allie Keffer and freshman Kate Fine. Other contributors are Earp’s middle sister, Carol, along with seniors Sarah Bazil and Madi Kay, sophomore Ella Stufflebeem and freshman Catherine Adams.

Classification changes toughen Class 5 

Perennial powers Ocean Lakes and Kellam move down from Class 6 to Class 5 under the Virginia High School League’s latest reclassification, while always tough Great Bridge moves up from Class 4 to Class 5. The region, which already had strong teams with Princess Anne, Cox, Kellam and Hickory, just got much tougher. Don’t count out Eastern District rivals Maury and Granby in Region B.

757Teamz top 10 boys runners

1. Armaan Chopra, Princess Anne

Could this be the year that Chopra wins his first state cross country title? He won the Class 5 Region A title and placed fifth at the state meet last season. He also placed sixth at state as a sophomore.

Mike Caudill/The Virginian-Pilot

Princess Anne’s Armaan Chopra, center, will be one of the top runners in Hampton Roads this season. He’s shown here running at Class 5 state indoor meet.

2. Connor Linehan, Grafton

The junior finished fifth at the Class 3 state cross country meet.

3. Cameron Sadr, Maury

The senior finished 16th at the Class 5 state cross country meet and was the Class 5 Region B champion in the 3,200 meters in outdoor track.

4. Jayden Curry, Bruton

The junior placed eighth at the Class 2 state cross country meet.

5. Billy Driscoll, Peninsula Catholic

The senior finished runner-up at the VISAA Division II state cross country meet.

6. Preston Haney, Ocean Lakes

7. Davin Tietz, Tabb senior

8. Danny Rockey, Princess Anne junior

9. Braden Cruz, Cox senior

10. Brady Cox, Walsingham junior

757Teamz top 10 girls runners

1. Lily Guinn, Maury

The senior won the Class 5 Region B meet. At the state meet, she led at the 2.5-mile mark, but collapsed because of exhaustion and did not finish. She’s ready to challenge for state title this fall. “Lily is among the best distance runners in Virginia and the United States,” said Commodores coach Bryan Bennett. “She’s going to have a great season.”

Lily Guin

Courtesy photo

Maury’s Lily Guinn will be one of the top runners in Hampton Roads this season. (Courtesy photo)

2. Anne Earp, Norfolk Academy

The senior finished runner-up at VISAA Division I state cross country meet.

3. Emme Malooly, Hickory

The senior finished 17th at Class 5 state cross country meet.

4. Jane Phillips, Kellam

The senior finished 20th at the Class 6 state cross country meet. She also was the Class 6 Region A champion in the 1,600 meters and was third in the 800 meters.

5. Kylie Brooks, Jamestown

The senior finished third at the Class 4 state cross country meet.

6. Lauren Pegher, Tabb senior

7. Payton Roche, Kellam junior

8. Ysabel Wells, Princess Anne junior

9. Lindsay Meadows, Ocean Lakes junior

10. Jane Earp, Norfolk Academy, freshman

Larry Rubama, 757-575-6449, [email protected]. Twitter @LHRubama

Virginia Beach temple welcomes new rabbi from South America following long immigration wait – Daily Press

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Some may call it kismet.

Rabbi Ari Oliszewski knew the career path he was destined to follow at the age of 13. Several decades later, he left South America to become the new rabbi at Temple Emanuel, a conservative synagogue in Virginia Beach.

When he was young, Oliszewski admired a rabbi for his teaching, sermons and relationship with the community. Two weeks after Oliszewski’s bar mitzvah, that rabbi left to work in the U.S.

“He was with people when they were ill or happy,” he said. “I decided that I’d like to be like him.”

In 2007, Oliszewski traveled from his native homeland of Buenos Aires, Argentina, for rabbinical studies in Israel. Two years later, he received his ordination in Jerusalem and became a senior rabbi in a small community in northern Brazil.

Three years after that, he moved to another synagogue in the southern part of the country where he remained for 11 years. He watched that temple grow from 400 people attending the last day of Yom Kippur services to 1,200 attendees hearing the traditional blowing of the shofar before COVID hit.

During the pandemic, Oliszewski was instrumental in creating a stage for drive-up services.

“I felt like I was Bon Jovi,” he said. “It was amazing with the lights, the music and 200 cars with 1,000 people there.”

Feeling as if he’d reached a pinnacle of his career in South America, Oliszewski began to search for a new opportunity during the pandemic. Like the rabbi he had looked up to, he turned his dream of coming to the U.S. into a reality.

Larry Weinstein, president of Temple Emanuel and co-chair of the search committee, said they were seeking a new rabbi after Rabbi Marc Krauss had to leave his eight-year post in July 2021 due to personal reasons.

Weinstein said Oliszewski’s spirit really shined through, even through initial virtual meetings.

“Rabbi Ari is a wonderful blend of traditional practice and a glorious spirit and enthusiasm plus an informality that is really just perfect for Temple Emanuel,” he said.

Oliszewski held Shabbat services, taught the religious school and met multiple times with the board — all via Zoom.

“We fell in love with each other. We started to think about the future, the past and what we can do together,” Oliszewski said of the virtual meetings.

Enamored by the small synagogue that has about 130 members, Oliszewski said he signed a three-year contract. And then he waited — and waited — for his visa to be approved. A normal eight-month process dragged on, he said.

In the meantime, lay leaders in the congregation stepped in to fill the void, holding services on Friday nights, Saturday mornings and on holidays.

“It was an extremely frustrating wait,” Weinstein said. “There was nothing we could do during that time.”

Oliszewski said he and his family were ready to travel at any moment. Once the Brazilian consulate reopened, a meeting followed by the final visa stamp on their passports a year and half after starting the process finally enabled Oliszewski, his wife, Pati, and their two children, Lia, 5, and Ben, 3, to move to Virginia Beach in January.

Settling in and watching as his children learn English and adjust to a new culture, Oliszewski said his main goal is to go throughout the community to share Jewish life.

“I take the words of the Torah, its message and apply it to today,” he said. “We are living in an era of disconnection for the soul, for spirituality.”

Happy to be here, Oliszewski said he already feels like he’s part of the community and feels he can do a lot for it.

Sandra J. Pennecke, 757-652-5836, [email protected]

Williamsburg native looks on the bright side after losing home in Maui fire – Daily Press

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One Hawaii family with Williamsburg ties is feeling lucky to be safe after losing their home in the fire that destroyed the coastal town of Lahaina in Maui three weeks ago.

Although Mary Tornai, her husband Max and their son Ollie recently lost just about everything in the fire that ravaged their home, Tornai counts herself as “one of the lucky ones.”

“We’re safe and together,” Tornai said during a phone interview.

The Tornai family’s neighborhood was decimated by the Maui wildfires. Courtesy of Mary Tornai

Tornai, who was born and raised in Williamsburg and attended Walsingham Academy, is one of thousands affected by the deadliest wildfire in the U.S. in more than a century. As of Monday, at least 115 people had been killed, with hundreds still unaccounted for.

She recalled fleeing the fire on the afternoon of Aug. 8, describing how “touch-and-go” it was as she and her family were forced to wait in standstill traffic waiting to get out of Lahaina on the one available route. Around the road, flames continued to spark and the smoke was everywhere, she said, while people were running for their lives down the road.

The family is now living in a vacation rental and still looking for a long-term housing solution while they work to rebuild their lives.

The Tornai family home before it was destroyed on Aug. 8 in the fire that swept through Lahaina on the Hawaiian island of Maui. Courtesy of Mary Tornai
The Tornai family home before it was destroyed on Aug. 8 in the fire that swept through Lahaina on the Hawaiian island of Maui. Courtesy of Mary Tornai

Since she first moved to Maui for a job in 2007, Tornai, who now works as the chief operating officer of the Hawai’i Farm Project, has always lived in Lahaina. When she first arrived, it was a big leap of faith, she remembered: “I was like, if it works out, great, and if it doesn’t, that’s the luxury of being in your 20s.”

Before long, Maui became Tornai’s forever home. The only “bummer” is how far away it is from her family, which is still in Virginia, Tornai said.

In 2011, she met her husband, a Massachusetts native, and they had their son, 7-year-old Ollie, who has been a “rock star” throughout the family’s upheaval.

Max and Ollie Tornai at Grand Illumination in Colonial Williamsburg during a family trip in December 2022. Courtesy of Mary Tornai
Max and Ollie Tornai at Grand Illumination in Colonial Williamsburg during a family trip in December 2022. Courtesy of Mary Tornai

“He’s being so positive,” said Tornai.

A GoFundMe site was set up by Debbie Weisman Clasie, a former coworker of Max Tornai’s, and so far, it’s raised over $25,000 to help the family. After being so overwhelmed by the fire and its aftermath, Tornai said the fundraiser has been “insane.”

“We’re so grateful because every dollar counts right now,” she said.

For those who wish to help the Tornai family or other Maui residents, Tornai also pointed to the Hawaii Community Foundation’s Maui Strong Fund, which is providing financial resources to support immediate and long-term recovery for the people and places affected by the wildfires. The donation page is available online at www.hawaiicommunityfoundation.org/maui-strong.

“Williamsburg seems so far away but there’s so many ways to help,” Tornai said.

Sian Wilkerson, 757-342-6616, [email protected]

Jacksonville shooter killed a devoted dad, a beloved mom and a teen helping support his family – Daily Press

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By RUSS BYNUM (Associated Press)

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — A.J. Laguerre worked at a Dollar General store after finishing high school to help support the grandmother who raised him. Angela Michelle Carr was an Uber driver beloved by her children. Jerrald Gallion relished weekends with his 4-year-old daughter.

All three were slain Saturday when a gunman with swastikas painted on his rifle opened fire at the Dollar General where Laguerre worked in Jacksonville. The sheriff said writings left by the killer, a 21-year-old white man, made clear that he was motivated by racism. Each victim was Black.

“I never thought I’d have to bury my baby brother,” Quan Laguerre said Monday outside the family’s house not far from the store.

“They say don’t question God,” he said. “But I just want to know why.”

Residents gather at a prayer vigil for the victims of a mass shooting a day earlier, in Jacksonville, Fla., Sunday, Aug. 27, 2023. (AP Photo/John Raoux)

A.J. Laguerre, 19, was the youngest of five siblings, all raised by their grandmother after their mother died in 2009, his brother said. The family celebrated in 2022 when A.J., like his older siblings before him, graduated from high school. As he looked into going to college to study cybersecurity, he got a job at the Dollar General store several months ago to help their grandmother pay the bills.

When he was off the clock, A.J. played Fortnite and other videogames on the live-streaming platform Twitch, his brother said, using the gamer tag galaxysoul. His goal was to build a large online following.

“He had dreams and aspirations of being a professional streamer,” Quan Laguerre said. “So after he would get off work, he’d just stay up until 3 or 4 in the morning just grinding, you know, trying to get that stance and have followers.”

A.J. Laguerre was shot inside the store trying to flee the gunman, Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters told reporters.

Carr, 52, was killed in the parking lot when the shooter fired multiple bullets into her car.

“My mother, she was a good woman,” son Chayvaughn Payne told The Associated Press in a brief phone call Monday.

Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is representing the Carr family, said at news conference later Monday that Carr had just dropped off a customer and was waiting for the person to get back in the car.

Carr join St. Stephen African Methodist Episcopal Church in Jacksonville when she was 3 years old and still attended services there. The pastor said the church community has rallied behind her family.

“She was just a loving, caring mother,” the Rev. David Green said.

A woman and her brother pose for a picture.
This undated selfie taken and provided by Sabrina Rozier shows Rozier, left, and Jerrald Gallion. Gallion was killed, Saturday, Aug. 26, 2023, when a 21-year-old white man opened fire at Black shoppers at a store in Florida with guns he bought legally despite once being involuntarily committed for a mental health exam. (Sabrina Rozier via AP)

Gallion, 29, was shot while entering the store’s front door with his girlfriend, who escaped.

“My brother shouldn’t have lost his life,” his sister, Latiffany Gallion, said. “A simple day of going to the store, and he’s taken away from us forever.”

Family members recalled Gallion’s sense of humor and work ethic. He worked two to three jobs — including as a restaurant manager — to provide for his daughter, Je Asia Gallion.

Je Asia’s fifth birthday is approaching and the family had planned a big party, said Sabrina Rozier, the child’s maternal grandmother. Gallion was looking forward to a father-daughter dance in February.

“He was so excited about it, talking about the colors they would wear,” Rozier said, as Je Asia played with the microphones during Monday’s news conference. “Now she’s asking, ‘Who shot my daddy?’ ”

Although Gallion’s relationship with the child’s mother didn’t last, they worked together to raise Je Asia. That earned him lasting affection from Rozier.

“He never missed a beat,” Rozier said. “He got her every weekend. As a matter of fact, he was supposed to have her (Saturday).”

Gallion never made it to pick up his daughter. Now the pastor of the church he attended is preparing to bury him.

“In two weeks I have to preach a funeral of a man who should still be alive,” the Rev. John Guns of St. Paul Missionary Baptist Church said during the vigil. “He was not a gangster, he was not a thug — he was a father who gave his life to Jesus and was trying to get it together.”

St. Louis Team Stax

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Norfolk NBA player Keyontae Johnson launches ‘Key to My Heart’ foundation – Daily Press

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COMMUNITYNorfolk’s Keyontae Johnson, a rookie for the NBA’s Oklahoma City Thunder, introduced his “The Key to My Heart” foundation.

The newly established nonprofit organization is dedicated to saving lives through critical cardiac initiatives.In collaboration with Heartfelt Cardiac Connections, “The Key to My Heart” foundation announced it will donate an Automated External Defibrillator (AED) to one of Johnson’s high schools, Oak Hill Academy.

Early this year, Heartfelt and Johnson helped save the life of an 11-year-old gymnast at a heart screening sponsored by Johnson, whose basketball career was interrupted by a medical incident in December 2020.

His foundation says this is just the beginning. The organization aims to improve cardiac health and emergency preparedness by providing communities access to life-saving AEDs and cardiac screenings to save lives through early detection.

COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL

Norfolk State announces new eight-player class

Norfolk State revealed an eight-player class of newcomers — two freshmen and six transfers.

The freshman are 6-foot-3 guard Jordan Leaks from Phoebus High, who averaged 23.2 points, 6.8 rebounds and 4.8 assists per game as a senior and was second-team all-state in Class 3, and 6-7 forward Chris Fields from Petersburg High. Fields averaged 25.2 points, 10.1 rebounds and 2.9 assists as a senior and was the Class 3 Player of the Year.

The transfers are 6-5 Allen Bertrand, who has played for Rider, Rhode Island and Towson; 6-10 forward Tyrel Bladen (Rider); 6-5 guard Jaylani Darden, a Norview High graduate who spent two years on Longwood’s team; 6-9 Kuluel Mading (Buffalo); 6-5 Daman Tate (Boston University); and 6-foot Jamarii Thomas (UNC Wilmington).

Tate is the younger brother of Dana Tate, a former NSU starter.

Tribe unveils non-league schedule

William & Mary announced its 13-game non-conference schedule, which includes five at home in Kaplan Arena.

The Tribe will open its season at home Nov. 6 at 7:30 p.m. against Regent as part of a doubleheader with the women’s team, then will play host to American at 7 p.m. Nov. 9.

W&M will play at George Washington on Nov. 11, then go to the Air Force Academy to play the host Falcons Nov. 17 in between games Nov. 16 against Lindenwood and Nov. 19 versus Omaha, all in the Falcons’ arena.

After hosting Maryland Baltimore County on Nov. 25, the Tribe will play at Norfolk State on Nov. 28 and at Richmond on Dec. 2.

W&M then will play host to Old Dominion on Dec. 6 and Virginia University of Lynchburg on Dec. 10 before playing at Pepperdine on Dec. 21 and at Navy on Dec. 30.

COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

Tribe reveals non-CAA slate

William & Mary revealed an 11-game schedule including five at home and eight against state opponents.The Tribe will open with home games against Norfolk State on Nov. 6, VCU on Nov. 10 and George Mason on Nov. 12.

W&M will play at Virginia on Nov. 15 and at defending ACC champion Virginia Tech on Dec. 21. The Dukes will visit reigning Sun Belt champ James Madison on Dec. 7.

The Tribe’s most prominent home game could be its Nov. 30 clash against Old Dominion, and W&M also will be at home for a Dec. 17 contest against Longwood.

COLLEGE MEN’S SOCCER

ODU earns tie with header goalJonas Schmalbach headed in the only corner kick on the night for Old Dominion, taken by Nathan Lam in the 78th minute, as the Monarchs and UMBC played to a 1-1 draw in Baltimore.

ODU (0-0-2) was outshot 17-10 by the Greyhounds, who had a 7-1 advantage in corner kicks. ODU sophomore Michael Statham made six saves, five in the second half.

Jordan Travers scored in the 37th minute for UMBC.

Coastal Carolina holds off W&M

William & Mary lost 2-1 to Coastal Carolina in Conway, South Carolina, leaving both clubs with 1-1 records.The Chanticleers went ahead on Christian Cook’s goal in the ninth minute and doubled their lead with Deryn Armstrong’s penalty kick in the 36th. A foul on W&M’s Joe Core provided that opportunity.

The Tribe answered on Lucas Caldas’ goal in the 52nd minute off an Aidan Morrison assist. W&M, which outshot Coastal Carolina 14-11 in the match, maintained good pressure for much of the second half but couldn’t pull even.

High school scoreboard | Granby, York claim one-goal victories in field hockey – Daily Press

0

Non-district

Granby 1, King’s Fork 0

G-Creamer.

Kameron Creamer scored on an assist by Brianna Carasco.

Grassfield 3, Maury 1

G-G, McDonald 2, Smith; M, Baker.

Meghan McDonald scored twice, Hanna Smith added a goal and Kalyn Fluker had two assists.

York 1, Lakeland 0

G-Moss.

Natalie Moss scored on an assist from Chevelle Claypool.

757Teamz Top 15

#14 Norfolk Christian 3, #10 Western Branch 1

(21-25, 25-21, 25-19, 25-16)

CJ Coleman had 13 kills and seven digs and Landon Pruhs had 23 assists and three aces.

Non-district

Western Branch 3, Norfolk Christian 2

(16-25, 17-27, 25-20, 25-15, 15-13)

Lindsay Waghalter led the Bruins’ defense by averaging eight digs per set, Abbey Smith had an attacking percentage of 0.466, and Keira Wright finished with 11 kills.

Nansemond River 3, Southampton 0

(25-16, 25-14, 25-22)

Laila Greene had five aces and three blocks, while Michelle Parker had 10 kills.

Private schools

Hampton Roads Academy 3, Williamsburg Christian 0

Upcoming schedules

Daily public-school schedules are available at:

bayriversdistrictva.org

beachdistrictva.org

easterndistrictva.org

peninsuladistrictva.org

southeasterndistrictva.org