Delaware
Delaware Winds to perform fall concert Oct. 28 in Dover
Delaware Winds will open its sixth season with a performance of its fall concert, A New Beginning, at 7 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 28, at Dover High School.
Delaware Winds is the First State’s only semiprofessional wind ensemble and includes band directors, freelance musicians and college music students who reside all over the state. The mission of Delaware Winds is to perform the finest wind literature available for wind band, and the group is intentional in programing works by underrepresented voices in the wind band medium.
Making his debut performance is new Delaware Winds Music Director Michael D. Russo. He was a music instructor in the New Jersey communities of Saddle Brook, Kinnelon, Parsippany and Morristown during a 34-year teaching career.
As a performer, Russo has been a member of the trumpet sections of the New Jersey Wind Symphony and Delaware Winds. He is a founding member of the Imperial Brass Quintet. He has performed throughout the United States as well as in China, the Philippines, the Dominican Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Austria and the Czech Republic.
In addition to Russo, Delaware Winds welcomes one guest conductor from within the ensemble – Nicholas Greeson, tenor and soprano saxophonist, and Rehoboth Elementary School band director.
As part of the event, the Dover High School Big Band under the direction of Garrett George will perform a prelude concert at 6:30 p.m. The DHS Big Band is an award-winning ensemble that specializes in the performance of Black American Music. Informed by historical styles and modern performance practice, the band’s repertoire includes swing, blues, Afro-Latin and funk music. George is a graduate of Dover HS and the University of Delaware, where he studied under Tom Palmer and Harvey Price.
Delaware Winds has embarked on a capital fundraising campaign this year with the goal of reaching $10,000, and every gift helps. To make a tax-deductible donation, go to degives.org/orgs/delaware-winds.
Admission prices for the concert are $15 for general admission, $10 for senior citizens/military, and as always, students and children enter free. Tickets will be sold at the door. For more information and to purchase advance tickets, go to facebook.com/delawarewinds/ or email delawarewinds@gmail.com.
Delaware
Thousands celebrate Delaware Juneteenth Association with 30th anniversary parade, festival
What is Juneteenth? The holiday’s history and significance, explained.
Biden just signed legislation to make Juneteenth a federal holiday. Here’s why this once local celebration is significant to U.S. history.
Just the FAQs, USA TODAY
It was 1994 when a handful of organizers created the Delaware Juneteenth Association ― not just to celebrate Black history, but also armed with a mission statement to develop programming to address problems in the community.
Thirty years later, the organization is continuing to grow and hosted its largest annual event on Saturday: the Juneteenth freedom parade and festival, which drew about 3,000 people to Wilmington’s downtown and the Riverfront.
“We started with a flicker, and now we’re the keeper of the flame,” said Sylvia Lewis-Harris, one of six co-founders, led by main founder Bernie Wilkins, as she looked out at the crowd from under a tent.
Parade doubles in size
Saturday’s parade had 60 units marching down King Street from Rodney Square to the Riverfront, doubling last year’s effort celebrating the holiday, which is Wednesday. The parade ended at Tubman-Garrett Riverfront Park with a six-hour festival celebration with children’s rides and music by R&B singer Christopher Williams (“I’m Dreamin’”) and The Odyssey Band.
Lines stretched down the sidewalk for the most popular food vendors, lured by the smells of whiting and catfish sandwiches from Vern’s Fish Fry and cajun crab macaroni and cheese and fried shrimp from Krys’ Soul Kreations.
The 2.4-acre Tubman-Garrett Riverfront Park is named after Underground Railroad figures and abolitionists Harriet Tubman and Wilmington’s Thomas Garrett, who is believed to have helped almost 3,000 enslaved people to freedom.
“Having it here really makes it poignant,” Lewis-Harris said of the park, which began hosting the Juneteenth festival several years ago after it moved from Christina Park a few blocks away.
Juneteenth now a state of Delaware holiday
Juneteenth, also known as Freedom Day or Liberation Day, is celebrated June 19 commemorating the day in 1865 when the Emancipation Proclamation was read in Galveston, Texas, announcing all slaves in the state were free.
It came more than two years after President Abraham Lincoln issued the proclamation, which had formally freed the slaves in rebellious states. Many slave owners didn’t comply and enforcement was slow to reach Texas.
In 2020, the murder of George Floyd, who was Black, at the hands of white Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, spawned widespread protest nationwide and in Delaware.
Less than a month after Floyd’s murder, Gov. John Carney announced all state offices would close in observance of Juneteenth. In 2022, it became a permanent state holiday.
A history lesson in freedom
It was the first time at the event for Charles Hayward, a longtime retired state of Delaware employee.
Hayward, a member of Alpha Phi Alpha, the oldest intercollegiate historically African American fraternity, attended with his wife, Saundra, who was celebrating her birthday on a park bench with a cup of ice cream.
“I was raised here and wanted to come down and show support, knowing the background of the park. There’s a lot of history here,” said Hayward, now living in Brandywine Hundred.
First-year association president Styna Marisa LeCompte says Juneteenth and the celebrations around it are especially important for the younger generation.
“Nowadays with our youth, they sometimes aren’t taught history, never mind Black history,” she said. “They need to know whose shoulders they are standing on.”
JUNETEENTH IN DELAWARE: 8 must-see events that you can attend
MORE ON JUNETEENTH: Delaware’s oldest Juneteenth organization kicks off observance with flag-raising ceremony
Juneteenth observance and Delaware Juneteenth Pageant still to come
In addition to the weekend parade and festival, the association will host a Juneteenth observance service at Cornerstone Fellowship Baptist Church (20 W. Lea Blvd., Wilmington) on Wednesday at noon.
The Rev. Dr. Jesse Wendell Mapson Jr., senior pastor of the Monumental Baptist Church in Philadelphia, will be the guest preacher with music by the Rev. Justin Powell and an appearance by Miss Juneteenth Delaware Erin Hubbard Witcher.
This year’s Juneteenth events will end June 29 at 5 p.m. with the 27th annual Delaware Juneteenth Pageant at The Baby Grand (818 N. Market St., Wilmington). Tickets are $15 for adults and $7.50 for ages 12 and younger at thegrandwilmington.com.
Have a story idea? Contact Ryan Cormier of Delaware Online/The News Journal at rcormier@delawareonline.com or (302) 324-2863. Follow him on Facebook (@ryancormier) and X (@ryancormier).
Delaware
How boring is Delaware? See the rank for people in states most eager to move abroad
Middletown businessman turns body into canvas for Delaware-themed tattoos
Ryan Pepe has over a dozen Delaware-themed tattoos on his arm. Most show landmarks, company logos and everything that Delaware is known for. 11/18/22
Damian Giletto, Delaware News Journal
Since everyone has heard the phrase “Delaware is boring,” where do you think the state ranks nationwide for residents most eager to ditch it and move abroad?
A new study conducted by luggage shipping experts MyBaggage.com revealed Delaware ranks eighth nationwide for residents who can’t wait to relocate from the United States.
Delaware is the only state from the Mid-Atlantic region to rank in the top 10, while Wyoming ranked No. 1 for residents most interested in bailing to live out of the country.
States with people most eager to move out of the USA
- Wyoming
- Vermont
- Alaska
- North Dakota
- Hawaii
- Montana
- Rhode Island
- Delaware
- Oregon
- Colorado
- New Hampshire
- Maine
- South Dakota
- Washington
- Nevada
- Utah
- Idaho
- Arizona
- Nebraska
- Florida
What are the reasons to move out of America?
Paul Stewart, managing director of MyBaggage.com, shed light on the report’s findings and explained why some Americans would want to leave the country.
“Americans leave the U.S. for a number of factors, including better job prospects, a lower cost of living, better quality of life, studying abroad, better healthcare, marriage and relationship, or just travel and adventure,” Stewart commented.
Google tells us people want to ditch the USA
Research conducted in the study analyzed all 50 states (and two U.S. territories) based on the number of times per month that each state Googled a term related to moving abroad.
The report said data included 285 keywords such as “best countries to move to,” “best European countries to live,” “minimum wage by country 2024,” “how to move to USA from UK,” “should I move to Australia,” and “legal requirements to move to Portugal.”
The number of searches for each term was then added to give a total for each state. This was then compared to the population to calculate the number of searches per 100,000 people.
Wyoming, which ranked No. 1, had an average of 115 searches per 100,000 residents and 672 per month.
10 best countries to move to
In 2023, U.S. News & World Report ranked the 85 best countries in the world, and America ranked fifth. The data was based on various metrics that included quality of life, cultural influence, and entrepreneurship.
The USA ranked as the No. 5 country in the world. Below are the top 10 countries in the world.
- Switzerland
- Canada
- Sweden
- Australia
- United States
- Japan
- Germany
- New Zealand
- United Kingdom
- Netherlands
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Delaware hopes to boost tourism
To make Delaware a more attractive state, legislation introduced House Bill 444 on June 6, with plans to designate “Orange Crush” as the state cocktail.
The primary sponsor for the bill is Rep. Peter Schwartzkopf, D-Rehoboth Beach.
While lobbying for a state cocktail might sound silly, it would allow the First State to claim another tourism item as it has done with scrapple.
Language in HB 444 states: “Orange Crush has been made famous and become synonymous with Dewey Beach, Delaware” and “The Starboard in Dewey Beach, Delaware perfected the Orange Crush and serves the most Orange Crush cocktails of any bar in Delaware every beach season.”
If Delaware adopts Orange Crush as a new state symbol, will it push the Small Wonder out of the top 10 for people most keen to move abroad?
Answering yes to this question likely means you’ve had too many cocktails, and should strongly consider taking an Uber home.
If you have an interesting story idea, email lifestyle reporter Andre Lamar at alamar@gannett.com. Consider signing up for his weekly newsletter, DO Delaware, at delawareonline.com/newsletters.
Delaware
Delaware County librarians receive training on how to use NARCAN to prevent fatal overdoses
MIDDLETOWN, Pa. (CBS) — Librarians from 12 Delaware County libraries received life-saving training including NARCAN nasal spray and “stop the bleed” classes at the Middletown Free Library Friday.
The classes were provided by the Delaware County Health Department’s Delco Revive, a program supported in part through monies distributed by Delaware County’s Opioid Settlement Fund.
The program provides free life-saving resources including Xylazine test strips, Fentanyl tests, basic wound care kits and NARCAN nasal spray to schools, businesses and organizations throughout the county.
Friday’s training was designed for librarians to be prepared to save a life during critical emergencies in the community.
To learn more about the trainings, visit DelcoRevive.com or contact the Delaware County Wellness Line at (484) 276-2100.
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