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                <text>The Allen Home/High School was created for higher education for African Americans living in Asheville and its surrounding areas. This school was created because for years African American students were kept from going on and furthering their education. This school made that possible.</text>
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                <text>Ronnie Carr is originally from South Carolina and was born in the town of Orangeburg in 1961 and moved to New York where he grew up as a child and eventually returned to Orangeburg to graduate high school. He played Basketball for Western Carolina University during his sophmore year. He played from  ((1979-1980)) and his life would change forever when he played against ((Middle Tennessee State)).  Ronnie Carr played as shooting guard aka “2nd guard” and received the ball during the ((1st half)) and he made the first three-point shot in college basketball history securing his place in the National Basketball Hall of Fame. Ironically, Ronnie Carr wore #22 and the 3-point arc in that first year was 22 feet, instead of the now 19-feet, nine-inches. Carr chose #22 as a freshman and the 3-pont shot did not debut until Carr’s sophomore season. &#13;
No other athlete had achieved such a feat until that day. Ronnie was chosen to go to UNC Chapel Hill Basketball Camp for two weeks but the first week he was invited to a cookout with Michael Jordan and other famous athletes. Ronnie was traveling on highway 15-501 and was lost and there was very rainy weather when he looked over his steering wheel a police car was supposedly chasing another vehicle tried to slide around his car but driver’s side over an excess of 100 mph Ronnie suffered a concussion, broken collar bones on both sides, two broken arms, a severely fractured left wrist, two broken legs, a severely fractured and lacerated left ankle. The impact was so severe that left mitral valve away from his heart. &#13;
Ronnie had to have open heart surgery and be hospitalized for a good while for various surgeries. Ronnie was able to find a new purpose outside of basketball when he found the help the youth of the East Coast when he established the Ronnie Carr Foundation to help others through his experience.  To this day Ronnie continues to work for his foundation and help the youth of east coast by speaking at public venues.  &#13;
Ronnie Carr’s philosophy for helping these people is to speak positively and to emphasize that even though something can be taken from you that you can learn from the experience and rise above it. This has been the key to improving people’s quality of life and helping them achieve their dreams. &#13;
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                <text>RONNIE CARR - CBS Sports Network." N.p., n.d. Web. 15 Nov. 2016.&#13;
Bambach, Mike. "GREATEST MOMENTS | WCU’s Ronnie Carr Made College Basketball’s First 3-pointer." American Sports Network. N.p., n.d. Web. 15 Nov. 2016&#13;
(Ronnie Carr, personal communication, November 15, 2016)&#13;
&#13;
When All God's Children Come Together pg.227</text>
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                <text>Born December 17, 1957, Jimmy Streater became a sports icon representing his hometown of Sylva, North Carolina. Upon entering Sylva-Webster High School in 1972, Streator was a prominent athlete playing football, basketball, track, and baseball. His athleticism gained him a large community backing nicknaming him “The Sylva Streak,” exaggerating that the grass did not move beneath his quick feet. Throughout his high school career he earned multiple awards such as the Athlete of the Year by the Asheville Citizen-Times and Football All-American by Parade Magazine. After graduating he was recruited and played football for the University of Tennessee from 1976-1979, where he continued to excel breaking the rushing record for a Tennessee quarterback. He then went on to briefly play professional football as a free agent in the Canadian Football League before his retirement in 1981. Streator sadly passed away in 2004 at the young age of forty-six but his memory lives on through his many achievements in sports and the inspiration he brought to his small town.</text>
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