Archive for May, 2007

Carole S. Gilliam

May 22, 2007

Too late to be breaking news, the following obituary for Asheboro Rotary Club’s current Secretary (and therefore, incoming 2007-08 President) Carole Gilliam is provided in this space to fill the historical record. Phil Shore reports that her memorial service Sunday afternoon was well-attended by Rotarians, business associates and friends.

Carole S. Gilliam

ASHEBORO — Carole Stiner Gilliam, age 61, of 837 Trollinger Road, Asheboro, died Thursday, May 17, 2007 at Randolph Hospital, Asheboro.A memorial service will be held on Sunday, May 20, 2007 at 4 p.m. at First Presbyterian Church, 420 West Walker Ave., Asheboro with Rev. W. Russell Ward Jr., Rev. Connie Weaver, and Rev. Jack Ogburn officiating.

Carole was born in Cumberland, Maryland, and had resided in Asheboro since 1970. She was a graduate of UNC-G and a former teacher with the Asheboro City Schools. She was a deacon and an active member of First Presbyterian Church. She was a partner with Coldwell Banker-The Real Estate Shoppe and was past president of the Board of Realtors. Carole was secretary and the incoming president of the Asheboro Rotary Club and was a Paul Harris Fellow. She was a member of the N.C. Zoological Society and formerly served as a docent at the N.C. Zoo. She was a member of the Asheboro/ Randolph Chamber of Commerce and participated in Leadership Randolph. Carole was a member of the Sorosis Book Club and was involved with numerous community activities.

She is survived by her daughters, Carolyn Dunnavant and her husband Edward F. Dunnavant of Wilmington, N.C. and Anne Reid Gilliam and her fiance William Scott Blair of Avondale Estates, Ga.; mother, Betty Stiner of Lawrenceville, Ga.; sisters, Robin Offutt and her husband Bob Offutt of Lawrenceville, Ga, Stacey Wilkinson and her husband Dwight Wilkinson of Sevierville, Tenn.; former husband, Robert A. Gilliam of Asheboro, N.C.; and several nieces and nephews.

The family will receive friends following the service at the church.

Memorials may be made to the Asheboro Rotary Foundation, P.O. Box 1281, Asheboro, N.C. 27204 or N.C. Zoological Society, 4403 Zoo Parkway, Asheboro, N.C. 27205 or First Presbyterian Church, 420 West Walker Ave., Asheboro, N.C. 27203.

Carole was a passionate volunteer, a constant, loyal and dedicated mother, sister, daughter and friend. Carole was a wonderfully talented and gracious spirit, so giving of her time.

She was a true community leader deeply admired, always interested in enriching lives, challenging herself and encouraging others. Her greatest joy was in helping and giving to everyone around her. Carole loved the beach. She was always ready to have fun, never taking herself too seriously, a nonjudgmental soul, a friend to all. Her legacy shall live on in each of us.

Online condolences may be made at www.pughfuneralhome.com

Friday, May 18, 2007

May 18, 2007

I (Mac Whatley) confess to being absent from Asheboro, present in greater Beantown, during our regular meeting; I was attending my first meeting as a member of the Board of Trustees of the American Textile History Museum in Lowell. Saturday (a wet, cold day), Roman and I saw Daisuke Matsuzaka pitch a great game at Fenway against the Braves; Sunday we hiked around Nantucket; Monday afternoon we ate Italian in the North End. More on my blog, with pictures, when I find the time!

Guest Scribe: Phil Shore, who deserves high marks for perseverance as he worked hard to figure out the wordpress software. Here, as he writes, is attempt#5: “Home Work with Dog Teeth Marks”:

Guests: Jerry Earnhardt guests of Mazie Fleetwood—George was present but was not introduced as a guest?—Jerry is new director of the Asheboro Unit of the Sandhills Mental Health Center.

Randolph Club—Archie O’Dell, Ed Bunch, Susan Milner, Charles Allen

No student guests.

Newsletter Committee has the program for June 1. President Prithvi said he had been told that there WOULD BE a program.

(Yes, says Mac: Benjamin Briggs, Executive Director of Preservation Greensboro and the Chairman of the Guilford County Historic Properties Commission, will speak on how historic preservation works in Guilford County.)

Announcement of Carole Gilliams’s passing with information about her memorial service. Family requests memorial gifts be made to Rotary Foundation (several received already). (For her obituary, see a subsequent post on this blog).

On behalf of Dale Lambert who invited our speaker, Bonnie Renfro introduced Jeff Brooks, the Marketing and Communications officer of ncGreenPower. With him was Martha Gettys.

Green Power

Jeff began by saying that when we turn on a light switch we make a choice to have illumination and we make a choice to expend resources to make the power for the light. In North Carolina the resource most called upon to make power is coal. Coal has to be brought into the state from West Virginia or Pennsylvania. So it is expensive as well as troublesome from an ecological point of view.

Jeff’s topic is renewable fuel sources already in North Carolina. He listed: solar power, wind power, hydroelectric power, methane recovered from landfills or hog waste, biomass (including woodwaste and biodiesel). These newer resources, although local and abundant, are more expensive to produce because development has not caught up with practicality. ncGreenPower is a nonprofit that provides power companies with a supplemental payment for the use of these more expensive technologies. This is done in an effort to get the producers at least up to the break-even point.

He said that every dollar donated to ncGreenPower stays in North Carolina; every dollar helps to make cleaner fuel options more practical.

Besides donating to ncGreenPower (which can be done monthly through the electric power bill) individuals can make big differences in their power use and environmental concerns by switching to compact fluorescent lightbulbs, purchasing Energy Star appliances, checking homes for air leakage, be wise users of electricity, and encourage renewable sources of energy.

For further information see http://www.ncgreenpower.org/

May 11, 2007

May 11, 2007

Did you “get your beauty struck,” as my great Aunt always referred to having her picture taken?

As promised, there was a Professional Photographer (two of them, in fact), present and ready to take some pictures for our Rotary directory. There was also a rank amateur photographer present, to immortalize the picture-takers. Photographers Doing Their ThingThe line was out the door when I checked in, so I scooted in and out just as Prithi rang the bell.

To get the wheel rolling, Tom White four-way-tested us, Prithi Pledged and Phil Shore Prayed. H.R. Gallimore introduced the guests of Tom White: Joyce Harrington, wife of part of the program, and Jerry and Kay Atwood, musical linch-pins of Deep River Baptist Church; also present was Pat Allred, the ever-lovely better half of Don; and Matthew Altamura, son of Lynn Dodge, whom Your Scribe has already met in court, and on the right side of the bar, fortunately. Matt is a native of New York, a graduate of William and Mary, attends law school at George Mason University, and is practicing for the summer with his stepfather Fred Dodge.

A tardy Bill Batten just managed to get our student guests to AVS under the wire, and professed his appreciation for seat belts and air bags. Katie and Christian

Katie Dawes, daughter of Michele, Queen of the City of Asheboro water treatment plant, and Rick, Principal of Randleman High School, evidently comes from good stock. She’s the Captain of the Volleyball team, runs track, swing dances, volunteers for CUOC and the Chamber’s Student LIFT program, and last but not least, was this year’s Homecoming Queen. She works at the North Fayetteville Street Sir Pizza, and for her Senior Project, she demonstrated Belly Dancing. OMG. This fall she’s going to Appalachian State where she’ll major in Communications, and she wants to become a News Broadcaster.

Christian Zafra, son of Christino and Luisa Zafra, was born in Mexico City. (Bill Batten, channeling Tar Wheel Scribes, checked in advance to report that greater Mexico City has 27 million inhabitants, which is the equivalent to the population of North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and Georgia all added together. FYI, that’s not even the largest city on earth: that would be Tokyo/ Yokohama, with 33 million residents.) Christian’s senior project was on Weight-lifting; he’s going to Chapel Hill where he intends to study Chemistry and Physics.

President Prithi offered the condolences of the Club to Richard and Alan Pugh, on the death last weekend of their mother Maxine Pugh. He also announced the death last night at Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem of Hassell Patterson, member for many years on behalf of Asheboro Concrete Products, and husband of our long-time pianist Rose Patterson. His funeral service will take place Sunday at 3PM at Central Methodist Church. Prithi (and Phil Shore, in his Prayer) asked the Club to support Club Secretary and Incoming President Carole Gilliam, who had a major heart attack this week, and has had angioplasty and stents inserted at High Point Hospital, where she remains in the Cardiac Care Unit.

Your Scribe revealed the creation of this Blog as a new method of publishing the Tar Wheel, and solicited the comments of the Club. One good thing about blogging: if there’s nothing in particular happening, I can always add pictures! The Club at TableKathy and H.R.Food!

Vegetarian Time: Famous Irish writer and playwright George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950), was a famous Socialist and women’s rights advocate; won both the Nobel Prize (for Literature, 1925) and an Oscar (for Pygmalion, 1938; and yes, was one of the best-known Vegetarians ever. At one time he had some serious health problems (both his sisters died of tuberculosis), and sought advice from doctors, who told him that if he didn’t start to eat meat, he’d die. He refused, and lived into his nineties, when someone asked him what he’d “say to those doctors now?” “I’d like to tell him I was right,” he said, “but they’re all dead.” Moral of the Story: Vegetarianism prolongs life!

Tom White introduced our program, the Capital City Gospel Quartet. Just founded in 2006, the group has a combined 236 years of musical experience. Dale Garner, accompanies the group on the electric piano, and is the mother of Stephan and Beverly. Dale is the credit manager for a marble and glass company, and has played piano or organ for churches for more than 50 years. Stephen Garner, Baritone, is a mortgage broker, gospel music recordist and producer, and has sung with 5 different quartets over the past 18 years. Beverly Garner Yates, Alto, is a homemaker and longtime gospel singer. Eddie Harrington, Bass, was for 37 years the band director at South Asheboro Middle School/ Asheboro Junior High School, is married to former school board member Joyce Harrington, and is a former choir director. Dennis Harrington, Lead, is Eddie’s brother, a career public health administrator with the State, and was almost always a soloist until joining this group.

Capital City Gospel QuartetYour Scribe lost count of how many songs they performed, and they didn’t announce the song titles, but they were impressive performers, all. As Tom White said, this is the music of almost every country church in the South, and has been for more than a century. There’s some question whether the gospel music tradition started in African-American or in white southern churches. There’s no question that the first great star of Gospel music was singer, songwriter and guitarist Sister Rosetta Tharpe, who first made the pop music charts in 1938, and the black gospel tradition certainly goes back into the 19th century. Southern Gospel is often just called “quartet music” by fans due to the tenor-lead-baritone-bass quartet make-up. Early quartets were typically accompanied only by organ or guitar, and were originally all male. Its roots can be found in the early church music business where publishers like the Stamps-Baxter Company of Dallas, Texas, promoted their music books through travelling teachers who ran “shape note” singing schools across the South. The “Sanctified” or “Holiness” religious movement of the first decades of the twentieth century pumped energy into Southern Gospel. The singers who travelled with evangelists such as Billy Sunday inspired groups such as The Carter Family, hugely popular in radio performances from 1927 to 1943.

For more info, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_gospel .

 

May 4, 2007

May 11, 2007

Welcome to an experiment!

The Tar Wheel has been the official newsletter of the Rotary Club of Asheboro, North Carolina, for more than fifty years. For much of that time it was printed by Durham Printing Company, address-o-graphed, and distributed by mail. The last three years it has been emailed to members after being written by the Tar Wheel staff and then designed, laid out and published by Cooper Thornton, with some help from the marketing department of First National Bank. The last six weeks, however, the distribution chain has broken down. Members haven’t received a Tar Wheel by email since early March, not because they haven’t been written, but because the publication phase takes some time, which Cooper hasn’t had.

After some discussion, Cooper directed me (Mac Whatley, Your Scribe today) to set up this blog through WordPress, which will allow Scriveners to post their notes on our Rotary meetings without waiting for prettification. WordPress offers the best blog software, and I’ve used it for a couple of months now to post my own online journals, mostly having to do with the my travels with Roman Bogdanov, my Russian foreign exchange student. Here is the link to my blog, FYI: macwhatley.wordpress.com . Roman actually is the one who first took the leap into blogdom, to avoid having to write separate letters to all his Russian friends and family. Here’s the link to his blog, but fair warning, it’s in Russian: hulkiliada.wordpress.com . Blogs allow comments from readers, so please comment! Here goes:

Asheboro was cool and rainy for the first Rotary meeting of May, but things were hopping inside AVS.

Past President Jim Rich, Chairman of the Scholarship Committee, led the Four Way Test, and President Prithi led us in the Pledge of Allegiance. Phil Shore, looking especially spiffy (I guess he primped to sit at the front table) led the way in being Thankful.

H.R. Gallimore welcomed guests Susan Milner and Tom Pugh; Steve Grove of BB&T and the Martinsburg, West Virginia club was making up and checking us out- he may be moving our way. Henry Trollinger introduced us to AHS students Trevor Wall (son of Terry and Merita, a member of the baseball and cross country teams; headed to NSCSU in engineering) and Jonathan Walker (son of Rick and Patricia, whose hobbies and interests are “hunting, fishing, church, helping little old ladies cross the road, rescuing babies from house fires, and saving cats that are stuck in trees”- maybe he needs to write for the Tar Wheel! Trevor has a tennis scholarship to Chowan where he will major in Christian ministries.) Besides those guys, we also had two tables of student scholarship winners from Asheboro, Southwest, and Randleman—see below!

Tom White announced that next week’s program would be the new gospel quartet “Capital City,” which includes retired SAMS band director Eddie Harrington.

Prithi says that a Professional Photographer will be present the next two weeks to take member photos for our online directory, designed to have a printed version in the future. Future President Carole Gilliam reminded the club of the 2nd annual Old Dominion Rotary Golf Tournament, at Mid Pines in Moore County- $500 a team with proceeds going to Boys and Girls Homes.

“Does meat have any medicinal value?” asks Prithi. Since this is Vegetarian Time, the answer is obviously NO. Many vegetables and herbs have been recognized for medicinal purposes for thousands of years (Oh, for instance: onion, garlic, grapes, hops, malt, barley, rye…. Just don’t add Melamine.)

The program is our annual scholarship presentation, and Jim Rich was the master of ceremonies.

Southwest Randolph guidance counselor Teresa Burton updated the club on the highlights of her school’s year, and introduced us to their three winners. Valeria Osipova, born in Russia, emigrated to Randolph County 6 years ago and lives on a farm in Tabernacle with her Russian mother and American father (and, in the interests of full disclosure, is a good friend of Your Scribe’s visiting Russian, Roman Bogdanov). Valeria will be attending UNC-G and wants to study music marketing so she can be a designer for a music recording label. Megan Sanders is the President of the FFA at SWR, which has 289 members. She will attend NCSU to study poultry science and veterinary medicine, with the intention of coming back to her family’s Randolph County farm “to help my Daddy” and her five siblings. Elizabeth Ritch will also be attending NCSU to study agricultural education, and also wants to return to her family farm, and would like to teach in the county schools. Both the horticulture and animal science programs at SW expanded this year (a new barn built, just in time for 9 goat kids born last week), so agriculture seems to be doing well at least in that corner of the county.

Jill Hays, guidance counselor at Randleman High introduced Michael Danford, who will be going to UNC-CH to study business, marketing and sales- right in line with his plan to be “an automobile industry entrepreneur.” Victor Oxendine will also be going to Chapel Hill to major in mechanical engineering and study criminal justice; he wants to work for a NASCAR racing team, so I hope that’s not a required double major.

Carolyn Fitch, AHS guidance counselor, waved the flag hard for AHS, not only reminding the club of athletic prowess (first undefeated season in football since 1982, Men’s Basketball conference tournament champs) but another Superior for the Band, with 2 students going to All-State Band and one going to Governor’s School; five students to All-State Chorus; 8 members of the class of 2007 with athletic scholarships, and one going to Princeton to run track. She touted the Blue Comet Academy, helping 8th graders to make the transition to high school, and the Zoo School, which will send 100 students and 4 teachers to study at the Zoo next year. Her winners: Elspeth Crawford, going to Chapel Hill to major in biology and Spanish, and who wants to attend medical school to be an OB/GYN; and Brittany Wright, Editor-in-Chief of the student newspaper Ash-Hi-Chat, going to Chapel Hill to major in English, and who hopes to go study law at Wake Forest after that.