June 1, 2008 by leeshephard

Saturday

Memorial Day 1961

FACES FROM THE WALL VIETNAM & LAOS NON-MILITARY PERSONNEL 1961 – 1965 AIR AMERICA CREW LOST
30 May 1961 near Hmong Laos
Air America Charles Mateer Walter Wizbowski On 29 March 1961, Clarence J. Abadie led a flight of 16 UH-34s from Bangkok to Air America’s new forward operating base at Udorn in northeastern Thailand, 40 miles sough of Vientiane. The helicopter forces soon became involved in supporting Hmong forces engaged in a fierce battle with the Pathet Lao at Pa Dong. On 30 May, the first Air America helicopter pilots died in Laos, when Charles Mateer and Walter Wizbowski crashed in bad weather while trying to land supplies to the besieged Hmong.


I wish it weren’t so, but it was a day our small family will never forget. My first cousin, and CHS54 graduate, Charles Mateer was (probably) shot down in Laos. (I say probably because I’ve since corresponded with Richard Crafts, the pilot of the other helicopter who had just landed at the site where Charles’ helicopter was attempting a landing. They were under artillery fire at the time. Crafts said he couldn’t tell if the copter hit the top of a tree, or it was brought down by enemy fire, but Charles was killed instantly. Crafts brought his body back to the Air America base in Thailand.

This was at a time when the world wasn’t aware that the US was fighting communists in Laos. That’s the reason that Charles had been discharged from the Army early……and joined AIR AMERICA, which, in reality was the CIA.

My aunt Kathryn and Uncle Harry, Charles’ parents, received their last letter from Charles the day after they were informed of his death. They actually found some comfort in it, since Charles seemed so happy and fulfilled with helping the Hmong people continue their fight for freedom.

-Ed

“All gave some,
some gave all.”

Thursday

At Last

I received this picture from Don Nance without much of an explanation. I was as perplexed as you probably are. It appears that Don and Jennie Margaret and Gene Moore just graduated from something or other or had just been inducted into Mensa or the Elks or………….AND Don said that they missed me. (I was supposed to be there?)
Linda, my trusty sidekick, significant other and keeper helped solve the mystery. She said that I had gotten something from UNC inviting me to march in their commencement ceremonies which would be led by members of the class of 1958.
She had given me the letter but frankly I didn’t read it. I just assumed that it was asking me for money, as usual….so I deep sixed it without looking at it. (Frankly I’ve made a number of trips back to Chapel Hill and admired all those mansions the professors are living in, and concluded that my old alma mata is doing just fine without money from me.)
Later, Don filled me in on the rest of the details:
Ed.
I am not very good at writing notes for the web. Jennie would do a much better job, and she and Bill were at Carolina for the whole event.

It was commencement at UNC. We, the class of 1958, were invited to return for a reunion and to lead the procession of graduates. The event started on Friday with tours and dinners, but all I cared to do was walk with that group of old folks at commencement. About 200 were to be attending, but I believe the rain prevented a few from coming. We did have around 150 present. We met at the field house at Kenan Stadium, donned our blue robes, and a medallion commemorating our 50 years since graduation. We exited the field house in pouring rain, walked around the podium, and returned to the fieldhouse. Meanwhile, spouses stayed in the fieldhouse out of the rain and watched from the balcony.

It was great seeing and visiting with Jennie, Bill, and Gene. I did get to visit with people I have not seen for fifty years (glad we had nametags). Most of us who still have hair, have gray hair. So many folks have changed, but Jennie has remained the same.

-Don
Ahhhh, the good old days! It’s hard to imagine a more beautiful and wonderful place to be in the springtime than Chapel Hill, NC! -Ed

Tuesday

Half Full, or Half Empty

Look what I found on eBay!

A CHS coffee cup from the class of 1938!
That’s 70 years old! Wow, what a find!
Almost.

When I turned it around, I discovered the it was really only 12 years old. It was a souvenir from the class of ’38’s 60th reunion.
Oh well, it only cost 10 bucks and I can drink a lot of coffee out of it til I get the REAL collector’s cup in 2014; the one from our 60th !
-Ed


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Thursday

Great Ship, Great Name

Warren Sparrow, our “rambling,” reporter checks in from Wilmington, NC

We cannot top Holly Jones’s smashing victory but we can tell you of our latest movement. On 3 May 2008 we, Becky and our son Artie and I, attended the commissioning of the USS North Carolina (SSN-777), the Navy’s newest fast-attack sub. Lord knows how this was arranged. The Navy brought the sub to Wilmington, NC. It was a beautiful day. Liddy Dole was there. She is a Duke graduate. A good time was had by all the 6,000 in attendance.

According to the program, the sub is a little more than 300 feet long. It is also covered with rubber. It must be the “Run silent, run deep” thing. Artie said it was the largest concentration of tax dollars he had ever seen: $2.2 billion contained in less than 400 feet.

According to the speechifying, the sub is going to be used for drug interdiction… and other things.

It was an exciting day. There were many folks who were World War II vets. Some were from the battleship North Carolina. The day before the ceremony there was a meeting of the crew of the sub and the Old Timers from the battleship. How about that? According to the sub’s captain, a few pieces of the teakwood deck of the battleship have been placed in conspicuous places on the sub.

That is the news. Here are a couple of pictures.

Hope all is well. We soldier on, keeping our heads up when we dribble.

Warren

(Note…..That’s an old basketball expression, not a reference to his fellow cronologically gifted classmates-Ed)

Wednesday

Neil Jones Daughter Wins in Buncomb County

AND THE WINNER IS:

Holly Jones!

Neil Jones reports that his daughter, Holly Jones, led the ticket in the Democratic Primary for Buncombe County Commissioner, by a wide margin.

She is the CEO of the YWCA in Asheville and has finished 8 years on the Asheville City Council.

Shown here….Holly and her adopted daughter from Guatemala.


Neil says that “Holly has her undergraduate BA in Public Policy from some public school in Orange County,N.C. (Guess you could look up the name somewhere. I forget it.) Then , thank Providence, she graduated from Divinity School at an edenic school called Duke. Then she relapsed and picked up a MagnaCum Laude MA from UNC School of Public Health. Went to Asheville to run their YWCA and has served 2 terms on the Asheville City Council leading the ticket in both elections.”

Neil adds, “Sorry bird dog who won’t brag on his puppy.”

Congratulations Holly, and congratulations Neil!

(Note: I went there for 4 years but I can’t remember the name of that nearby public school either, but I remember the names of every one of the beer joints in Orange County. I had to look up the word “edenic.” It means, Eden-like….as in “the garden of Eden”
…unless of course, you’re an evil lacrosse player. -Ed)

Monday

Missing Classmates

This is not official, but I’ve been hearing rumors that THE COMMITTE is considering an “event” to commerate our 55th anniversary….sometime next year. That’s welcome news, and certainly a good reason for us to make an extra effort to find our “missing classmates.”

As a reminder here is the current list:
James Morris Allen
Sarah Ellen Beck

Paul Everette Biles

Rebecca May Brogden

Nancy Elizabeth Brooks

Ruth Brown

Agnes Anne Caudell
Danny Carver Cole
Donald Bundy Cooke
Lois Elinor Dempsey
Ann Gorden Finger
Sue Elizabeth Griffin
Carl Guest
Janie Frances Gurley
Frederick Earl Howard
Nancy Eunice Karnes
John Thomas Keller
Kathleen Virginia Kesler
Jeanne Holland King
Doy Kenneth Lim
Ronald Richard Little
Gary Lutteral
Sarah Lillian McWhirter
Fred Arthur Merrill
Esther Lorraine Newell
David William Powell
Nelda Codelle Price
Elizabeth Ann Purvis
Helen Bryan Ray
Roseary Sessoms
Michael Thompson
Robert lee Tribble
Wade Edward Turner
Bruce Lawrence Wallace
Yvonne Wentz
Shirley Ann Williams
Elizabeth Ann Wilson
Jerry Lee Wood

I’ll keep you informed regarding our next “event.”

-Ed

Video Slide Show by Class of ‘50 !

March 5, 2008 by leeshephard

If I could figure out how to put one of those flashing red lights (like Drudge uses) on this website…I would!

I think this production I recently came upon (thanks to my sister Kathryn Carpenter) is terrific!

It was done by members of the CHS class of 1950 for their 55th Reunion in 2005 :

Producer…..John Brock
Executive Producer…Jack Claiborne
Associate Producer…Roddy Brown
Production Assistants…Dickie Orr, Jessie Rush, Al and Carolyn Parker

If you happen to see any of these people, please congratulate them for me on their outstanding video presentation! (Also ask them kindly not to sue me for copyright infringement.)

Apparently, they have a reunion every 10 years, since their next one is scheduled for 2010.

You’re going to enjoy these great old pictures of Charlotte and Central High School!

CLICK HERE to see the show.

We Made Him Number ONE

March 5, 2008 by leeshephard

Remember?
In the Spring of 1954 the radio stations in Charlotte had a contest to see which station had the most popular DJ. The winner would be determined by which DJ’s listeners contributed the most money to the March of Dimes campaign.
A couple of weeks prior to the contest Genial Gene had been kind enough to appear at the big Key Club talent show of that year and provide some real professional entertainment. The show was very successful. It raised $1000 for the club….to go to charity.
The vote was taken and the charity of choice was……the March of Dimes. It was bequethed to them is the form of VOTES for Genial Gene.
Charles Kuralt wrote a column about “The Genial One” in the Charlotte News in November of 1956:
THE GENIAL ONE
By Charles Kuralt

“I was a stammerer for 27 years.”
It sounds like a speech course testimonial, but it’s only the personal declaration of Genial Gene, he of the radio couplets and the glib tongue.
“Yep,” he says, “I stammered worse than anybody you ever heard for 27 years. I used to evade speaking in public, and I’ll tell you how I did something about it. I forced myself. I was teaching in the county and I was too poor to buy any literature for the youngsters, so I wrote little poems and plays. The English language has so many synonymous words that when I couldn’t say one I’d just switch to another one. I had to learn words that way. I learned an awful lot of words, just so I’d have one ready when I hit one I couldn’t say. That’s the way I became a literary man.”
His public, which tunes in WGIV at 6 and 11am and 1,2, and 3pm Monday through Saturday and all day on Sunday, gets an earful of literature.
Genial Gene (whose last name is Potts, by the way) talks in rhyme.
“I just make it up as I go along,” he says. “After learning all those words to quit stammering, rhymes are easy. Sometimes it’s hard NOT to talk in rhymes.”
Genial Gene won top disk jockey laurels in the city a couple of years ago, after 1,000 votes from Central High School pushed him over the top. This week, he’s celebrating his eighth year on the air.
“I belong to the public,” Genial Gene explains. “I’ve m.c.’d at all the swanky clubs around here and things like that. But I try to stay on the giving end, keeping others happy.”
On the “giving end,” he’s on the TB Association board, works with the March of Dimes, the Boy Scouts, the YMCA, United Appeal, Elks, AME Zion Church, and more civic committees than you can wave a microphone at.
“I don’t have sense enough to say no.” Genial Gene finishes work on his Christmas committee” and sprays that Yule geniality over the air.
It goes like that all the time.
A press release from New York the other day described the Carolinas Carrousel as “a big holiday celebration known as “Genial Gene Day.”
The press agent was a little over-enthusiastic.
But give the old stammerer a few more years.

History of Central High

November 5, 2007 by leeshephard

More than you ever wanted to know……about CHS

Thanks to Google, I found a very comprehensive history of Central High School. It’s on Garringer High’s website and I’ve taken the liberty of copying it here.

“The year was 1909 when ten students received diplomas in the first graduation in what was to become Charlotte High School. This year also was the premiere of our yearbook “Snips and Cuts.” Our first school building was located at Ninth and Brevard Streets in First Ward. The school included the tenth and recently added eleventh grade, with new courses in French, Physics, and Trigonometry. Mr. Harry P. Harding, the principal and later superintendent of the Charlotte City Schools, guided the school until 1912 when the eighth and ninth grades joined the two upper grades. It was in this year that the Charlotte High School was established. The young high school experienced much academic success and its enrollment increased during the next decade.

In the spring of 1920 the student body moved to a new, larger building located on East Morehead Street. This move included the administration, faculty and all the traditions of the Charlotte High School. Our second school building was named in honor of Dr. Alexander Graham, who had served for over twenty-five years as superintendent of the Charlotte City Schools. Our leaders for many years, Dr. Elmer H. Garinger was appointed principal in the summer of 1921. However, the time at Alexander Graham High School was very short because of the rapid growth of Charlotte’s population.

A new school building located on Elizabeth Avenue opened in 1922 to relieve the ever-expanding student population of Alexander Graham High School. The new school, named Charlotte Central High School, received all its remaining students from Alexander Graham High by 1924. Just as in 1920 when Charlotte High School closed its doors and moved the faculty, students, and traditions to Alexander Graham, the new school moved again to Charlotte Central High School. Alexander Graham became a junior high school. Our rich history at Central spanned thirty-six years, primarily under the leadership of Dr. Garinger. In the spring of 1959 Charlotte Central High School closed. The building, now part of Central Piedmont Community College, is named for Dr. Garinger.

The summer of 1959 brought much excitement to our Wildcat family. A new high school on the edge of a growing city, four miles northeast of downtown Charlotte, Garinger High School, was named in honor of our former principal and then superintendent of the Charlotte City School. The campus-style high school design won many architectural awards for its unique modern buildings and special features. Again as in 1920 and 1923, the administration, faculty, students, trophies, books and all our traditions moved into our modern school to start the decade of the sixties.

Our blue and gray school colors, the Wildcat, “Snips and Cuts”, the Rambler Newspaper, the Hall of Fame. School motto “Service”, the Willow Tree, and school clubs made the journey to the campus facility on Eastway Drive. The school “Alma Mater” and “Fight Song” music remained the same, but new lyrics reflected the new tradition.

Garinger High School was featured in a 1962 edition of National Geographic as Charlotte-Mecklenburg’s showplace high school. The new high school was to become the largest secondary school in the state during the mid sixties with a rich history of academics and superb athletic teams.

Our school has been through many changes since the first diploma was presented in 1909, but its mission has never wavered. Our graduates have gone on to make significant contributions to our community and out country in the art, sciences and humanities.”

Memory Pictures from Ellouise

November 5, 2007 by leeshephard

Here’s a nice verbal snapshot from Ellouise Diggle Shoettler that she more elloquently calls” Memory Pictures.”

She even posted this on her website Ellouise Diggle Artist-Storyteller

Memory Pictures has a nice ring to it. Feel free to join in…….and paint your own pictures here on the website, for all of us to enjoy!

-Ed (Your award winning, humble webmaster)

June 1954 I wept when I graduated from Central High School in Charlotte, NC; last week-end I wept as we drove out of Charlotte to return home.

The reunion was wonderful. People I had grown up with – some I had gone to school with for twelve years. No need to explain yourself to people who knew you WHEN! Whose parents had gone to school with your parents. Today what you see is what you get – - pretty much like it was when I walked into Elizabeth School for the first day of the first grade.

Just as I remembered the youthful face of fifty years ago I felt my classmates do the same for me. I loved them for the gift of recognition we exchanged.

Toward the end of the evening a man I felt I should know walked over and said “hello” – I saw the name on his tag and his 1954 picture and really recognized him.

We had known each other – not closely – since the 7th grade. ” I used to deliver your paper when you lived at 814 Hawthorne Lane” – he said. With those words he opened a whole series of memory pictures I had forgotten. By his remembering – - he gave them back to me.
I am so grateful to him.

That’s what I think reunions are for – to confirm and renew – to acknowledge and remember. To touch base with who we were so that we will know who we are.

Hugs and thanks to the committee for such a great job and gift to all of us.

Ellouise

Thank you, Thank you!

November 5, 2007 by leeshephard

A great big thank you for a great program that came together beautifully. Martha and I had a great time at all events.
Harry Ferguson

Today I woke from a fabulous dream! It was one of friendly faces from my past, soft voices long-forgotten, new friends now discovered, and the glimpse of a beautiful, futuristic city, rising in glittering splendor above the green sea of trees that is the city of Charlotte, What an awesome adventure was my whole time spent at the 50th reunion.
Maxcyne Motte Yaworsky

The reunion was great. I appreciate so much all that was done. Let me know about other get-togethers, I just might be in town and can join you.
Jackie Pickard Marcotte

I tell you one thing, I’ve had a hard time coming home!! The reunion far surpassed all my expectations (and they were high to start with). I don’t know what happened, but something magical!!
Betsy Villas White

Thanks to the committee for the wonderful fun weekend! I almost felt 18 again (Ha). It was great seeing everyone ….like turning the clock back.
Nancy Hartis Byers

What a wonderful weekend it was, to be sure! Thank you all so much. Although I have only the foggiest idea of what a monumental job you all did – - best proof of how good a job it was, seems to me to be how smoothly all went! Bless you.
Diana Carpenter White

Thanks for a wonderful job that resulted in making the reunion a most memorable occasion. My wife and I had such a grand time, which we will never forget.
Herb Jacobowitz

A tremendous thanks to the committee for all that was done for us. Really enjoyed the bus ride and being taken back in time 50 years.
Bill Huntley

“You members of the Reunion Committee did an outstanding job. My suggestion is that you form a corporation and devote yourselves to putting on conventions, with your expertise you could make a fortune.”
Gene Moore

“How wonderful to see you and to feel time evaporate as we caught up on each other’s lives. Thanks so much for planning such a pleasant reunion”.
Linda Garmon Huggins

“A great big thanks to the committee for a wonderful reunion. It was quite an unusual experience to be with people I spent 12 years of my early life with”.
Mike Andrews

“Thanks for all the hard work by the committee on our behalf.”
Al Widenhouse

“Just want to tell you and the committee what a great reunion it was. You all did a great job getting everything together”.
Mary Sandra Shulken Costner

“How can we thank the committee for the memories of a lifetime?!! Chet and I had the most wonderful time.”
Andrea Stalvey Davis

“I think y’all pulled off something rare and brilliant. Ed, Ellouise and Neil completely held the attention of everyone. I really came to show my respect for the work and spirit behind the planners. I didn’t expect to be totally charmed”.
John Talbutt

“My compliments to the committee for a super weekend, talking and visiting with classmates. Looking forward to the next one”.
Joe Broadway

“Just wanted to thank the committee for all your hard work. It really paid off. Everyone had a wonderful time, and the whole event was just great – Beautifully arranged and so much fun! Everyone I talked to said they had a great time.”
Jane Hoke Bultman

“A quick note to tell the committee how much we appreciate what you did to make the reunion a great success”.
Warren Sparrow

CONGRATULATIONS!! THANKS! Of course, those expressions are inadequate to say what Jeanette and I felt at the reunion. Thanks for being so meticulous. God bless you. Now rest!”
Bob Yandle

“What a fantastic event! Congratulations! I’m just now coming off the “high” of the weekend. So again, my thanks…..to the committee…..for a wonderful experience.”
Ed Myers

“What a grand time was had by all I know of at the reunion…expecially ME! The whole committee is to be HIGHLY commended. It was just so much fun.”
Carolyn Minogue Meacham

Thanks for all the vision and hard work for our reunion. It would not have been so great – and fun without good leadership!
Jennie Margaret Meador Forehand

Thanks so much for the class bios. I am in the process of reviewing them and like to think our classmates turned out to be a “pretty good bunch”. They cleaned up nicely over the years. Keep the committee together. I promise to attend the next one!
(Note: Pat had to cancel the day before the reunion began due to a family illness.)
Pat Faulkner

The committee did a marvelous job and I can’t think of a thing I would have done differently. Everything was well planned and seemed to go off without a hitch. We shared the details of the event with our friends here in Minnesota and they were very complimentary of our reunion.
John Ballard

Thanks for all the effort that went into making it such a special weekend. I especially appreciated the “smoke free” environment.
Sandra Lineberger Patterson

Thanks for all the work you guys did in organizing the 50th. There were a lot of people I recognized right away. We should have come down Friday night. Thanks also to Gene Moore for the CD. God Bless.
Jim Cook

Turn Out the Lights

November 5, 2007 by leeshephard

OK….so it’s time to clean up the website, and prepare for our next one. Our 60th? Well, maybe our 55th? How about doing it again next week? I’m all for it. Of course, I’m not one of the ones who did all the work. Those special CHS 54 grads on the committee did it all.

Look Out Charlotte,

We Might do this AGAIN!

Nothing official, of course, that’s just my heart speaking. But as your handsome, highly intelligent, trim, agile as a gazelle, and modest webmaster…..I have a plan. Here it is: Let’s let the committee (the worker bees behind the curtain who made our 50th…truly MAGIC!) rest…………..for about six months….or a year. By then, the shock of working their fingers to the bone…..for MONTHS making our 50th so successful….will have worn off.

Then, we’ll start dropping subtle hints……..to each of the members; something like, “Incidentally, what have you done lately for the Class of ‘54?” or “Isn’t it about time you got your boney fingers back to work for your fellow classmates?”

Meanwhile, I’ll start pruning this site. Now yaw’ll keep tuning in…because it’s going to become even MORE exciting than ever…….DON’T TOUCH THAT DIAL!

Betsy Villas White’s Poem

November 5, 2007 by leeshephard

THOUGHTS ON THE EVE OF MY 50TH HIGH SCHOOL
REUNION

By Betsy Villas White

SO SHOULD I START WHERE ONCE DIANA STOPPED
IN WRITING OUR COMMENCEMENT POEM SO DEEP?
OR SHOULD I SKIP THE PAGES WE HAVE TURNED
AND JUMP RIGHT TO THE DAY WHEN WE WILL MEET?

I DON’T EXPECT TO FIND THE FACES I ONCE KNEW
I KNOW THEY WILL HAVE CHANGED AS MUCH AS MINE
BUT UNDERNEATH I HOPE TO FIND THE SPARK
OF FRIENDS AND TIMES FOR WHICH I OFTEN PINE

IS LAUGHTER STILL ALIVE BEHIND YOUR EYES?
WILL I NOTE THE AGILE BRIGHTNESS OF YOUR MIND?
HAVE YOU GROWN IN LIFE AS ONCE YOU WISHED
OR DID YOUR DREAMS BECOME A DIFFERENT KIND?

I WANT TO KNOW HOW YOU HAVE WEATHERED STORMS
I YEARN TO ASK HOW YOU HAVE COPED WITH DEATH
I WANT TO HEAR WHAT WISDOM YOU HAVE LEARNED
AND WHAT BRINGS JOY AND MEANING TO EACH BREATH

AND YES, I KNOW, THESE WISHES ARE UNSPOKEN
WITH EXPECTATIONS FAR BEYOND THE NORM
BUT ANYTHING I GAIN FROM MUSING THUSLY
COULD POSSIBLY EMERGE IN VERBAL FORM

THE MORAL OF THESE WORDS IT SEEMS TO ME
IS WHEN YOU SEE ME COMING TOWARDS YOU WITH A SMILE
BE SURE YOU ARE SURROUNDED BY YOUR BUDDIES
AND DON’T ASK ME TO STAY AND CHAT AWHILE
©Copyright 2004

and……….

The Commencing (From 1954 by Class Poet Diana Kay Carpenter)

Each one has bold sharp edges on the base
That he has set to build his living on.
And in defiance of conformity,
He claims each jutting angle as his own.

He wishes not to differ with his kind,
But eldersâ€Âï�½ set traditions chafe his wings;
He wants to be a part of life that soarsâ€Âï�½
Of life that dreams, and does, and life that sings.

The outline of that base pray God to soften,
By some part added here, subtracted there,
So that the whole be separate and distinct,
Yetâ€Âï�½part of all thatâ€Âï�½s best and all thatâ€Âï�½s fair.

Pray each man be not worn to dreary sameness,
With every other being placed on earth;
But let his nature, different from all,
Work well with all, that each best proves his worth.

Diana Kay Carpenter
©Copyright 1954, 2004

Pictures at Our 40th

November 5, 2007 by leeshephard

TEN YEARS AGO


This is us at the 40th reunion.

More ……..10 years ago….at the 40th!


Sylvia Dunn Cross, Shirlene McGill Yeargins, Betsy Villas

Alton Widenhouse Bobby Seagraves


Bill Huntley


Carolyn McCall.


Alma Burton Stevenson Ann Ruth Henson Boyd.


Barbara McCall


Barry Clark and Linda Garmon Huggins

Bill Mason, Judy Anderson Fainberg, John Ballard

Betty Barnes Walpole, Sophie Leventis Trakas, Mary Rand Norton Kratt

Bradford Mills (deceased)

Max Evans


Barbara Presson Forrest
(This picture was NOT taken at our 40th, Barbara writes,
“This will be my first reunion– no one could find us!!!!
Attached is a picture of my husband (Jim Forrest) and me. We have been married almost 50 years.)


Karol Broadwell Welch, Nancy Gibson Smith, Shirley McClanahan Maynor, Millie Fogle Stanton, Dottie Cammer Parker and Nancy Hartis Byers.

Carolyn “Tootie” Byrum Nisbet

Jennie Meador Forehand, Alma Burton Stevenson, Buddy Matthews and Pat Roberts Stevens

The Rev. Don Nance

(That’s Charles Mateer’s mother seated and my wife Linda in the red jacket)

The Rev. Bob Yandle

The Rev. Mike Andrews


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New Book Released

November 5, 2007 by leeshephard

NEW BOOK JUST RELEASED

A couple of years ago, I was surfing the web for some information about my old home town of Charlotte and came upon some delightful articles about the Queen City. (My favorite was the one about Charlotte’s “urban removal” plan of the 1960’s.) One of the stories featured a picture of the author. SHAZAAM! It was our own Mary Norton (Kratt)!


Mary Norton Kratt

Now, she has a new book out:

Celebrating New South Women: Twentieth Century Women of Charlotte, North CarolinaCharlotte, NC-The Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County and Levine Museum of the New South announce the publication of New South Women: Twentieth Century Women of Charlotte, North Carolina by Mary Kratt. The arresting voices of the women themselves tell their stories. Using personal interviews, archives, and reports from books and newspapers, author Mary Kratt conveys an immediacy as lively as front-porch talk. White and black, poor and rich, these women saw needs and answered them. They became a political coalition, mentored others and experienced being the “first woman” in many fields. Whether seamstress, mill worker, teacher, athlete, novelist, humanitarian, or socialite, the women of the New South in Charlotte exhibited the amazing tenacity and ingenuity that has long characterized women’s lives.

The book, published by PLCMC in association with John F. Blair Publisher is available at Charlotte’s main library and its branches, Levine Museum of the New South, Charlotte Museum of History, and Park Road Books. Paperback: $14.95 plus tax 264 pages. Black and white photos. Index. Biographical appendix ISBN 0-89587-250-1.

REPORTERS NOTEBOOK

One of our stealth reporters found this accolade posted prominently at the Charlotte YMCA

“Charlie has been a member of the YMCA for 55 years. He literally grew up in the Y, joining when he was 10 and learning how to swim.As a parent, he has participated in youth basketball as an assistant coach. Charlie has been instrumental in committee work and our community outreach programs. He helped raise money in our last Capital campaign, worked for the last four years in our phonathons, served in the community gifts division for numerous years and on the chairman’s Roundtable division for the past 3 years. He has served in so many capacities including 10 years on the fitness Center Committee of which he was Vice Chair for 4 years, he has served the past two years as Chair of the membership development committee and has also been a member of the Board of Advisors for the last two years as well. Charlie is a walking, living example of the YMCA and what we stand for.”

.

Charlie Willis

Congratulations to a fellow Tadpole (That’s the award we got after learning to swim at the Y……at least that’s what they called us in the 40’s) However, now that this in on the internet………communities all over the country are going to be tempted to kidnap Charlie…..and clone him. Be careful Charlie, be very careful. -Ed