Archive for February, 2009

Happily Ever After

February 26, 2009

Our reporter Jerry (never sleeps) Gaudet has some good news to report:

Betty Rose Templeton Palomba and husband Louis celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary last September. They were given a party by their children and spouces, Tony/Melonie and Chris/Janice, celebrating with their 8 grandchildren and 150 friends and family. Betty and Lou travelled in Europe and returned across the pond to New York Harbor aboard the Queen Mary II.

Anna Lynn Smith-Petersen Kearse and her husband Henry have been married for fifty-two years and are still going strong. They were were married on September 8, 1956 at Dilworth Methodist Church. They celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary back in 2006 with their three children, their spouses, and seven grandchildren with a trip to a dude ranch. “It was a wonderful week” says Anna Lynn. They also celebrated with weeks at the beach with some family and other activities with friends. Anna Lynn says “It has been wonderful. We are looking forward to many, many more great years”.

Anna Lynn says of the photo above…”One interesting tid bit, the opal earrings I am wearing in this photo were given to me by Henry as a wedding gift. Some years ago I had them made into pierced earrings and can still wear them.

Joe Broadway Passes

February 19, 2009

Jerry Gaudet Reports:

2/17/2009……..With great sadness we heard the message from Rose Broadway to say that Joe died this morning. Details will be passed along as they become available. I’ve heard “probably Saturday”.

In the meantime:

Mrs. Rose Broadway

1701 Jameston Dr. (it IS Jameston, not “town”)

Charlotte, NC 28209-1511

It’s unsure if emails sent to Joe’s address will be seen.

More to follow…

(I’ll post the Charlotte Observer obituary as soon as it’s published. -Ed)

(From the Charlotte Observer)

Ben Joseph Broadway, Jr., ‘Joe’

Mr. Broadway, 73, of Charlotte died Tuesday, February 17, 2009 at Carolinas Medical Center-Main.

Born in Charlotte on October 22, 1935, Joe was the son of the late Ben Joseph Broadway and Bonnie Gambel Broadway. A lifelong Charlotte resident, Joe graduated from Central High School, served with the North Carolina Air National Guard, and had been employed 18 years with the Charlotte Observer before working in sales at Gerrard Tire on West 6th. He was a Mason, who belonged to the Joppa Lodge #530 and was a fan of NASCAR and the Carolina Tarheels. Joe will be remembered for his quick wit and humor.

Mr. Broadway is survived by his wife, Rosemarie, their five children, 10 grandchildren and 2 great grandchildren.

A service to celebrate the life of Joe Broadway will take place on Saturday, February 21, 2009 at 1:00 p.m. at Pritchard Memorial Baptist Church, 1117 South Blvd., with Reverends Bobby Morrow and Stan Heiser officiating. Interment will be private. The family will receive friends in the church narthex following the service and at the home.

The family would like to thank the doctors and nurses that cared for Joe at Charlotte Medical Clinic and Dr. Michael Livingston and staff at Carolinas Hematology Oncology Associates.

In lieu of flowers, please send memorials to The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, 5950 Fairview Rd., Suite 250, Charlotte, NC 28210.

Online condolences may be sent to www.carolinafuneral.com.

Carolina Funeral Service & Cremation Center is entrusted with the arrangements.

Family contact:

Mrs. Rose Broadway

1701 Jameston Dr.

Charlotte, NC 28209-1511

Busting at the seams

February 16, 2009

That’s right. 31 hungry wildcats descended on Jimmies of Mint Hill for the 5th LDL event, a relatively new tradition of the CHS class of ‘54.

Ace reporter Jerry Gaudet was on the scene:

31 gathered as we held the fifth CHS’54 “LDL” (Let’s Do Lunch). These lunches are being held on the second Tuesday of every month at “Jimmies Restaurant” in Mint Hill. Come when you can!

Of special note, Carolyn McCall drove up from Atlanta to be with us, Joy McKinnon Clark reconnected with her Midwood Elem., Piedmont JH and Central High classmates after having moved away after the 10th grade at CHS, and we had a welcome visit from Frank Clontz
(CHS’55)

NOTICE: CLICK ON THE PICTURES TO ENLARGE. IT COULD TAKE 20 OR 30 SECONDS FOR THE PHOTO TO JUMP OUT AT YOU… FULL SCREEN…BUT IT’S WELL WORTH THE WAIT!!

To RETURN to this page, simply click on the “go back a page” arrow at the top left of your screen -ED

Attending today were:
Sylvia Arnold Regehr
Gayle Barrier Austin
Vic and Sylvia Brawley
Frank Clontz (CHS’55)
Harold and Carolyn Cullingford
John Culp
Jerry Gaudet
Martin and Pat Hill
Bonson Hobson
Betty Hull Nixon
Carolyn Keziah Hudspeth
Thomas Lindsay
Carolyn McCall
Joy McKinnon Clark
Mitzi Minor Roper
Obie Oakley
Jimmy and Ronnie Rallis Pourlos
Marlene Ritch Beaty
Bob and Gloria Seagraves
Al Selby
Bee Smith Garmon
Jay Summey
Betty Rose Templeton Palomba
Jane Thornhill Cobb
Bob Wells
Charlie Willis

And now, our FEATURE movie!

February 14, 2009

The CHS 54 website’s official cinematographer, Martin Hill
has just produced his latest movie titled GOOD MORNING…JIMMIES! (subtitled “Rowdy Wildcats Eating Again!”)

It’s a documentary shot entirely at Jimmies of Mint Hill during the LDL’s January luncheon.

Watch this award winning film!


Up Dates

February 8, 2009

Thanks to Tony Thomas we learn that Paul Patton is doing well following recent surgery that kept him in the hospital for eight days.

Paul says he’s doing fine, but will need another month of recovery before he’s up to rejoining the “LDL” group.

-By Jerry Gaudet

Ellouise (Diggle) Scholettler is getting more and more famous as a storyteller. Her latest “local” appearance will be on February 15th. If you live nearby or if you’re going to be traveling up this way, don’t miss it!

Storyteller – Ellouise Schoettler

Sunday February 15, 2009

2:00 PM $10

Wood-End

8940 Jones Mill Road

Chevy Chase, MD 20815

Free Parking

Reservations: 301-951-1213

You also might want to check out her website

Speaking of her website, she took a great picture of a blue bird that “reminded her of a story….” which reminded ME that every February (around the second week) I start hearing the calls of what I always thought were the “first birds of Spring.” Thanks to the internet, though I learned that the first birds of spring don’t arrive in the southeastern part of the U.S. until sometime in March. The sounds I’m hearing out my window these days are from the same old birds who’ve been here all winter! It’s just that something in nature wakes up a chemical in their system that causes them to send out the bird equivalent of an invitation to the prom. -By Ed Myers

Friendship Trays

February 5, 2009

Most of the stories that show up on this website come in “over the transom,” which is an old newspaper expression dating back when doors HAD transoms.

Well, a terrific story came in over the transom last month, and promptly “slipped through the cracks.” (Which is an old excuse for, “somebody screwed up!”)

You may already have seen the story; it was about our own amazing Jerry Gaudet and family!

FRIENDSHIP TRAYS

Adults in group homes are delivering meals to their neighbors in need

Pat Gaudet began volunteering at Friendship Trays in the mid- ’80s. Husband Jerry joined her on Fridays when he retired in 1991. And now their son Rick helps deliver meals, too. Rick lives in one of the many group homes that have care-givers and clients spending part of their day delivering Friendship Trays. “The reception they get at

(pictured above:
All in the family: Pat Gaudet, left, began delivering Friendship Trays in about 1985. Husband Jerry joined her when he retired in 1991. Today, son Rick is part of a group home team that delivers three days a week.)

Friendship Trays is wonderful,” says Jerry. “Everybody lights up and showers them with love.” A North Carolina policy change involving custodial care programs last summer left many group homes scrambling to find daytime activities for their residents. Friendship Trays Volunteer Coordinator Lani Lawrence remembers being called by one group home employee, who sent a care-giver and some clients to deliver a route. Lawrence gave the new volunteers the usual warm welcome and detailed instructions on the task. “Word spread in the group-home community that this was a great place to serve,” Lawrence says. “It was phenomenal.” As of mid-March, 18 group homes send teams to deliver Friendship Trays. Teams include a care-giver and three to five clients. Some teams come once a week, others every every weekday. One team delivers trays to an adult day care center that serves other clients. Lawrence said the group-home teams have been as reliable or more reliable in their attendance than the general volunteer corps. Lawrence knows that some teams could stop delivering if, as gas prices rise, care-givers can no longer get reimbursed for driving the routes. One Charlotte provider has already stopped paying mileage. But Lawrence is hopeful, pointing out several care-givers whose mileage reimbursements were cut off have decided to pay for the gas themselves because they see how much their clients gain from the experience. Jerry Gaudet says he and Pat did not steer their son’s group home to Friendship Trays. And he says his son may think of delivering meals more as something to do than as volunteering. No matter, says Executive Director Lucy Bush Carter. “We are grateful for their service.” Pat Gaudet, reflecting on when she became a volunteer in the 1980s, says, “It was something right here that I could do…. We have met a lot of really neat folks.” Now, group-home residents can say the same thing.

Fast friends, first responders

Friendship Trays delivers meals to allow the ailing and infirm to stay in their homes as long as feasible. But that means that volunteer drivers become not just the recipients’ close friends but sometimes their first responders, particularly for recipients living alone. Among the Gaudets’ experiences, with Jerry Gaudet’s comments:

– Calling 911 for a recipient whose oxygen tank had failed overnight. – Whipping out a handkerchief to stop blood spurting two feet up from a recipient’s kidney dyalisis injection site. The recipient was unaware she was bleeding. “She might have bled to death.”

– Being one of a handful of mourners at a recipent’s graveside service. “The folks bringing meals to Joe were the only people in his life.”

– Bringing together for a birthday party a CMS student, who had made a placemat, with the 100-year-old recipient who was so taken by the gesture that she hung the placemat on her wall. “Friendship Trays played a big part in extending her independence.”

“We’ve been struck over the years at how many people live alone,” says Pat. “We may be the only people they see all day.”

(Wow! Congratulations Pat and Jerry. I hope the next time I see you will be at our 55th reunion in May….and not knocking on my door at the home…..with tray in hand. Not yet, anyway.

-Ed)

Movers and Shakers

February 4, 2009

The “political class” of our class of 54 has done very well lately.

Of course I’m talking about long time Democrat State Senator (Montgomery County, MD) Jennie Forehand (in blue jacket) and long time Democrat activist Neil Jones.

Jennie’s Maryland seat is so solid that nobody evens runs against her anymore and Neil is rapidly becoming known as Holly Jones’ daddy.

Holly is now………well, I’ll let her proud papa tell you about her:

Ed,

Holly Jones got an undergraduate degree at some college in Orange County
where she also wasted her time as a manager for someone named Dean Smith.
She then obtained a Divinity Degree from Duke, much to her father’s delight.
However she lapsed back into her earlier practices, and obtained a Masters
in Public Health cum laude from Chapel Hill.
She went to Asheville in 1996 as CEO for the YWCA. At the time she was hired
the YWCA was over a million dollars in the red. A year later, it was well in the
black, and 3 years later had finished a $3,6 million dollar expansion and paid for it.
She was elected to 2 terms on the Asheville City Council, (2000 and 2004) leading
the ticket. She served as Vice-Mayor during those terms.
In November 2008, she was elected to the 5 person Board of County Commissioners for
Buncombe County.
She is a Democrat, who showed Obama around downtown Asheville and appeared
on the Al Franken radio show for 30 minutes.
Holly is one tough retail politician, who flat tends to business.
Sorry bird dog that doesn’t brag on his puppy.
Thanks for asking.

-Neil