January 14, 2015 Issue
Transcription
January 14, 2015 Issue
January 14, 2015 www.lakenormancitizen.com Grieving on social media — Page 4 Volume 6, No. 32 Bewitching store — Page 21 North, Hough face off — Page 32 Page 2 January 14, 2015 Lake Norman Citizen www.lakenormancitizen.com 2 Member North Carolina Press Association Inside Citizens Arrest Crossword Idea Exchange Normanopolis PULSE on Lake Norman Business Schools Sports Talk of the Towns 16 38 39 27 21 18 32 14 Where Is This? The photo at left was taken somewhere in the Lake Norman area. Do you know where? Let us know by e-mailing the Citizen at whereisthis@ lakenormancitizen.com. Make sure to include your name. 32 Lady Titans on roll Hopewell off to 13-1 start, sits alone in first place. Last week, Paul Newton, Grady Wells, Kathie Turner, Joan Gradus, Chris Conroy, Meg O’Brien, Anderson Zangara, Dan Boone, Renee Atkinson, Nancy Whitehead, Andrew Kehoe, Brian Freeman, Andi Marshall, Rodney Hager, Mal Murray, Jay Stokes, Christine Wayne, Barbara Bryan, Keith D’Alessandro, Donna Higinson, Don Higinson, Tamara Dossin, Andy White, Jill Hillman, Katie Knox, Lynn Keating, Andy Seligmann and Jack Stevens identified the photo above as a crane on the site of a the construction project to expand the Martin Science Building on the campus of Davidson College. 39 Gift to remember An unexpected meal makes Christmas special for family. On the cover Senior Editor John Deem’s photo of the newly installed, decorative mast and cables on the I-77 overpass at Exit 28. 307 Gilead Road P.O. Box 3534 Huntersville, NC 28070 Phone: 704-948-3348 Fax: 704-948-3349 Publisher Kim Clark kimc@lakenormancitizen.com Editor Andrew Warfield andreww@lakenormancitizen.com Sports Editor Justin Parker justinp@lakenormancitizen.com Assistant Editor Lori Helms pulse@lakenormancitizen.com Senior Editor John Deem johnd@lakenormancitizen.com Associate Editor Lee Sullivan lees@lakenormancitizen.com Graphics/Operations Director Nelson Bynum nelsonb@lakenormancitizen.com Bookkeeper Kathy Bauer kathyb@lakenormancitizen.com Advertising Consultants Marlah Ebert, Fran Hook, Cathy Leitch adinfo@lakenormancitizen.com Sales Consultant Beccy Hager beccyh@lakenormancitizen.com Marketing Director Steve Podielsky Contributing Staff Harold Bales, Tim Cowie, Denny Seitz, Jacob Young, January Young Circulation Manager Steve Podielsky Mascot Lexi The Lake Norman Citizen is published weekly by Citizen Media Inc. The Citizen is delivered to residents and businesses in Huntersville, Cornelius, Davidson and Mooresville by Citizen Distribution Inc., and is available in racks throughout the Lake Norman area. Copyright 2014 Lake Norman Citizen JOHN DEEM Start the New Year off Right! WITH A $15 OFF Selected Signature Series® Window Treatments* 704-948-5178 or visit us online at www.budgetblinds.com *Offer not valid with any other offers. Offer good at time of initial estimate only. Offer good at participating franchises only. Each franchise independently owned and operated. Budget Blinds is a registered trademark of Budget Blinds, Inc. and a Home Franchise Concepts brand. Offer valid through Jan. 28, 2015. FREE CONSULTATION Trandem woven wood shades Wood blinds Wood shutters Budget Blinds offers energy-saving window treatments, including cellular shades, solar shades, roman shades and hardwood shutters. Schedule your FREE in-home consultation today. 704-948-5178 13819 Cinnabar Place | in Vermillion | Huntersville, NC WWW.BUDGETBLINDS.COM Franchise Opportunities Available. Call 1-800-420-5374 or visit www.budget-blinds-franchise.com. ©2013 Budget Blinds, Inc. All rights reserved. Participating franchises only. Each franchise is independently owned and operated. Budget Blinds is a registered trademark of Budget Blinds, Inc. and a Home Franchise Concepts brand. www.lakenormancitizen.com January 14, 2015 3 4 News January 14, 2015 Lake Norman Citizen Online outpouring to a holiday tragedy Friends, family take to Facebook to remember Valerie Shaak. By John Deem johnd@lakenormancitizen.com There are times when social media amounts to little more than an endless trough of zombie feed. There are other times, though, when online information engines chronicle the real-time drama of everyday lives and open portals through which the rest of us can instantly insert ourselves into others’ experiences, be they triumphant or tragic, momentous or mundane, hopeful or heart wrenching. Last month, as Christmas approached, a story encompassing all of those characteristics — and more — unfolded on Valerie Shaak’s Facebook page. On Dec. 16, Shaak posted a video on her Facebook page. Her accompanying comment succinctly summed up her feelings about the subject of the clip. “I have the sweetest and most amazing boyfriend in the whole wide world!!!!!” she gushed. In the video, a seemingly bashful Phillip Black sits on a couch and looks into a phone pointed toward him by an unknown operator. “Hey, Valerie. I just want to tell you that I love you, and to wish us a happy one-year anniversary, and a merry Christmas to you,” he says in a barely audible baritone. “I love you so much, baby. I’ve been with you for almost a year now, and I just love you.” Black pauses, looks down as if trying to arrange words scattered on the carpet, then again peers forward. “You make me happy,” he continues. “We make each other comfortable in a way I can’t really explain.” It was the last post the 22-yearold Shaak would make to Facebook. Just three days later, as the 19-year-old Black drove a moped with Shaak as his passenger southSEE FATALITY, PAGE 6 Valerie Shaak and Phillip Black in a photo posted on Facebook. Shaak was killed and Black seriously injured in a pre-Christmas accident in Huntersville when their moped was struck by an impaired driver. www.lakenormancitizen.com January 14, 2015 5 6 January 14, 2015 FATALITY FROM PAGE 4 bound on N.C. 115 near her alma mater, North Mecklenburg High School, late on a Friday night, a 2011 Infiniti, which police say was being driven by Robert “Bo” Leahy, plowed into the slower-moving scooter from behind. Black and Shaak were both thrown from the bike, which stuck like a skewer in the grill of Leahy’s luxury car. Police say Leahy drove away from the scene, leaving the critically injured couple along the side of the road. Leahy finally pulled into the parking lot of a business about a mile away, the Leahy scooter still protruding from the grill of his vehicle, and fled on foot. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police used dogs and a helicopter to search for Leahy. By the time they captured him, Shaak had been declared dead at the scene of the collision. Black was transported to Carolinas Medical Center. He had surgery NEWS to repair a broken jaw and was treated for other injuries, but is expected to recover. Shaak’s family and friends, however, will take time to get over the shock of losing a young woman, and the lifetime of memories they had yet to make with her. At 7:32 the next morning, Shaak’s sister, Kristin Bustle, posted the tragic news on Shaak’s Facebook page: “Heaven gained a beautiful, loving, and caring angel last night,” Bustle wrote. “A life gone way too soon! We love and miss you dearly!” With the news of Shaak’s death, her Facebook page came alive. Friends and family members began posting photos of themselves with Shaak, trying to connect with her in the only way they could. “I went through so many old pictures of us,” one friend posted. “I can’t believe any of this. She always had my back since we met. I had her’s too. Even after I’ve moved all over the place ... there hasn’t been a day we didn’t talk. We were trying to make plans so she could visit on my birthday. “I woke up this morning hoping it was a nightmare,” she continued, “but it’s a living hell. I’m destroyed by this. I can’t talk right or know what to say. This shouldn’t be real. I just hope wherever you are, Val, you’re doing okay. I know you’re watching over us all.” Other friends also looked heavenward. “I knew you were an angel,” one posted. “Now’s your time to fly. I love you.” On Dec. 22, Bustle posted a photo of herself in her wedding dress, her flowers still in her right hand and her left cheek pressed tightly against Shaak’s in a sisterly embrace. Christmas wishes poured onto Shaak’s page on Dec. 25. “Every time around Christmas it’s going to haunt me,” another friend posted. “I’m still expecting your phone calls and you always calling me by waking me up and saying ‘merry Christmas’ or ‘happy birthday’ ... Nothing is the same without you. I miss you like crazy.” And so it went, and so it continues to go, a perpetual, evolving memorial and a case study in social media at its best, uniting friends and family in a celebration of life and an outpouring of grief. In the meantime, Leahy remains in the Mecklenburg County Jail, his combined bond topping $200,000. He is charged with death by vehicle, serious injury by vehicle and hit and run, all felonies; as well as driving while impaired and driving without a license. Lake Norman Citizen H’ville retreat set for Jan. 28, 30 Huntersville leaders will spend two full days later this month setting goals and mapping out plans to reach them at the town’s annual planning retreat. Huntersville commissioners and town administrators will meet Wednesday, Jan. 28, and Friday, Jan. 30, at the Lee S. Dukes Jr. Water Treatment Plant on Babe Stillwell Road. Town Manager Greg Ferguson says sessions both days will begin at 8:30 a.m., with Wednesday’s gathering lasting until 5 p.m. and Friday’s meeting closing at 4. All sessions are open to the public. This week, Ferguson said work is under way to finalize the formal agenda, but standard topics such as transportation issues, economic development and budget considerations are expected to once again dominate discussions. “It’s a time for us to identify priorities, see where we want to go and work out a way to get there,” Ferguson says. “The retreat is where we develop the blueprint we hope to follow on town projects for the next 12 months, or for the next two years based on the size of the project and the financial commitment involved.” A traditional achievement at the retreat is the creation of a Top 10 list for local road improvements. That list is updated each year as previously prioritized, locally funded projects are completed and new areas of congestion or concern — or roads and intersections where new developments are anticipated — merit more attention. And this year, various aspects related to the future of Huntersville’s downtown district promise to be among the retreat’s hot topics. In 2014, two separate studies — one focused on all modes of transportation needs downtown and one examining the economic development status of the entire town (with the old downtown section as one of the carefully studied districts) — were authorized by the town. Information compiled from those studies will be used by town leaders to determine which municipal infrastructure enhancements deserve the most attention. A review of final plans and financing options for the new Veterans Park at Main & Maxwell is also expected to be topic of discussion. — Lee Sullivan www.lakenormancitizen.com January 14, 2015 8 January 14, 2015 NEWS Lake Norman Citizen Masts installed, more decorative work set for Exit 28 bridge By Andrew Warfield andreww@lakenormancitizen.com Now that the shorter-than-anticipated weekend closure of the Catawba Avenue bridge over I-77 is over and the masts and cables intended to replicate a suspension bridge have been installed, some drivers in the Cornelius area have been left to ask, “Is that all there is to it?” The latest round of installing the aesthetic accoutrements intended to enhance the new diverging diamond interchange (DDI) at Exit 28 is only the next step in converting what was once a pedestrian — although not pedestrian-friendly — interchange bridge into the Town of Cornelius’ visual gateway. But it may be the last time any such work will result in any daytime, longterm traffic disruption across the bridge, which serves as the town’s primary east-west connector. The contractor, Blythe Construction, opened the bridge last weekend earlier than expected after completing the mast and cable installation because it was too cold to put down the permanent lane markings. That work will be rescheduled when weather permits and will result in additional, short-term lane closures, perhaps during the nighttime hours. Otherwise, remaining “Phase I” work by both the town and the contractor — lighting on the masts and cables as well as the center walkway and landscaping of islands and pedestrian refuges — should be completed within a month, according to Cornelius Assistant Town Manager Andrew Grant. For months, converting the bridge into a DDI snarled traffic because of lane closures that were necessitated largely by the installation of concrete safety barriers to protect pedestrians from traffic in the center walkway. As the North Carolina Department of Transportation was developing plans for the bridge itself, the town underwent a design and decision process to The decorative masts and cables were installed in the center walkway across the Catawba Avenue bridge at Exit 28 in Cornelius last weekend. More work on the aesthetic treatment of the diverging diamond interchange is scheduled for the coming weeks while the masonry abutments must be coordinated with NCDOT and Cintra Infraestructures. JOHN DEEM spend upwards of $2.2 million on aesthetic treatments to provide a sense of place to passing motorists. The project is intended, commissioners determined at the time, to draw traffic off the interstate and into the town’s businesses. The bridge was closed for several hours beginning at 12:01 a.m. Saturday for crews to install the masts and cables, which are only the start of the aesthetics project. Chief among the coming “Phase II” aesthetic treatments are masonry abutments designed to appear to rise from the interstate below to above the bridge, topped by decorative lanterns, and landscaping in the areas between the ramps and the interstate. Just when that work will be scheduled has yet to be determined. Town officials are in discussions with the NCDOT and the private contractor for the managed lanes widening project on I-77, Cintra Infraestructures, in order to coordinate when that work — particularly the abutments — can be done. “We feel like we can go ahead and construct the masonry abutments prior to Cintra working on the lanes in this area,” says Grant. “Those are still some of the things we have to discuss.” “Foot and Ankle Specialists” • Heel and arch pain • Laser Therapy for fungal nails • Bunions, hammertoes and pinched nerves • Chronic foot/ankle pain/sprains • Diabetic foot problems and wound care • Ingrown & fungus toenails • Athletic injuries/tendonitis/children’s foot disorders • The latest advancements in surgical and non-surgical treatment of the foot and ankle Providing the most complete Foot & Ankle Care in the Lake Norman Area. 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By Andrew Warfield andreww@lakenormancitizen.com WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Last week in Washington, D.C., could best be described as a whirlwind to newly minted U.S. Senator Thom Tillis. Following eight weeks of preparation after ousting one-term incumbent Kay Hagan in the Nov. 4 election, he finally got a chance to get to work after officially occupying his seat on the Senate chamber floor. While still maintaining his Huntersville home, the former Cornelius commissioner, Hopewell High School PTA president and North Carolina Speaker of the House found an apartment in the nation’s capital along with his wife, Susan, occupied temporary office space, moved into his permanent office in the Dirksen Senate Building, was brought up to speed on Senate issues, received his committee assignments and began to find his away around; all while seemingly constantly meeting, greeting and entertaining visitors and wellwishers. His day last Tuesday began with greeting a contingent of campaign supporters and others as they embarked on a tour of the Capitol prior to the start of the swearingin ceremony. As always, Tillis posed patiently for dozens of photos as he greeted each individual by name. These were his people, and he was happy they were there. “They are the reason why we SEE TILLIS, PAGE 11 A wild ride COURTESY JAMES PIEDAD Thom and Susan Tillis on the trolley heading back to his Senate office building after being sworn in at the Capitol building as a United States senator. The event marked the end of weeks of preparation and celebration. NEWS www.lakenormancitizen.com TILLIS FROM PAGE 10 won,” Tillis told the Citizen. “Their hard work and their belief in me and Susan allowed us to overcome seemingly insurmountable odds to win the race. I’m glad they came to visit me early. I hope they will visit me often.” The week concluded back home as Tillis was the featured attraction at a meeting of the North Mecklenburg Republican Women at The Peninsula Club in Cornelius. In the days in between, he cast his first votes from the Senate floor, the first in favor of reauthorizing the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act, followed by his first vote on a controversial measure in support of the Keystone XL Pipeline. On a practical basis, Tillis had been at work in Washington for several weeks. His biggest surprise to date? “How well organized the Capitol staff are,” he said. “The orientation and temporary office set up was amazing. We had our offices furnished with computers withTillis in a few days after the election. Every interaction has been very positive. I have also been very pleased with the reception I have received from members on both sides of the aisle.” Among the most striking images of Tillis in his first few official days as a Senator was of him walking alongside and speaking with Democrat Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota. Tillis has a history as a consensus-builder across party lines, but most Congressional observers would suggest that it will take a long arm to bridge that expanse of an aisle. Tillis has said he sees consensus-building in Congress as essential, but it doesn’t supersede the new Senate Republican majority’s obligation to push ahead on longstagnant legislation. “First and foremost, supporting the leadership’s objective to return to regular order,” Tillis said of his priority. “We need to focus on legislation that will make government more efficient, more effective and more accountable. Sending the Keystone/XL pipeline to the President within days of assuming control is a good start, but we have a lot to do.” As challenging as navigating the political maze of the federal government, Tillis said, is the physical maze between buildings in Washington. With their multiple levels and seemingly endless corridors “They are the reason why we won. Their hard work and their belief in me and Susan allowed us to overcome seemingly insurmountable odds to win the race. I’m glad they came to visit me early. I hope they will visit me often.” — Thom Tillis on his supporters. that all look the same, the Hart and Dirksen Senate buildings are connected to the Senate wing of the Capitol via an underground corridor that provides the option of walking or riding on track-bound trolley. The trolley cars can be used by accredited members of the public and official visitors except during roll calls when senators must quickly arrive at the Senate chamber. Posted on Facebook last week was a photo of Thom and Susan Tillis shortly after being swornin on Tuesday, appearing relieved that the next phase of Tillis’ mercurial political career had, at last, officially arrived. “We were returning from the Capitol back to our office,” Tillis said of the photo. “I think we were trying to figure out how to get there. I am proud to report that by week’s end I am only getting lost about one-third of the time.” January 14, 2015 11 12 January 14, 2015 NEWS Lake Norman Citizen Davidson College sets M.L. King Day schedule As it does every year Davidson College will present a series of events to commemorate Martin Luther King Day on Monday, Jan. 19. All events are open to the public, and the schedule includes performances and talks and seminars focused on social justice. The full schedule follows. There is no charge to attend any of the presentations, all of which will take place in the Alvarez College Union. For more information, call 704-894-2225. • Civil Rights Cinema: 9 a.m.-3 p.m. in the Alvarez College Union Room 313. The film White Like Me by acclaimed anti-racist educator Tim Wise explores race and racism in the U.S. through the lens of whiteness and white privilege. Wise reassesses the American ideal of meritocracy and claims that the News Briefs country has entered a post-racial society. Instead, the film looks at white entitlement programs that built the American middle class, and argues that our failure as a society to come to terms with the legacy of white privilege continues to perpetuate racial inequality and racedriven political resentments today. • Dr. Martin Luther King MidDay Lecture with the Rev. Charles L. White: 11:30 a.m. in the Alvarez College Union C. Shaw Smith 900 Room.White is national field director of Al Sharpton’s National Action Network. Known as a strategic thinker, coalition builder, vi- “A Practice with A Purpose” 3,350 Items Raised! A very special thank you to: • The patients of Ballas Chiropractic • Novant Health Huntersville • Torrence Creek Elementary • Grand Oak Elementary • J.V. Washam Elementary • The Lake Norman Citizen • The Bagel Bin • The Learning Experience - Huntersville • The Town of Huntersville • The Town of Davidson • Cornelius Police Department • Lake Norman Woman Magazine • Lowe’s Home Improvement sionary and activist, for more than 30 years, White has worked as an advocate for social justice with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). White was the first AfricanAmerican member of the University of South Carolina Chaplains Association and of the Clover Rotary Club. In 1993 he won a suit against the Buffalo Room in North Augusta, S.C., for refusing to serve him and other NAACP officials because of their race. The suit led to the adoption of a strong Public Accommodations Law by the South Carolina Legislature. White and the NAACP a decade later used the law to prevail against several businesses in Myrtle Beach, S.C., for discriminatory practices during the annual Labor Day Black Bike Week. • Aliens, Illegals and Terrorists: Racialized Experiences of Immigrant Students of Color — 1:30-2:45 p.m. in the Alvarez College Union Smith 900 Room. A panel of students will share stories learned from their immigration experience in the United States and at Davidson College. They will focus on how they and their family members learned the written and unwritten rules of where they fit, and how they were positioned in the racial history, memory and culture of their new communities because of origin, religion, ethnicity, undocumented status, physical features and dress. • Mythbuster: Debunking Race as Biology — 1:30 p.m.-2:45 p.m. in the Alvarez College Union Sprinkle Room, presented by Professor of Anthropology Helen Cho. One of the most pernicious myths in American society is that races represent natural units of our species. While the idea that “race is a social construct” has become a popular academic cliché, many struggle to explain its incongruence with racial classification that is largely based on biological features such as skin color. Cho will speak about ways to deconstruct and debunk the race-as-biology myth, which continues to perpetuate stereotypes that associate certain races with criminality, intelligence, sexual behavior, athleticism and other behaviors. • Dear Black Men: Love Letters From Women of Color Who Are Struggling With You Against Racism and Fighting Against You About Sexism — 3-4:15 p.m. in the Alvarez College Union Smith 900 R panel of Davidson College students that will explore issues within the black civil rights struggle on and off college Celebration set for Senior Center Seeing patients of all ages for general dermatology. Most major insurances accepted including Aetna, Cigna and Blue Cross/Blue Shield and UnitedHealthcare. Nancy J. Astle, M.D. If you decide to purchase additional treatment, you have the legal right to change your mind within three days and receive a refund. Not valid with Medicare and some insurance plans. Right Across from Target! 9718-D Sam Furr Road, Huntersville 704-896-8080 • www.ballaschiropractic.com campuses, such as male dominance and heterosexist, classist and ageist agendas. Panelists will use love letters to initiate a dialogue about how to have a more inclusive movement for black freedom. • Material Representation of Blackness in Professional Basketball — 3-4:15 p.m. in the Alvarez College Union Smith Room 303. A presentation by Davidson senior Kassim Alani will explore how both Nike and the National Basketball Association portray black professional basketball players through the exploitation of “blackness.” • Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Evening Lecture — 7 p.m. in the Alvarez College Union Smith 900 Room with Professor Marc Lamont Hill. One of the country’s leading hip-hop generation intellectuals, Hill will cover topics such as culture, politics and education. He has lectured widely, and provides regular commentary for media outlets such as NPR, Washington Post, Essence magazine, and the New York Times. He was also a political commentator for Fox News Channel’s The O’Reilly Factor. In 2005, Ebony magazine named him one of America’s top 30 Black leaders under 30, and in 2011 Ebony named him one of America’s 100 most influential black leaders. 19900 West Catawba Avenue, Suite B 704-892- 4878 Cornelius, NC 28031 www.lakesidederm.com After more than a month of settling into its larger surroundings, the Mecklenburg Senior Center will hold official grand opening ceremonies next week at its new home in the old police station in downtown Huntersville. The grand opening event will be held Thursday, Jan. 22, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the new location at 102 Gilead Road. Food and beverages, along with a ribbon cutting ceremony and comments from local dignitaries, will be part of the planned festivities. Senior Center programs relocated from the Rock Church on N.C. 115 in Huntersville to the old police station facility late last year as part of an agreement with the town to share space in the building with the Huntersville Parks & Recreation Department. “The senior citizen population in the Lake Norman area continues to grow and we’re growing along with them,” Center Director Joanne Ahern said. “Our new center evokes a warm, bright, friendly feeling which we like to call senior-friendly. As we celebrate SEE NEWS BRIEFS, PAGE 13 NEWS www.lakenormancitizen.com NEWS BRIEFS FROM PAGE 12 friendly feeling which we like to call senior-friendly. As we celebrate our grand opening, we’re also taking this opportunity to thank the Town of Huntersville for providing the availability of this space for our center. I urge all citizens from the area to come and see our new home and what we offer for adults 55 and older.” Ahern said the new location, which served as Huntersville Police Department headquarters prior to the department’s move to a much larger building on Julian Clark Avenue, is completely handicapped accessible, provides ample parking and enough space to offer even more programs and activities. Food for the grand opening activities will be provided by Autumn Care of Cornelius, Bayada Home Care, Summit Place of Mooresville and Donna Lee of Cornelius. Normal Thursday classes, such as line dancing, pinochle and Wii bowling, will take place at their regular times so visitors and guests will have the opportunity to see the senior center and its participants in action. The new location is the third home for the North Mecklenburg Center. Previously, it was located at the River Church in Cornelius and then the Rock Church. The Center charges annual fee for participants. Classes with instructors carry individual fees while others are free of charge. The center is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. More information on program activities is available by calling 704-9482486, by emailing Ahern at joanne. ahern@mecklenburgcountync.gov or by visiting Charmeck.org/Mecklenburg/county.parkandrec. Armour Street Theatre, 307 Armour St. in Davidson. The Princess Plays, from the book by Colleen Neuman, will be presented Friday and Saturday, Jan. 16 and 17. Showtimes for the production, directed by Katelyn Englebert, will be 7 p.m. on Friday and 10 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. on Saturday. Shakespeare for the King: A Commedia Discord, adapted and directed by Heather Wilson-Bowlby, will be presented Jan. 17 at 7 pm. and Sunday, Jan. 18 at 1:30 and 4:30 p.m. Golly Gee Whiz!, by Eric Rockwell and Joanne Bogart and directed by Meredith Swanson, will be presented Saturday, Jan. 24, at 1 and 4 p.m. and Sunday, Jan. 25, at 2 p.m. The shows are appropriate for all ages. No reservations are required, but seating is limited so those planning to attend are advised to arrive early. Doors open 20 minutes prior to curtain. Performances are free, but donations will be taken at the door to support future youth programming. Youth Ensemble productions focus on the development of the youth actor through the production process. They are purposefully scaled back to keep the emphasis on the process and are performed free of charge as a culmination of the project. For information on upcoming youth auditions and productions, call the box office at 704-892-7953 or visit DavidsonCommunityPlayers.org. Davidson Community Players is a non-profit organization established in 1965 to produce theatre that entertains, enriches and encourages community participation in the dramatic arts. The Connie Company is DCP’s theatre for youth division. Both organizations have a long standing record of providing creative, authentic and affordable opportunities for both children and adults. LNRMC seeks teen summer volunteers The Lake Norman Regional Medical Center Volunteer Auxiliary is accepting student applications to participate in the summer Junior Volunteer Program at the hospital in Mooresville. The program is an opportunity for students to receive first-hand exposure to the operations of various hospital departments including imaging services, surgery, endoscopy, physical rehabilitation and women’s services. Applications are available online on LNRMC’s website under the volunteer opportunities tab, through local school guidance de- 13 partments and at the visitors’ desk at hospital at 171 Fairview Road in Mooresville. The program is open to rising high school juniors and seniors. Applicants are required to complete an essay and provide two teacher recommendations and two personal references. A Volunteer Auxiliary committee will select 25 students to receive at least 32 hours of volunteer opportunity each. An orientation will be held at the end of May and the program will run for eight weeks in June and July. “This is a competitive and rewarding program,” says Auxiliary Junior Volunteer Coordinator Connie Farrell. “We look for students who are career-driven and interested in working in a professional health care field.” Completed applications must be returned to the Junior Volunteer Coordinator at the hospital by March 31. DRS. COLEMAN & COLEMAN Dental Implants and teeth in the Same day! Exclusive 3D Computer Guided Dental Implant Technology Now Available in the Lake Norman area. Drs Michael and Patrick Coleman have successfully placed over 6,000 Dental Implants. Trust your Dental Implant Surgery to the Experience, Reputation and Quality of Care with Drs Coleman & Coleman. We work with your dentist to create excellence in your final result! DCP’s young actors present play series A series of free, family-friendly shows by the Youth Ensembles affiliated with the Davidson Community Players will begin this weekend. All performances will be at the Support Your Local Businesses January 14, 2015 Call us directly or ask your dentist to refer you for a consultation! Call today for an appointment! Drs. Coleman & Coleman 19910 North Cove Rd., Cornelius, NC 704- 892-1198 • CarolinaOMS.com LAKE NORMAN’S TRUSTED CHOICE FOR ORAL SURGERY SINCE 1985 14 January 14, 2015 Talk of the Towns Lake Norman Citizen Back to basics NELSON BYNUM Image of the Week On frozen pond A close-up view makes this appear to be a stream cascading into a mountain pond that has frozen over. In reality, it’s a water feature in front of an office building on Gilead Road near downtown Huntersville. Winter arrived with a vengeance last week with deep-freezing temperatures followed by a threat of freezing rain this week. Project your image Have a photograph you want to share with your fellow citizens? Submit your Image of the Week contribution to Lee Sullivan at lees@lakenormancitizen.com. The reaction on social “media” was swift and decisive as the recent news spread via Facebook and the Twitter-verse at thumbtapping speed. One commenter called it the “worst news” she will hear in 2015, a year, Talkers couldn’t help but note, was a mere 11 days old. But the damage had been done and additional carnage was soon to be swept up in the wake of this horrific turn of events. Terrorist killings in the offices of a French newspaper? No, It was something apparently much more significant. The horrific development capturing their attention was the recent announcement that Target stores will soon carry a product line created by highfalutin’ women’s resort and chic beach wear designer Lilly Pulitzer. Target! And to add insult to injury, some items will be available in plus sizes! Surely, some tweeters mused, this was some big, fat joke. But as reality set in, the Lilly-putians lashed out with comments that their designer hero would be “rolling over” in her grave that the name Lilly Pulitzer would be found on a rack next to the Target house brands such as Merona, Xhiliration and Mossimo; and only steps away from the motor oil and plungers. And even worse, the prestige of their favorite brand will be cheapened because “basics” will have the opportunity to wear the same Lilly Pulitzer label as they. Oh, the humanity. In their constant quest for knowledge, Talkers turned to the Urban Dictionary to find a reference to “basics,” learning, as expected, that it was slang for someone who lacks the level of sophistication obviously possessed by an individual of high enough stature to call someone else a “basic.” And heaven forbid someone of a certain socio-economic category should be permitted to wear a brand that would otherSEE TALK, PAGE 15 www.lakenormancitizen.com TALK FROM PAGE 14 wise remain unaffordable for them. The worst news of 2015? Within that attitude lies no clearer indication that it’s time for everyone to get back to basics. TALK OF THE TOWNS January 14, 2015 15 Horse’s Mouth Dumb phones Genius phones and other technological advancements have made some aspects of life better, but they can also lead to some awkward moments. Just this week, slaving away at the office anticipating Monday’s super-hyped finale to the college football season, one Talker got this intriguing — and no doubt dictated straight to a so-called “smart” phone — text message from a long-time pal. “Going to warm up some chicken wings the night watch the ball game come on out if you’d like wife out of town.” Sometimes, Talkers admit, we suffer from typos and every now and then take liberties with punctuation, but if there’s a best lesson to show just how valuable a comma or period can be, this might be it. Of course, the good friend could have simply been emphasizing just how much disdain his wife harbors for our company, but odds are it’s just a matter of the machine doing just what — and only what — the human told it to do. Secrets in plain sight A local blogger utilized as a columnist at another area periodical recently lamented that the only way the public knew about “clandestine” meetings between a requisite number of commissioners from each local to not constitute a quorum, held several months ago, was because one board member from one of the towns told him about them. The meetings between NCDOT officials and the local electeds were to allow for intimate question-and-answer sessions and idea exchanges. And they weren’t secret as they were discussed at the dais in Huntersville, and the media was informed and reported about them in advance. Talkers know, because they actually attend them, that the best way to know about “secrets” towns keep from their citizens is to actually show up at a meeting, where this one was discussed in open forum. “It’s a time for us to identify priorities, see where we want to go and work out a way to get there. The retreat is where we develop the blueprint we hope to follow on town projects for the next 12 months, or for the next two years based on the size of the project and the financial commitment involved.” — Huntersville Town Manager Greg Ferguson summarizing the primary objectives of the town’s annual planning retreat to be held later this month. “We feel like we can go ahead and construct the masonry abutments prior to Cintra working on the lanes in this area. Those are still some of the things we have to discuss.” — Cornelius Assistant Town Manager Andrew Grant on progress of aesthetics work on the diverging diamond interchange at Exit 28. “They are the reason why we won. Their hard work and their belief in me and Susan allowed us to overcome seemingly insurmountable odds to win the race. I’m glad they came to visit me early. I hope they will visit me often.” — U.S. Senator Thom Tillis of Huntersville in the throng of visitors and well-wishers who traveled to Washington, D.C., last week to witness him being sworn-in. “I’m looking for the people who are looking for me. And when they find me, they cry, because they’ve been looking for a long time.” — Gabriella Tebbens, proprietress of Laughingbrook Spellcrafting and Ancestral Arts in Huntersville, on the clientele of her shop that supports a rather large pagan community. “They have a very deliberate picture painted in their head about me, but I didn’t paint it.” — Tebbens on those critical of or uneducated about her practice of witchcraft. “I probably hate losing more than I like winning, to be honest.” — Hough High School wrestling coach Tripp Rogers, whose team has won more than it has lost this season. “We just need to keep grinding. Our conference is a grind. There are no easy games.” — Hopewell High School girls’ basketball coach Tyrelle Anderson, whose Lady Titans started the 2014-15 basketball season with a 13-1 record. “I think it’ll be nine bleachers high, packed in there like sardines. It’ll be about 96 degrees, and first place will be on the line.” — Hough High School boys’ basketball coach Jason Grube, whose team plays at rival North Meck Friday. The two teams are currently in a four-way tie for first place in the MECKA Conference. 16 Citizen’s Arrest January 14, 2015 Cornelius Arrests and citations as reported by the Cornelius Police Department Dec. 31-Jan. 4. Arrests • Rosero, Harold (BM, 27), ForgeryBank Notes (F), 20500 Torrence Chapel Road, 12/31. • Colley, Travis Paul (WM, 35), Impaired Driving-DWI (M), Open Container In Vehicle (T), 17999 West Catawba Avenue, 1/1. • Cooper, Jennifer Danielle (WF, 30), Possession Of Schedule II Controlled Substance (F), 19613 Shevington Drive, 1/3. Citations • Billy, Jonathan Michael (WM, 33), Driving While License Revoked, 18899 West Catawba Avenue, 12/31. • Low, Alain Simon (OM, 53), SpeedingExcess Of 15 Miles Over, 10399 Washam Potts Road, 12/31. CITIZEN’S ARREST • Isla Sosa, Juan Jose (HM, 22), No Driver’s License, 20099 North Main Street, 12/31. • Brewster, Talitha (BF, 42), Exceeding Posted Speed, 20011 West Catawba Avenue, 12/31. • Colley, Travis Paul (WM, 35), Open Container Of Alcohol In Vehicle, Speeding, 19099 West Catawba Avenue, 1/1. • Hinkle, Steven Leo (WM, 26), No Insurance, 17999 Statesville Road, 1/1. • Piro, Karen Shapiro (WF, 40), Expired Registration, Expired/No Inspection, 19099 West Catawba Avenue, 1/1. • Norman, Danzell Jaquan (BM, 23), Failure To Stop Steady Red Light, 19399 West Catawba Avenue, 1/1. • Beam, Gary Lynn (WM, 51), Driving While License Revoked, 20655 Catawba Avenue, 1/1. • Cianchetti, Domenico Robert (WM, 25), Exceeding Posted Speed, 19099 West Catawba Avenue, 1/2. MAKE THE FRONT PAGE! Put Your Message Where It Counts • Carpenter, Richard Hundley (WM, 16), Speeding-Excess Of 15 Miles Over, 10399 Washam Potts Road, 1/2. • Odehnal, Juliana Kendall (WF, 62), Exceeding Posted Speed, 19699 West Catawba Avenue, 1/2. • Ferrel, James Randall (WM, 54), Speeding-Excess Of 15 Miles Over, 18899 West Catawba Avenue, 1/2. • Peterson, Hans Edgar (WM, 48), Exceeding Posted Speed, Statesville Road at Catawba Avenue, 1/2. • Hodges, Jennifer Simpson (WF, 40), Expired Registration, Expired/No Inspection, West Catawba Avenue at Westmoreland Road, 1/2. • Burch, Jordan Elial (WM, 30), Speeding-Excess Of 15 Miles Over, 18899 West Catawba Avenue, 1/2. • Barvoets, Barbara Ann (WF, 53), Exceeding Posted Speed, Knox Road at Harken Drive, 1/2. • Sterling, Abraham (WM, 23), Speeding, 17499 Jetton Road, 1/2. • Minton, James Logan (WM, 28), Exceeding Posted Speed, Statesville Road at Boathouse Court, 1/2. • Rowse, Karen Wagner (WF, 67), Exceeding Posted Speed, 19699 West Catawba Avenue, 1/3. • Pratt, Erika Ann (WF, 35), Exceeding Posted Speed, 18899 West Catawba Avenue, 1/3. • Nemitz, Jared Ray (WM, 31), Flashing Red Light, Meadow Crossing Lane at Denae Lynn Drive, 1/3. • Hart, Molly Colleen (WF, 40), Exceeding Posted Speed, 18899 West Catawba Avenue, 1/3. • Matney, Kerri Jo (WF, 32), SpeedingExcess Of 15 Miles Over, 19751 Statesville Road, 1/3. • Yepez-Ramos, Luis David (OM, 46), Speeding-Excess Of 15 Miles Over, 19751 Statesville Road, 1/3. • Gary, Zeivon Marquise (BM, 20), Possession Of A Controlled Substance, 17599 Tuscany Lane, 1/4. Davidson Arrests and citations as reported by the Davidson Police Department Dec. 29-Jan. 4. Arrests YOUR STICKY NOTE MESSAGE HERE! Your advertisement, up clo se & personal, repeated 26,00 0 times in the most high profile sp ot in our publication and deliv ered to the homes and businesse s in LKN with the buying power yo u seek! • Duff, Brandon (BM, 25), Possession Of Marijuana (M), Possession Of Drug Paraphernalia (M), Selling Marijuana (F), Deliver Marijuana (F), Possession With Intent To Sell/Deliver Marijuana (F), Potts Street, 1/1. Great for: • Instant Coupons • Special Offers • Brand Recognition • Multi-part campaign • Games & Contests • Special Events Our sticky notes are surprisingly affordable and will get you the results you need! Call today 704-948-3348 • Proctor, Spencer Alan Jr. (BM, 28), Driving While License Revoked (T), Resist/ Obstruct/Delay (M), 700 Griffith Street, 1/4. Citations • Varnaob, Alisa Rachelle (WF, 44), No Driver’s License, Griffith Street, 12/29. • Donaldson, Tina (BF, 48), Revoked Registration Plate, Griffith Street, 12/29. • English, Teresa Lynn (WF, 46), Speeding, North Main Street, 12/29. • Speicher, Zachary Robert (WM, 20), Expired Registration, Expired Inspection, Griffith Street, 12/29. • Harvey, Dominique Melotti (WF, 48), No Driver’s License, Expired Registration, Running Red Light, Griffith Street, 12/29. • Godfrey, Kayla Renee (WF, 26), Speeding, Concord Road, 12/31. • Griffin, Mario Nicole (BM, 32), Speeding, East Rocky River Road, 12/31. • Crowley, Shanice Nicole (BF, 25), Expired Registration, Sloan Street, 12/31. • Fisher, Amy Annette (WF, 35), Speeding, North Main Street, 12/31. • Brookshire, Christopher Lee (WM, 50), Speeding, Concord Road, 12/31. • Jenkins, Nathan William Herrin (WM, 16), Wrong Left Hand Turn, N.C. 73, 1/1. • McFadden, Janet Lynn (WF, 48), Failure To Stop At Stop Sign, Ashby Drive, 1/1. • Caplanides, Christopher Robert (WM, 38), Expired Registration, Expired Inspection, Driving While License Revoked, Robert Walker Drive, 1/1. • Tangudu, Vidya (OF, 36), Speeding, Griffith Street, 1/1. • Minewiser, Elizabeth Cathryn (WF, 41), Speeding, Davidson-Concord Road 1/1. • Miles, Susanna Conner (WF, 61), Speeding, North Main Street, 1/1. • Alegria, Jennifer Leigh (WF, 42), Texting While Driving, Griffith Street, 1/1. • Williamson, Carlyle Rutledge (WF, 23), Expired Registration, Griffith Street, 1/1. • Hochman, Fred Kenneth (WM, 68), Expired Registration, Concord Road, 1/1. • York, Melanie Ann (WF, 44), Expired Registration, Expired Inspection, Concord Road, 1/1. • Davis, Jackson Lee (WM, 18), Underage Consumption, Cotton Gin Alley, 1/1. • Branson, Michael Stewart (WM, 19), Underage Consumption, Cotton Gin Alley 1/1. • Nuttle, Justin Andrew (WM, 19), Underage Consumption, Cotton Gin Alley, 1/1. • Erker, Ryan Michael (WM, 18), Under- Lake Norman Citizen age Consumption, Cotton Gin Alley, 1/1. • Farmer, Tyler Sean (WM, 19), Underage Consumption, Cotton Gin Alley, 1/1. • Craverm, Nathaniel Lee (WM, 20), Underage Consumption, Cotton Gin Alley, 1/1. • Roth, Ian Christopher (WM, 18), Underage Consumption, Cotton Gin Alley, 1/1. • Selby, Stafford Marion (WM, 58), Speeding, N.C. 115, 1/2. • Grover, Calvin Robert (WM, 34), Speeding, N.C. 115, 1/2. • Baldwin, Kimberly (WF, 48), No Driver’s License, Beaty Street, 1/2. • Lane, Lauren Nichele (WF), Speeding, Failure to Carry License, Griffith Street, 1/2. • Saire, Joseph P (WM, 41), No Driver’s License, Peninsula Drive, 1/2. • Paden, Donald Jr. (BM, 41), Wrong Side of Road, Jetton Street, 1/2. • Tomarchio, Louis Charles (WM, 33), No Driver’s License, Griffith Street, 1/3. • Gross, John Phillip (WM, 63), Speeding, Griffith Street, 1/3. • Parsons, Jessica Brown (WF, 33), Failure To Stop At Stop Sign, Peninsula Drive, 1/3. • Bailey, Cathy Hager (WF, 63), Speeding, Expired Registration, North Main Street, 1/4. • Holland, April Burns (WF, 34), Speeding, Griffith Street, 1/4 Huntersville Arrests and citations as reported by the Huntersville Police Department Dec. 31-Jan. 6. Arrests • Houston, Robert AlJerome (BM, 29), Driving While License Revoked (T), Speeding (T), McCoy Road, 12/31. • Whitt, Zachary Ryan (WM, 20), Larceny (F), Uttering Forged Instrument (F), 14215 Market Square Drive, 12/31. • Collins, Sharla (WF, 27), Simple Assault (M), Statesville Road, 12/31. • Frasier, Joshua Dale (WM, 24), Hit And Run/Property Damage (T), Possession Of Marijuana (M), 17400 Calverton Road, 12/31. • Cook, Anna Alicia (WF, 26), Open Container In Vehicle (T), Impaired DrivingDWI (M), Reckless Driving To Endanger (T), Resist/Obstruct/Delay (M), 13659 Beatties Ford Road, 1/1. • Paige, Kwamane Rashad (BM, 24), Impaired Driving-DWI (M), 14801 Statesville Road, 1/3. • Smith, Shanice Victoria (BF, 21), Larceny By Employee (F), 9801 Sam Furr Road, 1/3. • Knox, Khristopher Michael (WM, 34), Larceny (F), Conspiracy (M), Possession Of Drug Paraphernalia (M), Unauthorized Use Of Motor Vehicle (M), 11557 Hambright Road, 1/4. • Herron, Elijah Zachike (BM, 21), Rape (F), Whispering Pines Lane, 1/6. Citations • Ward, Christopher Vernell (BM, 29), Possession Of Marijuana, I-77 near Sam Furr Road, 12/31. • Greenwood, Shawn Andrew (WM, 56), Stoplight Violation, Statesville Road at Sam Furr Road, 12/31. • Brammer, Lindsey Jarrett (WF, 27), Expired Registration, Stumptown Road SEE POLICE REPORTS, PAGE 17 CITIZEN’S ARREST www.lakenormancitizen.com POLICE REPORTS FROM PAGE 16 near Statesville Road, 12/31. • Smith, Chelseanne Elizabeth (WF, 27), Expired Registration, Old Statesville Road at McCord Road, 12/31. • Stortz, Katherine Elizabeth (WF, 22), Text Messages/Reading Electronic Mail While Driving, Gilead Road at Sherwood Drive, 12/31. • Cooke, Nicholas Abraham (WM, 28), Expired Registration, Gilead Road at Old Statesville Road, 12/31. • Smith, Christopher Cody (WM, 24), Seat Belt Law, Gilead Road at Sherwood Drive, 12/31. • Hettinger, Christopher (WM, 26), Improper Registration, Statesville Road at Sherill Estates, 12/31. • Frasier, Joshua Dale (WM, 24), Failure To Report Collision, Sam Furr Road at Statesville Road, 12/31. • Trudan, Dan (M, 53), Parking In Direction Other Than That Of Travel, 17120 Formby Road, 12/31. • Sousa, Peter (WM, 37), Speeding 6045, Sam Furr Road at Ranger Trail, 1/1. • Sanchez, Luis Alberto (WM, 28), No Driver’s License, Gilead Road at McCoy Road, 1/1. • White, Anna Alicia (WF, 16), DWIAlcohol, Reckless Driving, Possession Of Open Container In Vehicle, Beatties Ford Road at Bud Henderson Road, 1/1. • Conneh, Morris (BM, 26), No Driver’s License-Revoked, Gilead Road at I-77, 1/1. • Darnell, Cynthia McClure (WF, 55), No Driver’s License, Mt. Holly-Huntersville Road at Reese Boulevard, 1/1. • Mendoza, Miguel Velequez (UM, 36), No Driver’s License, Old Statesville Road at Gilead Road, 1/1. • Witherspoon, Rhonda Roseboro (BF, 52), Expired Registration, Statesville Road at Corland Road, 1/1. • Courts, Britany Marie (BF, 19), DrugsEquipment/Paraphernalia Possession, 14314 Rhiannon Lane, 1/2. • Cullen, Vincent Depaul (WM, 29), Exceeding Limit On Highway, Gilead Road near I-77, 1/2. • Leathley, Cameron Jay Charles (WM, 20), Failure To Reduce Speed, Eastfield Road near Old Statesville Road, 1/2. • Echevarria, Andres Alberto (UM, 38), Speeding, Eastfield Road near Dixon Farm Road, 1/2. • Kane, Riley (WF, 18), Speeding 84-65, I-77 near Gilead Road, 1/2. • Frye, Tristen Blaine (WM, 18), Speeding, Possession Of Marijuana, I-77 North near Mile Marker 20.6, 1/2. • Flynn, Daniel Patrick (WM, 41), Speeding, Sam Furr Road near Birkdale Commons Parkway, 1/2. • White, Stephanie Lee (WF, 27), Stoplight Violation, Sam Furr Road near West Catawba Avenue, 1/2. • Spell, Frank Fulton (WM, 42), Speeding-Exceeding Safe Speed, Beatties Ford Road near Catawba Chase Drive, 1/2. • Swim, Calvin Allyn (WM, 25), Expired Registration, I-77 near Mile Marker 25, 1/2. • Deveaux, William (BM, 20), Possession Of Marijuana, 14314 Rhiannon Lane, 1/2. • Jackson, Gail (BF, 56), PassingImproper, Statesville Road at Holly Point Drive, 1/2. • Minor, Harvey William (BM, 46), No Driver’s License, Cletus Brawley Road at Stumptown Road, 1/2. • Federico, Jacklyn Leigh (WF, 29), Speeding 60-45, Sam Furr Road at Knoxwood Drive, 1/2. • Kellman, Ross Adam (WM, 43), Speeding 58-45, Sam Furr Road at Knoxwood Drive, 1/2. • Ferris, Jeremy Edward (WM, 32), Speeding 58-45, Sam Furr Road at Knoxwood Drive, 1/2. • Greene, Matthew Tyler (WM, 17), Defective Windshield, Gilead Road at Sherwood Drive, 1/2. • Stone, Tony (WM, 26), Tinted Windows Violation, Gilead Road at Sherwood Drive, 1/2. • Best, Margaret Anne (WF, 18), Speeding 66-45, Eastfield Road at Dixon Farm Road, 1/2. • Parris, Cecil (BM, 48), Speeding 60-45, Eastfield Road at Dixon Farm Road, 1/2. • Swaby, Travis Cliffton (BM, 27), Speeding 60-45, Eastfield Road at Dixon Farm Road, 1/2. • Stacy, Sandra Elizabeth (WF, 54), Speeding 60-45, Eastfield Road at Dixon Farm Road, 1/2. • Wacker, Ethan Austin (WM, 17), Speeding 60-45, Eastfield Road at Dixon Farm Road, 1/2. • Mancuso, Nicholas Mario (WM, 25), Tinted Windows Violation, Eastfield Road at Dixon Farm Road, 1/2. • Carlo, Christopher Garry (WM, 40), Speeding 54-45, Sam Furr Road at Knoxwood Drive, 1/2. • Doster, Jennifer Lynn (WF, 27), Speeding 54-45, Sam Furr Road at Knoxwood Drive, 1/2. • Preziosi, Danielle (WF, 28), Text Messages/Reading Electronic Mail While Driving, Gilead Road at Sherwood Drive, 1/2. • Pugliese, Adrienne Lori (WF, 39), Tinted Windows Violation, Gilead Road at Sherwood Drive, 1/2. • Scwartz, Brandon Christopher (WM, 17), Speeding 54-45, Eastfield Road at Dixon Farm Road, 1/2. • Pope, Samantha Michelle (WF, 25), Speeding, Eastfield Road near Dixon Farm Road, 1/3. • Bradford, Lovell Anthony (BM, 42), Expired Registration, No Driver’s License, Eastfield Road near Old Statesville Road, 1/3. • Jennings, Gary William (WM, 60), Expired Registration, Eastfield Road near Old Statesville Road, 1/3. • Reeves, Joseph Carter (BM, 20), No Driver’s License-Revoked, Sam Furr Road near I-77 South Ramp, 1/3. • Crowder, Alisha Noel Lynnette (BF, 23), Improper Turn, Sam Furr Road near Northcross Drive, 1/3. • Funderburk, Derrick Eugene (BM, 43), Expired Registration, Sam Furr Road near Northcross Drive, 1/3. • Winn, Ronald Neal (WM, 65), Improper Turn, Sam Furr Road at Northcross Drive, 1/3. • Steakhouse, Roslyn (BF, 52), Inspection Violation, Eastfield Road at Forest Path Drive, 1/3. • Prysiazniuk, Stephanie Ann (WF, 43), Stoplight Violation, Statesville Road near Holly Point Drive, 1/4. • Wilson, Steven Korean (BM, 31), Exceeding Limit On Highway, No Driver’s License, Eastfield Road near Dixon Farm Road, 1/4. • Dehart, Megan Rose (WF, 30), Expired Registration, No Driver’s LicenseRevoked, Sam Furr Road near Northcross Road, 1/4. • Burnett, Tyler Dean (WM, 17), Speeding, Eastfield Road near Dixon Farm Road, 1/4. • Luckett, Beverly Ann (BF, 61), Expired Registration, Eastfield Road near Old Statesville Road, 1/4. • Burke, Brendan Lee (WM, 25), Expired Registration, Sam Furr Road near Northcross Drive, 1/4. • McKinnie, Dana Karol (WF, 51), No Liability Insurance, Sam Furr Road near Kenton Place, 1/4. • Dunbar, Elizabeth Marie (UF, 26), Expired Registration, Sam Furr Road near Northcross Drive, 1/4. • Gilmore, Logan Brett (WM, 24), Larceny, 11145 Bryton Town Center Drive, 1/4. • Jones, Nathan Patrick (BM, 19), Possession Of Marijuana, Gilead Road at Rosedale Hill Avenue, 1/5. • Tollner, Scott Andrew (WM, 24), Seat Belt Law, Sam Furr Road at Old Statesville Road, 1/5. • Louden, Abbie Paige (WF, 34), Expired Registration, I-77 near Gilead Road, 1/5. • Trafzer, Matthew Allen (WM, 45), Expired Registration, Gilead Road at Reese Boulevard, 1/5. • Kaiokoia, Peta Grace (BF, 18), Speeding 64-35, Reckless Driving, Gilead Road at Boren Street, 1/5. • Ledholtz, Whitney Lynn (WF, 25), Larceny, 11145 Bryton Town Center Drive, 1/5. • Ellis, Ashley (WF, 23), Speeding 62-45, Sam Furr Road at Knoxwood Drive, 1/5. • Moultry, Jerrick Breon (BM, 23), Speeding-School Zone 51-35, Old Statesville Road at Alexnderana Road, 1/5. • Good, Cindy Nix (WF, 40), SpeedingSchool Zone 52-35, Old Statesville Road at Eastfield Road, 1/5. • Woolever, Derek Michael (WM, 32), Speeding-School Zone 51-35, Old Statesville Road at Eastfield Road, 1/5. • Baugh, Jeanna Burress (WF, 46), Speeding-School Zone 55-35, Old Statesville Road at Eastfield Road, 1/5. • Schroeder, Donald Bruce (WM, 66), Speeding 44-35, Old Statesville Road at Eastfield Road, 1/5. • Burgess, Nicola Marie (WF, 45), Ex- January 14, 2015 pired Registration, Ranson Road at Gilead Road, 1/5. • Munguia, Otoniel Gutierrez (UM, 32), No Driver’s License, I-77 near Mile Marker 23, 1/6. • Ambrocio, Elmerlsau (WM, 24), No Driver’s License, Gilead Road at Statesville Road, 1/6. Mooresville Arrests as reported by the Mooresville Police Department Dec. 29-Jan. 4. • Sears, Damian Nicholas (WM, 36), Assault With A Deadly Weapon (M), 750 West Iredell Avenue, 12/29. • Nazworth, Scott Anderson (WM, 16), Possession Of Schedule VI Controlled Substance (M), 117 Clusters Circle, 12/29. • Forbes-Jones, Ian MacKay (WM, 41), Assault On A Female By Male (M), 201 Town Square Circle, 12/29. • Archer, Chloe Ann (WF, 20), LarcenyShoplifting/Concealment (M), 350 West Plaza Drive, 12/30. • Desanti, Daniel Louis (WM, 19), Possession Of Schedule VI Controlled Substance (M), 966 Brawley School Road, 12/30. • Sherrill, Joseph Truman (BM, 17), Failure To Appear-Felony (F), 600 South Main Street, 12/31. • Houston, Sandtario Deray (BM, 29), Assault On A Female By Male (M), 315 Lee Street, 12/31. • Jennings, Sandy Ross (WM, 32), Larceny-Shoplifting/Concealment (M), 169 Norman Station Boulevard, 12/31. • Stinson, Johnny Labrian (BM, 36), Failure To Appear-Misdemeanor (M), North Broad Street, 12/31. • Cooper, Dexter Ray (BM, 50), Loitering/Soliciting For Money (M), 169 Norman Station Boulevard, 12/31. • Sloan, Franklin Fitzgerald (BM, 51), Fugitive From Justice (M), N.C. 115 at 17 Timber Road, 1/1. • Grimes, Riley Jordan (WM, 17), Damage To Personal Property (M), 140 Elrosa Road, 1/1. • Witherspoon, Chase Prentiss (WM, 16), Damage To Personal Property (M), 249 River Birch Circle, 1/1. • Brigandi, Tailor Tre (WM, 16), Damage To Personal Property (M), 111 Gage Drive, 1/1. • Hudson, Amanda Michelle (WF, 30), DWI-Alcohol (M), 100 Beaty Avenue, 1/1. • Holden, Patrick Kevin (WM, 17), Possession Of Schedule VI Controlled Substance (M), 1321 Oakridge Farm Highway, 1/1. • Piwoski, Meghan Lofgren (WF, 30), Drugs-Inhaling Toxic Fumes (M), 590 River Highway, 1/2. • Hall, William Edward (WM, 20), DWIDrugs (M), 590 River Highway, 1/2. • Holbrook, Austin Tyler (WM, 19), Assault On A Female By Male (M), 750 West Iredell Avenue, 1/2. • Tate, Brenton Christopher (BM, 24), Assault On A Female By Male (M), 131 South Sherrill Street, 1/2. • Hamilton, Nathaniel (BM, 45), Possession Of Schedule VI Controlled Substance (M), 399 West Plaza Drive, 1/3. • Mullins, John Michael (WM, 27), Unauthorized Use Of Motor Vehicle (M), 1968 Charlotte Highway, 1/3. • Caldwell, Leon Develda (BM, 55), Assault On Law Enforcement Officer/Employee (M), 274 North Main Street, 1/3. • Hill, Timothy Joseph (WM, 18), Possession Of Schedule VI Controlled Substance (M), 110 Steam Engine Drive, 1/4. • Murphy, Morgan James (WM, 31), Damage To Personal Property (M), 118 Town Loop, 1/4. • Carrera, Anthony Joseph (WM, 22), Breaking Or Entering Of Building (F), 233 College Street, 1/4. Schools 18 January 14, 2015 Lake Norman Citizen CSD hosts annual ‘Fresh Take’ education conference Jan. 23 Community School of Davidson will host the fourth annual “Fresh Take: Strategies for Student Success” education conference Friday, Jan. 23, at the CSD high school campus, 404 Armour St., in Davidson. The event, which has grown every year and earn accolades from a wide range of education professionals, will begin at 8 a.m. and continue until 8 p.m. Praised by a leading state educator as “by far the best teacher’s conference I have ever attended,” the Fresh Take program is designed as a way to unite exceptional educators and provide a forum to share ideas about best practices and new approaches to help students. The keynote speaker for this year’s conference will be Michelle Icard, an author and educator who helps students, parents and teachers navigate the tricky middle school social world. Icard’s book, Middle School Makeover: Improving The Way You And Your Child Experience The Middle School Years, received a starred review from Publisher’s Weekly for being outstanding in its genre. Her work has also been featured in The Washington Post, A Mighty Girl, The Chicago Tribune, The Christian Science Monitor and Your Teen Magazine, and highlighted on Parents.com, Fox News Good Day Carolinas, The Charlotte Today Show and the Huffington Post. The conference is for educators of all levels and those already registered for this year’s event include administrators, college students majoring in education, coaches, home school parents and educators from throughout the South. Online registration is available at the CSD website, CSDspartans.org, and at squareup.com/ community-school-of-davidson. The registration fee for the confer- ence, which will include 60 workshops, roundtable discussions, various seminars, three meals and take-home materials, is $75. Comedy production coming to Hopewell The drama department at Hopewell High School in Huntersville will present several performances of Duck Hunter Shoots Angel starting this weekend. This endearing story, written by Mitch Albom, has been hailed as a rare comedy with a surprisingly heartfelt lesson. Albom, a long-time newspaper columnist and noted writer, is responsible for several critically acclaimed novels including Tuesdays with Morrie and The Five People You Meet in Heaven. The play, Albom’s first not based on one of his books, follows the intersecting paths of two guiltridden duck hunters who believe Frozen-themed fundraiser at L.N. Charter The Interact Club at Lake Norman Charter School will host a “Parents Night Out”benefitting the Guatemalan Stove Project Saturday, Jan. 17 from 6 to 10 p.m. Parents can drop off children ($20 for the first child, $10 for siblings) to enjoy a fun, Frozen-themed evening complete with games and snacks. To register, visit goo.gl/cqYDUM. LNC officials have also issued a reminder that the deadline for the school’s next lottery is Jan. 31. Visit lncharter.org for application information. they shot an angel, a depressed tabloid journalist, his reluctant photographer, their crazed boss, a shopgirl at a local Gasmart, a halfman/half-alligator and a ghost. The themes of redemption, race, media and North vs. South are all explored in comedic fashion, and the play features a surprise ending that few playgoers see coming. SEE SCHOOL NOTES, PAGE 19 SCHOOLS www.lakenormancitizen.com SCHOOL NOTES FROM PAGE 18 The school’s drama department students, the Hopewell Headliners, have been hard at work preparing for this production under the watchful eye of Director Carey Kugler, who has supervised the Headliners in creating award-winning productions for more than 14 years. Performances are open to the public and will be presented in the auditorium at Hopewell, 11530 Beatties Ford Road. The play will be presented on four nights — Friday, Jan. 16; Saturday, Jan. 17; Tuesday, Jan. 20; and Wednesday, Jan. 21 — with curtain time for all performances set for 7 p.m. Tickets can be purchased at the door for $5 and the production is rated PG due to mild profanity. Local schools unite to help EC programs In a cooperative effort to create unity and raise awareness for children with special needs, two elementary schools in Huntersville are teaming up to sponsor a fun and fund-raising activity in late March. The third annual Torrence Creek Elementary and Grand Oak Elementary 5k/Kids Fun Run/ Walk will be held Saturday March 28, at Bradley Middle School with all proceeds going directly to the exceptional children’s departments at Torrence Creek and Grand Oak to use for much-needed educational supplies. An exceptional child is any child with a disability, disorder,delay, behavior, sensory or attention problem; or any other issue that hinders learning. This is a fundraiser that will directly impact the children and families at these schools. Registration for the event is now under way at queencitytiming.com. On race day, the 5K will begin at 8 a.m. and the one-mile fun run will follow at 9:15. Activities at Bradley Middle, 13345 Beatties Ford Road, will be held rain or shine. In addition to recruiting participants for the runs and walks (last year, more than 500 runners participated and organizers are expecting even more this year), the schools are also seeking sponsors to support the event and help the exceptional children’s departments. For a $100 contribution, a sponsor will be able to support the programs and receive publicity with a race shirt logo acknowledgement and other materials distributed at the event. Sponsorship information is available by contacting either school. Fees for participating are $25 for the 5K and $15 for the Kids Fun Run. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools faculty members get a reduced rate of $20 for the 5K. Registration on race day will be available for an additional $5. Awards will be presented for top performers in age groups and overall categories and all those registered by March 1 are guaranteed a T-shirt. Open house set at Trillium Springs Trillium Springs Montessori School in Huntersville will host an open house/school tour program on Thursday, Jan. 22, starting at 9 a.m. It will be the final open house at Trillium Springs prior to the close of the application period for the First School Options Lottery on Jan. 26. All prospective parents are invited to take part in the program and to visit the Trillium Springs page on the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools website, cms.k12.nc.us. Trillium Springs, in its first year, is a CMS Montessori School at 9213 Beatties Ford Road. Tours, other events set at J.V. Washam Parents of prospective students are invited to visit J.V. Washam Elementary School in Cornelius for tours starting this month. Tours begin at 10 a.m. and will be on the following Thursdays: Jan. 15 and 29; Feb. 12 and 26; March 19 and 26; April 16 and 30; and May 7 and 21. Reservations are encouraged but not required and can be made by calling the school at 980-343-1071. Tour participants must bring a January 14, 2015 driver’s license and check in at the front office prior to the tour to receive a visitor’s badge. Parents are encouraged to attend tours without children so they can concentrate on the information being presented. Prospective kindergartners will have an opportunity to visit the school on Beginners Day, April 22. This month, an additional look at the school will be offered during an open house program on Thursday, Jan. 22. That event will begin at 9:30 a.m. and will include a brief presentation and a questionand-answer session with Principal Paula Rao. Parents are also reminded that kindergarten enrollment has begunfor the 2015-16 school year. To be eligible for kindergarten, students must be 5 years old on or before Aug. 31, 2015. For an enrollment packet, visit cms.k12.nc.us and search J.V. Washam link. 19 Talon Challenge finale this Friday Lincoln Charter School is once again partnering with Thomas Jefferson Classical Academy (TJCA) near Rutherfordton to support the efforts of the V Foundation for Cancer Research. The sixth annual Talon Challenge, a cooperative fundraising effort by the two schools, will feature an assortment of activities this week highlighted by an afternoon and evening full of basketball games on Friday, Jan. 16. Lincoln Charter is hosting several events at its Denver and Lincolnton campuses and TJCA is doing the same. Both schools are hosting blood drives, along with T-shirt sales and other fundraisers, with all the proceeds going to the V SEE SCHOOL NOTES, PAGE 20 20 January 14, 2015 SCHOOL NOTES FROM PAGE 19 Foundation. In the first five years of the project, the schools have combined to raise $32,414 for the V Foundation and collected several hundred pints of blood for the American Red Cross. One of the main fundraising ventures affiliated with the Talon SCHOOLS Challenge is a game ball run between the campuses, which serves to raise awareness of the event and for the V Foundation. This distance is more than 60 miles — with students from both schools physically running the game ball from the non-host school to the host school. Weather permitting, this year’s game ball run will begin at Lincoln Charter’s Denver campus on Wednesday, Jan. 14, just a little after 8 a.m. and arrive at the Lin- Hope you have an Incredible 2015! coln Charter Lincolnton campus around 11:30 a.m. The runners will then meet with TJCA representatives and local officials at the Lincoln County Courthouse for the ceremonial hand off. On Friday, the middle school basketball games, featuring boys and girls contest, start at 4 p.m. followed by the varsity high school games that evening. All games are to be played at the Spindale House in Spindale, and activities will include the final leg of the game ball run, a video montage (featuring Jim Valvano’s famous “Never Give Up” speech), and tributes to members of both schools whose lives have been touched by cancer. Schoolhouse hosts open house next week Huntersville Square 102 N Statesville Rd, #B6, Huntersville, NC Weekdays: 10-8 Saturdays: 9-3 (704) 875-3213 The Children’s Schoolhouse, at 17616 Caldwell Station Road in Huntersville, will host an open house Saturday, Jan. 24, from 10 a.m. to noon. Families of preschoolers ages 3-5 are encouraged to visit and speak with the school admissions coordinator, take a tour and find out more about the Schoolhouse. The deadline to submit applications for the 2015-16 school year Lake Norman Citizen is Feb. 13. A lottery will be held on Feb. 14 if the number of applications surpasses available openings. For more information, visit thechildrensschoolhouse.com/ admission-process/ or e-mail Meredith Siefert at admissionscsh@ gmail.com. The Children’s Schoolhouse is a nonprofit, cooperative preschool for 3- to 5-year-olds and has been a part of the Lake Norman community for more than 40 years. Housed in the historic Caldwell Station School in Huntersville, The Children’s Schoolhouse is operated by the parents of the children who attend. Families are involved on a daily basis in and out of the classroom, from building maintenance to assisting in the classroom, organizing field trips to fundraising. The curriculum is based on the Open Door School prototype program, which offers a child-directed, multi-age learning environment. Company renews sports camp offer Energy United, along with North Carolina’s Touchstone Energy cooperatives, are partnering with North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill to offer educational and athletic opportunities for rising sixth through eighth graders this summer. Middle-school students in Energy United’s service territory are encouraged to apply for all-expenses paid scholarships to attend basketball camp: boys may apply for the Roy Williams camp at UNC and girls may apply for the Wes Moore Wolfpack Women’s Basketball Camp at NCSU. Energy United will award scholarships to two local students, one for each camp. Applications for both camps will be accepted through March 31. Applicants will be judged on their academic records, extracurricular activities and an essay that must be submitted with the application. Interested students should e-mail maureen.moore@ energyunited.com or call Lindsey Listrom at 1-800-662-8835, ext. 3214. Students can also download applications at energyunited.com. sportscamp. Scholarship recipients will attend either the camp in Raleigh June 14-17 or the camp in Chapel Hill June 20-24 and must provide their own transportation. — Compiled by Lee Sullivan www.lakenormancitizen.com January 14, 2015 High note — Page 23 21 Royal rip-off — Page 26 Spellbinding shop finds a home in Huntersville By Lori Helms pulse@lakenormancitizen.com “100-year-old nails. $2 each or 3 for $5,” reads the label on a small glass jar. It sits nestled amongst the dried sage, spellcasting sugars, handmade jewelry from Ireland and a container of sliced cow femurs. Dried sage for cleansing a space of its bad juju after a whopper of a fight with your spouse; spell sugars to drop in the sweet tea of said spouse to sweeten their future disposition; and handmade jewelry because, well, the pieces are gorgeous. So really only one question remained. “What does one do with 100-year-old nails?” I asked. Without missing a beat, Gabriella Tebbens, proprietress of Laughingbrook Spellcrafting and Ancestral Arts in Huntersville, handed me what was likely my first homework assignment since college. “That’s a great question,” she says. “What would someone do with those?” She smiles impishly and continues on her tour of the shop. It was essentially the only question she didn’t answer at Laughingbrook earlier this week. It’s the imp in her that sent me on a bit of a research project, not her reluctance to talk, answer and guide. Anyone entering her shop on Old Statesville Road in the heart of old Huntersville is immediately greeted like an old friend with many a shared story, whether you know Tebbens or not. And while she’s ready to hear yours, she has quite her own story to tell leading up to Laughingbrook’s opening just a few months ago. She’s from Massachusetts, and before landing in Huntersville in 2002 she also lived in California. She holds a few degrees, culminating with a master’s degree in social justice in education. She has four “deliciously beautiful children” ages 17, 15, 13 and “oops” (we learn later that Oops is two years old). Oh, and one more thing. “Well, I’m a witch,” she says matter-of-factly in describing herself. To those not fluent in conversational paganism, that’s a jarring declaration. It doesn’t flow through the regular course of introductions one is accustomed to in modern, Western, Judeo-Christian-steeped culture — especially in the suburban South. But for Tebbens, a practicing LORI HELMS Gabriella Tebbens (right), owner of Laughingbrook Spellcrafting and Ancestral Arts in Huntersville, and Thorn Mooney provide a variety of resources to the pagan community, as well as “Drop-In Divination” Mondays, when Tebbens and Mooney are available to provide Tarot, stone and rune readings for walk-in customers. witch for more than 25 years, she references her calling as someone else would recite a resume. And it’s that calling that led her to open her spellcrafting and ancestral arts shop last September. It might have also been the need to get out of the house again. Teb- bens once owned a botanicals shop in California and had plans a few SEE LAUGHINGBROOK, PAGE 22 22 January 14, 2015 LAUGHINGBROOK FROM PAGE 21 years ago to open a tea and spice shop in Davidson, but then Oops arrived and, as she describes it, slightly “derailed” those plans. But the desire never left to provide a marketplace for her fellow pagans. “I have too many degrees to stay home without hurting someone,” she says. “It just didn’t speak to my natural witchy tendencies.” So she found a space on Old Statesville Road near Lupie’s Café, completely upfitting an old coffee shop and creamery to create a wonderful wrinkle in place and time. It starts at the threshold of a stunning wooden door and just gets better from there. “There’s so much of this market that has been highly neglected,” Tebbens says of the rather large pagan community in the Carolinas that her shop now supports. She says there are things that can be found on the Internet for pagan practitioners, but much of it is cheaply made or not even made in this country. Tebbens says the demand has been here for a shop offering quality ritual resources, and she’s coupled that with works from local artists centered on art forms practiced for hundreds — if not thousands — of years. Alongside the crystals, stones, Tarot decks and hand-rolled incense, one can find beeswax candles, wood burnings, taxidermy, even collectibles from a third-generation broom maker. From carved drinking horns made in the Carolinas (“They hold a full bottle of wine,” Tebbens says with her signature grin) to Celtic pendants, the tiny, welcoming shop is a feast for virtually every sense — and just about any sensibility. One need not be a practicing pagan to appreciate Laughingbrook’s wares. Tebbens says she truly has no typical clientele, describing her demographic as “huge” — everyone from little girls shopping with their moms, to practicing witches, to fifth generation Huntersvillians, to someone looking for a Tarot reading on “Drop-In Divination” Mondays. Just as resources for pagan culture and rituals cover nearly every surface of the shop, the walls are festooned with all manner of art. As Tebbens says, if it’s “gorgeous,” it’s in — pagan-centric or not. “When you offer quality art, it doesn’t matter if you’re not a practitioner,” she says. But it has mattered to some of the artists themselves. She says there are some whose works became popular through her shop, giving them a shot at making a living doing what they love. “I had no idea what it meant to them,” she says about helping them advance their careers. “It amazes me. I never dreamed that this would happen.” It’s likely that several locals also never dreamed there would be a Lake Norman Citizen Tebbens’ reflection is caught in the mirror above the Community Altar. Drop-in customers and clientele from all walks of life and all ages have left personal items on the altar, presided over by stone figures “Mike and Ike.” The altar holds everything from a crow feather to a child’s small plush toy, and is intended to provide those leaving a personal item with a sense of communal energy and support. witchcraft shop in Huntersville, but Tebbens says her reception has been “unilaterally positive and supportive.” And for those who would question what she’s up to and are critical of her offerings, with that same calming and contagious grin she takes it all in stride. “They have a very deliberate picture painted in their head about me,” she says, “but I didn’t paint it.” She says the images and stories of Satan and the devil are constructs of Christianity, and insists they have no place in paganism. In fact, her mother LORI HELMS once told her that she is the most Christian woman she knew, which Tebbens took as a profound compliment. For her, the message of paganism is remarkably simple. “Walk your path, be who you are,” says Tebbens. “I’m looking for the people who are looking for me. And when they find me, they cry, because they’ve been looking for a long time.” Apparently, a lot of folks have been looking, and have definitely found her. She says sales over the winter holidays were through the roof, and she’s very optimistic about what she’s built in Huntersville. Speaking of building, if you still want to know what to do with a 100-year-old nail, my limited research shows you can use it in a “classic witch bottle” combined with pieces of broken glass, a pinch of dried rosemary and some vinegar to protect your home. Like a beaming grade schooler turning in her first book report, I told Tebbens what I discovered. And like a kind teacher, she complimented my work but asked me to look at it more metaphorically. “If you consider what a nail is crafted to do (hold pieces together),” she says, “you can begin to see the applications: hold the boundaries of my home, hold my family together, bind my house together by my fierce love for my children … get it?” Why, yes. Again, remarkably simple. Sit for a spell Visit Laughingbrook Spellcrafting and Ancestral Arts at the intersection of Old Statesville and Gilead roads in Huntersville. www.lakenormancitizen.com January 14, 2015 23 Residential sales end month, year on the upswing The Charlotte Regional Realtor Association has issued its preliminary report on December residential real estate sales for the area, based on data from the Carolina Multiple Listing Service. The reports shows December and 2014 overall ending on a positive note, with prospects expected to remain on the upside heading into 2015. Officials with CRRA say December sales increased 15.7 percent over last year, with 3,050 properties sold last month compared with 2,635 properties sold in December 2013. Closed sales for all of 2014 totaled 36,191, an increase of nearly five percent over the number of closings in all of 2013 (34,525). Both the median and average sales prices were higher in December, marking nearly three years of year-over-year price gains. The median sales price ($180,000) was up 4.3 percent over December 2013 ($172,500), and the average sales price ($229,437) was up 2.4 percent over December 2013 ($224,014). The average list price in December 2014 ($241,087) increased 3.3 percent over December 2013 ($233,389), bringing the original list price received measure for December 2014 to 93.8 percent, an increase of 0.6 percent when compared to the same period in 2013. Preliminary pending sales counts for December totaled 2,430, an increase of 28.5 percent over the previous period, when contracts totaled 1,891. Pending contracts for all of 2014 totaled 36,819, up 7.3 percent compared to all of 2013 (34,320). “At the beginning of 2014 inventory was pinched and buyers were facing new mortgage rules, but that did not put a damper on last year’s sales,” said CRRA President Maren Brisson-Kuester in the latest data release. “Though low inventory, seller confidence and higher mortgage rates could be factors in 2015, demand continues to be strong while price gains continue to moderate. With more financing options and programs available to first-time home buyers, along with rising rents and a strengthening local economy, we expect to see more buyers come to the market.” New residential listings in December totaled 2,661, rising slightly by 3.8 percent over December 2013, and listings for all of 2014 totaled 52,660, only a 0.6 percent gain over the previous year’s total (52,341). December 2014’s inven- Business Briefcase tory declined 14.2 percent compared to December 2013, leaving the CarolinaMLS region with a 4.1-month supply of homes for sale. Foreclosures and short sales have continued to decline. In December the share of closed sales that were lender-mediated was 5.6 percent compared to 9 percent of closed sales in December 2013. For all of 2014, distressed proper- ties only accounted for 6.7 percent of closed sales compared with 10.9 percent for all of 2013. The Lake Norman area saw sales close at a bit of a healthier clip than the overall Charlotte region. In December, closed sales rose nearly 19 percent over December 2013, and gained 10.3 percent at year’s end compared with the previous year. Data on the area’s average sales price was more of a mixed bag, with December 2014 coming in at $444,002, a 3.1 percent decline over December 2013. Year-to-date average sales price, however, rose slightly to $454,415, or 4.5 percent. Homes in the Lake Norman area spent far less time on the market in 2014 than in 2013, drop- ping 14.6 percent to an average of 99 days, compared to 116 days the prior year. And in December 2014, there were fewer of those homes on the market, with inventory declining by 14.8 percent over December 2013, dropping back to a six-month supply. View the full report at carolinahome.com under the “Market Data” tab. Mixed-use project opening Phase II LangTree Lake Norman has announced pre-leasing activity for the second phase of its mixed-use waterfront community in Mooresville at Exit 31. We can help you take control of your finances Adding to the existing retail, office, apartments, condominiums and clubhouse fronting Lake Norman, Phase II will offer more than 72,000 square feet of first-floor retail space as well as spots designed with dental, chiropractic, accounting or wealth management practices in mind. The initial spaces could be available as early as this summer. When complete, LangTree Lake Norman will include a DoubleTree by Hilton hotel, a 20,000-squarefoot conference center, a state-ofthe-art aquatic center and lakefront home communities. Learn more at langtreelkn.com. SEE BRIEFCASE, PAGE 25 JIM GRYWALSKI AL STRICKLAND Realtor/Broker al@carlyleproperties.com carlyleproperties.com Realtor/Broker grywal@bellsouth.net carlyleproperties.com 704-201-7244 704-236-9899 Joel Burris Vice President Andy Howe Sr. Vice President Dennis Howe President/CEO Ron Olsson Financial Advisor Chuck Skipper Financial Advisor 19444 STOUGH FARM ROAD, CORNELIUS MLS#3001469 by addressing your short and long-term financial goals...TODAY! W NE PR ICE ! Full brick home on large lot with room for a pool. Located in Patricks Purchase with lake access near Jetton Park. Guest suite w/ kitchen, bonus rm and private study. This sale is below tax value. Serving Charlotte and the Piedmont for 20 years! Call Jim Grywalski 704-236-9899 $599,900 Spectacular Lake Norman Waterfront Home ™ “Building Relationships by doing what’s Right.” LIFE INSURANCE RETIREMENT STRATEGIES* ANNUITIES DISABILITY INCOME HEALTH INSURANCE 401KS* IRAS* LONG TERM CARE Contact us for your personal financial evaluation. (704) 372-4491 www.gcgwm.com 9115 Harris Corners Pkwy | Suite 250 Charlotte, NC | Located at I-77, Exit 18 *Registered Representatives and securities offered through Questar Capital Corporation (QCC) Member FINRA/SIPC. Advisory Services offered through Questar Asset Management (QAM) a registered investment advisor. GCG Wealth Management is independent of QCC and QAM. Luxury home in The Point exudes elegance as it defines a warm & inviting atmosphere. It boasts over 9,000 sq. ft. of livable luxury with handcrafted quality & design throughout. Newly renovated with impeccable style includes a State of the Art Theater, Lutron Lighting & Innovated Sound. Entertain your guests in the chef’s dream kitchen which opens into a cozy hearth room. Enjoy the serene water views from your Screened Porch, Open Terrace, Covered Veranda and Saltwater Pool. MLS# 3035947 Offered at $4,200,000 Call Al Strickland 704-201-7244 19520 W. Catawba Ave. Ste. 113 • Cornelius, NC www.carlyleproperties.com 24 January 14, 2015 Lake Norman Citizen Kindred wins Davidson grant LOCAL BUSINESS DIRECTORY Invest in the Lake Norman Community. Support local businesses. AUTOMOTIVE A & B Automotive Lake Norman Chrysler Jeep Dodge Ram BAKERY / CAFE Maddy’s Fatty’s Bakery & Cafe DENTAL Carolina Oral and Facial Surgery J.C. Duncan, DDS Lake Norman Implant Dentistry Tate Langdon, DDS EVENT VENUES Beaver Dam, Armin’s Catering Peninsula Yacht Club FINANCIAL Aquesta Bank GCG Wealth Management Mikeworth Financial Missy Carlson / Edward Jones HEALTH & FITNESS Bel Corpo Spa Carolina Woman FURNITURE Stickley-Audi. Co. HOME DECOR Burgess Supply Co. ITALIAN SPECIALTIES Ferrucci’s Italian Market LEGAL Adkins Law Firm MEDICAL Allergy & Asthma Center of LKN Ballas Chiropractic Carolina Foot & Ankle Friedman Eye Care Lakeside Dermatology Piedmont HealthCare PETS Camp Wagging Tails Lakecross Veterinary REAL ESTATE Allen Tate Realtors Carlyle Properties Al Strickland / Jim Grywalski Christy Walker & Associates Jennifer Stewart - Allen Tate Susan Johnson & Associates RECREATION Cornelius PARC Freedom Boat Club Huntersvile Parks & Recreation Lake Norman Power Sports Lake Norman Miniature Golf Lake Norman Tennis Association Rural Hill RESTAURANT Kilwin’s Chocolate & Ice Cream Rusty Rudder Showmars Jack’s Corner Tap Verde Grill RETAIL The Town of Davidson last summer offered a $10,000 Main Street Solutions grant, accepting applications from businesses in the historic district along Main Street. As it turned out, only one business submitted a complete application. Town staff told commissioners last week that the planned Kindred restaurant won the grant, and is using the money for a new storefront, exterior windows and exterior doors at 131 N. Main St. Davidson residents Katy and Joe Kindred signed a 15-year lease on the 8,000-square-foot building last summer, and since then have been transforming the former Tom Clark Museum — which displayed and sold the local artist’s collectible gnome figurines — into a restaurant. Katy Kindred says they have tried to preserve the historic feel of the building through attention to detail, using solid hardwood for the floors and real marble for the bar. Money from the town will help them “give the outside of the building a full restoration to bring it back to its original glory,” she says. “To know our town is behind us and helping carry some of that financial burden is just incredible,” she says. Kindred says she and her husband plan to open their restaurant in early February. Downtown Manager Kim Fleming says the town had reached out to other local businesses through e-mails, personal visits and Facebook posts since the grant was announced July 1, but only Kindred took the bait. The conditions of the COURTESY DAVIDSONNEWS.NET grant limited the sort Kindred restaurant will open soon on Davidof improvements that son’s North Main Street. would qualify for funding from the town. The improvements the grant aims to “provide direct had to be permanent (no tables or financial benefit to small busichairs), and had to take place in a nesses, retain and create jobs in business with a storefront down- association with small businesses, town. It was a 2:1 matching grant, and to spur private investment in which meant that Kindred had to association with small businesses spend $20,000 on improvements located in our local historic disin order to qualify for the $10,000 trict.” from the town. “It wasn’t just free Fleming said the grant may be money,” Fleming says. offered again next year, depending According to the town website, on commissioners’ approval. COPY SHEET Ashley Carol/Catawba House Four Seasons of Lake Norman Wild Birds Unlimited AD LETTER By Jonathan Cox DavidsonNews.net YOU YOU DESERVE THE ROYAL TOUCH! SALONS Signature Style Studio B The Salon .com www.royaltouchcleaningcharlotte ROYAL TOUCH CLEANING SCHOOLS Lake Norman Charter Lake Norman Christian Cannon School Davidson Day Southlake Christian Weekly, Bi-Weekly and Monthly CALL NOW! 704.363.6062 SERVICES ROYAL TOUCH FREE HOME CARPET CLEAN CLEANING Weekly, Bi-Weekly and Monthly Mention This Ad & Get Advanced Marine Services Doug The Handyman Fogle Insurance Group The Furniture Guy Hansil Lawn & Landscape Maestro Travel (valued at $250) With Any 6 Month Cleaning Package CALL NOW! Serving Lake Norman, Mooreseville, Charlotte And Surrounding Areas 704.363.6062 SPORTS Mention this ad & get FREE HOME CARPET CLEAN (valued at $250) ATA Karate Carolina Rapids Cool Breeze Cyclery Stewards of the Game Strikers With Any 6 Month Cleaning Package CHR7043636062-A Serving Lake Norman, Mooresville, Charlotte and Surrounding Areas www.lakenormancitizen.com BRIEFCASE FROM PAGE 23 Discount site changes hands Tammi Murphy, owner of Blarney Stone Marketing & Design in Cornelius, has purchased LKNSavings.com from Diana Howard. For the past 18 months, Murphy managed the social media, website and e-mail marketing for LKNSavings.com under the direction of Howard. The business transaction took place in December 2014. “Tammi was a natural fit for LKN Savings, she was already familiar with the operations. Howard I couldn’t have hand picked a better, more qualified predecessor to take over the business,” says Howard, who sold LKNSavings.com to work full time as an independent financial advisor with Lake Norman Financial Group in Cornelius. LKNSavings.com is a community resource where consumers find deals and discounts at hundreds of area businesses. The site includes an events calendar and community information for kids, families and, coming soon, senior specials. Murphy has unveiled a new logo design and plans to launch a mobile app for the site in mid-January. The purchase of LKNSavings. com is the second acquisition for Blarney Stone Marketing & Design in two years. Blarney Stone specializes in website design, social media marketing, marketing consulting and logo design. Popular burger bar opens in Mooresville Bad Daddy’s Burger Bar has opened in Mooresville Town Square on Williamson Road, making it the popular restaurant’s fifth location in the greater Charlotte area, and its second locale for Lake Norman diners (the other is in Birkdale Village in Huntersville). Owner Frank Scibelli says he’s interested in continuing to grow the brand, possibly expanding to new locations in Gastonia or Fort Mill as well as farther afield in Raleigh. The restaurant is also being franchised as far away as Colorado. The new 4,400-square-foot Bad Daddy’s is at 279 Williamson Road in Mooresville. Kitchen changes at Port City Club Nick Lyssikatos, owner of Port City Club in Cornelius and BrickHouse Tavern in Davidson, has announced he has taken over chef duties at his waterfront Cornelius restaurant, replacing Port City’s original chef, Tim Schafer. Lyssikatos has been the head chef at BrickHouse Tavern for 13 years, and says he has decided to develop his own menu at Port City Club “based on a wide variety of quality food and affordability.” Schafer says he has landed at Queen’s Landing in Mooresville. “It’s a wonderful facility,” Schafer says, adding that he will use his talents there to help “get it straightened out” while also keeping an eye open for opportunities at smaller venues in the Mooresville area. Pull up a chair to this year’s Feast The winter 2015 installment of the semiannual Queen’s Feast Charlotte Restaurant Week will run Friday, Jan. 16, through Sunday, Jan. 25, featuring more than 120 upscale restaurants in the metro Charlotte area offering $30 prix fixe menus of three courses or more at dinner (not including tax and gratuity). Diners January 14, 2015 can visit CharlotteRestaurantWeek. com to peruse participating restaurants’ prix fixe menus and make reservations. The January promotion includes restaurants in eight counties, with participants located across Charlotte and beyond into Concord, Belmont, Gastonia, Waxhaw, the Lake Norman area, Statesville, Denver, Hickory and Fort Mill, S.C. The January and July 2014 Charlotte Restaurant Week promotions generated approximately 300,000 dinners and an estimated economic impact of more than $14 million. “It’s wonderful to see Queen’s Feast continue to grow in both participating restaurants and diners,” says Bruce Hensley of Hensley Fontana Public Relations and Marketing, which owns the event. Reservations during Queen’s Feast are strongly recommended. 25 Reservation links and contact information for all participating restaurants can be found at CharlotteRestaurantWeek.com. Participating local restaurants in the Winter 2015 Charlotte Restaurant Week are 131 Main-Lake Norman, The 220 Café, Alton’s Kitchen & Cocktails, BRAVO! Cucina Italiana-Northlake, Campania Café, Chillfire Bar & Grill, Dressler’s-Birkdale, Epic Chophouse, Firebirds Wood Fired Grill-Northlake, Jeffrey’s Restaurant, Kabuto Japanese Steak House & Sushi-Lake Norman, The Melting Pot-Lake Norman, Mickey & Mooch-Lake Norman, North Harbor Club, Red Rocks Café-Birkdale, Trattoria Al Gusto and Twisted Oak American Bar & Grill. — Compiled by Lori Helms 26 January 14, 2015 Lake Norman Citizen Life of a princess not all it’s cracked up to be Most of us don’t get to choose our parents. And while we’re usually grateful for the ones we have, we’ve also dreamed of lives that might have been. What little girl hasn’t dreamed of growing up a princess, living in a palace, riding in a horse-drawn carriage, wearing a tiara? And don’t forget marrying a handsome prince. Infanta Cristina de Borbon, Duchess of Palma de Mallorca, is the brother of Spain’s King Felipe VI and sixth in line to the Monarquía Hispánica. The Infanta grew up in the Royal Palace of Madrid, where she probably logged a ride or two in a carriage. And yes, she wore her mother’s diamond-crusted floral tiara at her wedding. But she chose a thoroughly modern career, graduating from college, earning a master’s degree in international relations at New York University and working for UNESCO It’s Your Money in Paris. Today she’s a working mom of four children. She’s also — if you believe Spanish judge Jose Castro — a tax cheat, named in a corruption scandal that’s rocking Spanish society. Cristina’s husband, Iñaki Urdangarin, isn’t a prince. But he’s a former pro handball player and Olympian. (That’s close, right?) Urdangarin, who was named Duke of Mallorca upon his marriage, is accused of embezzling €6 million ($7.4 million) in public funds through the Instituto Nóos, a charitable foundation he ran. Prosecutors say that he organized a series of sporting events for the re- gional governments of the Balearic Islands and Valencia — and hugely overcharged them. Cristina hasn’t been accused of participating directly in the fraud. However, she and her husband coowned a company called Aizoon that received €1 million from the sports foundation, money that she and her husband used for personal expenses such as furniture for their house in Barcelona, salsa lessons and pricey hotel stays. Naturally, there were no taxes paid on those funds. The judge says, “There are many indications that Cristina profited from illegal funds on her own behalf, and also helped her husband to do so, through silent cooperation and a 50 percent stake in his business.” The judge also says that letting Cristina off the hook “would leave the question open and discredit the notion that justice is Cristina de Borbon, Duchess of Palma de Mallorca. equal for all.” So now Cristina faces charges of failing to pay her taxes — quite a comedown for a member of a royal Lake Norman 24 Name Symbol Air T Inc. AIRT Babcock & Wilcox BWC Bank of America Corporation BAC Campus Crest Communities CCG Carlisle Companies CSL Carolina Trust Bank CART Chiquita Brands International CQB Coca-Cola Bottling COKE Duke Energy Corporation DUK Enpro Industries NPO FairPoint Communications FRP Family Dollar Stores FDO Kewaunee Scientific KEQU Lowes Companies Incorporated LOW Nucor NUE Park Sterling Bank PSTB Piedmont Natural Gas PNY Polypore International Incorporated PPO Snyder S. Lance Incorporated LNCE Sonic Automotive SAH Speedway Motorsports TRK SPX Corporation SPW The Cato Corporation CATO Tree.com TREE PORTFOLIO VALUE Shares 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0.333333 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 23.333333 Pur. Price* $9.74 $25.59 $10.88 $14.02 $39.74 $2.89 $13.82 $55.58 $17.81 $41.56 $4.33 $49.71 $13.65 $25.08 $43.82 $6.18 $27.96 $40.73 $23.44 $13.24 $15.32 $71.49 $27.41 $9.45 $603.44 Market Value $22.51 $28.81 $16.98 $7.32 $93.66 $5.00 $14.49 $90.22 $28.31 $60.76 $14.29 $77.99 $17.36 $68.33 $47.78 $6.83 $39.61 $43.92 $29.88 $26.09 $22.14 $81.91 $42.89 $49.39 $951.89 Gain +$12.77 (+131.11%) +$3.22 (+12.58%) +$6.10 (+56.07%) -$6.70 (-47.79%) +53.92 (+135.68%) +$2.11 (+73.01%) +$0.67 (+4.85%) +$34.64 (+62.32%) +$10.50 (+58.96%) +$19.20 (+46.20%) +$9.96 (+230.02%) +$28.28 (+56.89%) +$3.71 (+27.18%) +$43.25 (+172.45%) +$3.96 (+9.04%) +$0.65 (+10.52%) +$11.65 (+41.67%) +$3.19 (+7.83%) +$6.44 (+27.47%) +$12.85 (+97.05%) +$6.82 (+44.52%) +$10.42 (+14.58%) +$15.48 (+56.48%) +$39.94 (+422.65%) +$333.03 (+55.19%) Lake Norman 24 is a theoretical portfolio of 24 significant, publicly held companies with corporate headquarters located within 30 miles of Cornelius. Data for the Lake Norman 24 is provided by Norris R. Woody, who offers securities and investment advisory services through AXA Advisors, LLC, member FINRA, SIPC, and offers annuity and insurance services through AXA Network, LLC, and its subsidiaries. Sterling Group is a division of AXA Advisors, LLC (CA Insurance License #OF54166). His office is at 19900 W. Catawba Ave., Suite 207, Cornelius, NC, 28031 and his phone number is 704-895-7475. This is intended to provide a snapshot of the performance of major regional employers. Lake Norman 24 is a weekly feature of The PULSE on Lake Norman Business. Market value as of Friday, Jan. 9, 2015. * = Price per share as of Jan. 3, 2011, the first day of active trading for that year. family that used to collect them rather than pay them. If she’s convicted, she could spend the next few years in considerably “common” quarters — no palace, no carriage and certainly no tiaras. (Of course, that’s less punishment than a misbehaving royal might have gotten a few hundred years ago. Britain’s Henry VIII never bothered imprisoning his ex-wives, he just beheaded them.) Spain’s monarchy has already suffered a series of PR hits after Cristina’s father, King Juan Carlos, took a lavish trip to hunt elephants in Botswana at a time when Spanish unemployment was topping 25 percent. So what do they think of all this? Well, back in 2011, when the scandal first broke, they gave the Duke the royal boot from official events. In 2013, they cut Cristina off from the household budget and excised the Duke’s biography from their official website. Most recently, after learning of the indictment, they declared their “complete respect for the independence” of Spain’s judiciary. You’d like to believe the royals are too classy to throw someone under something as plebian as a bus, per se, but that sure sounds like what’s happening. Stories about princesses always end with a moral, and this one is pretty simple. Being a princess isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, and there isn’t always a happy ending. So if you want to pay less tax, do it right and call your tax advisor for a plan. Provided by Laura M. Mikeworth, CPA, PA, in Cornelius. She can be reached at 704-894-9991 or at info@mikeworth.com. www.lakenormancitizen.com Normanopolis January 14, 2015 27 Hugh Torance House repairs completed The board of directors of the Hugh Torance House & Store, at 8231 Gilead Road in Huntersville, has announced completion of repairs funded by a Special Projects Grant from the National Society, Daughters of the American Revolution. The grant was sponsored by the local Alexandriana Chapter of the NSDAR. The Hugh Torance House & Store is one of the few remaining 18th-century structures in Mecklenburg County, and is the oldest standing store in North Carolina. The structure was built in the 1770s by Hugh Torance, a Revolutionary War veteran. Torance (1743-1816) immigrated to the American colonies from Ireland in 1763 and came to Mecklenburg County in the 1770s. He became a successful merchant and planter. His son, James Torance, opened a store in the original log portion of the house in 1805. The Torance Store was an integral part of Mecklenburg County backcountry society. The Hugh Torance House & Store was salvaged and restored in the 1980s by a group of historic-minded local citizens. Today it is a small non-profit 501(c)(3) organization operated entirely by volunteers. It is open to the public and serves as an educational field trip for school tours, scouts, senior groups and historical and genealogical associations. As a result of a recent inspection by Andrew Roby General Contractors, it was discovered that structural support repairs, because of failure of the main support beam and piers, were needed along with chimney flashing, floor repairs and electrical wiring repairs. Thanks to the DAR Special Projects Grant, the contractor has completed the work, and went beyond the scope of the project to provide historically sensitive repairs that will keep this historic landmark open to the public far into the future. “I recently had the opportunity to lead a tour of special needs adults through the home, after the repair work was completed, and they were awestruck by their return to a simpler colonial time in our history,” says Hugh Torance House & Store Chairman of the Board Bill Russell. “We simply could not have had the house ready without the COURTESY BILL RUSSELL The Hugh Torance House & Store on Gilead Road in Huntersville is among the most historically significant structures in North Carolina. With restorations completed, it is open for tours. support of the DAR and the Town of Huntersville, who continue their strong support of our history and cultural heritage.” For more information about the store, visit hughtorancehouseandstore.com. Group tours are available by calling Russell at the Lake Norman Chamber of Commerce at 704-892-1922. SEE EVENTS, PAGE 28 28 January 14, 2015 EVENTS FROM PAGE 27 Garden symposium to focus on infill niche For the past 30 years, the Davidson Garden Club has hosted an annual horticultural symposium on the campus of Davidson College. Horticulturists who are well known throughout the country come to speak and hold workshops on a gardening theme. This year, the club has decided to address challenges faced by gardeners, from interesting ways to handle large open spaces ecologically to creating small jewels of gardens around condominiums. The latter is viewed as particularly important as Davidson, Cornelius and Huntersville begin to fill in with niche communities. NORMANOPOLIS This year’s program, “Planting Outside the Lines,” is limited to 400 participants and has sold out the past two years. The symposium will be held Tuesday, March 3, at the Knobloch Campus Center from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Cost is $89, which includes lunch. Speakers and workshops include: • Margie Ruddick, Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award winner, “Wild by Design.” • Sandra Clinton, Landscape Design Award winner from the American Horticultural Society, “Gardens Transformed.” • Carol Reese, University of Tennessee’s Ornamental Horticultural Specialist for West Tennessee, “Sex and the Single Pistil” and “Just Do It!” • Evelyn Hadden, author of Beautiful No-Mow Yards and Hellstrip Gardening, “Beautiful NoMow Lawns and Alterntives.” • C. Colston Burrell, author of many books and a curator of the U.S. National Arboretum, “Winter Garden Magic.” For more information about the symposium and to register, visit davidsonsymposium.org. Live birds visit Mooresville Library Lake Norman Wildlife Conservationists will host feathered friends from the Carolina Raptor Center of Huntersville at their next free nature program Thursday, Jan. 15, at 7 p.m. in the Youth Room at Mooresville Public Library, 304 S. Main St. Raptors are birds of prey such as hawks, owls and eagles. Participants will learn about the beauty and value of raptors in nature, and how to help protect them. Lake Norman Wildlife Conservationists is a chapter of the North Carolina Wildlife Federation. For more information, contact Sid Smith at 704-895-5686. Soup on Sunday for Hospice The 15th annual Soup on Sunday benefit for Hospice & Palliative Care Charlotte Region will be held Sunday, Jan. 25, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Central Piedmont Community College Culiary Arts Center at Lake Norman Citizen 425 N. Kings Dr. in Charlotte, at the corner of Kings Drive and Seventh street. Patrons may enjoy soups made in the kitchens of some of the Charlotte area’s finest restaurants; purchase pottery made specifically for the event by local potters and sample the talents of culiary art students from CPCC, Johnson & Wales and The Art Institute. Prices include Soup Lover’s Special for $40, including food, beverages and hand-made pottery bowl; general admission for $30, which includes food and beverages; and children’s admission for ages 7-12 at $10. Children ages 6 and younger will be admitted free of charge. Visit souponsunday.org to view a list of participating restaurants. Order your tickets online or by phone at 704-335-4312. Admission may also be purchased at the door the morning of the event. DCP registering for spring ensembles Registration is under way for Davidson Community Players’ spring youth ensembles. The ensembles are educational in nature with an emphasis on developing the student actor’s knowledge of and experience with the production process. This spring, DCP will offer more classes, including a new musical theater ensemble. Junior (ages 8-11) and senior (ages 12-16) ensembles are back and meet twice a week with a professional instructor to learn a wide range of theatrical skills such as acting, script reading, costuming, stage make-up, set design and construction. Junior ensembles are designed for actors ages 8-11. The classes culminate with three performances of a production developed that are offered free of charge to the public. These ensembles are perfect for the beginner or returning performer. Also returning this spring is the mini ensemble. This class allows aspiring actors ages 4-7 to investigate all aspects of theater from acting to behind the scenes. Through exploration of sets, costumes, props and lights, students develop their imagination while inventing new worlds and characters. Using theater games and acting exercises, the program focuses on freeing the creative spirit of each child while building a dynamic ensemble of actors. Friends and family will be invited to a final sharing on the last day of class. New this spring is a musical theater ensemble for the budding musical theater performers ages 9-15. The ensemble will meet twice a week with a professional instructor and will culminate with three performances of a production de- SEE EVENTS, PAGE 29 NORMANOPOLIS www.lakenormancitizen.com EVENTS FROM PAGE 28 veloped, offered free of charge to the public. This class will focus on beginning techniques to develop the voice for theater, ensemble dancing and performing music for the stage. Classes begin Feb. 2. Financial aid is available. For more details and pricing, visit davidsoncommunityplayers.org or call 704-892-7953. Spring Little League registration begins Lake Norman Little League’s Spring 2015 baseball registration is open through Feb. 15 for youth ages 4-12 in Cornelius, Davidson and Huntersville. Spring games will begin in mid-March with opening day scheduled for March 21. Lake Norman Little League was formed in fall 2011 to offer children and families of the Lake Norman area a safe, fundamentally sound option to learn the game of baseball. Starting with about 80, the program this year expects more than 400 participants. Lake Norman Little League is an official chartered league af- filiated with Little League Baseball International, headquartered in Williamsport, Pa. For more information and to register online, visit lakenormanlittleleague.org. Registrations are limited. A Hard Day’s Night with Studio C It will be A Hard Day’s Night at Studio-C Cinema at the Cornelius Arts Center in the Oak Street Mill Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 24 and 25, as the Art House Films series screens the 50th anniversary digital restoration of The Beatles’ iconic film. In A Hard Day’s Night, the wildly popular lads from Great Britain play wily, exuberant versions of themselves, capturing the moment when they officially became the singular, irreverent idols of their generation and changed music forever. Directed with raucous, anything-goes verve by Richard Lester and featuring several iconic pop anthems including the title track, “Can’t Buy Me Love,” “I Should Have Known Better,” and “If I Fell,” A Hard Day’s Night, which re-conceived the movie musical and exerted an incalculable influence on the music video, is regarded as one of the most deliriously entertaining movies of all time. This restoration of the 1964 movie is a recent 4K Digital conversion from the original 35mm film by Lester. The sound track was restored and remixed in 5.1 surround sound. This is the only screening currently scheduled for the Charlotte area. The show begins at 7 p.m. both nights. Doors open at 6:15 for a complimentary wine and cheese reception. Admission costs $9 per person for Cornelius residents, $10 for all others. Purchase tickets in advance at studioccinema.com or, if any remain, at the door. Oak Street Mill is at 19725 Oak St. in downtown Cornelius. NAMI offers family support class The National Alliance for Mental Illness offers a Family-to-Family support class series beginning Monday, Jan. 19, and continuing for 12 weeks at the Lowes YMCA in Mooresville. The free course is offered to families, partners and friends of individuals with mental illness taught by trained NAMI family members and caregivers of individuals living with mental illness. January 14, 2015 Information includes ways to understand mental illness and how to help the suffering individual. It also helps the family overcome the difficulties of living with severe 29 mental illness. The curriculum focuses on five major psychiatric illnesses — schizophrenia, bipolar SEE EVENTS, PAGE 30 LOOK LIKE A MILLION BUCKS WITHOUT SPENDING A FORTUNE! Signature Style offers: Facials • Chemical Peels Waxing • Eyelash/Eyebrow Tinting Cuts • Highlights/Lowlights Color • Perms Pin Ups/Special Occasion HOURS TUESDAY 10 AM - 9 PM WEDNESDAY 10 AM - 8 PM THURSDAY 10 AM - 9 PM FRIDAY 10 AM - 5 PM SATURDAY 9 AM - 4 PM SUNDAY - MONDAY CLOSED ★Walk-ins Welcome★ 704-895-9844 20035 Jetton Rd. Unit C, Cornelius www.signaturestylehairstudio.com FREE HAIRCUT With any color service New clients only. Offer expires 2/28/15 $5 OFF HAIRCUT Women’s & Men’s Haircut New clients only. Offer expires 2/28/15 30 January 14, 2015 EVENTS NORMANOPOLIS Have an event? FROM PAGE 29 disorder, major depression, obsessive compulsive disorder and panic disorder. The program has been attended by more than 3,200 people across North Carolina. Register by e-mail to ducarpenter@yahoo.com or by calling Duane Carpenter at 704-2362264. Class size is limited. The Lowes YMCA is at 170 Joe V. Knox Ave. in Mooresville. LNTA holds tennis expo Lake Norman Tennis Association will host its first Tennis Expo Friday, Jan. 30, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at The Peninsula Club in Cornelius. The event is the first of its kind in The Lake Norman Citizen wants to share news of your event. Please send your information by fax at 704-948-3349, by mail to The Lake Norman Citizen, P.O. Box 3534, Huntersville, NC 28070 or by e-mail to andreww@ lakenormancitizen.com. the Lake Norman area. “We are excited to add this expo to the growing list of activities we provide in Huntersville, Davidson, Cornelius and Mooresville,” says LNTA President JD Weber. The event will provide an overview of all the area’s tennis activities and player opportunities. Vendors will include equipment manufacturers, apparel retailers and United States Tennis Association (USTA) tennis professionals. A tennis fash- ion show, talks by college coaches and athletic training sessions are planned as well. For more information about sponsorship or vendor opportunities, call Rochelle Dearman at 704402-3059. Bridge games, classes offered The Lake Norman Bridge Center holds ACBL-sanctioned duplicate bridge games on Tuesdays at 9:30 a.m. and Thursdays at 12:30 p.m. at Cornelius Town Hall, 21443 Catawba Ave. Bridge lessons are also offered regularly. January classes include Beginning Bridge and Slam Bidding. For more information, contact John or Marlene Smith at 704-992-1260 or e-mail crzy4brdg@yahoo.com. The club’s website is lnbc.stevelee.name. Lake Norman Citizen Obituaries Christopher Scott Moeller Mr. Moeller, 47, of Huntersville died Wednesday, Dec. 31, at Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte after a long battle with ALS. He was born in Plainfield, N.J., to Sue Ann Moeller of Cornelius and the late H. Walter Moeller. He was employed by Film Roman in Hollywood, Calif., as an animator for The Simpsons television show and a director of the animated show King of the Hill. In addition to his mother, he is survived by his brother, Jeffrey, of Denver. The family wishes to thank caregiver Barbara Matthews and her family; Melissa Lynch; and the doctors and staff at the ALS Clinic in Charlotte. A memorial service was held Friday, Jan. 9, at Raymer-Kepner Funeral Home. Memorials may be made to The ALS Association, Jim “Catfish” Hunter Chapter, 4 North Blount Street, Raleigh, NC 27601; or ALS-MDA Clinic, 1010 Edgehill Road North, Charlotte, NC 28207. Raymer-Keper Funeral Home of Huntersville is serving the family. Janice Crystal Jackson Murphy Mrs. Murphy, 76, of Huntersville died Wednesday, Dec. 31, at Carolinas Medical Center-University. She was born on Aug. 23, 1938, in Tacoma, Wash. She is survived by her daughter, Alisa Pagels; and three grandchildren. Services were private. James Funeral Home of Huntersville is serving the family. Annie Mae Freeland Hill Mrs. Hill, 89, of Mooresville died Thursday, Jan. 1, following a lengthy illness. She was born Oct. 12, 1925, in Iredell County to the late Thomas and Frances Freeland. She is survived by her children, Brenda Holmes and husband, Bob, of Mocksville, Karen Stewart and husband, Terry, of Mooresville, Ann Davis and Avery Hill and wife, Amy, of Mooresville; sister, Marie Freeland, of Mooresville; brothers, Henry and Clyde Freeland, both of Mooresville; eight grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Bill; granddaughter, Shannon Holmes; sister, Irene Goins; and brothers, Jim and Carl Freeland. A funeral service was held Monday, Jan. 5, at Cavin-Cook Funeral Home with the Rev. Robert Hupp officiating. Burial followed at Glenwood Memorial Park. Memorials may be made to the Iredell County VFW, 263 Spring Shore Road, Statesville, NC 28677; or Vanderburg United Methodist Church, 1809 Charlotte Highway, Mooresville, NC 28115. CavinCook Funeral Home of Mooresville is serving the family. E. Houston Venters Mr. Venters, 41, of Denver died unexpectedly Thursday, Jan. 1. He was born March 24, 1973, in Richmond, Ky., to Mary McIntosh and the late Donald Venters. He was church administrator at Lake Norman Baptist Church in Huntersville. In addition to his mother, he is survived by his wife of 15 years, Janelle Venters; daughters, Bailey and Tori Venters; son, Mason Venters; step-father, Dennis McIntosh; and sister, Dawn Turner. A funeral service was held Monday, Jan. 5, at Lake Norman Baptist Church with the Rev. Robert Blanton officiating. A graveside service was held Tuesday, Jan. 6, at Freedom Cemetery in Kentucky with the Rev. Bill Newman officiating. Memorials may be made to Lake Norman Baptist Church, 7921 Sam Furr Road, Huntersville, NC 28078. Raymer-Keper Funeral Home of Huntersville is serving the family. Hon H. Ko Mr. Ko, 66, of Huntersville died Friday, Jan. 2, at Levine & Dickson Hospice House of Huntersville. He was born Oct. 31, 1948, in Hong Kong, China. He is survived by his wife, Sui Ying Leung; stepson, Siu Cheung Yip and wife, Joey, of Huntersville; and two grandchildren. Private burial was to be at Northlake Memorial Gardens at a later date. James Funeral Home of Huntersville is serving the family. Bettie Jetton Liffrig Mrs. Liffrig, 96, of Davidson died Friday, Jan. 2, at The Pines at Davidson. She was born Feb. 15, 1918, in Mecklenburg Coun- SEE OBITUARIES, PAGE 31 NORMANOPOLIS www.lakenormancitizen.com OBITUARIES FROM PAGE 30 ty to Francis and Bettie Jetton. She was a Lake Norman Power Squadron member, a member of the Carolina Airstream Club and Bethel Knitting Club, and was a life-long member of Bethel Presbyterian Church in Cornelius. She is survived by her daughters, Catherine Blevins and husband, Patrick, Theresa Gillespie and husband, Larry, Barbara Williamson and husband, Jim, and Ruth Oliver and husband, Ken, all of Cornelius; eight grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Cyril. The family offers thanks to the staff at The Pines of Davidson for their care. A service to celebrate her life was held Monday, Jan. 5, at Bethel Presbyterian Church. Interment was at the Davidson College Cemetery. Memorials may be made to the The Pines Residents’ Assistance Fund, 400 Avinger Lane, Davidson, NC 28036. James Funeral Home of Huntersville is serving the family. Lillie Rose Shepard Holman Mrs. Holman, 69, of Mooresville died Saturday, Jan. 3, at the Tucker Hospice House in Kannapolis. She was born June 29, 1945, in Ashe County to the late Luther and Leabelle Perry Shepard Stamper. She attended Wiggins Road Baptist Church in Mooresville. She is survived by her husband of 54 years, Wendell Holman; children, Regina Jackson and husband, Les, of Harrisburg, Edwina Champion and husband, Steve, of Belmont, Cindy Horton and husband, Jerry, of Cleveland, Selina Pryor and husband, Tommy, of Alma, Ga.; sisters, Louellen Fleming, Edna Johnson, Mary Barr, Anita Severt and Lisa Richardson; brothers, Dennis Stamper, Donnie Stamper and Danny Stamper; 11 grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her step-father, Worth Stamper; and sisters, Ethel Jones and Virginia Shepard. A graveside service was held Tuesday, Jan. 6, at Bethany Cemetery in West Jefferson. Memorials may be made to Tucker Hospice House, 5003 Hospice Lane, Kannapolis, NC 28081. Cavin-Cook Funeral Home of Mooresville is serving the family. Bobby McLaughlin Crabb Mr. Crabb, 84, of Mooresville died Monday, Jan. 5. He served in the U.S. Army and was a member of Southside Baptist Church. He is survived by his sons; Mike Crabb of Brunswick, Ga., and Mark and Gina Crabb of Richmond Hill, Ga.; sister, Helen Pope of Mooresville; brother, Mack of Mooresville; six grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. A funeral service was held Saturday, Jan. 10, at Southside Baptist. Interment followed at Willow Valley Cemetery in Mooresville. Ingram Funeral Home of Mooresville is serving the family. Michael Wolfe Mrs. Wolfe, 40, of Huntersville died Monday, Jan. 5. She was born April 24, 1974, in Mexico City to Luis Miguel Niño de Rivera and Araceli Garduño. She was a teacher at the Community School of Davidson. In addition to her parents, she is survived by her husband, Walter Wolfe; son, Hank; daughter, Michaela; stepfather, Mario; stepmother, Diana; siblings, Vania, Cathy, Saskia, Marius and Luis David; and grandmothers, Maria Luisa Taracena and Carmen Garduño. A funeral service was held Thursday, Jan. 8, at James Funeral Home with the Rev. Jack Homesley officiating. A funeral mass was held Friday, Jan. 9, at St. Mark Catholic Church in Huntersville. Memorials may be made to Community School of Davidson Capital Campaign, 565 Griffith Street, Davidson, NC 28036. James Funeral Home of Huntersville is serving the family. Richard Harry Callan Mr. Callan, 68, of Davidson died Monday, Jan. 5, at his residence. He was born Aug. 23, 1946, in Mercer County, N.J., to the late Charles and Sylvia Rubright Callan. He had a 30-year career with the Department of Defense, the last 24 for the Army Material Command. He moved to Davidson upon his wife’s retirement in 2006. He was a member of Community in Christ Church, where he was an elder, played the organ, sang in the choir and provided ministry. He sang in the North Mecklenburg Community Chorus. He is survived by his wife, Karen Callan; daughters, Christy Wood and husband, James, of Davidson, and Jennifer Lowe of Mooresville; brothers, Dennis Callan and Thomas Callan; nine grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. A funeral service was held Saturday, Jan. 10, at James Funeral Home. Burial followed at Mt. Zion Community Cemetery in Cornelius. Memorials can be made to the American Cancer Society or the Diabetes Foundation. James Funeral Home of Huntersville is serving the family. Gayle Allred Gunter Mrs. Gunter of Cornelius died Monday, Jan. 5. She is survived by her daughter, Renee Whitley of Huntersville; step-daughter, Lynn Gainey of Huntersville; mother, Betty Wilson of Greensboro; brothers, Tom Allred of Charlotte and Bill Allred of Greensboro; two grandchildren; and four step-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Richard Gunter; father, Robert Allred; brother, Robert Allred Jr. and step- daughter, Patricia Whitman. A memorial service was held Thursday, Jan. 8, at James Funeral Home with the Rev. Bill Cain officiating. Memorials may be made to the Levine & Dickson Hospice House, 11900 Vanstory Drive, Huntersville, NC 28078. James Funeral Home of Huntersville is serving the family. Joseph I. Keller Mr. Keller, 90, of Mooresville died Monday, Jan. 5, at his residence. He was born June 1, 1924, in Newark, N.J., to the late Karl and Carrie Smith Keller. He served in the U.S. Army Air Corps, was a member of the China-Burma-India Veterans Association, and was a member of St. Therese Catholic Church in Mooresville. He is survived by his wife of 67 years, Gertrude Keller; daughters, Carolyn Jenkins and Susan Friscia and husband, Frank; two grandchildren; and three greatgrandchildren. A memorial mass was held Friday, Jan. 9, at St. Therese Catholic Church. Burial with full military honors followed at Salisbury National Cemetery. Cavin-Cook Funeral Home of Mooresville is serving the family. January 14, 2015 Mooresville. He was born May 7, 1928, in Long Creek to the late Robert and Cora Lawing Luckey. He served in the U.S. Navy, was president of the Moore’s Park Civitan Club, treasurer of the Wilkinson Boulevard Volunteer Fire Department and was a member of Cook’s Memorial Presbyterian Church. He is survived by his children, Michael Luckey and wife, Patricia, R. Stephen Luckey and wife, Janice, Cathy Johnson and K. Patrick Luckey and wife, Wanda; six grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his wife of 65 years, Margaret Luckey, sisters, Isabelle and Crosby; and brothers, Robert, Arnold and Basil. The family wishes to thank the staff of Summit Place of Mooresville for their care. A graveside service was held Friday, Jan. 9, at Forest Lawn West in Charlotte with the Rev. Rick Felts officiating. Memorials may be made to Hospice of Lake Norman, 705 Griffith Street, Suite 203, Davidson, NC 28036. Dwight Shaw Cross Jr. Mr. Cross, 84, of Huntersville died Wednesday, Jan. 7, at his home. He was 31 born Feb. 3, 1930, in Mecklenburg County to the late Dwight Sr. and Edna Beasley Cross. He was a pilot in the U.S. Air Force from 1951 to 1956 and was a 1st Lieutenant in the 437th fighter group in Oxnard, Calif. Following military service, he worked with his father at Cross Chevrolet, which he later owned before retiring in 1999. He was a former member of the Huntersville Community Council, coached youth baseball for 13 years, and was a former member of the Huntersville Town Board of Commissioners He is survived by his wife, Hazel Cross; sons, Dwight Cross III and wife, Angela Todd, and Thomas Cross of Huntersville; sister, Jo Cross of Flat Rock; and three grandchildren. A funeral service was held Sunday, Jan. 11, at Huntersville Presbyterian Church with the Rev. David Brown and the Rev. J.E. Wayland Jr. officiating. Burial followed in the church cemetery. Memorials may be made to Oak Ridge Military Academy, 2317 Oak Ridge Road, Oak Ridge, NC 27310; or Novant Health Hospice, P.O. Box 33549, Charlotte, NC 28233. James Funeral Home of Huntersville is serving the family. Phyllis DeSandre Mrs. DeSandre, 61, of Davidson died Tuesday, Jan. 6, at Carolinas Medical Center-Northeast. She was born March 20, 1953, in Brooklyn, N.Y., to the late Salvatore and Millie Vivolo. She is survived by her husband, Robert DeSandre; son, Michael Bonelli and wife, Kelly, of Davidson; daughter, Jaclyn Felsenfeld and husband, Eric, of Potomac, Md.; and three grandchildren. A funeral service was held Monday, Jan. 12, at St. Mark Catholic Church in Huntersville with burial following at Northlake Memorial Gardens in Huntersville. Memorials may be made to the American Breast Cancer Foundation, 1220 B East Joppa Road, Suite 332, Towson, MD 21286. James Funeral Home of Huntersville is serving the family. New Healthier Option! Brooks Odean Luckey Mr. Luckey, 86, of Charlotte died Tuesday, Jan. 6, at The Summit Place of Super Crossword Answers BLACK BEAN BURGER... Healthier option Available at our Huntersville and Mooresville locations! Corner of Statesville Rd. (HWY. 21) and Sherrill Estates Rd. Huntersville, NC 28078:704-895-6199 Open 7 Days A Week at 7am Serving Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner 138 Williamson Rd, Mooresville, NC 28117 704-662-3383 Monday - Saturday 10:30am-9pm Sunday 11am-3pm 32 Sports January 14, 2015 SPORTS Lake Norman Citizen Hough, North fight for first place Friday Luke Maye and the Hough Huskies are 11-4 this year. CHRISWISSELL.COM Five games into the MECKA Conference boys’ basketball season, it’s already a tight race. Just like always. Four teams are tied for first place, and two of them meet Friday when Hough visits North Meck. The rivals’ highly anticipated game will tip at approximately 7:30 p.m. “I think it’ll be nine bleachers high, packed in there like sardines,” says Hough coach Jason Grube. “It’ll be about 96 degrees, and first place will be on the line.” Hough, North, Robinson and West Charlotte are all 4-1, and the four are responsible for each other’s losses. On Dec. 16, North knocked off West Charlotte 76-69, and Hough beat Robinson 69-59. Robinson handed North its first loss of the season by a score of 61-57 Jan. 6, while West Charlotte gave Hough its first league defeat last Friday. The Lions were dominant in an 80-56 win in Cornelius, scoring 30 first-quarter points and building a 48-25 lead by the half. It was a setback for the Huskies to be sure, but Grube says his team has time to improve. “The bottom line is we have to get better, have to learn to play in environments like that,” he says. North bounced back from its Robinson loss with a 75-55 win at Vance. It’s exam week in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools system, so teams were idle Tuesday. West Charlotte travels to A.L. Brown Friday, and Robinson hosts Mallard Creek. — Justin Parker CHRISWISSELL.COM Taj Middleton and the North Meck Vikings are 14-1 overall. Balanced Lady Titans out front in MECKA race Hopewell 5-0 in the conference, coming off win in first-place game with Robinson. By Justin Parker sports@lakenormancitizen.com By the time Hopewell High’s Tyrelle Anderson walks into the locker room for a halftime or postgame chat, his basketball players are already talking. He likes that. “They know what they’re doing and what they haven’t done,” says Anderson, in his third year as Lady Titans head coach. “They know what they need to do to be in every particular game.” Anderson’s Titans have been in all of them and won 13 of 14 games this season, including all five in MECKA 4A Conference play, and a particularly notable win came Friday, when the Titans topped Robinson 54-48 to take over sole possession of first place. Both teams entered with 4-0 MECKA records, and now Hopewell has a one game lead on Robinson and a two-game lead on Hough and Mallard Creek. “This group has really come a long way,” says Anderson. “This year, they’ve really bought into each other.” Being out front in a league race is nothing new for Hopewell, which last year emerged from a tight MECKA pack to win its fourth regular season title in five years. And while they’re on the right track to win another, it’s still early. “We just need to keep grinding,” says Anderson. “Our conference is a grind. There are no easy games.” Hopewell built a double-digit lead in the second quarter Friday, led 32-21 at the intermission, and kept the Bulldogs at bay most of the second half, until Robinson scored seven of the game’s final eight points. The Bulldogs struggled at the foul line, though, converting 7-of-23 at the stripe. Robinson features an inside threat in George Washington University recruit Kelsi Mahoney, who scored 20, but Anderson says his team’s defensive effort, especially against her, was the key in the win. “The girls did a great job trusting each other and rotating,” he says. That kind of team approach has been paying off for the Titans all season, on both ends of the floor. Junior forward Ineesha Hankerson leads the team in scoring, averaging 9.5 points per game. Senior forward Rhema Francis is next with 9.1 points, while senior guard Katie Dillon, who led the way with 14 points against Robin- CHRISWISSELL.COM Katie Dillon and the Lady Titans are 13-1. son, averages 8.3. Anderson likes the offensive balance. “There’s no one person who dominates the team,” says Dillon. “It’s a different person each game.” Anderson says there’s not a po- SEE HOPEWELL, PAGE 33 SPORTS www.lakenormancitizen.com January 14, 2015 Oh, Maya: Caldwell stars for Lady Pats FROM PAGE 32 BEN COON Davidson Day’s Maya Caldwell scored her 1,000th point Dec. 17. larizing personality on the team, the players get along and have the kind of court chemistry that develops when players bond. “Knowing our teammates is what helps us,” says Francis. The Titans’ lone loss came Dec. 29 against 3A Weddington, by a 53-38 score on the second day of East Lincoln’s holiday tournament. Anderson says his players learned from the loss and have moved on. “They come out and compete,” he says. “That’s all I’m asking for.” It’s exam week, so MECKA teams were idle Tuesday. Play resumes Friday, and Hopewell will be at home against Vance. The Titans will close out the first half of the MECKA season Jan. 20 at A.L. Brown. Quality Dental Care for the Entire Family We are a highly experienced dentist and staff utilizing the newest innovations in dental technology and treatments serving the Lake Norman and Huntersville areas. We look forward to working with you to make your routine cleaning or dental treatment a fun and meaningful experience. New patient? Call us today, 704.948.1300 to schedule your dental appointment! Exit 23 Prompt Emergency Care! Post Office DecideToDrive.org Gilead Rd. Fifth Third Bank C o m m e r c e C e n t e r D r. Maya Caldwell started her first varsity basketball game as an eighth grader and has led Davidson Day in scoring ever since. It took the 6-foot guard 55 games to reach the 1,000-point mark, and the Patriots’ sophomore did it on a night when she thought she hadn’t played that well and scored about 20 points. Actually, she had poured in a career-high 40 against York Prep to become the first Lady Patriot to reach the milestone. “I am truly honored,” Caldwell said following a 66-41 win over First Assembly Monday. “It was amazing. I didn’t know how to feel. It was just a rush.” Caldwell, who just turned 16, didn’t know she was close to the scoring mark. She was presented with a game ball during Davidson Day’s 6754 win over Wesleyan Christian last Friday and noticed the date of her scoring breakthrough. It was Dec. 17, her mother’s birthday. “That made it even better,” said Caldwell, who is averaging 24.6 points and 9.8 rebounds per game. Caldwell averaged about 18 points to reach the 1,000-point mark in a little more than two seasons. She was the SPAA Player of the Year as an eighth grader, PACIS all-conference last season, is a two-time allstate pick and is already attracting Division I college recruiting attention. She’s been known to call coach Zakia Vanhoose at 5 a.m. so she can get some shots up in the school gym. She loves the game. “I’m having so much fun,” said Caldwell, also an all-conference tennis player. Vanhoose knew early on that Caldwell was something special and wanted her to get experience on the varsity team as an eighth grader. Caldwell ended up in the starting lineup by the season opener. Caldwell had seen varsity games the previous year and was ready. “At first, I was a little nervous, but I wasn’t really scared,” she said. “I felt like I could play with them.” She’s been progressing — and surprising her coach — ever since. “She’s intentional about her game now,” said Vanhoose. “It has clicked.” But Vanhoose is quick to note that Caldwell’s play is only part of what makes her shine. “She carries herself like a young lady,” said Vanhoose. “She’s well-spoken. Everybody respects her.” Caldwell had 25 points, 16 re- bounds, six assists and six blocks in Monday’s win. And what makes the Patriots even more dangerous is that she doesn’t work alone. Players such as freshman guard Courtney Meadows and junior guard Alexas Bradford produce as well, and sophomore forward Parker Thompkins, who averages 15 points and 12.9 rebounds, had a monster Monday, with 18 points, 29 boards and six blocks. “This is one big happy family,” said Caldwell. The Patriots are 11-4 and hoping to make another postseason run a year after reaching the N.C. Independent Schools Athletic Association 2A final. HOPEWELL I - 7 7 No r t h By Justin Parker sports@lakenormancitizen.com 33 103 Commerce Center Drive, Suite 101, Huntersville, NC 704.948.1300 www.lakenormandental.com 34 January 14, 2015 SPORTS Lake Norman Citizen LNC boys meet Ashbrook for Big South lead Friday Two boys’ basketball teams are atop the Big South 2A/3A Conference standings, and they meet Friday night in Gastonia. tied with Lincoln Charter for first in the Southern Piedmont 1A Conference races. The CSD girls won nine games all of last year, but were 11-2 as of Tuesday. The CSD boys were 7-5. Sports Briefs Lake Norman Charter and Ashbrook are both 5-0 in conference play, and the Knights will pay the Green Wave a visit to determine sole possession of first place. “We’ll find out what we’re really made of Friday,” says LNC coach Aaron Reeves. “They’re hungry to play for first place. It’s what they want to do. I don’t think it’ll be a problem keeping them focused.” The Knights (9-4) have won three straight games and seven of their last eight, with the only loss in that stretch a 75-63 defeat to East Lincoln in the final of the Mus- Lady Huskies in third The Hough girls enter Friday’s game at North Meck tied with Mallard Creek for third in the MECKA standings. Hough is 10-3 overall and 3-2 in league play, a game back of secondplace Robinson and two games behind leader Hopewell. Meanwhile, North is 1-4 in MECKA play and 8-6 overall. CHRISWISSELL.COM Lake Norman Charter’s Nick Worthy scored 21 Friday against South Point. tangs’ holiday tournament Dec. 30. LNC’s Malik McCormick is averaging 15.1 points and 6.8 rebounds per game, while Barrett Hancock is averaging 14.3 points and 7.2 rebounds. Nick Worthy is chipping in with 11.9 points and 3.7 assists. Big South schools were idle Tuesday, as the Gaston County schools had exams. CSD teams lead SPC Entering Tuesday’s games with Christ the King, which occurred after press time, the Community School of Davidson teams were REAL news that’s REAL local. REAL community involvement. Every week. All year. Every year. The ONLY locally owned and operated weekly newspaper in Lake Norman. NOW WITH DENVER DISTRIBUTION 26,000 copies delivered weekly to homes & businesses in Huntersville, Cornelius, Davidson & Mooresville. Davidson dominant vs. Saint Louis Davidson moved to 2-1 in Atlantic 10 Conference play with an 8954 win over Saint Louis Saturday. Jordan Barham scored a careerhigh 21 points off the bench, while Brian Sullivan scored all 18 of his points in the first half. Jack Gibbs had 12 points and eight assists, with no turnovers, and Tyler Ka- TIM COWIE Tyler Kalinoski linoski scored 11 points to surpass the 1,000-point career mark. The senior from Kansas is the 46th Wildcat to do it. Davidson (11-3 overall) is on the road at UMass Wednesday and at Richmond Saturday. — Staff Striving to make the Lake Norman Community even better through involvement and support of the following local events and community organizations: • Live Awesome Flag Football Event - benefiting Cancer Research • Healing Dragons Breast Cancer Survivor Team • Susan G. Komen Foundation for Breast Cancer Research • Safe Alliance (formerly United Family Services) • Lake Norman Wine and Food Festival • Huntersville Connection • Lake Norman Scouting Organizations • LKN Chamber Members Ribbon Cutting Sponsor • Huntersville Parks & Recreation Events Calendar • Cornelius Parks & Recreation Events Calendar • Davidson Parks & Recreation Events Calendar • Hough High School Athletic Booster Sponsor • Huntersville Downtown Christmas Sponsor • LKN PULSE - Focus on area businesses • LKN Chamber Business Expo Bronze Sponsor • LKN Chamber Gala - Gold Sponsor • HFFA - Firecracker 5K Sponsor • HFFA - Fall Harvest Sponsor • HFFA - Biggest Loser Sponsor • Park Avenue Properties Haunted House benefiting local charities • Barium Springs Home for Children • Angels & Sparrows • The Bin • Manpower to Horsepower • Friends of the Animals • Purple Heart Homes • Cookies For A Cause • Jogging for Jenn & Julian • Welcome Committee • Ada Jenkins Center • American Cancer Society Relay for Life The only local newspaper with a veteran editorial staff that has lived and worked in the Lake Norman area for a combined 70 years. Great local news plus great local readership equals great return on your advertising investment. 307 Gilead Road • Huntersville, NC • 704-948-3348 www.LakeNormanCitizen.com SPORTS www.lakenormancitizen.com Stat Sheet High School Basketball Boys Scores Jan. 6 LN Charter 77, Hunter Huss 54 LN Charter 18 25 20 14 — 77 19 12 17 6 — 54 Hunter Huss LNC: McCormick 19, B. Hancock 15, Fairbairn 13, Worthy 12, Hickert 7, Cracknell 6, J. Hancock 4, Penner 1. Huss: McCluney 25, Black 12, Barnett 11, Potts 3, Nixon 2. Jan. 9 LN Charter 74, South Point 62 South Point 14 11 17 20 — 62 14 17 21 22 — 74 LN Charter South Point: Reeves 20, Williams 13, Zieske 9, Muse 8, Starr 8, Neyen 2, Julen 2. LNC: Worthy 21, McCormick 18, Cracknell 13, B. Hancock 11, Hickert 7, Fairbairn 3, J. Hancock 1. West Charlotte 80, Hough 56 West Charlotte 30 18 14 18 — 80 11 14 18 13 — 56 Hough West Charlotte: Rivers 16, Massey 14, BEN COON Senior Jordan Thompson won five matches Saturday to improve to 33-0. Hough continues building for late run Huskies lead the MECKA Conference with 3-0 record. By Justin Parker sports@lakenormancitizen.com Hough High’s bid to win its third straight Husky Duals didn’t go as planned Saturday, as the Huskies went 3-2 and finished third in their fifth annual event. And while that result wasn’t what the Huskies were after — “I probably hate losing more than I like winning, to be honest,” said coach Tripp Rogers — there were positives for the host school in the 12-team event. “It’s a wake-up call, and it’s good to have them,” said Rogers. Hough, now 16-2, went 3-0 in its pool, defeating A.C. Reynolds 72-6, Weddington 48-36 and Independence 61-9. Then came a 5518 loss to Rock Hill, the defending class AAAA South Carolina state champion, and a 40-39 loss to Northwest Guilford, one of the Tar Heel State’s top 4A programs. Rogers wasn’t pleased with his team’s effort against Rock Hill, which later wrapped up the Duals title with a 49-27 win over Northwest Guilford, but he said his team bounced back in the narrow loss to Northwest Guilford. Rogers wants his team to keep the losses in perspective as they build toward the latter part of the season. “They’re getting better every time they step out there, which is what you want,” he said. Hough 182-pounder Jordan Thompson went 5-0 Saturday to remain unbeaten on the season. The senior, who was the 4A state runner-up at 170 pounds last year, is 33-0 entering Friday’s match at 3A power Fred T. Foard. Early this season, many opponents were simply forfeiting to Thompson — “I told him to take it as a compliment and move on,” said Rogers — but he’s been getting more matches in recent tournament settings. “He’s starting to get back in the swing of things,” said Rogers. “It’s hard to do that when you’re not on the mat.” Hough’s Caleb Kreitter also went 5-0 Saturday and is 33-3 at 113 pounds. Austin Powell (120 pounds), Tony Woodward (132), Joey DiPietro (152) and Michael Rawlins (285) all went 4-1. January 14, 2015 Blackmon 12, Carter 12, Boone 9, Williams 9, Hatchett 3, Sanders 3, Huntley 2. Hough: L. Maye 20, Sweetman 10, Whipp 9, Murphy 6, Umstead 6, Grigg 3, Friday 2. Girls Scores Jan. 6 Hopewell 49, West Charlotte 38 Hopewell 7 13 11 18 — 49 West Charlotte 8 8 12 10 — 38 Hopewell: Francis 14, Dillon 13, Hankerson 9, Ruff-Mills 7, Haynes 3, Parks 2, Thames 1. West Charlotte: Gaston 12, Holland 12, Thompson 8, Nesbit 4, Donaldson 2. Hough 45, A.L. Brown 40 Hough 10 10 10 15 — 45 3 14 9 14 — 40 A.L. Brown Hough: Alquiza 13, Crawford 10, Gianikos 9, Cowie 4, Nyquist 2, Parker 2, Fuerst 1, Skidmore 1, Montague 1. A.L. Brown: Alexander 15, Grant 10, Downs 5, Howard 3, Stanback 2, Chrismon 2, McCoy 1. Jan. 9 Hopewell 54, Robinson 48 Robinson 15 6 10 17 — 48 20 12 13 9 — 54 Hopewell Robinson: Mahoney 20, Scott 12, Bearden 9, Bickford 4, Jordan 3. Hopewell: Dillon 14, Hankerson 8, Duncan 8, 35 Ruff-Mills 6, Sanders 6, Thames 5, Haynes 5, Francis 2. Hough 53, West Charlotte 43 West Charlotte 10 2 18 13 — 43 11 15 10 17 — 53 Hough West Charlotte: Gaston 18, Holland 11, Thompson 7, Best 4, Donaldson 3. Hough: Denny 16, Alquiza 13, Gianikos 7, Parker 5, Gipson 4, Cowie 4, Crawford 2, Nyquist 2. Jan. 12 Davidson Day 66, First Assembly 41 First Assembly 7 4 14 16 — 41 Davidson Day 11 23 16 16 — 66 First Assembly: Bennett 13, Wright 8, McNeill 6, Peay 5, Francis-Robinson 3, Brooks 3, Bryant 2, Mobley 1. Davidson Day: Caldwell 25, Tompkins 18, Bradford 18, Rees 5. Men’s College Basketball Jan. 10 Davidson 89, Saint Louis 54 Saint Louis 25 29 — 54 39 50 — 89 Davidson Saint Louis: Yarbrough 18, Roby 11, Lancona 8, Bartley 6, Yacoubou 5, Jolly 2, Gillmann 2, McBroom 1, Crawford 1. Davidson: Barham 21, Sullivan 18, Gibbs 12, Kalinoski 11, Michelsen 9, Aldridge 8, McAuliffe 4, Watkins 3, Ekwu 3. 36 a January 7, 2015 Lake Norman Citizen Common causes of aging cats ‘not acting right’ As cats age, they tend to sleep more and become more sedentary. These changes are to be expected. However, changes in social behavior, mobility, appetite and litter box habits can signal something different. These changes, along with increased vocalization, are often signs of degenerative disease. We often refer to these felines as NAR (not acting right) cats. If you have an NAR cat, it’s important to have your pet examined by a veterinarian. There are five conditions that occur commonly in aging cats, which could explain NAR behavior: • Dental or periodontal disease. This can be very painful for your feline. Resorptive disease of the tooth is unique to cats. This can cause them to stop eating and lose weight. Even though dentistry requires anesthesia, the benefits of dental treatment for your cat can far outweigh the risks. Your • Chronic kidney disease. As cats age, loss of kidney Pets function is very common and this results in an elevation of Dr. Tom Hemstreet chemical waste in the blood and the inability to hold body fluid appropriately. The toxic effect of accumulated waste leads to diminished appetite and the loss of body fluid leads to dehydration. This condition affects 50 percent of all cats older than 7 years and 75 percent of the cats older than 10. Chronic kidney disease usually progresses slowly and your vet can help you effectively manage this condition with diet, fluids and medications. • Thyroid disease. This condition involves increased thyroid hormone levels and usually affects cats older than 10. Thyroid disease has a devastating impact on a cat’s body if not treated. Cats with hyperthyroidism initially display increased activity and appetite, giving the illusion of health. Over time, vomiting, diarrhea and weight loss creep into the picture. The weight loss can be rapid and profound as the disease progresses. Heart, kidney and liver disease are also part of the decline. The good news is that thyroid disease can usually be cured with medications, surgery or radioactive iodine treatment. • Degenerative joint disease. This is very painful for a cat and often causes irritability, loss of mobility, decreased socialization, litter box avoidance, weight loss and excessive grooming over the joints. As cats age, the cartilage in the joints deteriorates. This leads to change in the underlying bone and osteophytes form which are painful. Fortunately, there are supplements and medications for pain that can make a big difference in the quality of life for cats with degenerative joint disease. • Cancer. Lymphoma, mammary cancer and oral cancer are common cancers in aging cats. Symptoms can be as vague as diminished appetite and activity. A thorough exam, blood work and imaging may be needed to identify this disease. Some cancers respond well to therapy and some do not. Palliative care and hospice are sometimes the best alternative. As with any cancer, early detection and therapy will improve outcomes. As cats age, don’t assume that changes in behavior or decreased activity is “just aging.” If you have a NAR cat, consult your veterinarian. There may be more going on and therapy or treatment can make a big difference in the quality of life for your cat. Dr. Tom Hemstreet is a veterinarian with LakeCross Veterinary in Huntersville where he also offers radioactive iodine treatment for cats with hyperthyroidism. The vets in the big yellow house have been treating pets like family for 20 years. For more information, call 704-948-6300. Salome’s Stars • ARIES (March 21 to April 19): Mixed signals could create problems. Make sure your views are presented clearly, and insist others do the same. Don’t let an unanswered question go by without a full explanation. • TAURUS (April 20 to May 20): Financial pressures ease, allowing for more budget flexibility. But as the money-wise Bovine will appreciate, thrift still beats out splurging. Expect news from someone special. • GEMINI (May 21 to June 20): Getting things done is what you do so well. But be careful not to overtax your energy reserves. Take time out to relax or to do something different to help keep them at optimum levels. • CANCER (June 21 to July 22): This is a good time to satisfy the Moon Child’s growing sense of wanderlust. Choose a really special place to go to, with a very special person to share it all with you. • LEO (July 23 to August 22): You love being in the spotlight. But be careful it doesn’t blind you to the truth behind a seemingly wonderful opportunity. Look closer and you might be sadly surprised at what you find. • VIRGO (August 23 to September 22): Isn’t it time to take a break from your hectic schedule? Sure it is. And the sooner you do, the sooner you can return fresh and more than ready to take on all those new projects. • LIBRA (September 23 to October 22): A recent family incident can help bring everyone closer, and there’s no one who’s bet- ter at making that happen than you. Accept (indeed, insist on!) help from others to get things off and running. • SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21): Long-held habits are often difficult to break. But the change from how you always did things to how you can do them now can be liberating. So, be flexible and give it a try. • SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21): Someone you met in your professional world last year and thought you would never hear from again could make a sudden reappearance in your life, along with an interesting job offer. • CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19): Once again, you delight everyone by coming up with a solution for a problem that actually works. On another note, it’s not too early to get started on those travel plans. • AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18): Before you go ahead with finalizing your plans for your new project, check them over to see if you can make some improvements or if you can find ways to cut costs. • PISCES (February 19 to March 20): The Fabulous Fish might have been out of the social swim for too long, and it’s time you plunge back in. Reinforce your old friendships and be open to starting new ones. • BORN THIS WEEK: Your creative talents help bring beauty to the world and the people in it. On their behalf, thank you. (c) 2015 King Features Synd., Inc. www.lakenormancitizen.com January 14, 2015 3 7 J.B. 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Licensed and Insured lawn care Carolina newspaper group Advertise Your Business Here For Service advertising information 13046 Meadowmeree-mail Road, Huntersville, NC JohnDirectory Hansil, Owner jhansil87@gmail.com servicedirectory@carolinaweeklynewspapers.com or call 704-849-2261 704-999-6666 We asked our readers, “What www.huntersvilleherald.com EXTRAordinary results have you gotten from The Business Card Page?” They answered. Citizen Lake Norman Your Town, Your Newspaper www.lakenormancitizen.com The Herald Weekly • Aug. 13-19, 2010 • Page 51 “We get a lot of responses from our business card ad in the Lake norman Citizen. our name is getting out there and we're being established. people call and say 'i saw your ad in The Citizen'.” Laurie Castricone, Office Manager, Buffalo Concrete Foundations Inc. Don’t miss out on any of the extras. Turn to the Business Card page to find the righT person, and the righT priCe for the job! January 14, 2015 Lake Norman Citizen He’s turning 73, and it’s no secret See Super Crossword Answers on Page 31. 38 January 16, my birthday. I am so happy to have been born. I am also thrilled to keep having birthdays. I notice that my attitude about birthdays has changed through the years. I thought my 16th would never arrive. However, I got my license and drove on. I slid easily by my 21st when I became a legal adult. Year 30 came and was easy for me. Some dread that one because it has come to signify the time we leave young adulthood and move on. My 40th was a bit of a downer for some reason — maybe thoughts of middle age. Age 50 was no big deal, nor age 60. Now I’m turning 73. I think it is the oddest one of all thus far. Sometimes I rise in the morning now and think: I believe I’ll drop by the Orthopedic Clinic this morning and Southern have a cup of coffee with Fried Preacher my friends. However, most mornings I awaken as frisky as a colt. Everything Harold Bales amuses me. I’m ready to get busy. I’m feeling like an adolescent. I’m a juvenile all over again. The big question is whether or not I will be a delinquent today! Most of the time I’m well-behaved. I have learned that, while sometimes I feel my age, most of the time I don’t think my age. I don’t really know how I am supposed to think in a more senior-like way. I just know how to think like me. Naturally, most of my friends are mature now. However, they seem young to me. The women seem prettier to me than they did decades ago when they were young. I’ll confess, some of my male buddies have gone to pot, but so have I. (Now that’s a seniorly comment that means something entirely different to my generation than it does to younger folk.) One of my favorite pals on the planet, perhaps inspired by my birthday, sent me a piece called the “Senility Prayer.” Maybe you have heard it: “Lord, grant me the senility to forget the people I never liked anyway, the good fortune to run into the ones I do like, and the eyesight to tell the difference.” I got a big laugh out of that, but I don’t think I’ll use it. I can honestly count on the fingers of one hand, the people I haven’t liked over these 73 years. I’m a bit like Will Rogers who said he never met a man he didn’t like. Or maybe it was said by actress Elizabeth Taylor who had seven husbands. Oh, I can think about lots of folk I’ve known who could give an aspirin a headache. You know, the kind who can cause a preacher to cuss. Sometimes on the day when you have only one nerve, that person can get on it. I tend to be philosophical about that and interpret him or her as a gift from God. It is given to teach us to pray. God knows all about this because some of us can get under the Divine skin occasionally, too. As you know, the dictionary definition of senility is the physical and mental decline associated with old age. That’s all true, of course. But I’m also aware of the ascendancy of some things during the adventure of growing older. For instance the freedom to be as cranky as I want and having it described as “colorful.” I’ll take that with a “Hallelujah!” One thing I don’t want to be is colorless! I’m 73 and happy to celebrate it. Once while celebrating the birthday of a parishioner whom I knew to be nearing 100 years old, I whispered, “Do you mind revealing how many years old you are?” She smiled and replied in a whisper: “Can you keep a secret?” I said,”Yes.” To which she said, “I can too!” I can’t! Harold Bales is a retired Methodist minister. For more information about him, visitTheSouthernFried-Preacher.com. Send him an e-mail at hbales@carolina.rr.com. Idea Exchange NEWS www.lakenormancitizen.com January 14, 2015 39 A Toast to a small town Christmas story Davidson is an idyllic place. With a prestigious college at its core, and through the vigilance of town leaders and involved citizens, it has meticulously evolved into a model village, cherished by those who embrace small-town values and marveled at by those who discover its multiple charms. With that said, it’s true that the Christmas story that follows could have occurred anywhere, but in Davidson it seems overwhelmingly appropriate. On Christmas Eve, Gina Fishburne of Davidson was floored by the flu. The illness sapped her stamina but, according to her husband Cary, sadness from the realization that she would be unable to prepare a meal for her family exceeded the pain of her symptoms. That afternoon, during a lastminute search for a meal-time solution, Gina called the Toast Cafe on Main Street, where the Fishburnes had eaten a few times during their three-plus years as Davidson residents, and asked about picking up some soup. Toast coowner Brian Burchill fielded the call and said the restaurant was preparing to close so employees could go home to their families, but potato soup would be available for pickup. During the telephone conversation, according to Cary, Burchill detected the discomfort in Gina’s voice and asked how she was feeling. She summarized the situation and the reason for her call, and then dispatched Cary to the restaurant. Thirty minutes later, when Cary arrived at Toast, he knocked on the locked door as instructed. When it opened, he said he was there to pick up soup and prepared for pay. Instead, he was asked inside. Once inside the restaurant, several employees told Cary they were sorry his wife was sick and they wanted to make the holiday dinner their gift to his family. Then they presented him with the soup, along with a large box filled with turkey breast, pasta, biscuits, chocolate cake and even some quiche and fresh fruit for Christmas morning breakfast. “They didn’t know me from Adam,” Cary said later when sharing his story. “We had been there a Final thoughts Lee Sullivan few times, but we weren’t regulars. It just blew me away.” Cary said Burchill told him they were happy to help, hoped his wife would feel better soon and, again, refused to accept any payment. “And he wished me a merry Christmas,” Cary said. “I felt like we were in It’s A Wonderful Life. I just couldn’t believe it.” Back at home, Gina cried when Cary told her what happened. And then the couple and their two boys enjoyed a traditional holiday feast, enhanced with an extra helping of Christmas spirit. “It’s a Christmas story we’ll never forget,” Cary said. “I’m getting to be an older guy (he’s only 48) so I guess I just appreciate old-fashioned things like this a little more. But I think this demonstrates the true meaning of Christmas and what a neighborhood business should be. It was kind, and thoughtful, and completely unexpected. It had a tremendous impact on our family and is one of the more special Christmas memories we’ll ever have.” And another special story about Davidson. Personal responsibility But with its many attributes, the town also has some nagging habits. Last week in our “Talk of the Towns” pages, we made reference to the fact that while motorists bear the brunt of the responsibility, joggers and cyclists must also do their part to avoid accidents. On the way to the office one morning this week, an unsettling scenario provided the motive for another reminder. Around 7:15 or so Tuesday morning, with dark, misty conditions already impacting the crowded commute, I was on Grey Road in Davidson approaching the Davidson-Concord Road intersection. The glaze on the windshield, not heavy enough for full-time wipers but steady enough for aggravation, the distracting glow of headlights piercing the fog and the blurry red glare of tail lights bouncing from the wet pavement combined to make even the posted 20-milesper-hour speed limit seem excessive. A few hundred feet from the stop sign, and hugging the right shoulder as best I could to avoid a truck still recovering from that awkward right-hand turn onto Grey, I caught a glimpse of something just ahead. Out of the dark- ness, a figure emerged, visible only because the legs were white. As I passed, I got a partial view of a jogger right at the edge of the pavement in black shorts and a dark, long-sleeve sweatshirt. Had he been wearing long pants, at that time in those conditions, he would have been, for all practical purposes, invisible. I didn’t hit him. As best as I could tell, neither did the cars behind me. In the rear view mirror, I did see several sets of highlights dart left as those drivers, just as I had done a few seconds earlier, reacted instinctively to avert disaster. At any speed, impact would have been devastating. At best, the jogger would have been severely injured and the driver would have been psychologically shattered. Blame wouldn’t have mattered. I can’t imagine any town that does more to protect pedestrians, runners and cyclists, but rules and regulations anywhere, even in Davidson, still rely on common sense and good decision making by those involved. 40 January 14, 2015 Lake Norman Citizen