Bombs kill two at Boston Marathon
Bomb threat at courthouse
A bomb threat called in to the Lenoir County Courthouse proved to be only words.
According to the Lenoir County Sheriff’s Office, an unknown person made several calls to LCSO staff around 3:40 p.m. Monday. The caller said there was a bomb somewhere in the courthouse. The person called the Lenoir County Clerk’s Office and made the same claim.
Deputies cleared the courthouse of staff, visitors and Lenoir County commissioners while investigating the buildings and grounds. Law enforcement was unable to find a bomb in the building or on the grounds.
“We are now working with CenturyLink to determine the origin of the calls,” Lenoir County Sheriff Chris Hill said in a statement. “If the caller is identified, they will be charged with the felony of making a false report of incendiary devices.”
He added, “These types of calls occur about once per year at the courthouse. They cause a disruption of all of the services that are ongoing at the time and needlessly frighten people.”
The LCSO will provide a $1,000 reward to anyone who comes forward with reliable information as to the caller’s identity.
Wes Wolfe can be reached at 252-559-1075 or wes.wolfe@kinston.com. Follow him on Twitter @WolfeReports.
Substitute teacher embezzles from Duplin Co. school
BEULAVILLE — Beulaville police have charged a substitute elementary teacher with embezzling nearly $7,000 from Duplin County Schools.
Donna Godbold, 48, was charged Monday by the Beulaville Police Department with embezzlement, obtaining property under false pretense and financial card fraud.
Godbold is a substitute teacher, bus driver and Parent Teacher Organization officer at Beulaville Elementary School. She was taken into custody Monday morning.
BPD Chief Joey Carter said Godbold stole $6,913.30 from the school PTO from April 19, 2012, through April 1. Godbold had access to the credit card used by the PTO. Members of the organization noticed discrepancies in bank statements and notified the principal who called police.
“She was basically converting money to her own personal use by paying her bills,” Carter said.
Carter said the N.C. State Bureau of Investigation helped with the case.
Godbold was released on a $25,000 bond with a first court appearance set for Friday.
Lindell Kay can be reached at 910-219-8455 or lindell.kay@jdnews.com. Follow him on Twitter and friend him on Facebook @ 1lindell.
Senator rewrites dredging bill
Sen. Harry Brown, R-Onslow, is rewriting his measure seeking funds to dredge the North Carolina coast’s shallow-draft inlets after facing pushback from boat owners who complained his originally proposed registration fee hikes were too high.
The reworked Senate Bill 58, which he plans to introduce this week in committee, will propose smaller fee increases and will seek to siphon some $2 million from the state’s gas tax that pays for highway improvements. Brown says many people fill up their boats at regular gas stations, and the shallow draft inlets should benefit from the gas tax.
Brown’s original bill included a multi-tiered system for fee hikes depending on the size of the boat. Under the original measure, big boat owners, those with vessels 40 feet or longer, would have been asked to cough up 10 times the current cost: $150 per year. The rewritten measure he plans to introduce in committee this week is much simpler and scales back those increases.
Currently, it costs $15 a year to register a boat with the state, regardless of the vessel’s size. Boat owners get a $5 break if they pay for a three-year registration.
Under Brown’s latest measure, boats that are 25 feet long or less would pay $25 and vessels 26 feet and longer would pay $50 per year. Three-year registrations still would be allowed but would not come with a price break.
Brownsaid he’s been in conversations with officials at the N.C. Department of Transportation about using a portion of the gas tax to fund shallow-draft inlets. DOT has appeared supportive, according to Brown.
“Right now, any time someone fills their boat up at the pump, that money goes to the highway fund. This is just getting a small percentage of that back to put towards the dredging issue,” he said.
As coastal lawmakers seek a solution to an ongoing problem, Rep. Chris Millis, R-Pender, also introduced companion legislation in the House last week. His measure, House Bill 707, provides a roadmap for the state to ensure dollars collected for inlet dredging “go as far as possible,” Millis said.
Among other measures, the bill would direct the N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources to work towards individual permits for these inlets that allow them to be dredged to deeper depths to make the dredging work last longer, Millis said.
Kayakers to float through Kinston to support cancer research
Don’t be surprised to see more than 18 kayaks floating along in the Neuse River next week.
They will make up the second annual Hope Floats NC fundraising event to raise cancer awareness, honor and remember those who have battled cancer and fight back against the disease by raising money for the American Cancer Society to fund prevention and research programs.
The 170-mile trip begins at Anderson Point Park in Raleigh on Saturday and ends at Union Point Park in New Bern on April 26.
Participating kayakers will spend the night of April 24 at Neuseway Nature Center and on April 25 at Maple Cypress Landing in Grifton.
The public is invited to welcome them from 6 to 8 p.m. at their stopping points, purchase concessions from Relay for Life teams and donate to the ACS. After dark, there will be candlelight prayer at Neuseway.
Eighteen paddlers will be taking the entire seven-day trip, while 19 others will be joining at various stretches. Included among them is Pam Turner, chairwoman of the Lenoir County Relay for Life, who will be paddling with a two-time survivor of Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
“I’m so excited,” she said. “I can’t wait. This is my very first time.”
Turner will be paddling from Seven Springs Wildlife Access on April 23 to Grifton. Other campsite stops include Smithfield Town Commons on Saturday, Richardson Bridge Wildlife Access at Brogdon on Sunday and Goldsboro Wildlife Access at N.C. 117 on Monday.
Lenoir County’s Electrolux Dish-Walkers team will be providing dinner for the paddlers when they arrive in Kinston and breakfast before they take off. Relay teams also will be selling goodies to the public.
At the Smithfield Commons Amphitheater, 200 S. Front St., a local team will host a free concert featuring Carolina Tradition Bluegrass Band, Carolina Grass Band and Tim Renfrow and Feelin’ Country from 3 to 6 p.m.
Raffle tickets will be sold at each stop for three prizes — a kayak, guided kayaking trip for four and $100 Visa gift card. The drawing will be held in New Bern at the end of the trip. Ticket holders do not have to be present to win.
The trip will culminate with the Craven County Relay for Life event at 5 p.m. April 26 at Grover C. Fields Middle School.
Chris Tart and his wife Kim areorganizers for the trip. He said last year the event brought in $13,000 for the ACS. The 220-mile trip ended in Morehead City, but was shortened this year to end in New Bern. The goal this year is $10,000.
“We know we’re going to meet our goal and exceed our goal,” Tart said. He said his future goal is to have events held at every stop on the trip.
Turner agreed. Lenoir County Relay’s fundraising goal is $205,000.
“I really think if everybody jumped on board,” she said, “we could raise a lot of money for Relay for Life.” This year’s Lenoir County event will be held June 14.
Hope Floats NC was initiated by Kim Tart after she was diagnosed with thyroid cancer in 2008 and had undergone treatments and surgeries. To increase exercise and reduce her stress, she began kayaking.
“It helped with her long-term recovery,” her husband said.
She had paddled as long as 5 miles, but wanted to do a 300-mile trip to raise money for cancer research. The couple formed a team of people around the state — people they didn’t know. The result was last year’s Hope Floats NC.
To follow the events along this year’s fundraising trip, visit hopefloatsnc.com.
Margaret Fisher can be reached at 252-559-1082 or Margaret.Fisher@Kinston.com. Follow her on Twitter @MargaretFishr.
FYI
What: Hope Floats NC coming to Kinston
When: 6 to 8 p.m. April 24
Where: Neuseway Nature Center
Information: 910-890-1094 or hopefloatsnc.com
Raffle tickets: $5 each or $20 for five; to purchase, email hopefloatsnc@gmail.com
Fire drives elderly couple from home
The only bright spot in Monday’s fire may have been that there was a fire hydrant in the front yard.
Around 10:20 a.m., the Lenoir County 911 center received a call of a house fire at 1327 Railfence Drive. Sunlight glanced off smoke pouring from under the roof as firefighters with the Kinston Department of Public Safety got the blaze under control.
An elderly couple evacuated the house, owned by Ellen Praleau, safely, but the residence sustained an estimated $10,000 in damage, mostly from smoke.
“The cause of the fire is a bare light bulb in a closet (that) came in contact with clothing,” KDPS spokesman Woody Spencer said.
The air outside ran thick with the smell of a bonfire as firefighters took about 30 minutes to put out the conflagration and begin their investigation. Firefighters placed a water cooler on a bench on the front yard, as they took drinks and shared shifts going into the structure. Extra oxygen tanks were also on hand.
The Lenoir County chapter of the American Red Cross announced on Facebook shortly afterward that it is providing relief efforts to the house’s residents.
In all, KDPS Engine 22, Engine 11, Ladder 18, Ladder 33, police and Lenoir County EMS responded to the scene.
Wes Wolfe can be reached at 252-559-1075 or wes.wolfe@kinston.com. Follow him on Twitter @WolfeReports.
Column: Woman gives birth in middle of U.S. 70 traffic jam
Road construction has turned a usually placid stretch of U.S. 70 between Falling Creek and West Vernon Avenue into a stormy sea of profane phrases and hand gestures. For one woman, it turned into a chapel and maternity ward.
“My boyfriend and I had been dating for about a year when we started carpooling to work,” said Stephanie Cole of Deep Run. “Usually the drive is pretty calm and uneventful, but last Monday the road construction really stirred things up.”
According to Stephanie, as she and her beau motored down U.S. 70 at 2 mph or so, something happened that changed her life forever.
“David (Stephanie’s boyfriend) started talking about how much time is wasted on things that don’t matter,” Cole said as her eyes misted up. “I thought he was going to wax philosophical on the traffic jam as a metaphor of the way day-to-day life can drag you down, but instead he put the car in park, kneeled on the cup holder and asked me to marry him.”
Over a chorus of car horns and lewd suggestions as to what the innocent road workers could do with their hand-held Stop/Slow signs, Stephanie said yes.
“I’d often imagined being proposed to somewhere romantic — like under the pier at Emerald Isle or at a Starbucks,” Cole said. “Hearing David ask me to spend the rest of my life with him while stuck on a major highway in a 1989 Honda Civic with no air conditioning or passenger door was quite surreal.”
After the proposal, the crawling traffic came to a dead stop.
“I’ve seen pallets of bricks in quicksand with more forward momentum,” Stephanie said. “The Highway Patrol dropped leaflets from a helicopter advising us how to have our mail delivered to our cars for the next few weeks.”
As night fell, those with camping equipment in their trunks started setting up tents up and down U.S. 70. Stephanie and her fiancé held hands as they walked around meeting their new neighbors — one of which happened to be a minister.
“Preacher Charlie was so sweet to us,” Cole said. “He told us if we came up with a marriage certificate he’d marry us right there on the highway.”
Cole’s fiancé quickly whipped out his phone and downloaded a marriage certificate from LegalSchmegal.com. Within minutes, a wedding was being planned.
“The ceremony was beautiful,” Cole said. “The guys working on the road made David a tux by tying together a few orange safety vests. I used a discarded Chick-fil-A bag as a wedding veil.”
After the ceremony, the couple and their entourage walked a few miles down U.S. 70 to Buddy’s Grill at Falling Creek for the wedding reception. Much fried chicken and fountain sodas were reportedly consumed, with the happy couple feeding each other pieces of honey buns and Moon Pies.
As the weeks passed with no sign of the traffic jam coming to an end, the newlyweds decided it may be time to abandon the car and go on their honeymoon.
“I would have been fine waiting a few more weeks for the traffic to ease up, but for some reason David really, really, really wanted to go on a honeymoon,” Cole said. “As luck would have it, our car was stopped just across the road from the West Parke Inn. David made a reservation for their honeymoon suite with extreme prejudice.”
After a three-day honeymoon, the couple returned to their 1989 Honda Civic and set up house. David eventually got a job with the road construction crew, while Stephanie started organizing Thirty-One parties along a two-mile stretch of U.S. 70.
“It was cramped — the two of us living in a car, but we rose above the stank and made the best of it,” Cole said.
When the traffic jam entered its third month, Stephanie realized she was with child.
“We were so happy,” David said. “With a baby on the way, I knew we had to find something with more room, so I bought a 1990 Chevrolet Suburban from a guy stuck about 400 yards behind us. It had more square footage than a $2,000/month New York City apartment and had higher emissions test scores.”
After nine more months of living on U.S. 70 East, David and Stephanie Cole (along with about a thousand other motorists) were overjoyed to see traffic finally starting to move again.
“It was great,” David said. “After a few miles, the orange barrels disappeared, but as we merged over into the left lane we were waived back over to the right by the road crew. I’m not sure why the barrels were removed if we couldn’t drive on that side of the road, but I didn’t have time to think about it because Stephanie went into labor just as traffic came to another stand still.”
Not knowing anything about birthing a baby, David decided it would be a good time to panic.
“Traffic was so congested a helicopter couldn’t even make it to our location,” Stephanie said. “We turned on the radio to stay calm. Everything was fine until a Bon Jovi song came on. The contractions stopped and the baby started tapping out Morse code on my stomach that translated into ‘turn it off or I’m not coming out’.”
Eventually an EMS crew made its way to the scene, and mother and child came through the experience with flying colors.
“We’ve added that Bon Jovi thing to all our pamphlets,” said Jon Hughes of Lenoir County EMS. “Anyone about to have a baby should keep a copy of Bon Jovi’s ‘Slippery When Wet’ in all their vehicles. We’d advise against one of Jon Bon Jovi’s solo albums, as that could lead to a Jaws of Life situation.”
Jon Dawson’s columns appear every Tuesday and Thursday in The Free Press. Contact Jon at 252-559-1092 or jon.dawson@kinston.com. Purchase books, music and ‘Bad Medicine’ pill dividers at jondawson.com.
New head of KCHC brings her organizational experience to Kinston
After a year without a CEO, Kinston Community Health Center has a new leader at the helm.
Sanja K. Hudson took over the leadership on Jan. 7, bringing with her more than two decades of healthcare operations management experience.
Hudson, a native of the Washington, D.C., area, grew up in a small city in Northern Virginia, similar to Kinston, she said.
She began her career in the early 1990s at Unity Health Care in D.C., followed by a number of years at Central Care Community Health Center in Houston. Her last stint was at Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta.
“I’d been trying to make my way back to Northern Virginia,” Hudson said. With the desire to be closer to her two grown children and six grandchildren, her move to Kinston puts her just a few hours drive from family.
Hudson said Kinston has similar healthcare issues as the city where she grew up in Caroline County. There are people here that need medical care, but aren’t getting it, she said.
“My goal is to help those that need to be seen,” she said.
About 9,000 individuals receive care at KCHC up to three times a year. Still, many people aren’t aware the facility accepts all types of insurance. Decreasing emergency room visits by increasing awareness of KCHC, a “hidden jewel” with complete primary care and referral services, will reduce medical costs, Hudson said.
KCHC provides a range of services, including a full dental facility and discount pharmacy. But Hudson said she plans to streamline the operations for efficiency and cost-savings, utilize the many partnerships the facility has with the community and make the center a pilot program for other healthcare facilities to follow.
Currently, the four OB-GYN doctors and one midwife on staff also provide services at Lenoir Memorial Hospital and the Lenoir County Health Department. But Hudson said she hopes to expand the facility to provide a full-service OB-GYN clinic at the center.
“The goal is really to become that one-stop,” she said.
Hudson has a reputation for tightening up operations at Federal Qualified Health Centers. After she earned a Bachelor of Science degree in business administration from Virginia Union University in Richmond, Va., she began working in patient financial services at Unity.
Mentored by CEO Vincent Keane, she learned the ropes of producing a smoother, more strategically-focused organization and left as director of management control.
“I started with two organizations,” she said, “and before I left, there were more than 30 organizations.”
In 1999, Anthony Williams, mayor at the time who was known to have pulled the District of Columbia out of financial straits, asked her to work on a focus group and committee for a program he introduced, the D.C. Healthcare Alliance, with the goal of providing every D.C. resident access to healthcare. That program is still being utilized, Hudson said.
In 2001, she began consulting for Central Care in Texas, performing audits. She was asked to open a new clinic and run it.
Hudson said she was recruited to work with the Gateway to Care, where she spent the majority of her time in Texas streamlining operations, including strategic planning and setting up policies and procedures.
“Gateway to Care is a collaboration of over 170 member organizations,” she said.
In August 2010, she received her MBA from Ashford University with a concentration in healthcare administration and was inducted into the Golden Key International Honor Society.
About two years ago, she was asked by the president of Morehouse to help the medical school improve its operations. She stayed a year and half as assistant dean and executive director for clinical affairs before taking the position in Kinston.
Margaret Fisher can be reached at 252-559-1082 or Margaret.Fisher@Kinston.com. Follow her on Twitter @MargaretFishr.
Evidence unclear whether hot temps mean high crime
Unbearable heat is not a justifiable defense for crime.
But there is an unverified tenet of conventional wisdom that says as temperatures rise, so do instances of crime.
For Alfred Hitchcock’s first television series, “Alfred Hitchcock Presents,” Ray Bradbury wrote an episode based on this concept, “Shopping for Death.”
In it, two retired insurance men try to save an emotionally-strained, angry woman — dealing with the heat of a New York City summer in the mid-’50s — from ending up dead. One of the men, Clarence Fox, believes the heat leads to dangerously careless behavior.
He further thinks that above 92 degrees Fahrenheit, people have a higher inclination for murder.
“Under 90 men’s tempers stay cool, but right at 92 degrees we all turn irritable, itchy, out of sorts,” Fox says.
Needless to say, the woman is unmoved by the men. Her husband, a longshoreman coming home drunk after work, proves the insurance salesman right when he does the deed off-screen.
The temperature was 92 degrees.
And while such notions are good for melodrama, how accurate are they?
In Kinston, high-profile gun crime caught headlines in recent days, including Friday’s homicide. Monday, there was a report of shots fired into a building, and a bomb scare at the Lenoir County Courthouse.
“Right now, it’s too early this year to see a correlation,” Kinston Department of Public Safety spokesman Woody Spencer said. “A lot of times, you don’t even see a peak. But I think, more than heat, is the fact that time changes and people are out more.
“And, of course, later in the summer when it gets hot, people lose their temper. But it’s hard to say specifically if there’s a correlation between the two.”
Lenoir County Sheriff Chris Hill believes, also, that people spending more time together outside may have more to do with assaults than the temperature itself.
“We’ve not ever done a study on it,” Hill said. “But I’m sure someone did a study on it, just like someone did a study on whether when the moon was full, if there were more crimes. I think that’s all a bunch of hoo-hah.”
Craig A. Anderson conducted a study at Iowa State — published in a journal of the Association for Psychological Science — looking at the concept. He noted correlations between heat and aggression date back centuries, and quoted a remark made in “Romeo and Juliet.” He concluded that there is some evidence heat is a factor.
“Hot temperatures increase aggression by directly increasing feelings of hostility and indirectly increasing aggressive thoughts,” Anderson wrote.
The study showed for every 2 degrees of increased average temperature, there were nine more homicides or assaults per every 100,000 people.
And, a March 2012 analysis of violent crimes by Chicago Magazine found incidents increased during the spring and summer, decreasing in the fall and winter.
But, explanations given by local law enforcement could apply to Chicago, as well.
Brandon Keim wrote a piece for Wired in 2011 on heat-crime causation, and appeared on NPR’s “Talk of the Nation” to discuss it.
Conclusion — the jury is out, as it has been since the beginning of recorded history.
“There are no hard and fast conclusions to be drawn right now and, you know, to go from correlation to causation is impossible at this time,” Keim said.
He continued, “But I think there are a lot of interesting questions that are raised and lots of interesting speculations about the, you know, the nature of human behavior and its intersection with, you know, weather itself.”
Wes Wolfe can be reached at 252-559-1075 or wes.wolfe@kinston.com. Follow him on Twitter @WolfeReports.
FFA team heads to state competition / Names in news
FFA team heads to state competition
On Feb. 23, the South Lenoir High School FFA Hunter Education Team competed by invitation with the Duplin-Onslow Hunter Association. The competition was in archery, rifle and trap shooting skills. The team took the first-place trophy for overall skills, plus individual and team trophies.
On March 9, the team won second place overall and received a trophy plus individual trophies at the District 2 annual N.C. Hunter Education Skills Tournament at Castle Hayne. The team competed in archery, rifle, trap and orienteering.
Team members will compete April 27 at the N.C. State Tournament at Camp Millstone near Ellerbe.
Kinston photographer to lead state organization
Bruce Williamson, owner of Williamson’s Photography in Kinston, was elected president of the Professional Photographers of North Carolina at the recent 85th annual convention. Active in PPNC since 1996, Williamson has served on numerous committees and has been treasurer, vice president and president-elect. He has earned the PPNC Fellowship Degree, PPA Craftsman’s Degree and is a Certified Professional Photographer.
“PPNC is one of the nation’s largest associations of professional photographers — with over 450 members,” said Williamson. “We offer our members some of the best educational seminars and professional photographic schools, in addition to networking with some of the best professional portrait, wedding and commercial photographers in the United States.”
The convention has a full agenda of classes with nationally recognized speakers on a variety of photographic topics. It also has a two-day trade show and an awards ceremony with election and installation of officers.
For more information, visit ppofnc.com.
Interviewing workshop being offered
The Lenoir Community College Small Business Center and the Kinston-Lenoir County Chamber of Commerce are co-sponsoring a program that explains interviewing practices that improve the likelihood of hiring the right person for the job.
The workshop will be from 9 a.m. to noon April 23 in Room 313 of the Kinston Enterprise Center, 327 N. Queen St. It will cover five steps to a successful interview, ways to determine critical job requirements, the behavioral interview process, how to obtain information legally and how to accurately analyze responses to interview questions. This seminar should be of particular interest to those who have job search, interviewing, hiring or placement responsibilities.
The event is free, but pre-registration is recommended. For more information, contact Greg Hannibal, Small Business Center director, at 252-522-4676, ext. 2021 or ghannibal@lenoircc.edu.
We remember
DEEP RUN — Members of South Lenoir’s softball team haven’t forgotten what took place on March 15, especially its two seniors.
The Blue Devils have a chance to erase the memory — or at least ease the pain of it — tonight.
South Lenoir will host Topsail in a key East Central 2A Conference softball game at 7 with the hopes of making things right after the Pirates 10 run-ruled it in a 13-0 win last month.
Not only were the second-place Blue Devils (12-2, 6-1) embarrassed by what happened, but they’ve made sure to turn their last loss into motivation in their current nine-game win streak.
“We remember how it felt, and it wasn’t a good feeling,” said senior pitcher Taylor Sandlin. “It was embarrassing to be 10-runned. We weren’t going to let it happen again.”
While South Lenoir hasn’t lost since, the first-place Pirates (12-2, 7-0) have been a problem for the Blue Devils since they became conference foes three school years ago.
Tonight will mark the ninth time the two have met as members of the EC2A and Topsail has won eight of them, including the last six. The last time South Lenoir beat the Pirates was a 5-4 extra-inning win in the second round of NCHSAA state 2A playoffs in 2010 — Sandlin’s freshman year.
“They’re a really good team, but we’re a really good team, too,” said senior outfielder Brittany Lassiter. “We maybe just get too hyped to play them.”
In their first meeting this year, South Lenoir committed five errors and its pitching yielded 14 hits while managing only two hits itself. Following the game, coach Lisa Smith had very few words for her team.
She could tell the game’s impact was felt immediately after it was over.
“I just told them to remember how it felt, and they have,” Smith said. “They learned a lesson that night, and it’s obviously helped since.”
With Sandlin anchoring the pitching circle, the Blue Devils have thrown six shutouts and outscored their last nine opponents 83-7. But today’s opponent is a bit tougher than the last nine.
The Pirates, who have won 21 straight conference games, have won each of their seven league games this season by at least four runs.
To knock them off will take a complete effort and near-perfect softball from the Blue Devils.
“We’re going to have to do the little things — locate pitches, run the bases, play defense, play small ball,” Sandlin said.
While Sandlin will start today’s game in the pitching circle, her lone senior teammate will most likely begin the contest on the bench.
Lassiter, who has played varsity since her sophomore year, she said, is an outfielder who knows it’s her job to keep her teammates focused and to cheer them on.
She’s ready to be a big motivator in the season’s biggest game thus far.
“It’s my job to make sure everybody’s playing their hardest and staying in the game,” Lassiter said. “We’re all going to have to do our part if we want to win.”
Ryan Herman can be reached at 252-559-1073 or Ryan.Herman@Kinston.com. Follow him on Twitter: @KFPSports.
UPDATED: Kinston's Reggie Bullock declares for NBA
UPDATED 12:15 P.M.:
Statement from UNC:
CHAPEL HILL - University of North Carolina junior forward Reggie Bullock is entering the 2013 NBA Draft. The Kinston, N.C., native was Carolina's third-leading scorer and second-leading rebounder last season. He led the Tar Heels and was third in the Atlantic Coast Conference in three-point percentage.
"It's been a great experience at Carolina and after talking to my family, the coaches and my inner circle of friends, I am ready to take the next step in my career," says Bullock. "I want to play at the next level and will put my name in the NBA Draft this year. I want to thank all of my coaches, teammates and the Carolina fans for their support these past three years. We did some great things that have prepared me to play in the NBA. I know the Tar Heels will have a great year next season."
Bullock averaged 13.9 points and 6.5 rebounds as a junior, earning second-team All-ACC honors from both the media and coaches. He made 88 of 202 three-point field goals, a percentage of .436. The 88 three-pointers were the third-most in UNC single-season history. He scored a career-high 24 points on Jan. 19, 2013, against Maryland.
Bullock played in 100 games as a Tar Heel and scored 989 points, an average of 9.9 per game. He made 188 three-pointers, eighth-most in school history. He scored in double figures 54 times, including 28 of 36 games in 2012-13.
"Reggie is such an outstanding young man and a talented basketball player," says UNC head coach Roy Williams. "He was our most consistent player this season, was productive on both ends of the floor and gave us great leadership. Our hope is that his decision will work out in a very positive manner for Reggie. He has big dreams and we will help him and support him in his efforts to reach those dreams. I'll always enjoy reflecting on Reggie's three seasons as a big part of our program."
ORIGINAL REPORT:
Kinston native and UNC junior Reggie Bullock will forego his senior season for the Tar Heels and declare for the NBA, according to WRALSportsFan.com.
We'll post more updates as they become available.
Video: Police need your help to identify larceny suspect
From the Kinston Dept. of Public Safety:
Crime reports
Reece Gardner: A frank approval of fracking is needed
Would you like for North Carolina to take action that would capitalize on the “natural gas boom” by lifting the moratorium on drilling for natural gas in our state and to go after the estimated 42 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in North Carolina?
A move is underway to do just that, with the passage recently by a landslide vote in favor of Senate Bill 76. If this bill becomes law — and it is certainly expected to do so — our state could start issuing “fracking” permits to drilling companies in less than two years.
The Department of Environmental and Natural Resources will probably finalize rules and regulations for this practice as early as October of next year.
This involves drilling a well thousands of feet beneath the earth’s surface and blasting a mixture of water, sand and chemicals into the well to create fractures in shale rock formations to release the natural gas trapped inside. It seems incredible that we have taken this long to act on this technology, since it has been available to us since 1998, making the extraction of shale gas economical.
Just by pointing to the success stories in Texas and North Dakota, it is clear that we have the opportunity to turn our economy’s around. As Sen. Buck Newton pointed out in an article written by Carolina Journal’s Sara Burrows, we have an opportunity to turn our state’s economy around by releasing the vast amounts of gas believed trapped below North Carolina’s soil. By setting severance taxes on this gas lower than any other state, we could attract industry and put thousands of people back to work.
Just look at some examples: An article in the Houston Chronicle reveals how once-impoverished Karnes County had been turned into a gold mine with landowners there pulling in $70 million in royalties in November alone. Largely due to this effort in North Dakota, that state’s unemployment rate has dropped to 2.6 percent, and there may soon be no sales tax there.
Of course on the Democratic side of the aisle, we have some naysayers such as Sen. Woodard of Durham, who said, “As people move into North Dakota to accept those jobs, they’re bringing families with them, and a lot of them are living in trailers and crowding the school system. We are tired of trailers for our schoolchildren.”
And Sen. Nesbitt, who said, “If we pollute the aquifiers, we’ll have a desert in four or five counties in this state.”
Sen. McKissick said, “We don’t want wells becoming long-term storage facilities for our wastewater,” to which GOP Sen. Newton responded, “The safest way to dispose of this wastewater is to put it back down deep in the earth, and there are more than 170,000 such wells in the U.S. already with no problems.
Sen. Kinnaird said, “This state would do better to support ‘cleaner’ sources of energy, like solar, and by being more energy-efficient we can reduce North Carolina’s energy usage by 40 percent.”
If these comments look familiar, they should, because it is this attitude that has kept us from going after this natural gas that has been available to us since 1998.
As GOP bill sponsor Sen. Brock said, “Drillers have a lot at stake if fracking proved uneconomical or unsafe. SB 76 requires them to post three types of bonds before drilling in our state — one ensuring they have sufficient funds to complete a project and not abandon it midway; one providing cleanup funds to the state in case of an accident; and one compensating the landowner in case drilling damages his property.
Folks, the time for talking about this effort has passed. It is now time to act!
Reece Gardner is the host of “The Reece Gardner Hour,” which airs on TACC-9 on Mondays at 9 p.m., Tuesdays at 8 p.m., Thursdays at 11 p.m., Sundays at 10:30 p.m.and on-demand anytime at TACC9.com. You can reach Reece at rbgej@aol.com.
Kelly: It’s strawberry picking time
Strawberry picking time is finally here, and it doesn’t get any better than getting outside and enjoying the beautiful weather while reaping these sweet treats.
These delicious berries are an excellent source of vitamin C and a good source of foliate and potassium. Strawberries are also packed with antioxidants and loaded with fiber — 3 grams per cup.
Strawberry Salad with Chicken
Dressing:
1 tablespoon sugar
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
1 tablespoon water
1/8 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
Salad:
4 cups torn romaine lettuce
4 cups arugula
2 cups quartered strawberries
1/3 cup vertically sliced red onion
12 ounces skinless, boneless rotisserie chicken breast, sliced
2 tablespoons unsalted cashews, halved
1/2 cup (2 ounces) crumbled blue cheese
Dressing: Combine first 5 ingredients in a small bowl. Gradually drizzle in oil, stirring constantly with a whisk.
Salad: Combine romaine and next 4 ingredients (through chicken) in a bowl; toss gently. Place about 2 cups chicken mixture on each of 4 plates. Top each serving with 1 1/2 teaspoons cashews and 2 tablespoons cheese. Drizzle about 4 teaspoons dressing over each serving.
Strawberry Salsa
1 cup finely chopped strawberries
1/4 cup finely chopped peeled avocado
2 tablespoons finely chopped red onion
2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro
1/2 teaspoon grated lime rind
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
2 teaspoons finely chopped seeded jalapeño pepper
1/4 teaspoon sugar
Combine all ingredients in a medium bowl; toss gently. Serve immediately. Serve this sweet and savory salsa with sautéed fish, grilled pork tenderloin, grilled chicken or even as a snack with baked chips.
Strawberry Lemon Crush
1/2 cup super fine sugar
1/2 cup fresh lemon juice
1/2 cup water
1 cup stemmed and halved strawberries
1 cup unflavored sparkling water or soda water
Cracked ice
Fresh mint sprigs, garnish
In a 2-cup measuring cup, combine the sugar, lemon juice and water, and stir to dissolve the sugar. In the bender, combine the strawberries and sweetened water. Puree on high speed until smooth. Add the sparkling water and pulse to incorporate. Taste and add more sugar if desired, and pulse to incorporate.
Place cracked ice in 2 tall Collins glasses. Pour the strawberry crush over the ice, garnish with mint sprigs, and serve.
Lightened Up Strawberry Shortcake
1 tablespoon calorie-free sweetener
1 tablespoon cornstarch
1 cup orange juice
1/4 teaspoon vanilla or almond extract
1 1/2 cups sliced fresh strawberries (about 1 pint)
6 sponge cake dessert shells (5-ounce package)
Combine sweetener and cornstarch in a small saucepan. Stir in orange juice. Bring to a boil; cook, stirring constantly, 1 minute or until mixture is thickened and bubbly. Remove from heat, and stir in extract. Cool completely.
Combine orange juice mixture and strawberries in a bowl; stir gently. Cover and chill 30 minutes.
To serve, spoon sauce over dessert shells.
This yummy sauce is also good spooned over no-sugar-added ice cream, angel food cake or fat-free pound cake.
Old Fashioned Strawberry Cake
1 (18.25-ounce) box white cake mix
1 (3-ounce) box strawberry-flavored instant gelatin
1 (15-ounce) package frozen strawberries in syrup, thawed and pureed
4 large eggs
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1/4 cup water
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly grease 2 (9-inch) round cake pans.
In a large bowl, combine cake mix and gelatin. Add pureed strawberries, eggs, oil and water. Beat at medium speed with an electric mixer until smooth. Pour into prepared pans and bake for 20 minutes, or until a wooden pick inserted in the center comes out clean.
Let cool in pans for 10 minutes. Remove from pans, and cool completely on wire racks.
Strawberry Cream Cheese Frosting
1/4 cup butter, softened
1 (8-ounce) package cream cheese, softened
1 (10-ounce) package frozen strawberries in syrup, thawed and pureed
1/2 teaspoon strawberry extract
7 cups confectioners’ sugar
Freshly sliced strawberries, for garnish, optional
In a large bowl, beat butter and cream cheese at medium speed with an electric mixer until creamy. Beat in 1/4 cup of the strawberry puree and the strawberry extract. (The rest of the puree is leftover but can be used in smoothies or on ice cream for a delicious treat.) Gradually add confectioners’ sugar, beating until smooth.
Spread frosting in between layers and on top and sides of cake. Garnish with sliced fresh strawberries, if desired.
Tammy Kelly is director, Lenoir County Cooperative Extension Center, 1791 N.C. 11/55, Kinston, NC 28504. Reach her at 252-527-2191 or Tammy_Kelly@ncsu.edu.
Godwin: Kudzu bugs are hanging out, looking for food
Kudzu bugs are responding to the warm temperatures, and activity is increasing. The bugs are looking for food sources, such as wisteria and kudzu, but there is very little foliage available. You will find the kudzu bugs congregating on light colored surfaces. They are simply hanging out rather than feeding.
Kudzu bugs are small insects (4 to 6 mm long) with mottled olive-green and brown color. They have piercing-sucking mouthparts and are considered strong flyers. Plants are damaged when the insect removes plant juices, which include nutrients and moisture from the veins.
Besides kudzu, the bugs are known to feed on soybeans, other bean species, wisteria and some vetches. In counties to our east, kudzu bugs are congregating on but not feeding on many different types of plants. Gardeners have reported thousands gathered on fig and willow trees.
Entomologists from several southern states are working together to find more detailed information about control and host plants. Kudzu bugs are producing several generations per year. In Georgia, they can complete development from egg to adult in six to eight weeks.
When temperatures warm, the strong-flying adults emerge from overwintering sites and move into kudzu or wisteria where they reproduce. The insects do reduce kudzu biomass just as they do in Asia. In the southeast, the new generation of kudzu bugs will move onto soybeans in June and July, where they can become an economic problem.
You may be tempted to use chemicals to spray the exterior of your house. Do not have high expectations of success. There is a big difference between killing individual bugs and controlling them. These bugs are a moving target searching the great outdoors for food and a place to lay eggs. Spraying large aggregations will kill a bunch, but it is not going to make them go away.
Remember, safe application of a pesticide includes making sure the product is labeled for use on the target. If spraying up over your head, do not forget to remove items such as children’s toys, pet food or water bowls. Fish ponds, grills, outdoor furniture and hard surfaces need to be avoided when pesticides are used.
Products available include bifenthrin, permethrin and lamda-cyhalothrin. Wettable powder formulations of insecticides may produce better results. Treating is difficult without the proper equipment, and care must be exercised.
Peg Godwin is horticulture agent, Lenoir County Cooperative Extension Center. Reach her at Peg_Godwin@ncsu.edu or 252-527-2191.
South Lenoir FFA team competes
Broadway and Beyond set for Friday / Names in news
Broadway and Beyond set for Friday
Lenoir Community College’s 16th annual Broadway and Beyond will be held at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Waller Building Auditorium. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m. with pre-concert entertainment provided by Timothy Maddox of the LCC Music faculty.
The show, produced and directed by LCC Music Program Chair Carolyn Crossland and co-hosted by Crossland and Rick Vernon, will feature students from L’Academie de Danse, Kinston Dance Academy and local vocal performers.
Admission is $7 at the door is $7.
Eighth Masonic District fellowship planned
Prince Hall Masons of the Eighth Masonic District will host their annual Fellowship Weekend April 26-28. The District invites all F&AM/AF&AM members to fellowship during the Third Degree Ceremonies at the House of Esther, 1401 Old Snow Hill Road. Delegates will come from the eastern seaboard (I-95 Connect) for this Masonic Fellowship Weekend.
April 26 activities include: 1 to 5 p.m., welcome visiting brothers at Holiday Inn Express, 1156 Hill Farm Road; 6 to 9 p.m., hospitality meet and greet at House of Esther; 9 p.m. to 2 a.m., fellowship gathering at the American Legion Post 219 Hut, 606 OK St., just off Highway 258 South.
April 27 activities include: High Noon Third Degree Work at House of Esther; the lodge opens at 10 a.m., receiving visitors from 10:45 to 11:45 a.m.; 9 p.m. to 2 a.m., Masonic Fellowship gathering at House of Esther. The weekend will conclude with worship services at 11 a.m. April 28 at Savannah FWB Church, 2349 Cameron Langston Road, Grifton.
Advance tickets are $10, $15 at the door, available at Tops-Bottoms-Soles, 135 N. Queen St.; Jeano’s Barber Shop, 216 N. Queen St.; and Sutton Transmission, 114 W. Blount St., all in Kinston. Proceeds will provide assistance to college scholarships. Johnnie E. Dixon is the Eighth Masonic District Deputy.
For more information, contact P.M. Demetric Raspberry, 252-521-5579; P.M. Michael Tice, 252-560-8466; W.M. Jimmy Harrison, 252-560-4522; or any Eighth Masonic District member.
Free skin screening scheduled
Lenoir Memorial Hospital and the Lenoir Memorial Foundation will sponsor a free skin cancer screening from 8 to 11 a.m. May 4 at the Lenoir Memorial Cancer Center, 703 Doctors’ Drive.
Dan M. Henshaw, M.D., and Victoria Rhodes, PA-C, of Kinston Dermatology will perform a full body screening. Limited to 40 people, the screening is open to anyone who has not attended a free skin cancer screening clinic. Sessions are at 8, 9 or 10 a.m.
Advance registration is required by calling 252-522-7014.
Twist of fate for former Kinston resident
A college student slept late.
Even at MIT, that wouldn’t be news. But on Monday, the day of the Boston Marathon bombing, sleeping late meant former Kinston resident Wegene Tadele didn’t make it to his volunteer assignment with the marathon.
Instead, the junior — studying electrical engineering and physics — went to the library to study. It was a nice day, he said — one of the few sunny days recently in the area. It was at the library that he heard the bombing.
“The campus is really quiet, now,” Tadele said in a phone interview on Tuesday. “People are really sad and shocked.”
MIT’s Green Building, facing Boston across the Charles River in Cambridge, lit up its windows in the colors of the American flag Monday night.
Tadele said it wasn’t something you’re ready for, especially with his experience with people being friendly and welcoming in Boston.
Kinston attorney Jimbo Perry, who opened his home to the Ethiopian native when Tadele was a junior at Arendell Parrott Academy, echoed the same.
“You know, being from the South, sometimes we think we have a corner, down here, on hospitality,” Perry said. “But our experience in Boston has been — you know, it is an extraordinarily friendly place, and people are so proud of their city.”
In response to the bombing, Tadele said Boston-area residents have stepped up.
“People are really hopeful and people are just helping each other, providing comfort and also accommodations to those who needed it,” Tadele said. “It’s really important that people get help, because (public) transportation halted after the explosion, because there were further suspicions that there would be bombs on (public) transportation.”
Tadele mentioned an online hub where area residents and stranded bombing victims have connected since the explosions. Writing in Slate, Will Oremus said a public Google document led to people giving of their homes, spare beds and a pet or two to play with.
By Tuesday afternoon, Oremus wrote, more than 5,500 people in the Boston area added their names and what they had to offer to the spreadsheet.
“Who knows how many people took them up on it, if any,” Oremus wrote. “Clearly the supply of generosity exceeded the demand. But that doesn’t matter. For anyone tempted to question the goodness of humanity in the wake of a very public act of pure hatred, the list is a salve in itself.”
Back in Kinston, Perry said his family was immediately concerned about Tadele’s condition. Perry said he knew the accomplished student to be punctual and socially involved and thought Tadele might be with other students, helping out at the marathon.
After four hours, the family was able to make contact. Perry said he feels blessed for Tadele’s safety, but sad for so many who, by circumstance, became victims of Monday’s attack.
Wes Wolfe can be reached at 252-559-1075 or wes.wolfe@kinston.com. Follow him on Twitter @WolfeReports.