Mr.
Lamm's son Mickey
(left), daughter Linda
Carroll, and son Travis
were on hand for the
unveiling of the
highway's signage at a
ceremony held this week.
Four
miles of I-95 is now the
"Carl Lamm Highway"
The
naming – requested by the
Smithfield Town Council
and other local officials,
and recently ratified by
the N.C. Board of
Transportation – was
celebrated Tuesday
afternoon during a
gathering of family and
friends inside the last
home base of Carl Lamm's
radio station beside US
301 between Four Oaks and
Smithfield.
Mr.
Lamm was a legendary
broadcaster whose
72-year career lasted
from 1958 until his
retirement in 2019. He
owned and operated
radio stations WMPM and
WTSB during most of
those years. He died
in August at the age
of 97.
Among those invited by
the family to pay
tribute to Mr. Lamm at
Tuesday's gathering
were State
Representative Donna
White, County Manager
Rick Hester, Sheriff
Steve Bizzell, mayors
Vick Medlin of Four
Oaks and Andy Moore of
Smithfield, Board of
Transportation member
Leo Daughtry of
Smithfield, and
Country Music
singer-songwriter and
retired state
legislator Charlie
Albertson of Duplin
County.
The four-mile stretch
of I-95 bearing Carl
Lamm's name extends
from mile marker 88
outside Four Oaks (shown
below) to
marker 92 beside
Wal-Pat Road in
Smithfield. Mr. Lamm
resided within a
stone's throw of the
Interstate near Four
Oaks.
Another
highway-naming
tribute: the "Tony
Braswell Bridge"
NCDOT recently named the bridge at the Peedin Street Extension over US 70 south of Pine Level in memory of County Commissioner Tony Braswell, a nearby resident who died in office March 9 at the age of 79. He had served 18 years on the county board. Previously he served terms as Pine Level's mayor and town commissioner.
NCDOT photo of the Tony Braswell Bridge looks westward above four-lane US 70, with two-lane US 70 Business headed toward Smithfield visible upper left:
School
board defers calendar
decision till February
Johnston's
Board of Education will
wait until its February 9
meeting to decide on a
calendar for the 2025-26
year. Chief Academic
Officer Anna Kuykendal
told the board Tuesday
that the school system's
Calendar Committee will
reconvene in early January
to explore options. Public
feedback will also be
sought, she added.
A return to that process
was prompted by the
board's decision last
month to rescind a
"modified year-round"
calendar that would have
started classes in early
August. The board's legal
counsel had ruled it to be
in violation of a state
law prohibiting most
schools from opening
earlier than the Monday
closest to August 26 each
year.
The choice now before the
board is whether to
continue the present
"modified" calendar that
shortens the first
semester ending the fall
term before Christmas or
return to a "traditional"
calendar extending the
first term into January.
Whichever is chosen, the
earliest Johnston's
schools may open for the
2025-26 year is Monday,
August 25.
Lyn
Andrews re-elected as
board's presiding
officer
The
vote was 5-2 with members
Michelle Antoine and
Ronald Johnson dissenting.
They're seated on the far
left and far right in this
screenshot from Tuesday's
meeting. Other members of
the reconstituted board
following November's
election: (left to
right) Kay Carroll,
Kevin Donovan (seated next
to Superintendent Eric
Bracy), Chair Lyn Andrews,
re-elected Vice Chair
Terry Tippett, and April
Lee, the only newcomer on
the board.
Board
urged to keep Innovation
Academy in place
During
last month's "Public
Comment" segment and again
on Tuesday, the board
heard from several parents
and students objecting to
a possible relocation of
the Innovation Academy
presently housed at
Smithfield's South Campus.
Apparently under
consideration is a
proposal to move the
selective program to some
other campus to make room
for the Choice Plus
Academy presently housed
on the former Smithfield
Elementary campus on Rose
Street.
The Innovation Academy is
described as "a choice
middle school" open to
students throughout
Johnston County,
especially "first-generation college students, under-represented minorities, or those seeking a different learning experience."
Choice Plus is a program for students of all ages deemed by school officials to be in need of an alternative learning environment.
The Board of Education has not discussed the relocation issue at any of its recent monthly business sessions.
Business
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Keeney |
DA
says policeman acted
with "reasonable" force
District
Attorney Susan Boyle's
office announced last week
that a white Smithfield
police officer was
justified in his use of
force during the arrest of
a black suspect in the
Amazon parking lot on
October 18.
The incident, shared
through a bystander's
video on social media,
drew heated comments from
Councilmen Marlon Lee and
Travis Scott at a town
board meeting November 12.
The two called for greater
transparency by the town's
staff regarding the
incident, with Mr. Lee
saying he would vote to
fire both the town manager
and the chief of police if
given the chance.
READ a news
story including details
of the DA's findings in
the JoCo Report>
The
choir's members were
photographed at the
concert hall's entrance by
an accommodating tourist:
(left to right) Curtis
Brookshire, Jacob Hand,
David Wiley, Darla Hamm,
Todd Johnson, Joyce
Kilpatrick-Jordan, Donna
Johnson, Sharon Burford,
Theressa Rose, Kay Hewitt,
and Jenny Quinn.
St.
Paul's choir performed in
NYC's Carnegie Hall
Choir's
director called it "a
mountain-top experience"
Eleven
members of the choir from
Smithfield's St. Paul's
Episcopal Church joined a
mass choir for a sold-out
performance in New York
City's famous Carnegie
Hall Thanksgiving weekend.
Accompanying the choir was
a local delegation of 15
from St. Paul's
congregation, including
spouses of the singers.
Todd Johnson, the choir's
director, explained how
the performance came to
be:
"In 2019, when I was music
director at Benson Baptist
Church, I received a
letter from Distinguished
Concerts International-New
York inviting my choir to
audition for a Carnegie
Hall concert, conducted by
composer Joseph Martin. We
had presented one
of Mr. Martin's
Christmas musicals and
somehow made it on the
publisher's list of
prospective performers.
"We sent in a video
and were accepted
into Martin's
280-member choir. Of
course, there was a fee
just shy of $1,000 per
person to cover
production costs, but it
turned out to be a great
experience.
"When I became music
director for St. Paul's in
the fall of 2023, I asked
the choir if they would be
interested in singing with
a mass choir on the stage
of Carnegie Hall, and the
response was a resounding
'Yes!' We settled on doing
Handel's Messiah on
December 1. Since I had a
track record with DCINY,
they accepted us without
an audition.
"We held two fund-raising
dinners, which included
mini-concerts by pianists
Ella Ann Holding and
Jonathan Levin. Members of
the congregation also
contributed generously to
make this experience
possible."
Mr.
Johnson said the ensemble
traveled
to NYC on Thanksgiving Day
and had two intensive
half-day rehearsals – on
Friday and Saturday at a
Times Square hotel. "Then
we rehearsed with the
35-piece orchestra at
Carnegie prior to the
concert on Sunday," he
said. "By Saturday tickets
were sold out."
The mass choir – including
choral groups from several
states plus youth choirs
from Austria and Canada –
performed the Christmas
portion of The
Messiah as well as
its "Hallelujah Chorus"
and "Worthy is the Lamb."
"The
work we did with Dr.
Jonathan Griffith, our
conductor, took us to a
new level musically, and
the concert itself was
truly a mountain-top
experience that we will
cherish for years to
come," Mr. Johnson
concluded.
Here's
a photograph of the mass
choir and orchestra on
stage in Carnegie Hall:
By a single digit, SSS sent to higher
athletic group
The
N.C. High School Athletic
Association is expanding
from four to eight
classifications for
interscholastic
competition starting next
school year. Based on last
year's enrollment,
Smithfield-Selma High
School has been
reclassified upward.
In fact,
SSS has the smallest
enrollment of any school
in the new 7-A
classification: 1,617. The
largest school in the 6-A
group has 1,616 students
and includes West Johnston
High (1,614) and South
Johnston High (1,335).
SSS joins Clayton High
(1,983 students) and
Cleveland High (1,941) in
the 7-A group. Presently
SSS is a 3-A school while
Clayton and Cleveland are
4-A, the state's highest
classification up till
now. Corinth Holders High
(2,253 students) is in the
new 8-A group that
includes school
enrollments as high as
3,300.
North Johnston High (823)
is in the new 4-A group,
Princeton High (602) is
assigned to 3-A, American
Leadership Academy
Johnston (505) is in the
2-A group, and Neuse
Charter School (232
students) remains
classified 1-A.
The coming realignment
will produce changes in
conference affiliations.
Presently, SSS competes in
the Quad County 3-A
Conference along with
South Johnston and West
Johnston while North
Johnston and Princeton
compete in a 2-A league.
A new Johnston County
Public Schools policy,
meanwhile, bars students
enrolled in alternative
academic programs
including the Career and
Technical Leadership
Academy and Johnston's
Virtual Academy from
participating in
interscholastic athletics
at their district's high
school.
Up till now, that has been
allowed. But that changed
over the summer as school
leaders feared the
specialty-school athletes
could inflate a high
school's enrollment enough
to push it into a higher
sports classification and
thereby reduce the
school's competitiveness.
Several students appeared
before Johnston's school
board on Tuesday pleading
for a waiver of the new
rule for specialty-school
students who've previously
been competing on local
high-school teams. The
board did not respond.
WHAT'S COMING
UP
Smithfield's Christmas parade starts
at 7 p.m. this evening
The
procession moves westward
on Market Street from
Sixth to Second streets.
Beginning at 6 p.m. you
may partake of free hot
chocolate and cookies
while supplies last at
Town Hall on the corner of
Fourth and Market. Santa's
Workshop on the Courthouse
lawn beside Third Street
will be open from 4 to 6
p.m.
Town
Council faces two
Waddell Drive townhouse
requests
The
Smithfield Town Council at
its regular second-monthly
meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday
at Town Hall will consider
two requests for townhouse
projects off North
Smithfield's Waddell
Drive: one for 17 units
discussed at a public
hearing last month, the
other for 16 units that
will be addressed during a
new public hearing.
VIEW the
complete agenda for
Tuesday's council
session>
EXQUISITE
HOME FOR SALE IN
SOUTH SMITHFIELD
515
Rosewood Drive: 4
bedrooms, 3.5 baths,
1.2-acre landscaped lot.
Picturesque
French Country
custom-built home on
very private lot.
1st floor primary
bedroom suite. Hardwoods
throughout most of home.
Formal living &
dining rooms. Large
family room with gas log
fireplace.
Fantastic kitchen with
stainless steel
appliances and granite
counters.
Brick patios, porches,
walks, 2-car garage. $820,000
(MLS#10063083)
SUSAN
LASSITER, FONVILLE
MORISEY REALTY,
919-669-9235
DEATHS
& FUNERALS
A
WORD (OR TWO) FROM THE
EDITOR
The
heat's on in Johnston,
and that's a good thing!
Wake
County has seen a rash of
school closings in recent
weeks because the heat
wasn't working. That's not
happening in Johnston
County's public schools.
The reason appears to be
this county's sterling
stewardship of public
funding coupled with our
school system's pro-active
maintenance team.
Over the past year,
especially, we've reported
contract after contract
for replacement of aging
HVAC systems at many of
Johnston's schools. A
large portion of those
projects were done with
federal ARPA money
allotted to this county
under the American Rescue
Plan Act – a key element
in federal relief to
combat the COVID pandemic.
(Does anyone remember, now
that it's behind us?)
The never-ending challenge
to keep our public schools
in good working order will
continue with funding
included in that
$120-million school-bond
issue Johnston's voters
approved last month.
Several of the projects to
be financed are for HVAC
overhauls at elementary
schools including South
Smithfield. (HVAC, by the
way, stands for Heating,
Ventilation, and Air
Conditioning).
Some of us older folks can
remember when students
were sent home from school
in late summer because of
overheated
classrooms that weren't
air-conditioned. We've
come a long way from those
days, thank goodness.
Johnston
County's economic
success story
Business
North Carolina
magazine has a "sponsored
section" in its December
edition that offers an
overview of our county's
recent progress in
economic development. You can read
all about it on the
magazine's website>
Subscribers
to this edition: 1,576
MISS
A PREVIOUS EDITION?
You'll find
it in the Weekly
Sun archives>
the SMITHFIELD
WEEKLY SUN
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