The Daily Southerner, Tarboro, NC

Editorials

March 19, 2012

Yep, the Bradford pears are in full bloom, too!

TARBORO — I really do know the difference between  a dogwood and a Bradford pear, but apparently had my train of thought broken while reading an online news story from a Mississippi newspaper that was talking about the dogwood’s already being in bloom.

Despite all of the long-range forecasts pitching nothing worse than a couple of nights down into the lower 40s, I always think of an admonition shared annually by my Mom and Dad.

It’s a simple enough warning: Beware an Easter freeze!

Dad farmed by the signs of Mother Nature. He watched the clouds and would point out the mare’s tail to me and tell me what that meant, as well as other types. He also paid attention to the moon and what would be happening, such as the it holding water and pouring water.

Dad also watched the skies in the morning and repeated “Red sky in morning, sailor take warning” and “Red sky at night, sailor’s delight.”

I must have been in the second or third grade, because my sister had not yet gone off to college at Millsaps, when Daddy took me to school in his gray, Chevrolet Apache pick-up. I remember him saying that if the weather got bad, to watch out for he or Mom ... that it was a red sky that morning and things felt “funny.”

By midday, things had gone to heck in a handbasket and they were there to get both Sarah and me and head back out into the country, where we lived.

It was a horribly hot day, about this time of the year, and as the day grew older, the storms grew more menacing.

And keep in mind, if you will, that these were the days when the weathermen — we relied on Woodie Assaf from WLBT in Jackson — marked their weather maps with chalk.

There was no doppler and no instant notification on your not-yet-invented cell phone and not-yet-invented weather radio.

I remember being scared that night as we went on the back porch of that old house, hunkering in a corner between a Philco chest freezer and the wall, as if that would really protect us if a huge old oak by the side of the house decided to come crashing down.

I realize those things today, as an adult, but not then. I don’t know if my sister did, either, although we’ve sense talked about it as our parents sought to protect us as best they could.

After it seemed as if the worst of the storms had passed, Daddy wanted to go into town to see if anybody knew anything, so we all piled in the front seat of that pickup and left the car parked.

We headed east on Mississippi 14 and as we turned south on US 49 to head the last mile or so into Louise, the sky lit up with some of the brightest lightning I’ve ever seen. Off to our southeast, you could see funnel clouds dancing from the sky.

There were no injuries in Louise that night, but there were a lot of nervous folks who watched the skies long after their children had finally gone to sleep.

I’ll always remember that day, when the skies started out red and there was a funny feel to the air and Daddy wound up having a reason to be worried.

That's one of the reasons I still think about Easter freezes.

•   •   •

There are a few things worth noting this week and, while we have them elsewhere in the newspaper, I’ll plug them again:

• Turning in prescription drugs that are no longer used at both Bryan Drugs and Thorne Drugs on Saturday, as part of Operation Medicine Drop.

This is the third year for the AG’s office, the SBI, local law enforcement agencies, Safe Kids North Carolina, the U.S. DEA and local pharmacies are teaming up to sponsor take-back events across during National Poison Prevention Week.

Both stores will be accepting drugs beginning at 10 a.m. Bryan will take the drugs until 1 p.m. and Thorne until 2 p.m.

• Several Relay for Life-related activities are on tap this week, beginning with a team captain meeting at 6:30 today in Room 152 at ECC.

Also on tap is a Survivor’s Social in the Atrium at ECC at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and on Saturday and Sunday, we’ll be painting the county purple with the Purple Bow Blitz.

• The 11th Annual TASS Shad Tournament is under way through Saturday and, while these folks have a lot of fun fishing, they also do a lot in the community — such as provide the lead scholarship for the Edgecombe County DYW program.

•   •   •

And what’s up with your Daily Southerner:

Friday, we began ‘We Salute,” an editorial saluting those individuals and groups who do good things.

It’s a way of offering an extra pat on the bat to someone who did well.

Thanks for reading!



(John H. Walker is editor and publisher of The Daily Southerner and may be reached at 823-3106 or jwalker@dailysoutherner.com)

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Editorials
  • Spring and snow just don’t go together

    A check of the calendar tells us that spring arrived last Thursday while my memory reminds me we saw snow flakes flying by in that March wind throughout much of the day.
    With Easter this coming Sunday, I’m reminded of a wet Good Friday snow in West Texas that brought anywhere from six inches in Big Spring to 18 inches in Sweetwater on April 5, 1996.
    The wind that day was straight off the Polar ice cap and the snow was horizontal much of the time. In fact,the wind compacted the snow so much that it was more that six inches thick on the sides of utility poles in front of the Big Spring Herald.
    On Saturday, it was almost completely gone.
    Mom and Dad always warned of an Easter freeze and the weather this year seems conducive to such a phenomena of Mother Nature.

    March 25, 2013

  • Why is there no answer to the question ‘why?’

    Stephanie and I have two grandsons, 7-year-old Alex and 5-year-old Dominick, and every word we’ve heard come out of the mouths of those young survivors at Sandy Hook Elementary School has hit us like a sledgehammer.

    December 17, 2012

  • On dealing with humanity

    I’m probably not much different from any other grandparent.
    As we heard the story Monday morning about the 2-year-old who was treated just about every way but humanely last weekend, we started trying to track the story down.

    November 12, 2012

  • Remember all history, good and bad

    As we maneuver the ins and outs of life, we develop connectors to link with the timeline of events stored in the recesses of our brain.
    On Saturday, Sept. 29, Mom, Daddy and I were in Mississippi Memorial Stadium looking on as Coach Johnny Vaught’s Ole Miss Rebels beat the Kentucky, 16-0.

    October 3, 2012

  • Sharing random thoughts

    Now that the Olympics are over, what did you think about some of the events?
    Come on. How can baseball no longer be an Olympic sport but advanced gymnastic ribbon twirling can get you a gold medal?
    Who won the ribbon twirling, anyway?
    But talking about the Olympics, how about those two women’s relay teams —he 4x100 and 4x400? What a show they put on!

    August 20, 2012

  • Football Fridays not just about game on field

    This is the week when it’s time for local schools to be ready, as Friday night signals the start of the 2013 high school football season.
    But it’s not just about the game.

    August 13, 2012

  • News with color not part of paper’s DNA

    Once upon a time, I had a publisher whose seem to think that a day in which at least one hour wasn’t wasted in meetings was, well, a waste.
    I don’t like meetings ... especially those that drone on and on and on when one of the participants wastes everyone else’s time asking questions after the fact when it would have been easier for them to have done their homework.

    August 13, 2012

  • Olympics: It’s hard to not be jingoistic

    Sitting in from of the television, it’s hard not to be jingoistic when you see some young American on the top step of the Olympics award stand, gold medal around their neck and hand over their heart as they sing the Star Spangled Banner.

    August 6, 2012

  • Princeville administration claims conspiracy against its efforts

    To the Editor:
    These are the people who are against our Administration and their negative efforts affect everybody in Princeville since the beginning of this Administration in 2010:
    • Former Mayor Delia Perkins
    • Commissioner Ann Howell
    • Commissioner Gwendolyn Knight
    • Former Commissioner Ann Carney Adams
    • Former Commissioner Carolyn Sharpe
    • Newspaper Reporter, Calvin Adkins
    • County Commissioner Viola Harris

    July 13, 2012

  • Heat offers opportunities

    I’m thankful I don’t have t toil outside for a living, as do many people.
    I’ve always been one to take care of my own yard, yet Saturday, we paid Tom Williams to cut the grass.

    July 9, 2012

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