
24 minute read
COMMUNITY INTEREST
from Dec 2020 / Jan 2021
by hmsgolf
Please Note: Summary of this information can be viewed at www.lapoaga.com • Click on LAPOA / Contact column • Click on Board Members
Secretary positions open (non-officer position) – The LAPOA Board is looking for two volunteers to assume the roles as LAPOA Board of Directors Secretaries.
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These secretary titles are Secretary & Assistant Secretary, no professional experience required.
If you are interested in volunteering please email us at lapoabdga@gmail.com with your contact information, background and committee interest.
Gail McGurk will serve as the acting secretary until volunteers are found to serve in this role.
LAPOA Community Committee Volunteer Program
– Are you interested in joining one of the abovementioned committees.

To review information on each committee, go to www.lapoaga.com • Click on Documents column • Click on Owner Document • Review section on LAPOA Community
Committee Volunteer Program
If you would like to volunteer for a committee, please email us at lapoabdga@gmail.com with your contact information, background and comminute interest.
continued...
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Mark the Dates for 2020-2021
LAPOA Board of Directors 2020 – 2021 calendar dates for monthly Board meetings at the Highlands Clubhouse is set.
Beginning Wednesday, November 18th at 4:30p.m. the LAPOA Board of Directors will meet each month. Owners are always welcome to attend these calendar, go to www.lapoaga.com bottom of the calendar:
meetings. To review our LAPOA Board Monthly Minutes, go to www.lapoaga.com • View by date We will be announcing our LAPOA Quarterly
We want to hear from you. Owners are encouraged to email the LAPOA Board at lapoabdga@gmail. com concerning agenda items an owner would like to present to us at a monthly Board meeting.
Please note. Monthly Board meeting dates are subject to change; an announcement will be made on all LAPOA Board communication sites should To view the LAPOA Board’s 2020 – 2021 entire • Click on Happening Now / Amenities • Click on Events Calendar • Two (2) options for viewing by Category at the 1. View by LAPOA – Click on the word LAPOA (LAPOA dates only) 2. View by All Categories – Click on the words All Categories (All events)
• Click on the big green button labeled Owners
Login (center & top right) • Login or create an Owners Login (if first time) • Click on the Monthly Minutes
such a date change be necessary. Property Owners meeting dates soon.
THE PRESIDENT'S VIEW OF THE LAKE
Greetings Lake Arrowhead,
It's been an exciting start to our tenure for the new LAPOAGA Board, as tropical storm Zeta came roaring into our community in late October. I want to thank everyone for their patience during a very trying event. Zeta should teach us going forward that it's important to have a plan in place. According to a few of our longtime residents, Lake Arrowhead has seen much worse with the winter storm of 1993. Remember we live in a mountain environment full of trees that can be impacted by severe weather at any time.
I want to thank all of those that participated in the 2020 LAPOAGA Board elections. Our organizational meeting took place in less than a week after the election; the Board of Directors were selected, and I drew the short straw for Board president. It's very important for members of our community to step up and serve in various roles that are available within Lake Arrowhead; it's a sign of a vibrant "can do" spirit. I believe we have a very talented group of people elected to the Board. I look forward to working together with each one of them. I also want to thank the prior Board for a very thorough turnover. I ask that you please be patient with us as we get up to speed.
John Stein LAPOA Board President
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community interestProject Lifesaver Facts A program of the No Injuries/No Deaths. 100% Success Record. Cherokee Sheriff’s Office No injuries requiring an overnight hospital stay and No deaths. Everyone wearing a Project Lifesaver bracelet was located. Average location time: 22 minutes PROJECT LIFESAVER and 96% of Project Lifesaver is provided by local civic A program of the Cherokee Sheriff’s Office and Cherokee County EMA Cherokee County EMA
95% Alzheimer's Disease wanderers and 5% special
about the Project Lifesaver Program in Cherokee County, please call
Cherokee County EMA 678-493-4033
WHAT IS PROJECT LIFESAVER?
Project Lifesaver Protects Wandering Patients and Gives Piece of Mind to Caregivers, Families and Communities.
Project Lifesaver is an innovative and rapidly growing program aiding the victims and families suffering with Alzheimer’s Disease and related disorders such as Down’s Syndrome and Autism. Project Lifesaver uses state-of-the-art technology employing wristband transmitters to locate wandering and lost adults and children.
Over 5,000,000 people in the USA have Alzheimer’s. That number will triple by 2050. Well over 50% of these people wander and become lost. A lost person with Alzheimer’s Disease or other dementia represents a critical emergency as nearly half of them will die and many can become injured or fall victim to predators if they are not located within 24 hours. The number of people, families and communities experiencing this risk will grow dramatically in this decade.
If you are not yet touched in some way by Alzheimer’s Disease or related diseases, chances are you will be within the next several years. You will find it among neighbors, your friends, coworkers and their families, and perhaps within your own family.
HOW PROJECT LIFESAVER WORKS
Project Lifesaver is much more than a passive ID bracelet. It is an active system that relies on stateof-the-art technology and a specially trained search and rescue team of professionals. People who are enrolled in the program wear a personalized bracelet that emits a tracking signal. When caregivers notify the Cherokee County E-911 Center that the person is missing, a search and rescue team responds to the wanderer’s area and starts searching with the mobile locater tracking system. Search times have been reduced from hours and days to minutes. In hundreds of searches, there have been no reported serious injuries or deaths. Recovery times average less than 30 minutes.
The Project Lifesaver bracelet is a one-ounce battery-operated radio wrist transmitter emitting an automatic tracking signal every second, 24 hours a day. The signal is tracked on the ground or in the air over several miles. As each bracelet has a unique radio frequency, the Project Lifesaver search team positively locates and identifies the person who has wandered away.
TECHNOLOGY IS ONLY HALF THE STORY
Members of the Project Lifesaver team are specially trained, not only in the use of the electronic tracking equipment, but especially in the methods to communicate with a person who has Alzheimer’s Disease or related disorders. Locating the individual is only part of the mission. The person who has been located will be disoriented, anxious, and untrusting. The Project Lifesaver team knows how to approach the person, gain their trust and put them at ease for the trip back home.
Educational and community awareness programs have been a cornerstone to Project Lifesaver’s success. The Cherokee County Project Lifesaver team members are also active in presenting information to civic groups, community clubs, and various healthcare providers throughout their communities.
HOW PROJECT LIFESAVER SAVES LIVES AND COMMUNITY RESOURCES
In Pittsylvania County, Virginia a 45 year-old man suffering from atraumatic brain injury became lost and disoriented. A deputy sheriff specially trained used the special tracking receiver and was able to locate the missing man 1.5 miles from his home within 20 minutes. A traditional search without Project Lifesaver would have normally involved the time (and expense to the tax-payers) of 9224 man hours and up to 264 searchers without the special tracking system.
In Chatham, Virginia an 80 year-old woman with Alzheimer’s Disease wandered from her home at night. The family contacted Project Lifesaver upon learning she was missing. Two Sheriff’s vehicles equipped with Project Lifesaver Emergency Responder Units arrived on the scene and within a short time located the woman lying in a tobacco field and injured. Rescuers reported that a person standing up to 10 feet away from the injured woman would not have noticed that she was lying there. The woman was helpless and could have died if not located by Project Lifesaver.
A 79 year-old man with Alzheimer’s Disease left his house in Virginia Beach driving his truck. He became lost and could not find his way back home. After searching the neighborhood, a police helicopter was called in with a Project Lifesaver team member and equipment. In just 35 minutes, the helicopter located the man using the signal transmitted from his Project Lifesaver bracelet. He was found 14 miles from his home. Before he became a part of the Project Lifesaver program, he wandered off and was missing for 2 1/2 days.
Project Lifesaver is endorsed by the National Sheriff’s Association. Hundreds of communities across the U.S. have now adopted Project Lifesaver to locate those residents who may wander away from familiar surroundings. People with Alzheimer’s Disease, Autism, Dementia, Down Syndrome, Williams Syndrome, Soto Syndrome, Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, traumatic brain injuries or other conditions that cause wandering issues are potential candidates for Project Lifesaver.
PROJECT LIFESAVER FACTS
No Injuries/No Deaths. 100% Success Record. No injuries requiring an overnight hospital stay and No deaths. Everyone wearing a Project Lifesaver bracelet was located. Average location time: 22 minutes 96% of Project Lifesaver is provided by local civic clubs and communities. Over 1,200 Wanders found to date. 95% Alzheimer's Disease wanderers and 5% special needs children.
For more information about the Project Lifesaver Program in Cherokee County, please call Cherokee County EMA 678-493-4033
READING BETWEEN THE WINES by Sarah Martin Jones The Good Lord Bird – James McBride. New York: Riverhead Books, 2013
Abolitionist John Brown and his18 followers rode into U.S history on October 16, 1859 when they took possession of a federal armory at Harpers Ferry, Virginia. Using the 100,000 muskets and rifles stored there, he planned to arm local slaves and then head south deep into pro slavery states, growing his army as more and more slaves joined his troops. In Brown’s eyes, the only way to defeat slavery was to use violence, breaking the back of its economic structure. Two days later, Brown and his men were overrun by the U.S. Marines under the command of Jeb Stuart and Robert E. Lee. Two weeks later, they were tried and sentenced to hang on December 2. When Brown was placed in his wooden casket, the rope was still around his neck.
His execution drew fiery responses from numerous prominent individuals. Henry David Thoreau called Brown “the most American of us all,” and Victor Hugo predicted his death would “open a latent fissure that will finally split the Union asunder.” Songwriter Julia Ward Howe incorporated the melody to “John Brown’s Body” when she penned the “Battle Hymn of the Republic,” equating Brown’s death to Jesus Christ with the line. “As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free.”
But who was John Brown? A crazed zealot who quoted scriptures to justify his terrorist actions in Kansas and Missouri before heading east to start a war, or a holy saint who sacrificed his life to win freedom for others? Author James McBride takes an unusual approach to profiling this man. He uses humor. Not just a snicker-here-and-there type of humor, but a slap-your-thighs, hold-your-gut, laugh-out-loud type of humor. It’s as if McBride channeled Mel Brooks (“Blazing Saddles”) and Mark Twain (“Huck Finn”) as he wrote his story.
Narrating The Good Lord Bird is a young black boy named Henry who is captured by Brown in a raid on a Kansas tavern. Because Henry is wearing a potato sack as clothing, Brown thinks he is a girl named Henrietta. But the name Brown uses most often for Henry is Onion because he eats one of Brown’s good luck charms when they first meet. (Yep, it’s crazy. Just go with it.) And the “Good Lord Bird” of the title? It’s an ivory-billed woodpecker that, according to one of Brown’s sons, will “bring you understanding that’ll last your whole life.” Understanding is what Onion seeks as he travels with Brown. As seen through Onion’s eyes, Brown is a true religious fanatic. Time after time, Onion witnesses atrocious actions by Brown and his men, the Pottawatomie Rifles. A typical greeting Brown might say to a settlement of Pro Slavers he is about to slaughter is, “I come with the Lord’s blessing to free every colored man in this territory. Any man who stands against me will eat grape and powder.”
“Whatever he believed, he believed,” says Onion. “It didn’t matter to him whether it was really true or not. He just changed the truth till it fit him. He was a real white man.”
McBride follows Brown’s journey east from Kansas, showing the reader along the way the total lawlessness of the west as each territory battles among themselves over whether to join the Union as a pro or anti slave state. Just as Huck Finn was horrified by scenes he saw while traveling down the Mississippi, Onion sees the harsh reality of Brown’s men. There is nothing heroic about them. They are simply “a ragtag assortment of fifteen of the scrawniest, bummiest, saddest-looking individuals you ever saw. We were feared,” he notes, “but the truth is, the Pottawatomie Rifles weren’t nothing but a bunch of hungry boys with big ideas running ‘round looking for boiled grits and sour bread to stuff their faces.”
One humorous detour Onion has away from Brown is when he works in a whorehouse. Still disguised as a girl, he falls in love with one of the women on the “Hot Floor” named Pie. Seeing her for the first time was like “ice cream running down my little red lane in summertime.” But just outside the house is reality. Customer’s slaves are held in a pen while their owners laugh, drink and sample the merchandise.
His sojourn in the whorehouse is partly comic relief to the story, because once Onion rejoins Brown as he heads east to Virginia, the reader knows that the laughs will be few
and far between. Yet even as the end approaches, McBride keeps his tone light, even adding a touch of wisdom, from crazed man to confused boy. “There is an eternity behind and an eternity before,” Brown says to Onion as he awaits his execution. “That little speck at the center, however long, is life. I has done what the Lord has asked me to do in the little time I had. That was my purpose.”
It takes a talented writer to tackle the slavery issue in today’s culture. McBride is that type writer, bringing a new perspective to a difficult period in American history. The known facts are in his book, yet his humor allows the reader to bridge the gap, laughing and thinking along the way.
MY WINE RECOMMENDATION Just seven miles south of Harpers Ferry is Two Twisted Posts Winery. Their Don’t Call Me a Cab cabernet sounds humorous enough to go with this book. Blended from four different grape varieties grown on this family-run estate, the wine has a sweet and spicy taste that pairs nicely with foods cooked on an outdoor grill. While John Brown was a teetotaler, Onion would certainly enjoy a glass. $25
Sarah Martin Jones is a former English teacher and author of Quicksand: A Cautionary Love Story. Her novel, Summer Squall, will be published by Sunbury Press in Fall 2019. You can reach her at sarah.gently@gmail.com and read her book and wine pairings at www.SarahJonesAuthor.com.
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Christmas Traditions

WHERE DO OUR TRADITIONS ORIGINATE?
It’s the most wonderful time of the year because Christmas season is finally here!
Every family has different Christmas traditions whether it’s going on an annual ski trip or traveling to see other family members, but some traditions are so popular they can be found in homes all across the globe. Whether it’s picking out the perfect tree to decorate with colorful lights, hanging stockings for everyone by the fire (even the pets), or placing mistletoe over the door, these traditions have been around for hundreds of years. But have you ever wondered how they started? Who came up with the idea to bring an evergreen tree into the center of the living room and decorate it with lights and ornaments?
Decorating a Christmas Tree
The pagans were the first to decorate using the evergreen tree. They thought that the darkness of winter meant the sun god was sickly and dying, so they hung evergreen tree branches all around their homes as the evergreen tree is one of the only trees that does not lose its pigment in winter. They believed the branches symbolized the coming of spring and would bring the sun god back to life. The modern Christmas tree tradition came about in Germany during the 16th century. Although not proven, the story tells that Martin Luther was walking home on a late winter night and was mesmerized by the beauty of the stars shining through the evergreen trees, so he cut a tree down, brought it home, and decorated it with lighted candles in an attempt to recreate the beauty of the stars. The tradition carried throughout Europe after this but did not reach the United States until many years later. In 1776 after Germany lost the Revolutionary War where they were allies with Great Britain, many Germans decided to settle in the United States instead of returning home, thus bringing the Christmas tree to America.

Making a Gingerbread House
Gingerbread houses date back to the 1600s, a couple of centuries after the emergence of gingerbread which originated from the ginger root in China. The idea of decorating gingerbread houses with candy and icing originates from the German fairytale of Hansel and Gretel. The story is inspired by the Great Famine (1315-1321) in which parents were forced to abandon their children because they were not able to feed them. In the story, Hansel and Gretel were thrown into the woods by their parents when they discover a gingerbread house decorated with delicious candy, after that the story gets quite dark but nonetheless it inspired what is the modern gingerbread house. Today, people decorate gingerbread houses with all kinds of colorful candies and frostings and even compete in gingerbread house making contests.
Hanging Your Stockings by the Fire
The story of the stocking starts with a widowed man who was worried about finding husbands for his three-beautiful daughters because he was dealing with money troubles. St.Nick heard of the man’s troubles but knew he would be too prideful to take money directly from him. So, late at night after the family had gone to sleep, St.Nick went down the man’s chimney and plopped sacks of gold coins in all three of the daughters stockings that were hanging by the fire to dry. The next morning, the girls were delighted to wake up to such a splendid surprise and all three daughters were wed to the men of their dreams. For the years to come, children would try to find the biggest socks to hang by the fire hoping it would mean they would receive more presents on Christmas morning. Today, stockings come in many different shapes, patterns, and styles, yet waking up to a stocking stuffed with goodies is still one of the most anticipated parts of Christmas morning.
Kissing Under the Mistletoe
The mistletoe plant is actually considered to be a parasite which leads one to wonder how it ever could have evolved into a symbol of love? The mistletoe tradition originates from a myth in Norse mythology. Loki, the god of mischief, created an arrow made with the branch of a mistletoe tree, and killed Frigga, the goddess of love’s son. Frigga was able to bring her son back to life under a mistletoe tree and declared that mistletoe from now on would be a sign of love. However, the tradition of kissing under the mistletoe did not popularize itself until the 18th century with servants in England. The tradition originally was that every time a couple kissed they would pick a berry off the mistletoe and once all of the berries have been picked off there is no more kissing.
As silly as some of these traditions may seem, it’s hard to imagine the holidays without them. Traditions carry importance because they create memories and give us something familiar to look forward to as the holidays approach. Whether you adhere to old traditions or create your own original traditions, once embedded they will become part of your family tree, to be passed on and cherished for generations to come.
Article by Mary Rose Provence. I am a current senior at the University of Georgia studying the field of Advertising with the pursuit of a Master’s in Journalism. Contact me at mrprovence@gmail.com.
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PAGE 30 | DECEMBER 2020 // JANUARY 2021 Horizon at Laurel Canyon 770-704-7776 Home Exterior Makeover 770-529-0330 Exovations-Home Exterior Makeover
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Real EstateRestaurants
678-297-2811 Atlanta Communities-Jennifer and Associates Luna Maya 770-529-7780770-720-4999 Berkshire Hathaway Home Services-Blumer Retaining Walls 678-858-4927 770-790-0000 Coldwell Banker-Sherry Warner Ben Hopkins LLC 404-784-8848770-893-8986 Compass Realty-Gipson and Co. Retirement Community 404-405-5363 470-282-5225 Compass Realty-Natalie Gregory Team Soleil Laurel Canyon 404-373-0076678-880-3071 Cory & Co. Realty Roofing 404-564-5561 770-713-3894 Harry Norman Realtors-Pam Hughes Aspen Contracting 404-626-3604877-784-7663 Earthly Matters Painting and Contracting 770-346-0203 678-329-3100 Exovations-Roofing Generation Contracting DBA Generation 770-205-2955 770-733-3517 770-389-2000 Roofing Co. Schools-Private McGinnis Woods Country Day School 770-664-7764 The Friends School of Atlanta 404-373-8746 678-880-1156 Siding Exovations-Siding 770-205-2995 770-441-1681 Painting Plus - Siding 404-474-3464
Tree Service
706-301-8176 The Davey Tree Expert Company 770-451-7911
Water Heaters
404-382-9988 Serv'all Plumbing-Water Heaters 770-917-1852
Window Cleaning
678-584-0880 Squeegee Clean 770-924-9173
Window Replacement
404-325-8000 Exovations-Window Replacements 770-205-2995
106 DIANE COURT WALESKA, GA 30183
201 CHEROKEE DR S $350,000 SOLD 224 NARROWS DRIVE $172,000 SOLD 110 GREY EAGLE DR $280,800 SOLD 101 SMOHALLA CT $160,000 SOLD 106 OSAGE COURT $28,000
“EXPERIENCED/DEDICATED/SUCCESSFUL” LAKE ARROWHEAD MARKET EXPERTS with NATIONAL EXPOSURE
