july 20, 2012 spartanburg journal

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Spartanburg, S.C. Friday, July 20, 2012 • Vol.8, No.29 SPARTANBURG JOURNAL BENJAMIN BUSCH: Actor and author brings military memoir to Hub City. PAGE 19 CHARLES LEA CENTER: Funding in peril after budget veto. PAGE 9 GRAZING IN THE GRASS ON WALKER FARM PAGE 15 KUYKENDALL TWINS READY TO WELCOME MOM HOME FROM HOSPITAL PAGE 12 L for Hundreds of foster children in the Upstate are awaiting adoption . PAGE 8

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Weekly newspaper for Spartanburg, South Carolina. Published by Community Journals.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

Spartanburg, S.C. • Friday, July 20, 2012 • Vol.8, No.29SPARTANBURGJOURNALJOURNAL

BENJAMIN BUSCH: Actor and author brings military

memoir to Hub City. PAGE 19

CHARLES LEA CENTER: Funding in peril after budget veto. PAGE 9

GRAZING IN THE GRASS ON WALKER FARM PAGE 15

KUYKENDALL TWINS READY TO WELCOME MOM HOME FROM HOSPITALPAGE 12

L for Hundreds of foster children in the Upstate are awaiting adoption. PAGE 8

Page 2: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

2 SPARTANBURG JoURNAl | JULY 20, 2012

JoURNAl commUNiTy

locally owned and operated since 1999For delivery requests, call 679-1240

Publisher Mark B. Johnston

[email protected] editor/editorial Page

Susan Clary [email protected]

assistant editor/staFF writer Jerry Salley

[email protected]

staFF writers Cindy Landrum

[email protected] April A. Morris

[email protected] Charles Sowell

[email protected]

contributing writer Dick Hughes

[email protected]

PhotograPher Greg Beckner

[email protected]

news layout Sally Boman Tammy Smith

Production Manager Holly Hardin

client services Managers Anita Harley Jane Rogers

billing inquiries Shannon Rochester

circulation Manager David M. Robinson

Marketing rePresentatives Mary Beth Culbertson Kristi Jennings

Donna Johnston Pam Putmansales associate

Katherine ElrodcoMMunity sPonsorshiPs

and event Marketing Kate Banner

senior vice President Alan P. Martin

[email protected]

148 river st, suite 120 greenville, sc 29601

Phone: 864-699-4348, Fax: 864-467-9809 thesPartanburgjournal.coM

© Spartanburg Journal published by Community Journals LLC. All rights reserved. All property rights for the entire contents of this publication shall be the property of Spartanburg Journal, no part therefore may be reproduced without prior written consent.

SpartanbUrg JoUrnaL

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The Chapman Cultural Center is honored to be the only South Carolina host site for the National Heart Gallery Exhibit, a collection of 48 giant photos of foster children from every state, who need forever homes. Please join us for a very special free and public reception on Thursday, July 19, 6-9 p.m. Help us welcome special guests and speakers Gov. Nikki Haley and her husband, the First Gentleman Michael Haley, who was a foster and adopted child.

Viewing Mon-Sat, 10-5, free, till Aug. 24

542-ARTS

Poster KidsOctavia, Dashon, Javan & KeyonnaSouth Carolina foster children in need of a forever home.

6 x 4-foot photo byCatherine Tolbert

When you are done reading this paper, please recycle it.

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Page 3: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

JULY 20, 2012 | SPARTANBURG JoURNAl 3

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timing is everythingWaiting for weeks to see your internist is

frustrating. Rifat Hassan, M.D., keeps a

flexible schedule so that she is available for

same-week appointments. She is accepting

new patients and is especially interested

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II diabetes, high blood pressure, high

cholesterol and COPD.

Dr. Hassan received her medical degree

from the Government Medical College in

Srinagar, India. She completed her internship

at the University of Toledo Medical Center where she also completed

her residency in internal medicine. Dr. Hassan speaks Hindi and Urdu, in

addition to English.

For more information, visit spartanburgregional.com/physicians.

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“ ‘Amazing Grace’ is one of the songs I remember that was sung in the fields.

I just loved to listen to that singing. Singing was the only thing about the

fields that I loved.” Leather artist Winfred Rembert, on memories of

his childhood days picking cotton in Georgia.

“When I first saw them, I said, ‘I like these cows.’ ”Nancy Walker, on the decision to start

a herd of Devon cattle at Walker Century Farms.

“I understand the governor’s stance on private nonprofits, but I don’t think that addresses the reality of the situation we have in this state.”

Gerald Bernard, Charles Lea Center executive director, on Gov. Haley’s veto of funding intended to reduce the 300-person waiting list at Lea Center.

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Page 4: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

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Work to expand the Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport con-courses will begin in late July or early August, the first terminal work in the airport’s $115 million renovation.

Construction has already begun on the airport’s new rental car customer center in Garage A, but that work has gone mostly unnoticed by the majority of the airport’s passengers.

The terminal renovation work is ex-pected to take 48 months.

The airport unveiled a new website Wednesday, www.elevatingtheupstate.com, that will serve as an information hub about construction for travelers and Upstate residents as well as high-light key aspects of the program.

GSP President and CEO Dave Edwards said the program would make GSP one of the most efficient airports of its size.

“To maintain efficiency while the program is underway, communication is critical,” he said.

The terminal improvement program – which will have three phases – will modern-ize and expand the terminal building, im-prove traffic flow and upgrade the facility.

“We’re not trying to be Atlanta or Charlotte,” said Kevin Howell, the air-port’s deputy director. “We want that small feel and to be customer-centric. People don’t want us to mess up the

easy-in, easy-out of GSP.”Either later this month or in early Au-

gust, workers will begin construction on expanded restaurant space and rest-rooms for Concourse A and B. The ticket counter will be moved to a portion of the terminal’s north wing this summer and utilities will be relocated. That work is expected to be complete in fall 2013.

The second part of Phase 1 will focus on the baggage claim area. The work will include new baggage carousels, a curbside canopy and covered walkway to Garage A, a glass facade on the front of the termi-nal and a new concessions area for people who are dropping off and picking up pas-sengers and can’t get past screening.

Those renovations will begin as soon as the rental car area in the garage is complete, probably the end of 2013, officials said.

Phase 2 will begin in early 2014 and includes the airport’s in-line automated screening, a “grand hall” space facing the garden in the post-screening area, continuation of the glass facade and canopy, a new landside garden near the flagpole for those who will not have ac-cess to the runway garden and new fin-ishings for the concourses.

Phase 3 will wrap up the project, Howell said. By that time, all of the air-lines will have been moved to their new ticket counter space and a public con-ference room will be built on the first floor. New administrative offices will be built on the second floor.

Howell said workers would do as much of the construction at night as they can to minimize impact to passengers.

Airport officials are encouraging pas-sengers to reserve their parking spaces online.They said passengers should get to the airport within the Trans-

GSP concourse expansion work to begin by AugustNew website will provide information to travelers

during duration of 48-month project

By Cindy Landrum | staff

A rendering shows planned improvements to a terminal at Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport.

Page 5: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

JULY 20, 2012 | SPARTANBURG JOURNAL 5

JOURNAL COMMUNITY

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portation Security Administration’s guidelines.

“Shaving any time o� the 1.5 hours is not a good idea today and it will be less of a good idea a year from now,” said GSP spokeswoman Rosylin Weston.

� e airport is calling its terminal im-provement project Wingspan. Informa-tion on the project is also available on the airport’s blog, regular website and social media platforms such as Facebook.

Skanska Moss, a joint venture between Skanska USA Building and local contrac-tor Moss & Associates, is the project’s con-struction manager at-risk. Local subcon-tractors are being sought to work on the project. Howell said breaking the program into smaller projects would allow more of them to participate.

“We are embarking on the most substan-tial wave of renovations in GSP’s history,” said Airport Commission Chairwoman Minor Shaw. “� e terminal improvement program will accomplish needed renovations to the airport while keeping the authenticity and community feel that everyone in the Upstate has grown to love.”

� e terminal renovation should be completed in 2016.

Contact Cindy Landrum at [email protected].

Justin A. Converse and Stewart H. Johnson of Spartanburg were named to the Wo� ord College board of trust-ees during the annual conference of the United Methodist Church held last month in Orangeburg.

Converse, who graduated in 1996, and Johnson, a 1967 graduate, were named to replace R. Michael James, whose term has expired a� er three four-year stints, and Frederick D. Gibbs, who resigned from the board several months ago. Converse and Johnson will serve four-year terms.

Re-elected to new terms were: the Rev. B. Mike Alexander, Dr. James E. Bostic, J. Harold Chandler, Jimmy I. Gibbs, Laura J. Hoy, L. Leon Patterson and J. Edwin Reeves Jr.

At the May board meeting, Chandler was voted in as chairman for the 2012-2013 school year. James M. Johnson, C. Michael Smith and John B. White Jr. were named vice chairmen.

Converse is chairman and CEO of Converse & Co. Inc.-Converse Resource Group. He has served on the Wo� ord President’s Advisory Board and is in-volved with the Terrier Club.

He is a trustee for Spartanburg Day School and a former trustee at Spartan-burg Methodist College. He is a member of the Young President’s Organization’s Southern Seven and serves as a director for the South Carolina Golf Association.

Johnson is chairman of the board of Morgan Corp. He and his wife, Ann Cobb Johnson, have been longtime Wo� ord sup-porters, sponsoring the Terrier Ball for the past 13 years and providing scholar-ship and endowed professorship funding. � ey also recently donated trees for plant-ings around the Wo� ord football parking area. Johnson is a member of the Episcopal Church of the Advent, where he serves on the Vestry. Mrs. Johnson is a former mem-ber of the Wo� ord Board of Trustees.

Contact Charles Sowell at [email protected].

Converse, Johnson named to Wofford boardBy CHARLES SOWELL | staff

Page 6: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

6 SPARTANBURG JOURNAL | JULY 20, 2012

JOURNAL COMMUNITY

OPINIONVOICES FROM YOUR COMMUNITY, HEARD HERE

FROM THE EDITORIAL DESK

Deny cafes a toehold � e city of Spartanburg has set the example for other Upstate local govern-

ments in refusing to grant the smallest toehold to Internet sweepstakes cafes, the latest stealth attack by a powerful gaming industry determined to entrench video poker in the Palmetto State again.

� e Spartanburg council is using emergency moratoriums to deny business licenses and rezoning requests to cafes peddling electronic games South Caro-lina’s top law enforcement o� cials insist are video poker by another name.

Although defenders claim the games are equal to fast-food promotions that include game pieces with food and drink purchases, the state attorney general’s o� ce says the electronic machines are gambling devices and “illegal per se,” spokesman Mark Plowden told the Journal.

It is immaterial that players buy a phone card or Internet time � rst: � ey are playing Vegas-style games of chance on computer screens, and any prizes won can be claimed on the spot in cash or saved as points for future games. As Plowden said, a pig smeared with lipstick is still a pig.

� e games’ proponents are using the same tactics that entrenched video poker so deeply in South Carolina two decades ago: � ey open new cafes as soon as old ones are shut down, relying on con� icting rulings from impressionable magis-trates and the protection of senators willing to kill any limiting legislation.

� is year’s bodyguards were Sens. Robert Ford and Jake Knotts, who killed a House bill shepherded by Rep. Phyllis Henderson that clari� ed the new games as illegal. Two decades ago the industry pawn was Sen. Jack Lindsey, now deceased, who slipped one sentence into a complicated law that his colleagues failed to catch.

� at sentence allowed video poker machines to give payouts – and the game grew from a smattering of machines to a $3 billion-a-year predator that took a decade to kill. � e industry barons were so powerful they took out a governor and spent millions thwarting law enforcement in the courts and trying to buy a Legislature that would bend to their will. Foiling them took the combined cun-ning and courage of South Carolina’s canniest minds in the General Assembly and Supreme Court.

Now, in today’s echo chamber, local governments are forced to mount piece-meal resistance while Henderson and Sen. Larry Martin, the dead bill’s cham-pion on the Senate side, gird to � ght again next year.

Like Spartanburg, Sumter County and the city of Columbia are using their regulatory powers to banish the cafes outright. Irmo Town Council chose to play into the industry’s hands instead, with a $500-per-machine fee – paltry change to a $3 billion-a-year predator that knows cash-strapped governments grow ad-dicted to fees.

In Greenville County, where the cafes are popping up with increasing speed, Sheri� Steve Lo� is is gathering ammunition for a County Council work session on the proliferation in August. Greenville Mayor Knox White told the Journal he is unaware of any cafes operating within the city and “right now we have no plans to enact any ordinances on the subject.”

� at’s a “see no evil” attitude the city needs to change. Spartanburg sets the wiser example, choosing to “act proactively to keep these machines from becom-ing entrenched,” as city spokesman Will Rothschild said.

South Carolina history is proof enough that rooting the gambling barons out is far harder than preventing their arrival in the � rst place.

� e temperature has been steadi-ly above 90 degrees for more than a month. Everyone is at the beach or on vacation. � ings are just slow.

Is that being said in your office? Is it said every year around this time? The middle of South Carolina sum-mer takes hold like a kudzu vine when it comes to wanting to be idle in businesses. People take the slow time and simply accentuate it. There are distractions galore, and the heat is brutal even if you aren’t a damn Yankee like I am.

So what should you do to get out of the summer doldrums when busi-ness gets slow? Reenergize. Do. Create. � ink. Work.

Call up a potential client or busi-ness partner and get co� ee or lunch. Reenergize that relationship. Engage new people by networking – and not just hand-o� business cards network-ing. Develop and establish your ideas. Don’t be afraid to pick up the phone or send that email.

Reenergizing doesn’t have to be about meeting new people or recon-necting. Take your sta� o� -site to a swimming pool or go hiking. Have some fun. � is will allow them to get their energy � owing. Now is the time to create. Look at your company’s busi-ness model. Reexamine your website and social media presence. Create some work to do. You will be amazed at what you can accomplish.

Don’t just think business has to be done in the con� nes of the o� ce: Go outside and walk downtown. Get out there and connect with people in new and di� erent ways. Great things can result simply from meeting others in a non-work setting.

Help � ll the business void by hosting an event and giving people something to do. One of my clients, Liquid Cater-ing, did that with a major grand-open-ing party for its downtown showcase on a Wednesday night. � e response

was huge because people were looking for something to do.

Try volunteering with a new group, or volunteer maybe for the � rst time. Many nonpro� ts need volunteering slots � lled in the summer months be-cause so many people are on vacation. Reach out to a group that you think would interest you and get going. Vol-unteering is a great way to make con-nections.

And speaking of vacations, don’t be afraid to strike up business while out of town. Yes, people are trying to relax, but people have a lot of down-time waiting for seats at a restaurant or waiting to board an airplane. In-stead of burying your nose in your phone, talk to people around you. If you get to know them and what they do, you might find that you can do business together.

Practice your elevator pitch for you or your company among friends at a party or social get-together. � is will help make you more at ease when striking up conversations, but it also helps you codify your goals and work ideas. However, don’t over-practice: You don’t want to sound forced when talking about what you do.

Make sure to follow up with any-one you meet with an email, phone call – or, best of all, a hand-written letter.

Just because it’s hot doesn’t mean you can’t develop and grow your business.

John Boyanoski is the president and owner of Complete

Public Relations, a Greenville-based

strategic and media a� airs � rm.

IN MY OWN WORDS by JOHN BOYANOSKI

IN MY OWN WORDS FEATURES ESSAYS BY RESIDENTS WITH PARTICULAR EXPERTISE WHO WANT TO TELL READERS ABOUT ISSUES IMPORTANT TO THEM. THE JOURNAL ALSO WELCOMES LETTERS TO THE EDITOR (MAXIMUM LENGTH OF 200 WORDS). PLEASE

INCLUDE ADDRESS AND DAYTIME PHONE NUMBER. ALL LETTERS WILL BE CONFIRMED BEFORE PUBLICATION. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO EDIT ALL LETTERS FOR LENGTH. PLEASE CONTACT SUSAN SIMMONS AT [email protected].

Summer is slow, so reenergize

Page 7: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

JULY 20, 2012 | SPARTANBURG JoURNAl 7

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Page 8: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

8 SPARTANBURG JoURNAl | JULY 20, 2012

JoURNAl commUNiTy

542-ARTSChapmanCulturalCenter.org

200 E. Saint John St. Spartanburg

ArtWalkOn the third Thursday of each month, the art galleries in Spartanburg stay open until 9 p.m. so patrons can check out what’s new. On Thursday, July 19, 6-9 p.m., be sure to stop by the Chapman Cultural Center and see what’s new in the Spartanburg Art Museum, the Guild Gallery, and the Student Gallery. No admission fees! This month, free and public receptions in the Guild Gallery and for the National Heart Gallery (Foster Child) Exhibit. Gov. Nikki Haley and the First Gentleman Michael Haley are expected.

Taking Flight ExhibitLocal artists Jane Frost and Susan Hopps exhibit their work July 2-27 in the Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg’s gallery at the Chapman Cultural Center. Open daily 10 a.m.-5 p.m., but closed on Sundays. Free!

Auto Racing ExhibitSpartanburg was once at the hub of auto racing. The Spartanburg Regional History Museum presents an exhibit featuring artifacts, trophies, and the development of the auto racing industry, June 19-Sept. 1, Tues.-Sat., 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

Fine Furniture ExhibitMaster woodcraftsman Michael McDunn presents Function & Awe, a large sampling of his handmade fine furniture in the Spartanburg Art Museum. It is both heirloom and contemporary. Tues.-Sat., May 22-Aug. 4, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

Printmakers Exhibit15 printmakers from the Upstate have come together to create a unique and vastly diverse exhibit of handmade prints in Shifting Plates. The exhibit is in support of a project that collected works for the true “art collector.” Presented by the Spartanburg Art Museum, Tues.-Sat., 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Ends: Aug. 25.

Call for ArtistsThe Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg is now accepting submissions for its 2012 39th annual juried art show, which will be Sept. 20-Nov. 3. More than $4,000 will be awarded in various categories. Deadline for submissions: Aug. 1.

Foster Child Photo ExhibitThe Chapman Cultural Center is the only museum in South Carolina to host the acclaimed National Heart Gallery Exhibit: a large collection of 6x4-foot photos of children in foster care and in need of permanent homes. Mon.-Sat., 10 a.m.-5 p.m., free. July 9-Aug. 24.

Susan Sellers* was 45 years old when she decided to adopt. She was looking for a child around 11 years old, but decided to adopt a teenager when she saw her daughter’s photo at the Department of Social Services open house. That was two years ago.

“When people heard I was going to adopt a teenager they thought I was crazy, but it has been the best experience I have ever had,” the Greenville resident said.

According to the South Carolina Department of Social Services, 1,216 children are currently in foster care statewide. Of those, 477 are free for adoption, meaning parental rights to them have been terminated. Anoth-er 739 are in the process of having parental rights terminated.

In Spartanburg County, 208 chil-dren now wait in foster care, with ap-proximately 33 percent of those hav-ing special needs. Greenville County has 345 children in care; of those, 21 percent have special needs.

“Most people want babies, but the truth is that children who end up in the foster care system tend to be older,” said Isabel Blanco, DSS deputy direc-tor. The greatest need is among teen-age males, 13 to 18 years old, she said.

“There are children in the state who are free and ready for adoption, but they are not always the type of child people are looking for: the age, the sex, the child may have special needs. If people are looking for a healthy newborn child, there is a wait,” said Carl Brown, executive director and founder of the South Carolina Foster Parent Association, headquartered in Elgin, just outside Columbia.

Brown and his wife have three ad-opted children and have fostered 156 children over the past 38 years.

“You have to decide what kind of child you are willing to take,” he said. “How far will you go if they have learning disabilities, physical disabilities, or emotional issues? You have to have a heartfelt calling to do special things in this world. Adop-tion is a special thing.”

Many people want to adopt a per-

fect child with no health issues and no behavioral problems, but “that’s not the kind of kids that are involved in the system. These are kids who have been hurt,” said a Spartanburg DSS employee who is father to two adopted children. “They blame themselves; they feel like outcasts – rejected, aban-doned – and that has consequences.”

This may lead to behaviors that will need to be dealt with, he said, “but even healthy teenagers are

hard to handle. That doesn’t mean every child is going to be acting out. Absolutely not … (but) our goal is to open people’s eyes so they know what they are getting into, so we don’t further traumatize the chil-dren …It’s going to take time and effort on the part of the parent, but love does help these guys heal.”

For those worried about the pros-pect, Sellers said adopting a teenager can definitely work out.

“I am shocked at how much I love my daughter and how much she needs me. She can bring me the greatest joy and the greatest grief all at one time, and we haven’t known each other very long. I always thought there would be a little distance there, but she’s my daughter. There is no question.”

Sellers is in the process of adopting a second child; this time, a teenage son.

Before Congress passed the 1997 Adoption and Safe Families Act (ASFA), reunification was the primary goal for foster children, leaving many in the system for years, according to adoption.org. Children often aged out of the system. Since the law’s passage, nearly all states have increased their number of adoptions for all ages.

“Before this law was passed there was not an urgency to get a child to

a lifelong family,” Blanco said. States are now urged to make this a priority through whichever avenue is safest for the child, be it adoption or reuni-fication, she said.

Typically, foster children are relo-cated often, spending long periods of time in foster care with no sense of permanence, Blanco said. Such children are less likely to finish high school, have children at a young age, be arrested, be homeless or have

post-traumatic syndrome, she said.Almost a quarter of young homeless

people in America “are people who left the foster care system and don’t have a place to go,” added Brown.

Teen adoptions consistently ac-count for 10 percent of all adoptions, according to the S.C. Children’s Fos-ter Care Review Board. Matching is the biggest hurdle to finding teenag-ers a forever home. Potential adop-tive parents must go through an ex-tensive home study and background check. A social worker meets with the family and ensures the house adheres to safety codes. Once a fam-ily decides on a child, there are visits and a pre-placement trial period.

“You have to be honest on the forms they give you,” Sellers said. “You have to be honest about what you can han-dle and step back and leave it to God.”

“Most adoptions work out if you match the right parents with the right child,” Brown said.

People thinking of fostering or adoption can visit SCfpa.com, heart-feltcalling.org or scheartgallery.org to see some of the children who are looking for forever families.

Contact Nichole Livengood at [email protected].

Wanted: a lifelong family

*Names and personal details have been changed to protect children and families.

By Nichole liveNgood | contributor

“You have to decide what kind of child you are willing to take. How far will you go if they have

learning disabilities, physical disabilities, or emotional issues? You have to have a heartfelt

calling to do special things in this world. Adoption is a special thing.”

Carl Brown, executive director and founder of the South Carolina Foster Parent Association

Page 9: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

JULY 20, 2012 | SPARTANBURG JOURNAL 9

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A quarter million dollars in state fund-ing for Spartanburg’s Charles Lea Center hangs in the balance this week as state lawmakers take up Gov. Nikki Haley’s vetoes of 81 items worth $67.5 million in the state’s total $6.8 billion budget.

“Certainly we hope the Legislature will restore our funding,” said Gerald Bernard, the Lea Center’s executive director. “� is money was intended to help reduce our waiting list of about 300 persons.”

Haley’s veto could mean about 70 Spar-tanburg County families waiting on ser-vices for their developmentally disabled relatives may not get help this year.

Local legislators secured $250,000 from the state and $250,000 in federal Medicaid dollars to reduce the 300-per-son waiting list at the Lea Center, which provides services to about 1,400 devel-opmentally disabled adults.

“If we don’t get that money back there are alternatives we can consider. State DDSN has said we can adjust some of our programs and use that money to work on the waiting list. It won’t be as much mon-ey, but it would help,” Bernard said.

� e vast majority of clients at Lea are from Spartanburg County, he said. Lea also takes clients from around the state.

“� e Legislature is the only body tak-ing this (issue) as a statewide program,” Bernard said.

Several quasi-private nonpro� t in-stitutions like Lea are scattered around the state. While Lea runs on a combi-nation of funding sources, more than $20 million of its $24 million budget is

from contracted services with the state Department of Disabilities and Special Needs. � e nonpro� ts are not under the jurisdiction of county boards; they are regulated by DDSN.

Haley said in her veto letter to the state House of Representatives that the state is not the best provider for private nonpro� ts like Charles Lea.

“While I do not attempt to question the merits of each organization or the quality of their missions, there are just as many service organizations as wor-thy who seek private sector support to maintain their operations,” she wrote.

“I understand the governor’s stance on private nonpro� ts, but I don’t think that addresses the reality of the situation we have in this state,” Bernard said.

Lea Center does seek private sector support; its 2010 Annual Report notes that donations from about 500 people raised $250,000.

Bernard said Haley’s vetoes came de-spite that fact that the budget was a bal-anced one.

“I know we’re on the list to have our funding restored,” he said. “I’m not sure if that will happen.”

Last year, lawmakers overturned a similar ra� of vetoes from Haley that featured many of the same items she vetoed this year.

� is year, two state agencies, the state Arts Commission and Sea Grant Con-sortium, had to close a� er Haley’s June 6 vetoes. Haley also slashed $10 million in state funding for mandated teacher salary increases.

Contact Charles Sowell at [email protected].

Lea Center hopes funds will be restoredBy CHARLES SOWELL | staff

Page 10: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

10 SPARTANBURG JoURNAl | JULY 20, 2012

JoURNAl commUNiTy

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coUntY coUnciLfrom the july 16 meeting

Spartanburg County Council voted to give county employees a 2 percent raise in October thanks to an extra $1.5 million in state funding.

The pay increase, the first since 2008, could have started next month were it not for worries about how the county will continue to pay for the increase, council Chairman Jeff Horton said.

The pay hike will cost the county about $1 million per year. By waiting to implement the increase, council will be able to save about $100,000 of the state windfall for emergencies.

Part of the worry for council are the Legislature’s actions during the past few years. Under state law, the county is owed millions in aid to local government money. That money has never arrived, due to state budget cuts.

“The businessman in me says we should wait on the raise,” said Councilman O’Neal

Mintz. “Our employees certainly deserve this raise, but prudence dictates we should wait a bit before implementing it.”

County Administrator Katherine Hubbard said she is “guardedly optimistic” that county tax collections are on the way up and would have enough money on hand to give workers a raise in January.

With the state money, the raise will take effect on Oct. 5.“I personally feel like our employees deserve it,” said Councilman Dale Culbreth.

“They need it. ... Our employees have children, they have college tuitions to pay, they have groceries to put on the table, and they have Spartanburg County taxes to pay.”

Filling new positions, two in the Clerk of Court’s office, one in the coroner’s office, and one in probate court, will wait until later in the budget cycle, Hubbard said.

County Council next meets at 5:30 p.m. on Aug. 20 in chambers at the county administration building, 366 N. Church St.

Contact Charles Sowell at [email protected].

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Bob Inglis’ views on climate change played a big part in his ouster from Congress in 2010.

But the Travelers Rest resident said last week it is time for conservatives to pro-mote conservative solutions to America’s energy and climate challenges.

He is heading the Energy and Enter-prise Initiative, a national public en-gagement campaign that will operate from George Mason University’s Center for Climate Change Communication.

“With the financial system still quaking in 2010, the voters were right-ly focused on this month’s paycheck and this month’s mortgage payment,” Inglis said. “As time goes on, though, I’m confident that the champions of free enterprise are going to engage on energy and climate, and I want to be a part of that.”

Inglis said the solution is “real and muscular” free enterprise that holds all fuels accountable for all costs. He said subsidies should be eliminated for all fuels but that all costs must be attached to the price of all energy sources to get its true cost.

Inglis said soot from coal mining causes 23,600 premature deaths a year and 3 million lost workdays.

“If we added those things to the cost of coal-fired electricity, it doesn’t look like such a bargain,” he said. “If we knew the true costs, we’d be looking for al-ternatives. But we’re

letting coal get away with it and that means we don’t get innovation.”

Inglis supports reducing taxes on de-sirable things such as payroll, individ-ual income and corporate income, and increasing taxes on undesirable things such as pollution, so that the taxes would be revenue-neutral.

“Government should not be in the business of picking winners and los-ers,” he said. “We need to return to the bedrock of conservatism – ac-countability.”

Inglis said he thinks progress could be made on the issue soon, especially if it is included as part of the solution for the problem of the federal deficit and tax reform. Inglis said he believes the lame-duck session of Congress after the next election could take ac-tion. If not, he said, progress could come later following a couple of elec-tion cycles where “populist rejection-ism” loses steam.

Inglis said the campaign would fo-cus on younger people because they are generally willing to accept inno-vation and change and because he hopes they’ll be able to persuade their parents and grandparents to support the effort.

Contact Cindy Landrum at [email protected].

Inglis wants conservatives to end climate change denial

Ex-Congressman leads new initiative promoting conservative answers to

problem

By Cindy Landrum | staff

Inglis

Page 12: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

12 SPARTANBURG JoURNAl | JULY 20, 2012

JoURNAl commUNiTy

More than two months after she began a harrowing ordeal and battle for her life against necrotizing fasciitis, sometimes called “flesh-eating disease,” 36-year-old Lana Kuykendall has gone home. She faces months of rehabilitation ahead to regain full use of her legs, which under-went multiple surgeries to halt the in-fection, but also the reality that she will finally be with her infant twins, Abigail and Ian, full time.

The day before her release on Tuesday, Lana Kuykendall, along with her hus-band, Darren, spoke publicly for the first time since she was admitted to Greenville Memorial Hospital.

Kuykendall went to the hospital on

May 11, just days after the birth of her babies. She told reporters she noticed a skin discoloration on her left thigh, thought it was a blood clot, and asked her husband to take her to the hospital. Between the time they left for the hospi-tal and received treatment – a matter of minutes, said Darren Kuykendall – she had deteriorated from feeling “sick all over” to suffering considerable pain and being severely ill.

“I’m very grateful to God for help-ing me through what he has helped me through,” Lana Kuykendall said. She said she doesn’t remember the time she was in intensive care, but does know her hus-band was there with her every day. She said she was also grateful to hospital staff. “I didn’t realize how many people were involved in my care.”

Her husband said he “got to see first-hand how strong she is and how good the care was. I’m so grateful that she is still here with me because it was very scary and stressful for a good while.”

Darren Kuykendall said that he knew that amputations were a real possibility.

“I was just scared for her life more than the amputation of her legs.” The couple had a friend who also survived necrotiz-ing fasciitis in 2007.

Dr. Bill Kelly, an epidemiologist at Greenville Memorial, said Kuykendall’s quick action saved her life.

Dr. Spence Taylor, vascular surgeon and vice president of academics at GHS, said, “You can literally see the abnormal-ity of the tissue. These infections grow so rapidly that you can actually see the skin change in front of your eyes.”

Taylor said much of the credit goes to a group of acute care surgeons he calls “Jedi Knights.”

“They’re the heroes and they’re the ones who made it happen,” he said.

Greenville Hospital doctors rushed Kuykendall to surgery, and every day over the next 11 days she underwent more surgery to remove infected skin, tissue and muscle, Darren Kuykendall said. She had more than 20 surgeries and spent a total of 38 days in intensive care, 30 of those sedated.

The bacteria that cause necrotizing

Lana Kuykendall ready to go homeVictim of ‘flesh-eating

bacteria’ spent 10 weeks in hospital

By april a. morris | staff

Darren (standing) and Lana Kuykendall with their twin babies, Abigail and Ian. Lana Kuykendall was set to return home this week after 10 weeks in the hospital undergoing treatment for flesh-eating bacteria.

Page 13: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

JULY 20, 2012 | SPARTANBURG JoURNAl 13

JoURNAl commUNiTy

HAVE YOUSCANNED YET?

120306

fasciitis are common, including some that live in the body, such as group A streptococcus, the cause of strep throat infections, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

The bacteria causes an infection in a damaged area, such as the site of a bruise, or where the skin is pierced, said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt Univer-sity’s School of Medicine.

Kelly said Kuykendall’s is not the first case of necrotizing fasciitis at GHS. He calls it “not common, but not rare” and said the cases vary in severity.

The Kuykendalls said their twins were cared for by family and friends. Lana Kuykendall said she did not worry about them because a family member quit her job to help care for the infants.

“At times, I’m able to focus on the fact that the best thing for them is for me to get better and at other times I break down and cry,” she said.

After moving to Roger C. Peace Re-habilitation Hospital on June 21 and several weeks of aggressive physical therapy, Kuykendall can walk more than 250 feet on her own and care for her twins, said Dr. Kevin Kopera, medi-cal director of Roger C. Peace. Initially, she was so weak, she couldn’t stand

without braces.“To Lana’s credit, she wanted the

most aggressive approach,” Kopera said. Kuykendall now faces home therapy and months of outpatient therapy, he said.

When asked about the aggressive re-habilitation she chose, Lana Kuykendall said, “I had to do it. I had to get bet-ter and the way to get better is to work hard.” She said she is looking forward to going home and has been getting used to having people help her with everyday tasks.

She added that she had planned to re-turn to work at some point and still may. “We take life one day at a time now.”

One day the couple would like to resume a favorite pastime, traveling, maybe even to visit her best friend in Australia, she said.

A fund has been set up to help the Kuykendall family with medical costs. Donations can be sent to GHS Federal Credit Union, 211 Patewood Drive, Greenville, SC 29615, 864-455-7112. The website www.faithhopelana.com also provides information about fund-raisers.

Contact April A. Morris at [email protected].

Prepare your palate.

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Local restaurateurs have teamed up to bring you the 4th Annual Foodie Fest!

This year’s event promises to be even bigger and better as restaurants will

be offering “3 for $30,” “2 for $20,” or “Buy 1, Get 1” menus.

Visit us on Facebook and UpstateFoodie.com for new additions,

menus, and more!

Page 14: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

14 SPARTANBURG JoURNAl | JULY 20, 2012

JoURNAl commUNiTy

oUr commUnitYcommunity news, events and happenings

If you are sponsoring a community event, we want to share your news. Submit en-tries to: Spartanburg Journal, Community Briefs, 148 River St., Suite 120,

Greenville, SC 29601 or e-mail: [email protected]

The Glendale Outdoor Leadership School will lead a Lake Jocassee paddle trip on July 21. This trip offers a chance to beat the summer heat with this lake paddle that also visits wa-terfalls. For more information, call 864-529-0259 or visit www.palmettoconservation.org.

Bring your lunch to the West Wing conference room at the Chapman Cultural Center for an informative hour with Dr. Sheila Breitweiser, the executive director of the Spartanburg Regional Foundation, who will discuss the duties of the Regional One helicopter personnel. This Lunch and Learn event will be on Friday, July 27, 12:30-1:30 p.m. It is presented by the Spartanburg County Historical Association and admission is $5. For more information, call 864-542-ARTS.

Spartanburg Community College recently honored faculty and staff members for outstanding service at the annual Employee Recognition Program. The recipients of the 2011-2012 faculty and staff of the year awards included academic director of social sciences Dr. Bruce L. Dillenbeck: Faculty of the Year, Peer Award; history and politi-cal science instructor Ivory D. Wilson: Faculty of the Year, Student Award; Expanded Duty Dental Assisting adjunct faculty member Brenda G. Johnson: Adjunct Faculty of the Year Award; and veteran’s affairs coordinator Katherine J. Payne: Staff of the Year Award. “Each year the college honors individuals who go above and beyond to uphold the college’s mission and values,” said Henry Giles, SCC interim president. Registration for SCC fall semester classes is going on now. Individuals interested in registering for fall semester classes that begin August 15 can apply online at www.sccsc.edu.

The Ellen Hines Smith Girls’ Home will hold a Tailgate Trot fundraiser on Friday, August 17, at 7 p.m. The event will feature collegiate-centered tailgates with the University of South Carolina, Clemson University, University of Georgia, Wofford College, and College Game

Day. Tailgate cuisine will be offered along with an auction, live entertainment by Mighty Mc-Fly, games and a football toss contest. Tickets are $45 in advance and $50 at the door. To pur-chase tickets and for more information, call 864-573-9223 or visit www.spgirlshome.com.

The Advent Shoppe, a community outreach project of The Episcopal Church of The Advent, is offering a special book bag sale through the end of July. Each backpack is loaded with school supplies. Some even include special computer equipment. All are offered at $15 and $17. Staffed by volunteers with profits going to community out-reach, the “destination shop” features eclectic, secular, non-secular, classic and unique items from around the world, 10,000 Villages, and is a Fair Trade Store. Located at 161 Advent St. in Spartanburg, The Advent Shoppe is open Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sundays, 8:30 to 11 a.m. Free gift wrapping is available.

Mellow Mushroom locations in Greenville and Spartanburg will be holding an all-day fundraising event to support The Transportation Museum of the World featuring the Miniature World of Trains on Tuesday, July 24. Anyone dining that day should mention that they want to donate to the Transportation Museum or Miniature World and the Mellow Mushroom will take 10 percent of the meal total (excluding tax and alcohol) and donate it to the project. The yet-to-be-named Transportation Museum mascot will be at the Greenville location from noon until 2 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m. for photographs. For more information, visit www.miniatureworldoftrains.com/eventscalendar.htm.

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Page 15: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

JULY 20, 2012 | SPARTANBURG JoURNAl 15

JoUrnaL bUsiness Grass-fed cattle fills healthy niche

Nancy Walker’s battle with breast cancer was the defining moment in the decision that led to founding Walker Century Farm’s grass-fed cat-tle business.

“I was diagnosed in 2003,” she said, “and went through the whole regimen of treatments from chemo to surgery to reconstructive surgery. Afterward, my husband (Dr. Bill Walker, a pulmonary physician) decided we needed to start eating healthy and dug into the issue of just what constitutes a healthy diet.”

Grass-fed beef came up as the most

Walker Century Farms builds thriving business selling Devon cattle and free-range pork By CHarles sowell | staff

Farm continued on page 16 Bill and Nancy Walker with one of their Red Devon cows at Walker Century Farms.

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Real estate market takes ‘meaningful strides’ in June

After some “head fakes in the past,” the residential real estate market has taken “meaningful strides toward recovery,” the South Carolina REALTORS Association said, based on June sales and other signs.

Statewide, the association’s multiple listing service record-ed an increase of 5 percent in sales, a 1.9 percent increase in median sales price and a 15.7 percent decline in the inven-tory of housing on the market – the latter a continuation of the trend toward a better bal-ance between supply and de-mand.

In the Upstate, the Greater Greenville market showed strong gains in June and Spar-tanburg did moderately well. The picture was spotty in the rest of the Upstate.

Sales of residential homes and condos were up 9.9 per-cent over June of last year in Greater Greenville, which in-

real estate continued on page 16

By DiCk HugHes | contributor

Page 16: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

16 SPARTANBURG JoURNAl | JULY 20, 2012

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logical way for the family to change their eating habits. “Bill had been think-ing about getting back into the cattle business on the family farm, so we pur-chased Devon cattle, which do very well on a grass diet.”

Today, Walker Century Farm is step-ping into the niche soon to be vacated by Live Oak Farm near Woodruff, which will likely go on the auction block if owner Ron Wilson is convicted of fraud charges in connection with his precious metals business.

They opened a farm store in May of this year and have a thriving business selling their beef to Greenville restau-rants catering to high-end clients.

“It’s just tragic what has happened with Ron,” Nancy Walker said. “We knew him (Wilson) slightly through meetings of the Devon cattle growers association. This is going to leave a big hole in the grass-fed beef trade in the area.”

If need be, it’s a hole the Walkers are happy to fill as they grow their red cattle in the rolling hills just east of Anderson off Interstate 85.

“I was leery of cattle at first,” Nancy Walker said. “We had been renting the farm to another cattle grower who kept Limousin cattle. They scared me.”

The large French breed is one of the oldest cattle varieties in Europe. They look very similar to the Devon cattle the Walkers now raise, except for one dif-ference: Devons are notoriously gentle; Limousins, not so much so.

As soon as the Walkers stepped into the pasture, about a dozen Devons am-bled up to greet the couple, with none of the typical jostling when a face associ-ated with food and care arrives in the pasture.

For such large creatures, the Devons demonstrated a knack for treating peo-ple with deference. Even the massive

herd bull seemed painfully aware of just where his masters were at all times.

“Bill and I took a trip to North Caro-lina to see some Devons,” Nancy Walker said. “When I first saw them, I said, ‘I like these cows.’ ”

“That was enough for me,” Bill Walk-er said.

As the herd grew, the Walkers started selling some of their beef to staff at the AnMed Health Medical Center, Bill Walker said. Next came sales to people outside the hospital and, eventually, the restaurants.

“We opened the store in May,” Mary Walker said. “Originally it was only open on weekends. We’ve added Thurs-day just recently.”

The farm store is an old portable classroom that the couple saw near a local school with a for-sale sign on it, Mary Walker said.

“The cost of a stick-built building was just prohibitive,” she said. “We harvest-ed and milled the cedar paneling and beams from trees on the farm.”

The end result was a rustic-looking building rife with the smells and tastes of an earlier era.

In addition to their Devon cattle, the Walkers sell heritage breed pork. The hogs are raised free-range with supple-mental feedings.

They also carry various vegetable and dairy products from area producers.

A Devon rib-eye has a lovely texture and flavor when cooked on the grill. The meat lacks the heavy marbling of grain-fed animals and, Nancy Walker said, the steak has more of the good cholesterol and omega 3 and omega 6 ratios.

The family divides the farm chores.“I’m the only one without a day job,”

Nancy Walker said.She sees the farm as part of a heritage

that goes back more than a century. “We’re a certified Century Farm,” she said. “Raising cattle in much the same way as Bill’s grandfather did.”

Contact Charles Sowell at [email protected].

Farm continued from page 15

cludes Greenville, Pickens and Lau-rens counties. Sales were up 3.6 per-cent in Spartanburg. They were down in the rest of the Upstate.

The median home price rose 6 percent in Greenville to $159,000. Spartanburg’s median price rose by an even greater margin – 8.4 per-cent to $127,000.

One of the key metrics Realtors use to gauge activity is the number of days between a listing and a sale. That

dropped to 94 days in Greater Green-ville, the lowest in the state and well below the state average of 134 days.

In Spartanburg, the average in June was 171 days on the market, up 14 percent from a year ago. That index also rose throughout the remainder of the 10 Upstate counties.

SCR, the state association of Real-tors, saw enough encouraging indica-tors in June activity to be upbeat.

“Residential real estate has finally taken some meaningful strides toward recovery, and they’ve all been self-pow-

ered without divine (or government) intervention,” SCR said. “Yes, there have been some head fakes in the past, but there’s real reason to believe that market turnaround awaits us.”

Housing in the $200,000-$300,000 range is experiencing the greatest gain in appreciation, 14.5 percent, and has the shortest days-on-the-market with the exception of homes selling for $100,000 or less, SCR said.

Contact Dick Hughes at [email protected].

real estate continued from page 15

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One of the Walkers’ English cows. Nancy and Bill Walker, in cooperation with two other Devon breeders, are importing embryos from the United Kingdom to broaden the traditional genetic base of the Devon breed in America by utilizing genetics that have been in England for over 2,000 years.

Page 17: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

JULY 20, 2012 | SPARTANBURG JOURNAL 17

JOURNAL BUSINESS

THE FINE PRINTBY DICK HUGHES

Bank Plans Coastal BranchSouthern First Bancshares, the

holding company for Greenville First Bank and Southern First Bank, is expanding into the coastal market with a branch in Charleston.

� e Greenville-based company hired Len Howell, who was regional executive for National Bank of South Carolina for the last 13 years, as executive vice president and Charleston regional executive.

Art Seaver, chief executive o� cer of Southern First, said Howell “has been extremely successful in serving the Charleston market and we believe that his leader-ship and performance will add signi� cant depth to our executive team.”

� e bank said it expects to open the Charleston branch on East Bay Street in the current quarter.

� e company has three o� ces in Greenville and one in Greer operating as Greenville First and two in the Columbia market as Southern First. A third branch in Columbia is under construction in Forest Hills.

Southern First, which was founded in 1999, reports assets of $760 million.

FDA Approves Lab for Test� e Greenville CLIA lab of

the British company Lab21 has been approved by the FDA to o� er a diagnostic test to determine whether pa-tients with colorectal cancer are suitable for treatment with the drug Erbitux.

� e lab is one of nine in the United States approved by the FDA to o� er the test. Lab21 said the test has been routinely used in Europe since 2008.

� e approval makes Lab21 “well positioned to be the � rst provider of this valuable service to the regional cancer community,” said Michael Bolick, president, in a statement from Cambridge, England.

Firm Closes In on AcquisitionKEMET Corp. has

moved closer toward the � rst step in eventual ac-quisition of NEC Tokin, a Japanese rival in the global capacitor business.

� e European Union last week cleared the Simpson-ville-based company to complete the � rst stage of the acquisition.

KEMET has an agreement with NEC Tokin to acquire the company in three steps.

Initially, KEMET will pay $50 million for 34 percent interest and $50 million in a second step to bring its eq-uity to 49 percent in a joint venture.

In the � nal stake, KEMET would acquire the remain-ing 51 percent for an amount “based on multiple perfor-mance at that time.”

� e acquisition would make KEMET one of the larg-est makers of tantalum, ceramic, aluminum, � lm, paper

and electrolytic capacitors in the world.KEMET CEO Per-Olof Loof told � nancial analysts

the union will result in “one of the most exciting compo-nent solutions in the world. Ever since I joined KEMET, I have felt that without a real presence in Japan we can-not truly call ourselves global.”

� e acquisition of NEC Tokin still requires regula-tory approval from China, which has aggressively ex-tended the capacitor business of its companies. KEMET expects the transaction will close during this quarter.

EDTS Buys a CompetitorEDTS, an information technol-

ogy consulting � rm with o� ces in Greenville and Augusta, Ga., has acquired Axios Data of Au-gusta e� ective immediately, EDTS announced.

With the acquisition, EDTS has more than 40 IT professionals, “placing it among the upper tier of South-eastern IT � rms,” the company said.

EDTS specializes in networking, security and man-aged support services in a broad range of industries with a particular focus on healthcare, manufacturing, distribution, professional services and state and local government.

“Not only are we adding depth to our team, but we are adding talented colleagues that we know embrace our EDTS culture of client service � rst,” said Charles John-son, chief executive o� cer of EDTS.

Inc. Magazine has named EDTS one of the 5,000 fast-est growing companies in America.

County Shares a PlannerGreenville County has

designated its � rst employee to work jointly for the county and for the Greenville Area Development Corp.

The county said that Brooke Ferguson, a demo-graphic and market research analyst in the county’s planning and development department, would pro-vide “expert assistance in site certification and se-lection” to the GADC.

“� is sharing of resources is yet another action by Greenville County that highlights our commitment to growing our economy,” said Joe Kernell, county admin-istrator. “� is is an e� ective, e� cient use of our best as-set – our people.”

Jerry Howard, president and chief executive of-ficer of GADC, said Ferguson’s “proven success working with municipalities, utilities and other community stakeholders will provide GADC a valuable service.”

� e county pays Ferguson’s salary; the shared portion of her duties would be considered an “in-kind contribu-tion” to GADC, a spokesman said.

� e GADC is a nonpro� t entity supported by public and private funding.

Refreshing Fresh Market’s Home� e Forest Park shopping

center on South Pleasantburg Drive, where � e Fresh Mar-ket is the anchor, has a new owner.

Kimco Realty Corp. of New York said it paid “approx-imately $11.8 million” for the 52,000-square-foot shop-ping center. � e company said Fresh Market “serves the upscale neighborhoods bordering the Greenville Coun-try Club.”

Kimco said it believes it can increase occupancy from the current 79 percent by repositioning the center “to better appeal to these upscale patrons, as well as the 15,000 students at nearby Greenville Technical Col-lege.”

� e acquisition of Forest Park was one of four shop-ping centers Kimco bought as a package from EDENS, a Charlotte, N.C., shopping center operator, for $63.8 million. � e others are in Asheville, Charlotte and Da-vidson, a Charlotte suburb.

Moonshine Whiskey to GinDark Corner Distillery,

where moonshine is dis-tilled on Main Street in Greenville, says it is produc-ing South Carolina’s � rst hand-distilled gin.

� e distillery said a limited batch of 100 bottles of what it calls White Tiger Gin went on sale July 13.

Head distiller John Wilcox said 90-proof White Tiger is a fusion of Dark Corner’s corn whiskey, juniper, Szechuan pepper, lemongrass, jasmine and Thai basil.

White Tiger won a bronze medal at the Los Angeles International Wine & Spirits Competition, the company said.

Festivities for Olympics� e International Center,

the nonpro� t that helps inter-national families settle in the Upstate, is holding a two-day drop-in event to bring “global professionals” together for the summer Olympics in London.

� e celebration begins Friday, July 27, from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m., with opening ceremonies over “a few drinks” and hors d’oeuvres and a speaker from REI, the outdoor out� tter.

On Saturday, the International Center will hold an open house from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Events include watch-ing the games, playing Olympic trivia, a “parade of na-tions” and a potluck luncheon with the center providing the entrée and participates providing side dishes.

� e events are free for Upstate Global Professional members; guest refreshments are $5. RSVP to Whitney Walters at 864-631-2188. � e International Center is at 9 S. Memminger St., Greenville.

Page 18: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

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Winfred Rembert was sent to work in a Georgia cotton field when he was six.

He was arrested as a teen for making off with a car while trying to escape two white men who were chasing him after gunshots rang out at what had been a peaceful Civil Rights march in Americus, Ga.

He was nearly castrated by the KKK dur-ing a near lynching – a lynching he said was stopped by a white man wearing large wing-tip shoes.

He spent time working on a Georgia chain gang.

Rembert, who now lives in Connecticut, tells his story through art, now on exhibit at the Greenville County Museum of Art through Aug. 19.

Instead of canvas, Rembert uses leather. Instead of brushes, he uses knives, bevels and hammers. Instead of paint, he uses viv-id commercial leather dyes that are “paint-ed” into the substrate to achieve rich and varnished hues.

He uses a craft he learned from a fellow prison inmate to create images both person-al and rooted in the South of a half-century ago. The images range from chain gangs to baptisms, pool hall and kitchen scenes, from church services to cotton fields.

Rembert left the South for Connecticut in the 1970s after he got out of prison, part of a migration of African-Americans flee-ing the South for freedom and jobs. He

found work as a longshoreman, a career he pursued until an injury forced him to retire in the mid-1990s.

It was then that his wife, Patty, a woman he met while working on that Georgia chain gang, suggested that Rembert, who has had no formal art training, tell his stories.

According to the catalog for “Winfred Rembert: Amazing Grace,” Rembert begins his work by purchasing one “side” of veg-etable or oak-tanned cowhides from a Con-necticut leather factory.

He sketches an image on paper, then

Winfred Rembert’s life is carved in leatherCraft learned in prison tells story of work in cotton fields, Civil Rights movement

By Cindy Landrum | staffBy Cindy Landrum | staff

Winfred Rembert, “Dinner-Time in the Cotton Field,” 2001. Dye on carved and tooled leather. 27 x 34 3⁄4 inches. Private collection.

RembeRt continued on page 20 busch continued on page 20

Benjamin Busch says his par-ents – novelist Frederick Busch and his librarian mother – were both Vietnam War protestors and had no intentions of rais-ing a soldier.

But Busch had other ideas.He was a soldier in real life

– Busch is a decorated U.S. Maine Corps infantry officer who served two combat tours in Iraq – and in the movies: He played a Marine in the film “Rules of Engagement,” star-ring Tommy Lee Jones and Samuel L. Jackson.

“I was a martial creature,” he wrote in his memoir, “Dust to Dust.” His parents’ “prolonged effort to dissuade me from my natural tendencies had failed.”

Busch, who played Offi-cer Anthony Colicchio on the HBO series “The Wire” and has appeared on “Homicide,” “The West Wing” and “Gener-ation Kill,” will hold a reading and book signing at Hub City Bookshop on July 24 at 7 p.m.

“Dust to Dust” is a memoir written in elemental-themed chapters – water, metal, bone and blood – that includes vivid

Benjamin Busch was born to be a soldier

Page 20: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

20 SPARTANBURG JOURNAL | JULY 20, 2012

JOURNAL SKETCHBOOK

The value of vagabondingReflections on a gap year

By GIVENS PARR | contributor

traces that image onto a piece of leather. A� er he sprays the leather with water, Rembert begins to cut the image into the leather with a swivel knife. He uses more than 100 di� erent tools to create shading, textures, patterns and other three-dimen-sional impressions, the catalogue said.

He then paints the scene with commer-cial leather dye.

“Ain’t much room for a mistake and that takes practice,” he said.

He said his jailhouse “teacher,” T.J., was not a good man. He was jealous of Rembert’s abilities and stole his leather-working tools.

“I kind of wish T.J. could see what I’m doing now,” he said.

“Amazing Grace,” an image of pickers in a cotton � eld with musical sta� s su-perimposed on them, is in the permanent collection of the Richard M. Ross Art Museum at Ohio Wesleyan University.

“‘Amazing Grace’ is one of the songs I remember that was sung in the � elds. I just loved to listen to that singing. Sing-ing was the only thing about the � elds that I loved,” Rembert said.

“Dunlap’s Quarters II” shows quarter houses a farmer had built for his workers.

“All of his workers were black. Dunlap did all types of work: cut wood to sell, picked cotton, shook peanuts, pulled corn,” Rembert wrote. “� e Quarters were large and consisted of about 50 houses. But like every farmer, cotton was his big crop. And he had the workers to do it.”Rembert said he visited Dunlap in 2006 before he died.

“Winfred Rembert Going North?” shows a black man with two bags and a loaded car. A woman stands nearby. “They’re surely leaving home. No more picking cotton for 2 cent a pound. Got to be something better. I believe they’re going north because that’s what everybody talked about during dinner time in the cotton

field,” Rembert wrote.In “� e Struggle,” Rembert pictures

some famous African-Americans such as Michael Jordan, Michael Jackson and Tiger Woods in a cotton � eld.

“I just wanted to show that, even though these folk may never have been in a cotton field, they are still connected to the cotton field,” Rem-bert wrote. “So it is possible to go through the cotton fields, corn fields, peanut fields and watermelon patches with all the rest of us and still end up being famous or even being president of the United States.”

Contact Cindy Landrum at [email protected].

SO YOU KNOWWho: “Winfred Rembert: Amazing Grace”

What: an exhibition of Rembert’s leatherworks

Where: Greenville County Museum of Art, 420 College St., Greenville

When: through Aug. 19

Information: 864-271-7570

REMBERT continued from PAGE 19

Winfred Rembert, “All Me II,” 2002. Dye on carved and tooled leather. 31 1/2 x 37 3/4 inches. Collection of the artist.

My philosophy teacher fin-ished writing in my yearbook, punctuating his note with a Ti-betan word.

“A special word,” he said, smil-ing. “Emaho (ay-mah-hoe). It means, ‘Oh how wondrous!’”

Lover of language that I am, I could have wept. I adored my word. I felt he had presented me with a self-contained celebra-tion, had inscribed the letters on my forehead like a grace-given tattoo. It was not an earned gift, but one of inspiration. To be lived and shared.

At that moment, I’m not sure either of us understood the pre-science of his angular script. I certainly wouldn’t have pre-dicted that, come September, I would be penning him a letter from Tibet itself.

The spring of 2011 found me on the cusp of graduation. I had accepted an offer of admis-sion for college, was prepared to move on from my high school community, and my diploma was signed and sealed, soon to be delivered.

But the conviction to wan-der was gnawing at my bones. I wanted to make a classroom of the world, to wring out my mind, to fly a long way away. My feet itched. I wrote to my college-to-be, requesting a one-year deferral. The admissions officer responded with consent. I had successfully enrolled in the School of Life.

In autumn, rural China le� me breathless. I traveled from province to province in the backs of buses and on crowded overnight trains. I didn’t shower for days at a time and yet felt cleaner that I had my whole life. Villagers

memories of Busch’s pastoral childhood in rural New York, Marine training in North Carolina, the Ukraine and Cali-fornia, and deployment to Iraq.

Busch writes of his boyhood days spent building forts and exploring riv-ers and woods, and of his brushes with mortality, going down in a helicopter and being wounded by shrapnel in Ra-madi.

Ironically, Busch told Publishers Weekly, it wasn’t until he was in Iraq that he became much of a reader or writer.

“When I was in Iraq, writing was what I had and I began to use it to describe

my experience and explain as I learned it,” he said in the Publishers Weekly in-terview. “� is book began then. Unlike my father, I needed the war to � nd the words.”

He decided to write the memoir in themed chapters instead of chrono-logical order because he said that’s how people remember things.

Busch’s writing has been featured in Harper’s and has been twice nominat-ed for the Pushcart Prize. He has also been a guest commentator on NPR’s All � ings Considered.

Contact Cindy Landrum at [email protected].

BUSCH continued from PAGE 19

SO YOU KNOWWho: Benjamin Busch, author of “Dust to Dust”

What: Reading and book signing

Where: Hub City Bookshop

When: July 24, 2012

Information: 577-9349

Page 21: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

JULY 20, 2012 | SPARTANBURG JoURNAl 21

JoURNAl SkeTchBook

welcomed me into their homes and took me into their fields to pick vegetables. Their generosity of time and space humbled and instructed me. Peace soon grew out of the knowledge that I needed nothing beyond one foot in front of another, beyond the view of Jade Dragon Snow Mountain that brought me to my knees and then to tears, beyond the look on the 10-year-old monk’s face when I offered him my bicycle or the circle of laughing Naxi minority villagers shucking corn around a fire.

In the winter, my Chinese home-stay family in the city of Kunming claimed me as daughter, grand-daughter, sister. My nainai knit me socks and told me stories about the Cultural Revolution. Yeye cooked vast meals with vegetables I had nev-er seen before, and Ma doted on me when I washed the dishes. My six-year-old sister sang songs with me as I hung laundry out to dry. I spent afternoons at a local hospital of tra-ditional medicine, mentored by a tui na doctor who healed people with the work of her hands.

Winter unfolding into spring took me to the Netherlands where I lived at L’Abri Fellowship (a commune of sorts) in the countryside. There, I pored over books of theology and philosophy, and works of great literature. I let life-questions multiply in my mouth, and

I asked them all. I learned the value of labor and, daily, to pit my strength against the tasks required to keep L’Abri functioning. Together, mem-bers of the community split wood and scrubbed toilets, tiled floors and pre-

pared dinner. I found joy in working with my hands, in repairing what was once broken and using it anew.

I learned to love the people who lived alongside me, in all of their peculiar and wonderful and terrible forms. Existence became an act of serving and receiving, an exercise in patience and in grace. In those months, I wrestled with God and, like Jacob, walked away limping and joyful and blessed.

Returning to the Carolinas for the summer, I had fresh eyes to recog-nize the capacity for adventure and rich experience all around me. I got a job and navigated Greenville as an empowered young adult – seeking community, holding responsibili-ties, and knowing that time is my re-source, relationships are the invest-ments worth holding, and love is the universal prerogative.

In all these places, I have been both humbled by my shortcomings and grateful for the awareness that leads to change. And grateful, in no short measure, for every good door I went through and every strong arm

that helped me to open it. My life has become characterized by Wonder. Emaho is always on my lips.

To anyone approaching ends, bridges or beginnings, I say, do not fear the narrow gate, nor the road less traveled. Tap every resource for beauty. Whether we go or stay, a sea-son of wonder is at hand.

“Allons! The road is before us!It is safe – I have tried it – my

own feet have tried it well – be not detain’d!”

-Walt Whitman, “Song of the Open Road”

Givens Parr graduated in 2011 from Phillips Academy Andover in

Massachusetts. She is a longtime student of Mandarin, a painter, a writer and a seeker of Truth. This summer, Parr served as an intern

at the Spartanburg Journal and in the fall will be a freshman at Brown University. Parr highly recommends

“Vagabonding” by Rolf Potts to won-derers and wanderers of any age.

Contact Givens Parr at [email protected].

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Page 22: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

22 SPARTANBURG JOURNAL | JULY 20, 2012

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The Chapman Cultural Center ended its fiscal year on a strong note by sur-passing its 2012 UnitedArts Annual Fund campaign fundraising goal for the second year in a row. 1,078 donors gave to the United Arts Annual Fund cam-paign raising $847,233 for the arts in Spartanburg County. United Arts cam-paign donors provide funding for award-winning and innovative arts education programming, which serves approximately 47,000 school children and teachers in Spartanburg County. Contributions to the United Arts Annual Fund cam-paign also provide funding for the Chapman Cultural Center. For more infor-mation about the United Arts Annual Fund Campaign, call 864-278-9690 or visit www.chapmanculturalcenter.org.

The West Main Artists Co-op will host Pottery Palooza, a ceramics show and sale featuring Co-op artists Bryan Davis, Tracie Easler, Jason Galloway, Al Hof-mann, Anges Martin, Terry Murdock, Teresa Prater, Katherine Rausch, Rebecca Savage, Garry Turpin, Holly Williamson, Nancy Williamson and Kathy Wof-ford. The exhibit will feature functional stoneware and earthenware pottery, decorative wall art and sculptural work. The exhibit runs from July 19 through Aug. 11. The Co-op’s regular hours will be extended for this show to include July 20 from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. and July 21 from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. The Co-op’s regular hours are Thursdays from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. or by appointment.

� e Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg is now accepting submissions for its 2012 39th annual juried show, which will be in the Spartanburg Art Museum at the Chapman Cultural Center, Sept. 20-Nov. 3. An opening reception and awards ceremony is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 29, 6-8 p.m. � e show is open to all artists in South and North Carolina and Georgia. More than $4,000 will be awarded in various cat-egories. � e deadline to submit work for consideration is Aug. 1. Media categories are 2D Painting, 2D Drawing and Mixed Media, 2D-Photography, and 3D-Sculp-ture, which includes ceramics and jewelry. � e juror this year will be Mana Hewitt, MFA, director of the McMaster Art Gallery, as well as Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Art Department of the University of South Carolina. For more details, please visit www.artistsguildofspartanburg.com, contact director Robin Els at 864-764-9568 or email [email protected].

SCENE. HERE.THE WEEK IN THE LOCAL ARTS WORLD

Send us your arts announcement. E-mail: [email protected]

The July exhibit in the Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg’s gallery features two women who retired from Spartanburg School District 7 and now have second careers as artists. Susan M. Hopps, a watercolorist who produces representational canvases of people, places, plants and animals; and Jane Frost, who works in several media and experiments with representational, non-repre-sentational and three-dimensional projects. The “Taking Flight” exhibit is free Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. at the Chapman Cultural Center.

Susan M. HoppsJane Frost

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Blue Ridge Brewing CompanyThe Bohemian

Brick Street CaféThe Brown Street Club

Cafe at Williams HardwareChophouse ‘47

CityRangeDavani’s

Devereaux’sFonda Rosalinda’s

Ford’s Oyster HouseThe Galley Restaurant

The Green RoomHandi Indian Cuisine

Hans & Franz BiergartenHarry & Jean’s

John Paul Armadillo Oil CompanyThe Lazy Goat

Liberty Tap Room & GrillMary Beth’s

The Mellow MushroomMidtown Deli

Nami Asian BistroNantucket Seafood GrillNorthampton Wine Café

Nose DiveOn The Border

Open Hearth Steak HouseP. Simpson’s

The Plaid PelicanPortofino’s Italian Restaurant Rick Erwin’s West End Grille

Ristorante BergamoRoman’s Macaroni Grill

Runway CaféRuth’s Chris Steak HouseSaffron’s West End Café

Sassafras Southern BistroSmoke on the Water

Soby’s New South CuisineStax Billy D’s

Stax Omega DinerStella’s Southern Bistro

Stellar Restaurant & Wine BarThaicoon Ricefire &Sushi Bar

The Trappe DoorTravinia Italian KitchenTrio A Brick Oven Café

Yia Yia’s

DININGSee what you’ve been missing

U P S T A T E

Feed Your Inner Food EnthusiastFeed Your Inner Food EnthusiastUpstateFoodieUpstateFoodieUpstate .com

Page 23: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

JULY 20, 2012 | S P A R T A N B U R G J O U R N A L 23S P E C I A L T O T H E J O U R N A L

Price: $785,000 | MLS# 1243851 4 Bedrooms, 3.5 Baths, 4000-4199SF

Contact: Nick Carlson 864.386.7704

[email protected]

Send us your Featured Home for consideration: [email protected]

H O M E I N F O19 Ash ley Avenue, North Ma in , Greenv i l leGorgeous custom built home in North Main. This 4 BR, 3.5 BA home has all the high-end features that one could imagine. 3 levels with unbelievable views of Rotary Park for added privacy. Open first floor plan with formal living, and huge combination dining, family room, and kitchen. Kitchen has Subzero multi-cabinet built-in fridge with wine chiller, six burner wolf stove, and large center island with double slab granite. Custom beams throughout living room and downstairs living/rec room. Double insulation between all levels for sound

proofing. Large screened in porch with IPE hardwoods. Custom bar area in downstairs rec room and wine cellar is perfect for entertaining, and separate guest suite. Master bedroom has a wall of windows, large his & hers closets, huge bathroom with separate shower and soaking tub. All baths include Radiant Heat flooring. Home is pre-wired for intercom and internet hard-wiring. 3 tankless hot water heaters, central vacuum, premium hardwood flooring throughout. Huge entertaining patio with multiple entertaining areas, outdoor Fireplace, and pre-plumbed for outdoor kitchen area.

More photos, info and over 1,900 neighborhoods online at

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED HOME

BEFORE YOU BUY OR SELL, DO YOUR

HOMEWORKover 2,500 Upstate neighborhoods, listings, and area information

J O U R N A L H O M E SF E AT U R E D H O M E S & N E I G H B O R H O O D S | O P E N H O U S E S | P R O P E R T Y T R A N S F E R S

Page 24: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

24 S P A R T A N B U R G J O U R N A L | JULY 20, 2012 S P E C I A L T O T H E J O U R N A L

SUBD. PRICE SELLER BUYER ADDRESS

CAROLINA COUNTRY CLUB $515,000 RHODENBAUGH, SHARON A SHUGART, HENRY E 371 TWIN OAKS DRCAROLINA COUNTRY CLUB $375,000 REGIONS BANK LEADER, ELLIOTT 848 INVERNESS CIRCAROLINA COUNTRY CLUB $345,000 LEVESQUE, MICHAEL C HICKS, HARVEY W 648 INNISBROOK LNBELLVIEW ESTATES $325,000 SHUGART, HENRY E KR GROUP ASSOCIATES LLC 1040 RIVERVIEW DRWOODFIN RIDGE $322,000 HARLAN, DONALD EDWARD GRONDALSKI, THOMAS E 405 MONTEVERDE CTCARLTON CREEK $302,732 D R HORTON INC BOGHANI, RIKHAV B 427 TIMBER RIDGE LNDILLARD CREEK CROSSING $257,210 S C PILLON HOMES INC WAN, SAU YIN 353 HARKINS BLUFF DRCASTON HEIGHTS $250,000 FIRST CITIZENS BANK & TRUST E R KEELS LLC 3409 BOILING SPRINGS RDCLAUDE E BISHOP MEADOWS $242,000 KOVTUNOVICH, IVAN GREGG, RANDAL K 1615 BISHOP RD $230,000 RENNINGER JR, WILLIAM POLAND JR, JOHNR 445 JORDAN CREEK RDCARLTON CREEK $214,543 D R HORTON INC PARSONS JR, FRANK S 402 TIMBER RIDGE LNSHAFTSBURY $152,500 GRISWOLD, PHILLIP J FRANCE, JOHNNY 619 MANDEVILLE DRTYGER WOODS $146,000 ASHMORE HOMES INC THWAITE, JESSICA 315 TIMBER TRLSWEETWATER HILLS $140,000 FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE BRUNKEN, ROBERT W 815 BAYSHORE LNCLEVELAND HEIGHTS $139,900 WHITE, SUE VICTORIA ROGERS, WILLIAM H 100 SEAL ST $132,121 ED LEE INC BAGWELL, CATHY J 6991 NEW CUT RD $131,160 LOWE, CHARLES D LOONEY, KELLY 200 LOWE LNFOUR SEASONS FARMS $127,700 PATE, EUGENE BOOKER, MERKA 304 E RUSTLING LEAVES LN $127,500 WELLS FARGO BANK NA GARCIA, JOHNATHAN BROOKS 2789 BROCKMAN MCCLIMON RDHILLBROOK FOREST $127,500 BALASCAN, GHEORGHE B LEAR, NICHOLAS C 825 THACKSTON DRPIERCE ACRES $125,000 HUTCHINS, SHEREL RENE FERO, CINA G 116 GALAXIE PLRED FOX FARMS II $119,900 GRACE UNLIMITED INTERNATIONAL ELKINS, CLIFTON C 545 ARCHIBALD RDNORTH HILL $115,000 EDLUND, SCOTT M LEE, JASON BRENT 237 N HILL DRCOUNTRY CLUB ESTATES $115,000 MURPHY, RYAN W PLUMBLEE, ANDREW M 2 ROLLINGREEN RDARBOURS WEST $112,728 GARRETT, PEGGY GARRETT, LISA R 80 ARBOURS WEST LN $107,500 WHITLOCK, D CARLISLE AMERICAN IRA LLC 383 REXFORD RDSPRINGFIELD $106,364 MANPHONSY, JENNIE DALAVAN FANNIE MAE 208 OAKMONT DRNORTHVIEW ACRES $105,000 WILSON, REBECCA D WILLIAMS, JONATHAN C 104 PINEWOOD DRMALLARD COVE $103,000 FANNIE MAE SCHUMANN, DAVID P 110 MALLARD DRWESTGATE PLANTATION $101,000 DRAKE, KEVIN SIENA PROPERTIES LLC 633 ADELAIDE DRSTARCREST $99,000 RANGER, JANICE E HYSON, ARON M 215 MILKY WAYNORTHVIEW ACRES $95,000 GILES, CHARLES J WEST, JOSHUA R 211 NEWMAN DRWILKINS HILLS $89,900 FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE MCCASLIN JR, JERRY DEAN 625 WILKINS RDFERNWOOD FARMS $88,500 MOYER, JUDITH C BURNETT, JONATHON B 122 APPLEWOOD LNVANDERBILT HILLS $82,000 FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE POWELL, FELICIA 146 STRIBLING CIRNORTHRIDGE HILLS $78,200 VANDERBILT MORTGAGE & FINANCE BLACKWELL, TONY RAY 176 WOODCLIFF DRCYPRESS RIDGE $73,000 FANNIE MAE BLOSSER, LARRY A 512 SIERRA RIDGE CTSHAW RIDGE $72,900 SPRINGLEAF FINANCIAL SERVICES SITTON, MARCUS V 157 SHAW RIDGE DRBELVEDEER $70,000 ESTATE OF REBECCA M EDWARDS BUSS, LESLIE 1997 OLD REIDVILLE RDOAK FOREST $65,000 JONES, KEVIN B WACHOVIA BANK NA 4721 WORDEN DRMAYFAIR ESTATES $50,000 DILLS, JUDY C MELGAR, PRISCO LOT NUMBER: 8&7GEORGES ACRES $43,000 HOUSING & URBAN DEVELOPMENT SELECT HOLDINGS LLC 108 WINTON CT $40,000 TOTAL MINISTRIES OF SPARTANBURG RERAI, DHANBAI K 420 UNION STVANDERBILT HILLS $38,000 FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE I & I PROPERTIES LLC 108 DOVER RD $34,000 HOUSING & URBAN DEVELOPMENT PEELER, JOSH L 140 FULLER STSILVER LAKE ESTATES $30,000 PARKER, LORENE M QUINN, DERRICK M 103 BUCKINGHAM RDTHORNHILL $28,000 LEE, LISA J SHANDS, WAYNE 105 THORNHILL DRGREENE CREEK $26,000 BEESON HENTHORN DEVELOPMENT SPAULDING QUALITY HOMES 343 ROBIN HELTON DRSPARTAN HOMES $25,600 FANNIE MAE SAKALOSH, YURIY 8322 TAYLOR COLQUITT RDROCK SPRINGS $25,500 MARK III PROPERTIES INC ENCHANTED CONSTRUCTION 509 SWINDON CT $25,000 MCGUIRE, MICHAEL GORDON, TIMOTHY ERIC 151 FLEMING LNGEORGES ACRES $25,000 GRNA, EVELYN US BANK NA 190 S PINE LAKE DR $16,500 MCDOWELL, JERRY D MASON, LEWIS C 15 BRIDGES STDELANO HILLS $16,500 HOMES 4 YOU BUICE, JERRY W 411 SHAW AVEWILKINS HILL $15,000 SIMS, THOMAS TRAVIS B&D SPECIALTY CONTRACTORS LLC 486 WILKINS RD $13,500 JONES, EVELENE H FUENTES, ANTONIO 203 FOSTER CIRSPARTAN MILL VILLAGE $13,000 EDWARDS, STEPHEN C CAROLINA INVESTMENTS OF WVI 340 COLLEGE STMALONE ESTATE $12,500 COTHRAN, WADETTE WORKMAN, DARYL L 49 MILL STDILLWORTH PARK $11,700 BANK OF NORTH CAROLINA MANN, GORDON E 403 E FAIRVIEW AVEFITCHETT FARMS $11,000 RMJ ENTERPRISES LP MORAN, YOLANDA LOT NUMBER: 8BABNEY MILLS $10,000 SATEY FERNANDEZ, SUSAN JUAREZ, MARIELA VERONICA 535 WOODRUFF STBELLVIEW $9,500 TLR V LLC KRAMER, MICHAEL A 601 S CONVERSE STPINEDALE ACRES $7,000 GUTIERREZ, JOHN C LAYTON LEIBER, MARC SEQUOIA DRBOBO CREEK ESTATES $5,500 RICH JR, GORDON K MEADOWS, JONATHAN 1231 BROWNING RD $5,000 HOLBERT, ROMANDA NORTHSIDE DEVELOPMENT 546 VERNON STBROOKSIDE VILLAGE $5,000 MAVROFT, EUGENE MARTINEZ, AURORA 214 PENROSE LN $4,896 HILL JR, JOHN W OLD REPUBLIC NATIONAL TITLE INS 164 HILL DRROGERS MILL $2,500 CANTY, KIMBERLY HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL 222 S MUSGROVE LNTHE VILLAGE AT RIVERWALK $2,500 TIDWELL, MAT A FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE 116 RIVERWALK DRPARK HILLS $2,500 MILLIGAN, ARLENE H FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE 125 E VICTORIA RD

R E A L E S T A T E T R A N S A C T I O N SF E B R U A R Y 2 2 - 2 9 , 2 0 1 2

12 Month Average Home Price:

$270,000

Amenities: Lake Community

Hendrix Elementary

Boiling Springs Junior High

Boiling Springs High School

HISTORIC HOME SALES

N E I G H B O R H O O D I N F O

2007

$280,000

0

$70,000$140,000$210,000

20092010

20112008

$1

14

,81

1

$1

03

,45

4

$2

12

,14

2

$2

47

,49

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$7

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Over 1,900 neighborhoods online at

L a k e E m o r y , I n m a n , S C :Enjoy the best of lake living at Lake Emory! This lovely community features beautiful homes on wooded lots, many of which enjoy a lakefront location. Lake Emory is minutes away from Boiling Springs, Landrum, and Spartanburg. With

public areas for you to enjoy, Lake Emory is the perfect place for young couples, growing families, and retirees alike. Existing homes are available along with lots on which you can build your dream home!

N E I G H B O R H O O D P R O F I L E

L A K E E M O R Y

O N T H E M A R K E TH O M E S C U R R E N T L Y O N T H E M A R K E T

GRANDVIEW5BR/3.5BA $384,900A breathtaking, full brick, custom built home that includes an inground pool with plenty of outdoor entertaining space! Granite, hardwoods, trey and coffered ceilings. Exit 60, close to Greenville and Spartanburg. Hilary Hurst (864) 313-6077, MLS#1239294

Page 25: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

JULY 20, 2012 | SPARTANBURG JOURNAL 25

JOURNAL SKETCHBOOK

THE WEEK IN PHOTOSLOOK WHO’S IN THE JOURNAL THIS WEEK

Crossword puzzle: page 26 Sudoku puzzle: page 26

Shannon Hetrick watches her fl ying disc sail toward a disc golf basket at Wofford.

Donny Robinson of Spartanburg walks along the Rail Trail in Spartanburg during his lunch hour. Robinson said he tries to get out and walk every day. If he can’t get out during lunch, he walks later in the evening.

Jack Gregg throws his fl ying disc at a basket during a round of fl ying disc golf at the course at Wofford College.

PHO

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Frances Jarratt-Hortis, director of counseling services at USC Upstate, speaks to freshmen and parents at the 2012 Freshman Orientation at the University Readiness Center.

A large crowd attended the 2012 freshman orientation.

1204

97G

JNL

G U I D E . When you held your son for the first time, you were overwhelmed – by the love pounding your heart and the awesome realization of fatherhood hitting you. Since that moment, you’ve done your best to teach and train him, to pass on what matters most.

We can help with Guyology, a program for rising fourth- and fifth-grade boys and their dads (or dad substitute) to discuss puberty, hygiene and girls in a setting that is active, entertaining and cringe-free. Join Michael Guyton, M.D., a GHS internal medicine-pediatrics physician, as he leads …

Just the FactsWed., Aug 1 • 6-7:30 p.m. • Fee: $50/father and son Patewood Center • 255 Enterprise Blvd., Greenville

To learn more and to register, visit GIRLology.com.

In partnership withCommunity Journals

L O V E L I F E !

Page 26: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

26 SPARTANBURG JoURNAl | JULY 20, 2012

JoURNAl SkeTchBook

A c r o s s1 Abbey denizens6 Bar lineup11 Black __: covert mis-

sions14 Take for a spin?19 “The Tempest” spirit20 Weird Al Yankovic

spoof of a Michael Jackson hit

21 With 43-Across, cock-tail made with Curaçao

22 Asian princess23 Film about the appli-

ance supervisor at Sears?

26 Woodard of “Cross Creek”

27 Shelf-clearing sale28 Baltic capital29 Inability to make

good pitches?30 Rover’s reward31 Film about a small

chicken that won’t stay away?

34 Milk: Pref.38 Volleys40 Make __ of: jot down41 In need of liniment43 See 21-Across44 Lab medium45 Feature of a two-ltr.

monogram48 Film about a sculpture

that defies description?53 Sent the same

97-Down to54 Tributes55 More learned

56 “SNL” alum Oteri57 Gravy absorber58 “Since __ Eyes on

You”: Faith Hill song61 It means nothing62 Pitcher Jesse with a

record 1,252 regular-season appearances

63 Film about a smooth-legged fellow?

65 Film about a deli spe-cializing in heros?

67 Well-harmonized70 La __ Tar Pits72 Deli offerings73 Fed. property manager76 Prepare chestnuts77 Inclined79 Less respectful81 Not working82 Film about following

a pack up a mountain?86 Salem-to-Reno dir.87 Educ. for tots88 Lennon collaborator89 Olay competitor90 Prepare in a pan92 Placing in direct com-

petition96 Richard who played

the garage attendant in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off”

97 Film about fans of confessional rock music who enjoy spicy food?

100 Over simplified?102 Christie’s Miss103 Prompter lead-in104 Improved, as one’s

skill level

109 Bill’s “Groundhog Day” co-star

110 Film about a prince’s affair with actress Fletcher?

113 Not moving114 AQI monitor115 Up from Méjico116 Vagabond117 Early strings118 Urge119 Evil spirit120 Assuages

D o w n1 Cleo’s lover2 Like some surgery3 Kid in Cádiz4 Brewpub supplies5 Potential powerhouse

not to be “awakened”6 Humdingers7 Lewis Black delivery8 Cockpit approx.9 Old powdered apparel10 Caterer’s can11 Pair of horseshoes?12 Carrier founded in 192713 Watch kids14 Arnold, notably15 Squirrel’s treat16 Subtle case crackers17 Aired again18 Looks like a rake24 Extinct kiwi cousin25 Tiny pest29 Hr. some stores open31 Humdrum32 Miller’s “__ From the

Bridge”

33 Brand on vermicelli34 Wooden slats35 Sound in an allergist’s

office36 Congo River area

denizen37 Brown of publishing39 ABA member

42 Language that gave us “slogan”

44 Oxygen-dependent bacterium

46 Former Ford div.47 Peculiar: Pref.49 Romanov title50 “Les __”

51 Consumes52 Blood bank supply53 Word with house or

shop56 It may decide an

election59 Return remark60 Puccini’s “Vissi __”62 Ontario’s second

most populous city63 Where “F” means

“Ford”64 Reprimand to a

dachshund?66 Miss America acces-

sory67 Bearded flower68 Some okays69 Pitcher’s goal71 Municipal rep.73 Yields74 “I __ reason ...”75 Bad lighting?78 “... __ tango”80 Holiday card drawing82 Bandleader Shaw83 Strive for84 Still competing85 Cargo unit87 Young hens91 Aim (to)92 Nursery rhyme mer-

chant93 “__ have to do”94 Words after “ever

after”95 Parachute color?97 Modern letter98 12-time All-Star

Ramirez99 L’__ du Tour: French

cycling event101 Slippery swimmer104 Opposite of ecto-105 Claimed psychic

detection106 Reunión attendees107 Edward’s adoptive

mother in the “Twi-light” series

108 Bank acct. additions110 “You, there!”111 Water tester112 Pitcher’s asset

Crossword answers: page 25

“Anemic verit...” By Peter A. collins

figUre. this. oUt.

Sudoku answers: page 25Easy

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Page 27: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

JULY 20, 2012 | SPARTANBURG JoURNAl 27

JoURNAl SkeTchBook

in mY own wordswith Steve wong

Mother Nature can be beautifully brutal.

I live in the foothills, pretty far out in the northern countryside of Spar-tanburg County, within shouting distance of Hogback Mountain. It is a serene place, envied by many for its up-close view of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Here, I have the luxury of having five dogs, three cats, and an abundance of wildlife that includes turkeys, rabbits, squirrels, possums, raccoons, big brown rodent-like things, woodpeckers, whippoorwills and, of course, deer.

It is a common morning privi-lege for me to sip coffee at sunrise on my wooden deck and watch the deer breakfast in my poor excuse for a garden. They don’t eat much, and I’m not much of a gardener anyway, so I am just glad at least the deer can get a little morning nibble out of my well-watered weed patch. I sit very still on those mornings, hoping that Futar, my big yellow dog, is fast asleep under the deck. Otherwise, my pastoral bliss can easily turn into a bloodbath.

Futar is about the best, most well-behaved dog in the whole world. He can sit on command and will offer his paw in friendship to little chil-dren at the farmers’ market. When it’s time for a walk, he will wait im-patiently for me to tie shoelaces, fill a water bottle, lock the door, hide the key and loop the chain around his neck. And when he walks, it is straight and forward, only stopping at the stop signs to briefly mark his territory the way male dogs do. He’s one of those strays that came up one day and just stayed.

But make no mistake about it. Futar is a big male outdoor dog whose fa-vorite sport is to chase deer through the peach orchards. I am glad that deer are skittish creatures, ready to bolt at the slightest threatening movement. Big deer can outrun my big dog, so normally it is just good-natured aerobic exercise. There’s a mad chase through the orchards, and some 10 minutes later Futar returns

home, panting and tired, with noth-ing to show for his efforts but a burr-covered coat.

Except last week. This is that Bam-bi time of the year, when does give birth to fawns. Until last week, I had never seen a fawn up close enough to take in just how beautiful they can be. I was down in the garden digging new potatoes on a Saturday afternoon. At first I thought I heard a goat bleating. I looked up and saw the two big pups playing, but where was Futar? A slight panic stirred, and I dropped my shovel and started up the hill, calling “Futar! Futar!”

The bleating got louder and more urgent, and so did my calls to my favorite dog. As I crested the back-yard hill, I saw Futar with a baby deer in his mouth. It was thrashing about, screaming. And then I was running and screaming too. “Fu-tar! Futar! Let go of that deer. Put it down. Futar!”

Futar ran; I ran after him. Then I saw the mother deer running. The pups joined in the chase. My yard is about three acres big, and I was part of a racing, screaming melee of dogs and deer, when my wife came out and joined in, too.

I’m not as young or as thin as I used to be, and running full tilt in the heat of a summer’s day in san-dals can be tough on a guy who takes high blood pressure pills. About the fourth lap around the house, Futar stopped, the deer still struggling in his jaws. “Futar, let go of that deer,” I demanded. He set it down until it tried to get away, and then he grabbed it again. More painful bleating.

When we advanced within reach, I gently pried the deer, which Fu-tar now gave up willingly, out of his mouth. As I held the terrified deer in my arms, Futar wagged his tail and nosed his prize, obviously proud. He was giving me something that meant a great deal to him.

The fawn didn’t appear to be hurt. We took it into the dog pen (leav-ing the dogs outside) and found it

could walk. It was one of the most beautiful creatures I had ever seen – so fragile, so small. A fawn’s legs are strangely long and spindly and its coat is short and medium-brown with light and dark spots in an orga-nized pattern that proves there is a Grand Design. And it just lay down and awaited its fate.

Our friend the vet said it would be best to reunite the fawn with its mother. She said to pen the dogs for the next 12 hours and to put the fawn somewhere in the woods where the doe could find it. So we left the fawn nestled in a tangle of vines and leaves that evening. It was still there just before dark, but that was okay, we told ourselves. The mother would come later.

The next day brought a misty and rainy morning. I was up at sunrise. I downed my coffee and quickly headed outside, sure the fawn and doe were reunited and long gone. The rain was very gentle that morn-ing and the air was just a little bit cool. The sun had just risen, and the promise of a great day was at hand. It took a few minutes for me to walk through the woods to where we had left the deer, but I felt good, and I was confident that I would find nothing but underbrush.

But there the deer lay in the morn-ing rain among the tendrils of green. It was still and staring. I knew im-mediately what had happened, but I hoped I was wrong, that it would jump up at my touch. But what I touched was cool and wet and unmoving. The deer had died in the night, and there were tears mixed with raindrops that cool Sunday morning in the foothills of the Carolinas.

Steve Wong and his wife and their dogs

and cats live in a peach orchard in Gramling, which is a quiet little rural community in

northern Spartanburg County. He loves to get feedback on the stuff he writes:

[email protected].

The natural order of things

Northampton Wineswww.northamptonwines.com

211-A East Broad Street • 271-3919

Words of WisdomBy: Richard deBondt

It is HOT! Time for Rosé. The traditional summertime table wine of Europe is ideal for our Carolina summers. Great for picnics and light snacks, it also serves well with red meat dishes that might cry out for big red wine in cooler times. Who needs high-alcohol heavyweights when you break into a sweat just walking across the patio? Rosé is the thing.

Just about every traditional red wine region has its Rosés. Bordeaux, the Rhone, Rioja, and even Burgundy all have important Rosé products. Producers can’t help themselves wanting to make Rosé. Winemakers’ get hot and thirsty too! A similar situation exists in California, Oregon, and Washington. Even wineries famous for expensive red wine occasionally release rosés from every grape imaginable.

Provence, in the South of France, is legendary for Rosé. Estate grown Provence Rosé can be $35. Don’t be shocked at the price, these wines are classic, dry, elegant and worthy of special attention. However, if your backyard barbeque has less royal standards, good, dry Provence Rosé can be under $15. For all but the elite, youth is a virtue. Drink the youngest available.

Throughout the rest of Europe Rosé is common. The best examples tend to mention a region rather than a grape. Look for Bordeaux, Tavel, Lirac, Rioja, or Navarra; not for Merlot, Cabernet, Grenache, or Syrah. There are even classic European districts famous for slightly sweet fresh Rosé, notably Anjou in the Loire valley.

Don’t overlook the U.S.A as a source for premium Rosé. “White Zinfandel” (Rosé really) still tops the sales charts but there are many fi ne dry alternatives. Pinot Noir producers often make “Vin Gris”. However many good U.S. bottles will bear the name of the principle grape from which they are made. Any top producer is likely to make good Rosé, although there is no region dedicated to the style. Again, youth is generally a virtue.

Richard deBondt founded Northampton Wines in Greenville in 1975. With his business partner David Williams, he oversees retail wine and restaurant operations, along with wine travel.

Page 28: July 20, 2012 Spartanburg Journal

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Registration 8 A.M. First Bike out 9 A.M.Last Bike out 10 A.M.

Registration fee $25 (includes a FREE t-shirt)

Best Hand $2000Worst Hand $250Door Prize Drawings

Benefitting

Cooperative CareFollow us.

Contact: David Hammond at 864-683-1667

PO Box 700, Laurens, SC 29360

Dual Starting Locations:Laurens Electric Cooperative 2254 Hwy. 14, Laurens, SCorHarley-Davidson of Greenville30 Chrome Drive, Greenville, SC

Ride Will End At: Harley-Davidson of Greenville

FOOD WILL BE AVAILABLE from Quaker Steak & Lube