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  • 16Music iconsPaul Thompson is a musician and entrepreneur with a heart for this community – especially its big-hearted
    musicians. He owned Big Harry’s Tavern for 13 years and hosted countless bands there as entertainers, but he also hosted fundraisers to help others. And local singers, songwriters and bands always showed up to give stellar performances. Thompson was so touched by their generosity that in 2011, he created Fayetteville’s Icons of Music. “I started this program to recognize musicians who have contributed to events and causes throughout the years,” he said.

    Sunday, Aug. 26, Thompson will add 12 names to this distinguished list. The celebration is open to the public and includes food, fun and an open mic jam.
     
    Today, Thompson is the proprietor of a new nightclub – Paul’s Place – and the program is still going strong.

    “Someone came and made me an offer I couldn’t refuse,” he said about his former establishment, Big Harry’s. “So,
    I sold and tried to retire for two years.” But that didn’t work out, and he opened Paul’s Place behind the Trophy House on Bragg Boulevard in what used to be Lois’s Book Store, continuing his legacy.
     
    The Icons of Fayetteville Music honored Bob Steele as its first inductee in 2011. “Bob Steele started playing in Fayetteville in the late ’60s after Vietnam,” said Thompson. “I thought (about the fact that) every fundraiser I ever had, Bob was there. So, I presented Bob a guitar with his picture on it.”

    Thompson noted that this program is not a competition but a way to acknowledge the generosity and good works of Fayetteville musicians. It celebrates the diversity and community of the music scene. “I spent 20 years in the military, and you hear a lot about the band of brothers and the brotherhood. While that is true, the musicians here are like that, too. They cooperate and support each other. I did a fundraiser recently, and we had live music for nine hours and raised $3,000.”

    The musicians named Icons of Fayetteville Music have a place of honor at Paul’s Place – an entire wall filled with their photos and accomplishments. Thompson said this is a true representation of the spirit of giving that resides in local musicians. “I’ve got some musicians on the wall that I never got along with, but that doesn’t diminish their contributions (to the community). They give a lot to this community, and their families always appreciate seeing them on the wall. You have to have been active in the Fayetteville area and supporting this community and made a lasting contribution (to be inducted to the Icons of Fayetteville Music).”

    The newest round of inductees that will be honored at the celebration on the 26th are Bill Joyner, Danny Young, Bryan Shaw, Guy Unger, Jerry Godfrey, Scott Miller, Pat Vines, Ken Barfield, Carlton Warwick, Vince Groves, Darrell Collins and Brad Muffett. Food will be served at 2 p.m. followed by a presentation at 3 p.m. A regular Sunday open mike jam follows this ceremony.

    Paul’s Place is located at 719 Starling St. Search Paul’s Place on Facebook to learn more about this event and the many others that Thompson hosts.
  • 03ABCChanges and fragmentation in traditional news media operations have brought many changes, including less coverage of state government news in areas outside state capitals. Two important events occurred earlier this month, though, that should register with all of us. First, North Carolina’s five living former governors, three Democrats and two Republicans, got together in the old capitol and urged voters to reject proposed constitutional amendments that will appear on our November ballots.
     
    The governors say the amendments would redistribute the balance of power between the legislative and executive branches of government. The five, Jim Hunt, Jim Martin, Mike Easley, Bev Perdue and Pat McCrory, who collectively logged 40 years in North Carolina’s Governor’s Mansion, know whereof they speak, and I, for one, will be taking their advice. Our Constitution is not broken and does not need fixing, thanks just the same.

    North Carolina’s elected state auditor, Beth Wood, also released scathing findings of a yearlong audit of our state-run Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission. The audit reported the ABC Commission wasted about $11 million in tax revenue through mismanagement and lazy oversight. Not surprisingly, the report triggered cries of “not me” and political finger-pointing, along with calls for privately owned and operated liquor stores.

    Infuriating as the audit findings are, let’s not overreact.
     
    Our state’s ABC Commission has been around since 1937 and has historically been a vehicle for political patronage under both parties. That said, as a state-controlled monopoly, it returns millions of dollars to state and local governments and provides hundreds of jobs. No one knows what exactly would happen if the system shifted to a market-based private system, but it is a safe bet to say ABC revenues to governments would have to be made up with tax hikes, some on people who never patronize state ABC stores.
     
    In addition, while alcoholic beverages are legally sold and enjoyed in 98 of our 100 counties, it is also true that alcohol addicts some of its users, causing pain and distress to them and those who love them. State oversight originated as a protection of sorts.
     
    Perhaps our state-controlled ABC system should include some private entrepreneurs or change altogether, but that is a decision to be made after much study of other private systems and with great deliberation. It has potential ramifications far beyond reacting to a critical audit report.
     
    ********************
    “Spare the rod, spoil the child” is an oft-quoted modern justification for corporal punishment of children. Many believe the saying may be a corruption of a biblical verse found in the book of Proverbs, but whatever its origins, it is a virtual artifact in North Carolina’s public schools. With the Robeson County School Board’s vote of 6 to 5 earlier this month to ban the practice, only Graham of our 100 counties continues to sanction the “intentional infliction of physical pain upon the body of a student as a disciplinary measure.” Nineteen states continue schoolhouse corporal punishment, most of them in the South.
     
    ********************
    Several Up & Coming Weekly readers took me to task for a recent column entitled “Mysterious Melania,” in which I talked about other first ladies, quoted humorist Celia Rivenbark, and opined, “It cannot be easy being Mrs. Donald Trump.”

    My take was particularly unpopular with one reader who emailed, “what a hit piece on our first lady... as a wife, mother, grandmother, nurse... I cannot believe Margaret Dickson would right (sic) such an appalling piece on a woman, much less the first lady of the United States.”

    I thanked the reader for her response, and we agreed that we are all blessed to live in a nation where we can share our opinions freely and openly, whether we agree or not.

    In that vein, a recent New York Times piece on our first lady entitled “Melania Trump, a Mysterious first lady, Weathers a Chaotic White House” provides a longer, more detailed look. Here is a link: www.ny-times.com/2018/08/17/us/politics/melania-trump-first-lady.html
  • 13Comedy of ErrorsSweet Tea Shakespeare, the downtown theater company known for quirky outdoor performances that include live music and simple, creative staging, kicked off its 2018- 19 season on Aug. 21 with “The Comedy of Errors.” It’s a story about two sets of twins who get separated during a shipwreck and the satisfyingly chaotic shenanigans and reunions that follow, and it runs through Sept. 8.
     
    The show is directed by STS Artistic Director and President Jeremy Fiebig, Associate Artistic Director Jessica Osnoe and General Manager Jen Pommerenke.
     
    “It’s a story about one giant family that has been torn apart and is seeking one another,” Pommerenke said.
     
    In productions around the world, “The Comedy of Errors” is almost always played as a gag show – solely for laughs born from slapstick confusion and chaos. “It’s written so hilariously that the text alone could have the audience in bouts of laughter,” Pommerenke said. However, she said, STS took a different approach; one that shows how, at the core of the story, there are real hurts the characters experience due to the confusing situations.

    “There’s a twin that has a wife. So when that wife runs into the other twin, he says, ‘I’ve never seen you before in my life.’ So often, that’s played as this big joke. And that line always struck me as so hurtful and so sad. We decided as a directing group to try to play the heart of the story as well as the hilarity.... We sought to find the balance of lifelike truth in it.

    “For us, it’s a story of the lengths people will go for those they love and those they seek to know.”

    Pommerenke added that “The Comedy of Errors” is one of the most family-friendly shows STS has put on, and that it’s also one of the most accessible stories for those who are not familiar with Shakespeare. “The topic might be confusing, but because of the way we’re doing it, people will be able to follow it,” she said.

    Co-directors Pommerenke and Osnoe are in the unique position of also playing one set of the twins who are central to the story. Osnoe plays Dromio of Ephesus and Pommerenke plays Dromio of Syracus, comprising twin-set No. 1; twin-set No. 2 is Traycie Kuhn-Zapata as Antipholus of Ephesus and Taj Allen as Antipholus of Syracuse. The story’s other main characters are in some way tied to these four; there are mothers, fathers, wives, sisters-in-law, friends and powers that be.

    When asked about uniquely STS elements in the show, Osnoe talked about the creation of a balcony that happens every night. “It doesn’t sound like much, but given that we build our set outdoors on a daily basis, things of that nature pose a challenge in staging,” she said. “This particular scene shows our answer to that challenge in true STS fashion.”

    Pommerenke said the element that comes to her mind is the casting of the sets of twins. While she and Osnoe look pretty similar – in fact, their physical likeness is part of what inspired the decision to do this show – the other two actors are physical opposites. Kuhn-Zapata is a white woman and Allen is a black man. However, throughout the show, the two are constantly referred to as being obviously identical, adding to the hilarity of the situation. This is a casting move Pommerenke said she’s never seen in any adaptation of the show.

    “The Comedy of Errors” runs nightly, at 7:30 p.m., through Sept. 2 at the 1897 Poe House and Sept. 5-8 at Holy Trinity Episcopal Church. As usual, drinks (including sweet tea and spirits) and food will be available for purchase to enjoy during the show. Look out for a special ginger pomegranate sour crafted just for STS by Sanford-based Hugger Mugger Brewing Company.
     
    To buy tickets or learn more about STS, visit www.sweetteashakespeare.com or call 910-420-4383.
     
    Photo: L to R: Traycie Kuhn-Zapata, Jessica Osnoe, Taj Allen, Jen Pommerenke
  • 21Arnold Pope L Neil Buie R22Left Tony Haire Right Mark Dreibelbis supervisor of officials for the N.C. High School Athletic Association
    Two veteran high school football officials, Arnold Pope and Tony Haire, were recently honored by the Southeastern Athletic Officials Association at their annual preseason meeting of football officials.
     
    Pope retired after some 60 years of work as both an on-field official and a supervisor who grades and counsels other officials.

    He is a Methodist minister and formerly served as dean of students at then-Methodist College.
     
    He was a charter selection to the North Carolina Weightlifting Hall of Fame, winning 27 state and six Southern titles in the Open Divions. He was the 1988 world champion in the masters division, winning 11 consecutive national titles and earning induction into the National Masters Weightlifting Hall of Fame in 1988.

    He was inducted into the Fayetteville Sports Club Hall of Fame in 2013.

    He also competed in the Scottish Games for 20 years and was North American caber toss champion in 1976. That same year he was the first American to win a caber-tossing title in Scotland.

    Haire received the Dick Knox Distinguished Service Award from Mark Dreibelbis, supervisor of officials for the North Carolina High School Athletic Association.
     
    Haire has been with the SAOA since 1997, officiating softball, football, basketball and baseball.
     
    He has officiated three Eastern Regionals in basketball and one state final, that occurring in 2003.
     
    He has called the state football finals twice, in 2005 and 2017.

    He is currently the sports chairman for football for the SAOA. This involves training officials and assisting Neil Buie, the regional supervisor of football officials for the SAOA.

    Left photo: Arnold Pope (L) and Neil Buie (R). Right photo: Tony Haire (L) with Mark Dreibelbis, supervisor of officials for the North Carolina High School Athletic Association (R).

  • This picking business has certainly changed over the years I’ve been doing it. When I first started, there was an information void.
    Teams hadn’t even been together since the previous season ended. They took to the practice field just a few weeks before the first games and then went after each other.
     
    Now, everybody has been working since last winter, with nearly full-scale workouts in spring and summer.
    On top of that, we’ve got an assortment of preseason conference polls and state and national rankings. Everybody’s got an opinion.
    But that’s the problem. It’s just opinion. You still have to play the game, and that’s one part that hasn’t changed.
    So thanks for all the informed theories and rampant optimism. It’s all going to come down to who blocks and tackles the best and figures out a way to do what Vince Lombardi used to preach. Run to daylight.
    Here’s to a great season for everybody.
     
    Clinton at Cape Fear - It’s game one for Cape Fear without Justice Galloway-Velazquez. It’s also game one for Clinton with hall of fame coach Bob Lewis no longer on the sidelines. I like Cape Fear’s chances for a win.
    Cape Fear 24, Clinton 12.
     
    Douglas Byrd at Fairmont - Is this the year Douglas Byrd snaps its 25-game losing streak and gets a win for Mike Paroli? If the Eagle performance in the BSN Sports Cumberland County Football Jamboree is any indication, there’s a good chance it will finally happen.
    Douglas Byrd 21, Fairmont 12.
     
    Seventy-First at Westover - First-year Wolverine coach Ernest King couldn’t have picked a much tougher opener. Seventy-First just might be the best team in Cumberland County as we begin the season.
    Seventy-First 35, Westover 12.
     
    St. Pauls at E.E. Smith - This should be a good opener for a fairly young Golden Bull team that needs to get experienced quickly before Patriot Conference play begins.
    E.E. Smith 27, St. Pauls 6.
     
    Purnell Swett at Pine Forest - This is an early chance for Pine Forest to build momentum before a couple of tougher nonconference encounters.
    Pine Forest 18, Purnell Swett 12.
     
    South View at Jack Britt - This is more than just a meeting of neighborhood rivals. South View has been unofficially crowned as the favorite in the Patriot Athletic Conference. Jack Britt has designs on being a serious contender in the always tough Sandhills Athletic Conference. The winner of this one will get a big boost to it chances.
    South View 24, Jack Britt 18.
     
    Gray’s Creek at Parkwood - It’s a long road trip for the Bears to start the season. Like Parkwood, Gray’s Creek had a disappointing result in 2017, going 2-9. This one looks like a tossup so I’ll give a slight edge to the home team.
    Parkwood 13, Gray’s Creek 12.
     
    Fuquay-Varina at Terry Sanford - Can Terry Sanford get out of the gate with a win now that the Jayne brothers have graduated? I think so.
    Terry Sanford 22, Fuquay-Varina 8.
     
    Other games: Providence Day 22, Trinity Christian 21; Dillon Christian 18, Village Christian 12; East Columbus 17, Fayetteville Christian 12.
     
  • 07LimeBike 1024x683Bike-sharing is popular in cities across America. Now it’s coming to Fayetteville. Fayetteville State University has contracted with Lime to make 150 bikes available to students beginning Aug. 21.

    Lime Bike’s first location was the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. It was launched in June 2017 with 125 bicycles and expanded in July 2017 to the cities of Key Biscayne, Florida; South Bend, Indiana; and South Lake Tahoe, California. In May 2018, the company announced that it would rebrand as simply "Lime” and partner with Segway to produce new scooters.

    Bike-sharing is a transportation program in which bicycles are made available for shared use to individuals on a short-term basis for a price. Bikesharing is already in use or soon will be in most of North Carolina’s large cities. It is ideal for short-distance trips, providing users the ability to conveniently and inexpensively use bicycles located in their area. It can reduce vehicular traffic, especially for short, point-to-point trips.

    Lime is one of the most popular firms in the U.S. As of October 2017, it had 150,000 users. Lime differs from some major U.S. bike programs, such as New York City’s Citibike initiative with Motivate Co, because it doesn’t require corrals where several bikes are stored for customer use. Instead, Lime bikes are parked and locked wherever customers end their trips. They’re then available on the spot for someone else to use.

    Lime was inspired by mainstream Chinese-style bike-sharing. In China, companies have raised massive amounts of venture capital and distributed tens of thousands of their GPSenabled bikes in urban markets. Lime uses green-colored, three-speed cruiser bikes equipped with GPS and 3G connectivity. The bicycles also feature operating headlamps and tail lights, front baskets, solar panels and smart locks. Most users download the Lime app on their cell phones.
    They are then equipped to find a bike or a scooter and scan the QR code or enter the number to unlock the bike.

    Lime charges one dollar to unlock the bikes. Thereafter, it’s a dollar per 30 minutes of travel.

    Fayetteville City Council is considering adopting an ordinance to regulate the use of Lime bikes in the city. City staff is recommending that city council consider adopting local regulations like those in Durham’s ordinance, a city where three bike-sharing companies are operating. Vendors would be issued permits after agreeing to operational standards. City ordinances and company rules will require that riders wear helmets, stay off sidewalks and use bike lanes where available.

    City council is committed to expanding marked bike paths in heavy use areas. Riders must obey traffic laws and park their bikes away from pedestrian walkways.

  • 06gerrymandering copyNorth Carolina leaders across the American government spectrum can agree on one thing: We are a divided people. A group of 60 influential North Carolina leaders, comprised of people in the state’s political, business, academic and faith communities, was asked by North Carolina’s McClatchy newspapers what they think is driving the partisan divide. The question was posed as part of an ongoing series.

    They could not agree on specifics, but there was a general sense of gloom among respondents that North Carolina and the U.S. are becoming more and more divided. Several themes resonated through answers from people on both sides of the political aisle: Civility in public debate is eroding. People are stuck in echo chambers, hearing only ideas they agree with, while social media spreads misinformation.

    Political parties have increasingly abandoned moderates and have become more extreme. “President Trump seems to be manipulating people’s fears,” said Bob Page, CEO of Greensboro-based Replacements Ltd. “We’ve got to overcome this divide by returning to a sense of working together to solve problems as opposed to electing extreme politicians who divide us instead of inspire us.”

    Bob Morgan, president of the Charlotte Chamber, said changing demographics are contributing to tensions in the state. “Race is a major factor as our  population is increasingly diverse and political power is slowly shifting to non-whites,” Morgan wrote. That is evidenced in Cumberland County by the election in recent years of more African-American judges than whites. And, in November of last year, a 6–4 majority of blacks was elected to the Fayetteville City Council for the first time in modern memory.

    “White folks are not going to the polls anymore because of animosity,” said a local official who asked not to be identified.

    “My goal is to continue to be a unifying force of all people in our community,” Mayor Mitch Colvin said through a spokesman, though he is on record as
    believing there is a clear racial divide in Fayetteville. Colvin is the second African-American to be elected mayor of Fayetteville. He believes the community is
    somehow immune from state and national trends of misunderstanding and extremism. “What goes on in the federal and state political arenas has, thankfully,
    not affected us here in Fayetteville,” he insisted.

    Ric Elias, CEO of Red Ventures, said people aren’t willing to hear opposing viewpoints anymore. “The biggest issue we have as a state and as a country is that we have stopped listening to each other,” Elias said.

    Forty-two percent of respondents in the Mc-Clatchy newspaper poll pointed to political gerrymandering as a prime cause of polarization. Gerrymandering is the practice of manipulating district boundaries in an effort to establish a political advantage for a particular party or group. It has created uncompetitive political districts at all levels of government.

    “Gerrymandering requires office holders to play to their base on every issue,” said former Gov. Mike Easley, a Democrat. “The districts need to change so that all leaders listen to all voters as they try to resolve important issues.”

    Former Bank of America CEO Hugh McColl of Charlotte had a simple answer to the question of what is driving polarization among the populace: “Massive ignorance.”

  • 05Ethel ClarkLongtime Spring Lake Mayor Ethel T. Clark has died. She was 72. She served in public office in Spring Lake for 30 years.

    Clark was elected and re-elected mayor from 2001-2011 after serving 20 years on the Board of Aldermen. She became the town’s first African-American female chief executive.

    Clark was mayor when the Cumberland County Sheriff’s Office assumed control of the Spring Lake Police Department, after State Bureau of Investigation agents arrested two Spring Lake officers on charges ranging from embezzlement and obstruction of justice to kidnapping and breaking and entering. Sgt. Darryl Eugene Coulter Sr. and Sgt. Alphonzo Devonne Whittington Jr. eventually pleaded guilty and were sentenced to prison.

    The funeral service for Clark was held Aug. 8 at Williams Chapel Church in Spring Lake.

    Highly decorated Fort Bragg soldier dies in parachute mishap

    Sgt. Maj. Christopher Nelms, an Army special operations soldier, died when his parachute failed to fully open during a training maneuver in Scotland County, Fort Bragg’s Special Operations Command confirmed this month. Nelms, 46, was identified as a member of the elite Delta Force, a secretive special operations group, said Yahoo News, which was first to report his death.

    The Army did not announce the accident. Nelms died July 1 at Duke University Medical Center. He was buried in Arlington National Cemetery on July 31 and was posthumously awarded the Legion of Merit.

    Nelms was critically injured while training at Laurinburg-Maxton Airport, Lt. Col. Robert Bockholt, a spokesman for USASOC, said in a statement to Army Times. His parachute did not fully deploy during a June 27 free-fall exercise, Yahoo News reported.

    Nelms was a troop sergeant major with USASOC. He deployed six times to Iraq and Afghanistan and once to Niger. A native of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma,
    Nelms is survived by wife Stephanie Nelms and their two children, 16-year-old Naley and 15-year-old Nolan.

    Eight-mile river walk

    Crews will soon begin construction of a new section of the Cape Fear River Trail that will connect two existing segments. When completed, the trail will extend for eight miles from the Jordan Soccer Complex off Ramsey Street to the southern end at the city’s Riverside Dog Park near the new bridge at I-95 Business.

    The CSX railroad sold the city of Fayetteville an easement through its property beneath the railroad tracks, allowing the city to build a bridge under those tracks overlooking the banks of the Cape Fear River. Construction is slated to begin this fall and could be completed next summer.

    “We are excited to be able to connect these portions of the trail,” said Deputy City Manager Kristoff Bauer.

    Funding for the bridge, which will run through the CSX easement, includes a federal grant in the amount of $600,000, a state contribution of $1 million and a city contribution of $150,000.

    Shoreline Drive to receive repairs

    Construction on Shoreline Drive in College Lakes to replace a culvert beneath the roadway began Aug. 13. Lanier Construction Company of Snow Hill, North Carolina, was awarded the $830,000 contract.

    Several factors led to the emergency replacement of the 36-inch pipe. The existing culvert on Shoreline Drive has been in service since the late 1960s. It deteriorated to the point that it had to be replaced. Shoreline Drive is the only accessible roadway to the upper portion of the College Lakes subdivision, which necessitated this project.

    Construction is expected to be completed by spring of 2019.

    Fayetteville hazmat team recertified

    The Fayetteville Fire Department’s Special Operations Division has been recertified. It is charged with overseeing the operation of the hazardous materials team and the collapse, search and rescue team. Recertification is required every five years by the North Carolina Association of Rescue and EMS.

    “I’m proud of our staff and I congratulate them on this achievement,” said Assistant Fire Chief Robert Brinson.

    Hazardous material team units are assigned to fire stations 1 and 17. Each team member is required to obtain, at a minimum, state certification as a Hazardous Materials Level II Technician.

    In addition to handling all local hazardous materials incidents, the team is also contracted by the state as one of seven regional response teams responsible for a 12-county area. In the event of a long deployment, the team is also equipped with tents, food and water. Members are issued specialized protective equipment to ensure safety during dangerous operations.

     

    PHOTO: Ethel T. Clark

  • 04ParisThanks to the calendar, with some help from the Earth rotating around the sun, summer comes every year. This phenomenon leads to my unrequested, rarely read and inevitable column about summer vacation. Mrs. DelGrande, my fourth-grade teacher, began this process for me. Old habits are hard to break. To quote a time-honored adage, a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. When it comes to enjoying foolish consistencies and cranial hobgoblins, count me in.

    This summer, we went to Paris to renew our acquaintance with cafe au lait and Monet. The trip began on a spooky note. Our seats on the plane were in the last row, which meant they would not recline, resulting in an up-close-and-personal olfactory relationship with the toilet. We were on the interior row of three seats. No window access.

    As a bonus, a lady with a 2-year-old was our row companion. Four humans in three seats. What could go wrong? The little darling would sit on her lap for the next eight hours. Small children typically enjoy being confined in a small space for prolonged periods. We were really looking forward to being joined at the hip with our new roomies for the next 4,000 miles. Fortunately, a very kind stewardess took pity on us and moved us to another location.

    We went on the red-eye flight, arriving at 7 a.m. Paris is six hours ahead of North Carolina. This results in sleep deprivation on arrival. Lesson one: do not attempt to negotiate the Paris Metro with a head full of lack-o-sleep. We had a bit of a fun meltdown in a vain attempt ride the metro.

    Undaunted, we tried the Paris Uber Survivor Challenge, which is not for the faint of heart. You plug in where you want to go. Then the Uber Fuehrer starts you on a 5-minute race to meet your driver at an unknown location several blocks away in an unfamiliar city. The stakes are high – find the Uber, get a ride; don’t find the Uber on time, and you are penalized six Euros and remain a pedestrian. Until you have had a phone conversation with a non-English speaking Uber driver who keeps repeating the number 21, you cannot truly say you have experienced Paris.

    On Sunday, we went to the Gregorian Mass at Notre Dame, which was solemn, ancient and impressive. We left the spiritual world to re-enter the temporal plain when we left Notre Dame. We emerged to the frenzied preparations for the completion of the Tour de France that afternoon on the Champs Elysees. These preparations involved setting up food stands and a large presence of heavily armed soldiers and gendarmes in case of bad guys. The sight of French soldiers with Uzis is surprisingly reassuring.

    At the Pompidou modern art museum, we tested the resilience of our somewhat worn museum feet for hours while viewing the finest in nouveau art. One  exhibit stood out particularly strongly – a plain wooden chair sitting on a slab of plexiglass. The exhibit was labeled “Chair.” You could not sit in it. You were just to contemplate the chairness of it in relation to the cosmos and the dilemma of man and Mr. Death. It dramatically demonstrated that Andy Warhol was right when he said, “Art is what I can get away with.”

    We subsequently passed a sanity test when we went upstairs to the rooftop cafe at the Pompidou to get lunch. After sitting down and studying the menu, we
    saw it offered a $36 hamburger. We got up and left without eating there. The cafe obviously subscribed to Warhol’s theory that “Burger prices are what we can
    get away with.”

    My wife Lani ate snails at a sidewalk cafe. I discovered that there are few better ways to contemplate the meaning of life than sitting in a clean, well-lit place at
    the end of a Paris day nursing a cup of cafe au lait and a Cognac. It doesn’t get any more Parisian than that. La vie est belle.

  • 03EatingWe all do it. We all do it daily. Many of us do too much of it, and some of us do so little of it, we risk our lives. It gives us pleasure, and sometimes it makes us sick. We do it alone, and we do it with others. We read and sometimes take advice about doing it. Sometimes we get it right, and sometimes we get it wrong.

    Yes, we all eat, and lots of us try to eat well. But what the heck does that really mean?

    The old food pyramid of meat, starches and vegetables of my childhood is a culinary relic, and even though I try hard to pay attention to the latest in nutritional learning and advice, I am still confused most of the time. How much protein is right for my size and age? How much fat? Should I give up all white foods – pasta, potatoes, rice, breads, mayonnaise? What about my chardonnay at the end of the day? What happens if I do? What happens if I don’t?

    A new book posits that we should eat in sync with our ancient circadian rhythms, meaning during the 8 to 10 hours of the day when our bodies’ hormones and metabolisms are active and primed for processing food, like most other animals on earth. In “The Circadian Code” by Satchin Panda (yes, just like the pandas in China), the Salk Institute professor says extending our feeding times into the wee hours – remember that pre-bedtime bowl of ice cream? – simply ripens us up for weight gain and metabolic disorders.

    Maybe Panda’s nutritional notions are spot on, as well as the oncefamous grapefruit diet, which gave me a stomach ache and on which I nary lost an ounce. Maybe so as well to food that arrives in boxes dropped on our doorsteps and all the fancy and expensive juice concoctions made with spinach, exotic fruits and
    Lord knows what else. Maybe we should all be on a Paleo diet, eating just what we could have hunted or gathered way back when.

    As the daughter of a mother who believed we could eat anything we want if we do so in moderation, the recommendations of Aaron E. Carroll, professor at Indiana University School of Medicine, who also blogs at the Accidental Economist, make good sense for most of us. They have lots of wiggle room for those things our diverse tastes and metabolisms just have to have and those we simply cannot tolerate. Carroll is quick to say that his recommendations are not etched in stone – that no foods are “demons” or “miracles.”

    Here are some of Carroll’s recommendations.

    • Take as much of your nutrition as possible from unprocessed foods, including fruits and vegetables and meats, fish, poultry, and eggs that have not been cooked or prepared in some way until you do it. Choose whole grains over refined ones, and eat your fruit instead of drinking it in juice form.

    • Understand that most of us are all going to eat some processed foods. I have never made homemade pasta in my life and don’t expect to, but I have certainly cooked plenty of dried pasta. Fine, says Carroll, but not every day. Ditto for cookies, chips, breads and most cereals, which all contain processed ingredients.
    Know that homemade really is better, but it is not unprocessed either. That said, eat homemade food as often as possible. It gives us more control of what we are eating, and in Carroll’s words, “you are much less likely to stuff yourself silly if you eat home-cooked food.”

    • Use fats, including butter and oil, and salts in food preparation. Our bodies need them, but don’t go overboard. When we do this ourselves, we know what is in our food. We often do not know that in restaurant food.

    •Drink lots of water, but other beverages, including coffee and some alcohol, are OK as well. Remember that except for water, black coffee and most teas, all beverages have calories, often far more than we think.

    • This is probably Carroll’s best advice. Eat with other people, especially those near and dear, as often as you can. It will make you, or maybe some of them, more likely to cook. You will be happy in their company and will probably eat more slowly as you enjoy the conversation.

    Well said, Dr. Carroll, well said. You and my mother are kindred spirits at the table.

  • 02LSFThere are now two Hope Mills mediaresources residents can depend on for accurateand dependable Hope Mills news. Andboth are free and accessible to everyone.They are Up & Coming Weekly and the blogHopeMills.net, which is hosted by ElizabethBlevins. Below is a sample of Blevins’ journalistictalent and unrelenting resolve forseeking out the facts. We welcome Blevinsas a journalist and media partner ready,willing and able to serve the residents ofHope Mills.
    Stay informed. Sign up today at www.upandcomingweekly.com and HopeMills.net.

    – Bill Bowman

    Interview with Terry Jung, executivedirector, Lone Survivor Foundation

    In March of 1865, Gen. Sherman stormed through our small town, burning the mills around which we’d built a community. His intention was to bring absolute destruction to the South, to ensure future generations felt his wrath. He succeeded. It would be the last time the town of Hope Mills knew real industry. More than 150 years later, our town center is a disorganized mix of pawn shops and nail salons anchored around a long line of fast food joints, regrettably known as “Hamburger Hill.” We’re a bedroom community. The residents of Hope Mills choose it for its proximity to Fayetteville and Fort Bragg.

    Despite that, Terry Jung, executive director of Lone Survivor Foundation, chose us. He chose a forgotten piece of swampy land as the future home of a Lone Survivor Foundation facility. And, ironically, the very fact that we’d neglected it for 50 years is what made it so appealing. It’s secluded, tranquil and the perfect retreat for soldiers suffering from PTSD.

    I spoke with Jung about his search for the perfect piece of land and ongoing battle to buy the property.

    More than a year ago, Jung began his search. He was diligent, looking at more than 50 properties in Cumberland County before a series of introductions led him to the Fayetteville Cumberland County Economic Development Center.

    The FCCEDC staff, which includes Hope Mills’ Mayor Warner’s son, Teddy Warner, were instrumental in pairing Jung with the property in Hope Mills. Several commissioners have accused Mayor Warner of collusion, implying that she and her son somehow manipulated the process in which Jung brought his proposal to the Hope Mills Board of Commissioners.

    But Jung disagrees, “I’m confident they’re wrong because we’ve dealt with two other cities in the Cumberland County area – Godwin and Fayetteville – and that’s exactly the procedure we have followed (each time).”

    On June 4, Jung and members of the FCCEDC presented the board with their proposal in a closed session. By all accounts, most of the board was receptive of the idea. “Pat Edwards, Jessie Bellflowers and Meg Larson all expressed very positive thoughts to us. All three of them, when the meeting was over, said to either Tim (Byrom, LSF president) or me directly, ‘We’re gonna get this done.’”

    But Commissioner Mitchell was hesitant. After quizzing Teddy Warner about the tax value of the land – which has never been assessed – and without conferring with the other board members, Mitchell quoted a price for 60+/- acres that was much higher than market value. This is interesting in that Mitchell has steadfastly maintained the land was not for sale. Jung, who was never interested in buying the entire parcel, was bewildered by Mitchell’s behavior.

    “I didn’t know any of the history of Mitchell and Warner; I didn’t know anything about him being beaten twice in a mayoral election. I quickly sensed something
    was askew.”

    During the initial meeting, no one discussed the 2030 Southwest Cumberland County Land Use Plan or the McAdams Group Parks & Recreation survey. In fact, we know now that the land in question wasn’t initially included in the McAdams survey. It was included July 31, when commissioners Mitchell and Larson reached out to the McAdams Group and asked that it be added. There was no discussion of the 1999 and 2014 PWC surveys at this time.

    According to Jung, no one mentioned that the land wasn’t technically for sale. In fact, not only did Mitchell suggest a selling price, but the other commissioners all requested Jung make an official offer as a jumping off point for negotiations.

    And no one seemed at all concerned about the way in which the presentation had come to the town. No one suggested a conflict of interest or collusion. They were all, except Mitchell, in favor of the project and incredibly excited to move forward.

    “We left the meeting feeling like this was a done deal … the majority, three out of five commissioners, said we were gonna get this done.” Jung wasn’t prepared for what happened next.

    The morning of July 18, Jung received a call from the Hope Mills attorney informing him the board had rejected his offer and wasn’t interested in any further offers. He and other supporters of LSF had also been removed from the agenda of the next board meeting. Undeterred, Jung made the pilgrimage back to Hope Mills (from Houston, Texas), and addressed the board – not once, but twice.

    “I don’t want to be in the middle of all of these politics – I’m just trying to look out for what I believe is the best for the veterans, and you’ve got a community that is very veteran-centric that seems adamant they want this,” Jung said.

    Jung credits the Hope Mills community, which has been overwhelmingly supportive, with bolstering his resolve to fight on. But he also admits to being frustrated with the antics of the board and the time wasted. “We’re willing to fight some more, but there’s going to come a point where it’s not to the benefit of the soldiers anymore,” he said.

    Jung won’t give an exact timeline, but when 22 veterans commit suicide every day, every day spent waiting is a tragic waste of life.

    Crystal Beach, Texas, the home of LSF’s first facility, is thriving. After being devastated by Hurricane Ike, which destroyed 7,000 homes, the town had no economy to speak of. When LSF chose the community to operate out of, it gave confidence to residents who’d lost their homes and they began to rebuild. Today, more than 5,000 new homes have been added, and affiliates of LSF have purchased 52 acres of land for hosting largescale events. Each spring, the LSF affiliates host a Memorial Day Concert that brings more than 5000 people into the community. They’ve also hosted Jeep and motorcycle rallies. The town’s economy is rebounding … LSF and the town’s reputations are growing.

    The media blitz surrounding the Hope Mills Board of Commissioners has helped spread the word to neighboring communities, which have adopted a “your loss is our gain” mentality, and LSF is fielding offers from towns more than willing to support the organization. We can only assume they recognize the prestige associated with hosting a nationally recognized nonprofit organization.

    But do the commissioners of Hope Mills recognize the devastating effects of rejecting a nationally known nonprofit organization? Jung was hesitant to divulge details, but he indicated the story of Hope Mills and our squabbling board is spreading outside of this community. Other organizations and businesses are taking note of the trouble LSF has dealt with these last two months. We can’t expect them to ignore our bad decisions. We’re standing on the wrong side of history and the nation is watching.

    There will be a rally in support of LSF atGrace Place Christian Church, 3748 S. MainSt., Hope Mills, Aug. 16, at 6 p.m. The purposeof the rally is to measure public support forthe LSF and discuss the next course of action.The public is invited to attend.

  • 01coverUAC0081518001Dr. Larry Wells, director and conductor of the Fayetteville Symphony Youth Orchestra, thinks laughter is essential to the learning process, but he’s not here to play. He’s here to train Fayetteville’s young musicians to operate at a professional level and to help build Fayetteville into a city where the best and brightest  want to stay.

    “It bothers me that... our best young people want to leave,” he said. “That doesn’t bode well for our future if that continues. In my little way, because I just have my little slice of this pie, I want to have something that young people want to stay and do.”

    Wells plays trumpet with the Fayetteville Symphony Orchestra and the Carolina Philharmonic and is a professor and director at Methodist University. He holds a Master of Science in teaching music from Portland State University (1996) and a Doctor of Musical Arts in trumpet performance/wind conducting from the University of North Texas (2006).

    Though his current resume is impressive, Wells said growing up there was a lack of programs for young musicians in his home-state, Washington, and that he didn’t have access to professional training until college. This is a situation he never wants to happen to Fayetteville’s young talent.

    “There are certain rules in the professional world that young people won’t have been exposed to unless they’re in a program like (the FSYO); even how you practice and go about your day, how you dress,” Wells said. “The youth symphony is an opportunity for kids to study.”

    The FSYO, which was formed in 2014, is open to students ages 13-21 in public school, private school or homeschool. It includes Cumberland County students as well as students from many other counties.

    Wells said the FSYO is not meant to compete with high school music programs, but rather to complement those programs for students who want to go further. For this reason, the FSYO meets on Sundays; Saturdays would force many students to choose between marching band and the youth symphony.

    “We’re all on the same team,” he said. “The high school programs do a great job for what they do. (The FSYO) can be a conduit for the next step.... There are nitty gritty things like (transposition) that maybe don’t really apply on a marching band field but absolutely apply in a concert hall on an audition.”

    Every week, FSYO students rehearse music for one of three or more concerts they will perform over the course of the year, but there’s also a lot of teaching going on.

    Wells gives them a basic lesson in conducting so they can follow his movements – “No 1, 2, 3, 4 here,” he said. If the students run into a difficult rhythm they don’t know how to play, Wells pauses rehearsal and break the rhythm down on the whiteboard. When players need to transpose their sheet music, they learn how to do that, too.

    If the flutes are having trouble, Wells calls in FSO flute section leader Sarah Busman to work with them in a separate mini-session.

    Students’ direct access to their professional counterparts in the FSO is one of the strongest elements of the program, Wells said. “I’ve got a doctorate in trumpet, but I can’t play tuba well enough to teach my kid how it should sound. Here, they’ve all got access to all of it.

    “We talk a lot about intonation, music theory … Whatever the day, it’s like ok, this is what’s happening, let’s talk about (it) from a professional perspective.”

    The students’ hard work results in three or more concerts over the course of one season, culminating in the “side-by-side” concert, in which students get to play onstage with the FSO. The FSO is led by Music Director and Conductor Stefan Sanders, who has conducted for the New York Philharmonic among many other orchestras.

    Another of the FSYO’s strengths is a structure that allows for both specialization and inclusion. This structure is comprised of a Concert Band (woodwinds, brass and percussion) led by Wells, a String Orchestra (violin, viola, cello and bass) led by FSO violinist Monica Thiriot, and a Full Orchestra led by Wells. Wells said having these separate groups creates two advantages.

    First, he said, separating Concert Band and String Orchestra allows students in those groups to play music that’s challenging for their instruments. Sometimes, he said, music that’s challenging for strings can be painfully easy for woodwinds, and vice versa. It also allows for more specialized instruction.

    Second, the structure allows Wells to say yes to every student who wants to learn. No student who auditions is ever turned away from participating in Concert Band or String Orchestra. However, the audition does determine students’ seating, and to play in the Full Orchestra, they have to be at the top of their section.

    “(This structure) gives me flexibility to meet the needs of all the kids, and it also gives a spot for people where I don’t have to say no,” Wells said. “You never know when the light’s gonna come on for a young person. But if you don’t have them in your group, then you’ll never know if the light (could) come on. He added that having students with a range of skill levels allows for less experienced players to learn from their seniors and then pay it forward.

    String coach Thiriot, who also leads string programs for K-second-graders and ages 13 and under, said her favorite thing about working with the students is giving them music they don’t ever think they could play – and getting them to a place where they realize they can.

    Wells added that the FSYO’s “never say no” policy coupled with the fact the FSYO gets students from school systems as far as an hour away creates a diverse body. Students get to play and connect with other musicians their age they might otherwise never have met.

    The FSYO also holds extra workshops and social events outside of its weekly rehearsals. These include free workshops for Cumberland County students that focus on preparing students for things like all-district auditions and college auditions, as well as an end-ofthe- year party at Wells’ house and possible field trips.

    All in all, it’s a program that lets those who are willing to work for it shine, Wells said.

    “Good enough isn’t good enough for me. … I jokingly tell my students that’s why I’m bald. Because my hair will never look good. So it’s gone. They laugh, but I get my point across. If they’re laughing, then they’re learning.

    “If mediocre is the best you can do, then don’t. Either work hard enough to not be mediocre, or find something you’re good at. Way too many people shoot low; I don’t want Fayetteville musically to shoot low.”

    The thing is, Wells said, being serious about music is actually really fun. “It’s fun to learn, and it’s fun to be good,” he said. “It’s fun to not suck. Young people get that. And again, they laugh, but they remember.”

    The FSYO meets on Sundays; Concert Band and String Orchestra separately from 4-4:50 p.m., and Full Orchestra from 5-6 p.m. Registration for the 2018-19 FSYO season must be completed by Aug. 31. When students register, they also sign up for an audition time. Learn more at fayettevillesymphony.org/youth-orchestra. View the FSO’s upcoming season, which includes dates for the FSYO’s concerts, by clicking on “Concerts and Tickets” and “2018-2019 Concerts.”

  • 10Rodney Brewington South View2017  record: 9-4


    Top returners: Donovan Brewington, 5-10, 175, Sr., QB; Emery Simmons, 6-2, 185, Sr., WR; Joel Evans, 5-11, 325, Jr., OL; Matthew Pemberton, 5-9, 190, Jr., ATH; Denarea McMillan, 6-2, 215, Sr., RB; Jaylin Webb, 5-9, 260, Sr., DL; Elijah Wyand, 6-3, 225, Sr., TE; Ashawn Henley, 5-11, 235, Sr., DE; Gerald Bellanger, 6-2, 205, Sr., LB; Kevin Brewington, 5-8, 165, Jr., WR.


    Top newcomers: Joshua George, 6-2, 200, So., LB; Corey Johnson, 6-0, 175, Sr., DB; Marzea Saunders, 5-9, 165, Jr., RB.

    11Jaylin Webb South View
    Team strengths: “Skill positions.”Team concerns: “Youth.”

    Coach’s comment: “We have the pieces to make a strong push if we get the young offensive line

     

     

     

     

    Coach Rodney Brewington, top returner Jaylin Webb

  • Meetings Meetings For details about all meetings and activities, including location where not listed, call Town Clerk Jane Starling at 910-426-4113. Most meetings take place at Town Hall or the Hope Mills Parks and Recreation center.

    • Board of Commissioners Monday, Aug. 20, 7 p.m. The town of Hope Mills will take notice that the Board of Commissioners has scheduled a public hearing at Hope Mills Town Hall, 5770 Rockfish Rd., Room #120, on the question of annexing the following described territory, requested by petition filed pursuant to G. S. 160A-31:  The described area of land is located on SR 2333 (Corporation Drive) and is the exact distance of 1 mile (N) from the intersection of Route No./Road SR 2252 (Chickenfoot Road) towards the city of Fayetteville, but is not within the city of Fayetteville.  LOT 4 CAROLYN R GRANT, Lot frontage 527.80 ft. facing the west is N 72”54’28” E, N 18”26’04”W, S 71”33’58”, N 17”57’39” with a lot depth of 412.11ft.  Lot 4 is in the Rockfish Township of Cumberland County. This is a non-contiguous annexation.The public is invited to attend the meeting to offer comments or ask questions.

    • Lake Advisory Committee Tuesday, Aug. 21, 6 p.m. at Hope Mills Parks and Recreation.


    Activities

    • Hope Mills Area Kiwanis Club at Sammio’s, second Tuesdays at noon and fourth Tuesdays at 6 p.m. For details, call 910-237-1240. 

    • Senior programs – Acrylic painting, Thursday, Aug. 23, 10 a.m.-noon or 1-3 p.m., in the Small Activity Room of the Hope Mills Parks and Rec center. $5. Sign up at front reception desk. Only 10 seats available per session. 

    Promote yourself: Email hopemills@upandcomingweekly.com.

  • 09Hope Mills Municipal ParkWhen Hope Mills residents come to Thursday’s Food Truck Rodeo in the parking lot behind the Hope Mills Recreation Center, they need to plan on doing more than eating.When Hope Mills residents come to Thursday’s Food Truck Rodeo in the parking lot behind the Hope Mills Recreation Center, they need to plan on doing more than eating.

    Kenny Bullock, head of the Hope Mills Parks and Recreation Department, wants them to arrive ready to share ideas for the town’s comprehensive recreation plan.

    Representatives of the McAdams firm will be on hand to get input from the townspeople about their concerns for the future of recreation in Hope Mills.

    Bullock said the plan being developed will include some nine park areas in Hope Mills, existing athletic fields like Municipal Park and Brower Park, community parks like Herring Park in the Eaglewood subdivision, and parks still on the drawing board like Heritage Park, which will include a museum devoted to the town’s history as a mill village.

    There is also potential for major park development at the old golf course, which the town owns.

    The main purpose of the comprehensive plan is to avoid duplication of services and to make sure that something offered at one park isn’t constructed at another park. “That’s the purpose of the comprehensive plan,’’ Bullock said, “to utilize all the park space independently instead of duplicating park space.’’

    Athletic fields are always a major concern when anyone talks parks. Bullock said the town has existing fields at Municipal Park and Brower Park and also uses the field at Hope Mills Middle School.

    Bullock said there are preliminary plans to add some fields at the golf course property. “We need some multipurpose fields we can use for soccer and football,’’ he said. “There may be a complex we can convert to football and soccer.’’

    He said at Municipal Park it might be possible to use Fields 1 and 2 as a soccer/football field, then turn Fields 4, 5 and 6 into a wagon wheel type facility.

    The most urgent priority in developing the parks is the construction of Heritage Park near the restored Hope Mills dam. “That’s part of the contract with the Hope Mills dam,’’ Bullock said. “The next priority is the museum for the historical committee.’’

    The current plan for Heritage Park involves nothing to do with athletics. It is scheduled to feature walking trails and bridges.

    Bullock feels it’s important not to lump all the parks into one pile when getting input from the public. “We need to concentrate on all of them,’’ he said. “Each park is different. We need to put a focus on all the parks and what we would like to do.’’

    Meanwhile, public input at this Thursday’s Food Truck Rodeo is critical.

    Bullock stressed to the citizens of Hope Mills that this is their time to speak out and voice their concerns and their opinions on the future of parks and recreation in the town. “Don’t wait until after the fact and it’s been done,’’ Bullock said.

    Photo caption: The main purpose of the comprehensive plan is to avoid duplication of services and to make sure that something offered at one park isn’t constructed at another park.

  • 08Food truck promoIt may have rained out the last Food Truck Rodeo in Hope Mills, but the rescheduled event this Thursday at 5 p.m. behind the recreation center on Rockfish Road is going to give people a chance to help out children about to return to school.It may have rained out the last Food Truck Rodeo in Hope Mills, but the rescheduled event this Thursday at 5 p.m. behind the recreation center on Rockfish Road is going to give people a chance to help out children about to return to school.

    Chancer McLaughlin, development and planning administrator for the town of Hope Mills, said he realized the later date would push the rodeo closer to the scheduled opening of school. This led to the town using the Food Truck Rodeo as an opportunity to collect school supplies for youngsters.

    The Food Truck Rodeo already collects donations of food for the Hope Mills ALMS HOUSE, which has a mission of feeding the hungry, clothing the needy and providing counseling and financial assistance.

    Now, this week’s rodeo is collecting goods for the upcoming FAYONE event, which is helping to provide school supplies to Cumberland County students.

    McLaughlin said FAYONE is a cooperative effort between a number of other groups that were providing school supplies to youngsters.

    The FAYONE organizers joined their efforts to offer one large event.FAYONE is scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 18, at the Crown Arena beginning at 10 a.m.

    It will feature two events, Gotcha’Back and Cut My City.Gotcha’Back provides backpacks filled with school supplies for needy children, while Cut My City offers free haircuts.To get a free haircut, students must be at the Crown Arena and registered by 2 p.m. the day of the event.

    McLaughlin said when he realized the Food Truck Rodeo was going to have to be postponed, he contacted Hope Mills town manager Melissa Adams to see about adding collecting school supplies to the rodeo.

    All supplies collected at the rodeo will in turn be donated to FAYONE to be given away this Saturday.

    “I feel as a municipality we have a bigger reach and we can be bigger leaders,’’ McLaughlin said. “We want to support a communitywide back-to-school drive as well. We’re telling residents of Hope Mills to bring school supplies when they come to the food drive.’’

    Any school supplies are welcome, but McLaughlin said the top choices for people to bring are wire composition books, pens, pocket folders, rulers, pencils and notebook paper.

    Another feature of the FAYONE event will be a separate area in the Crown Arena called the Teachers Lounge. “We’ll have things for them and supplies we’ll donate to the schools,’’ McLaughlin said.

    If there is anyone who is interested in volunteering to help out at FAYONE this Saturday, they can email fayeone2018@gmail.com.

    In addition to the usual food trucks, because the Thursday rodeo is focused on back-to-school, McLaughlin said Hope Mills will offer a bouncy house, cornhole games, face painting, karaoke and a dance-off for the children.

    There will also be raffles held for various prizes.

    The town will also conduct its usual solicitation for donations of food to the Hope Mills ALMS HOUSE.

    Preferred food donations for the ALMS HOUSE include bottled water, single-serve boxes of cereal, ramen noodles, individual microwaveable servings of pasta and gallon-size freezer bags.

  • 16Bruce McClelland Terry SanfordCoach: Bruce McClellandCoach: Bruce McClelland

    2017 record: 11-2

    Top returners: Tanner Morris, 6-2, 270, Sr., OL; Leonard Mosley, 5-9, 168, Sr., WR-RB; Connor Brady, 6-1, 307, Sr., OL; Kirin Keys, 6-0, 286, Sr., OL; Shawn Newman, 5-9, 160, Sr., DB; Dante Bowlding, 6-0, 181, Sr., DB-WR-RB; Donovan Stevenson, 5-11, 172, Sr., LB; Dorian Clark, 5-11, 201, Jr., RB; Jackson Deaver, 6-0, 224, Jr., LB; Ezemdi Udoh, 6-5, 232, Jr., TE-DE.

    Top newcomers: Joseph Briley, 5-11, 208, Sr., LB-RB; Jacob Knight, 6-0, 170, Jr., QB-WR; Roscoe Blue, 6-4, 334, Jr., OL-DL; Jamir Moore, 6-1, 173, Sr., WR-DB; Tyquan Hayes, 6-1, 172, Jr., LB-RB; Maurice Jones, 5-10, 163, Jr., RB; DeAndre Brown, 5-9, 164, Sr., DB; Saquon Smith, 6-0, 160, So., DB-WR; Elijah Morris, 6-1, 220, Jr., DL.

    17Shawn Newman Terry SanfordTeam strengths: “Senior leadership. Offensive line.”Team concerns: “Depth. Replacing 15 starters.”

    Coach’s comment: “Our senior leadership has maintained the level of competition this summer and is excited about the opportunity to lead the 2018 Bulldog football team into this year’s PAC-9 Conference slate. Our goal is to develop a host of new starters. We feel we have a schedule that will challenge us both in and out of conference. Staying healthy will be a top priority.’’

     

     

    Coach Bruce McClelland, top returner Shawn Newman

  • 14Ernest King WestoverCoach: Ernest King

    2017 record: 4-8

    Top returners: Xavier Marsh, 6-2, 180, Sr., QB; Demarion Ford, 5-7, 180, Sr., WR; DeShawn Fitts, 5-8, 160, Sr., WR; Pernell Shoulars, 6-5, 315, Sr., OL; DeMareon James, 6-2, 260, So., DL; Te’Andre Walton, 6-0, 205, Sr., SS; Jaivon Coates, 5-10, 160, Sr., DB.

    Top newcomers: Taurienne Freeman, 6-1, 215, Jr., MLB; Devon Marshall, 6-1, 170, Jr., WR; Keyshawn Lindsey, 6-1, 205, Jr., RB; Antonio Arrington, 5-9, 180, Sr., LB; Nahala Moore, 6-3, 305, So., OL.

    Team strengths: “The experience and numbers in the senior class.”

    15DeMareon James WestoverTeam concerns: “Team is learning its third system in three years, particularly the most recent system in a short time.”
    Coach’s comment: “Our success this season will be determined by our experienced playmakers and the quick ability to learn the offensive and defensive schemes. We are hoping our non-conference schedule will help us evaluate our players as well as team play before entering the conference schedule.’’

     

     

    Coach Ernets King, top returner DeMareon James

  • 12Deron Donald E.E. SmithCoach: Deron DonaldCoach: Deron Donald


    2017 record: 9-4

    Top returners: Toshiro Spivey, 6-1, 185, Sr., WR/DB; Maurice McLaughlin, 5-9, 205, Sr., DL/P; Jaylyn Locklear, 5-8, 165, Sr., RB; Daquan Wilson, 5-8, 165, Sr., DB; Darius Johnson, 6-0, 245, Jr., OL/DL; Angel Holden, 5-11, 180, Sr., QB/K; Malik Small, 5-10, 175, Sr., K/WR; Jeremy Priebe Jr., 5-11, 155, Sr., LS/DB; Jeremy Evans, 5-9, 160, Jr., WR; Tobias Winder, 5-11, 260, Sr., OL/DL.

    Top newcomers: Markell Samuel, 6-3, 220, Jr, OLB/DE; Randy Franklin, 6-0, 180, Jr, DB; Jarvis Dudley, 5-8, 210, Jr., LB/FB; Trevon Hinton, 5-7, 160, Jr., DB; Shawn Kirk, 5-8, 155, Jr., RB; Brenden Tibbs, 5-8, 170, Jr., LB; Genuwine Clark, 6-0, 265, So., DL/OL; Judah Matthews, 5-9, 175, So., DB.

    13Jaylyn Locklear E.E. SmithTeam strengths: “Explosive playmakers on the offensive side of the ball as well as overall team speed.”Team concerns: “Inexperience. Only six returning starters from last year’s team.”

    Coach’s comment: “This year’s team is inexperienced in some key areas and there will be several young guys stepping in who will play meaningful minutes. However, we have quality leaders that have been in the program for four years that understand the Golden Bulls way.”

     

     

    Coach Deron Donald, top returner Jaylyn Locklear

  • 01coverUAC0080818001

  • 12Steven2Linda Buie first met Steven when she took some South View students attending the North Carolina High School Athletic Association’s Student Athlete Summer Institute to Fayetteville’s Dorothy Gilmore Therapeutic Rehabilitation Center.

    To this day, she doesn’t know Steven’s exact age, but there’s one thing she does know about him.

    “He would always say, ‘Hey, it’s my birthday,’” Buie said.

    Thanks to Buie and her South View SASI students this year, it finally came true for Steven. As part of their action plan for SASI, Buie and her five South View students threw a birthday party for Steven, which was according to Buie the first one the young man ever had.

    The party was held at the Gilmore Center, which provides recreation opportunities for people with disabilities.

    While Steven may be classified as one of those people, SASI student Priya Mall of South View said you’d never know it by Steven’s demeanor.

    “We made a strong connection with Steven,’’ she said of the group’s first visit to the Gilmore Center with SASI this year. “We were dancing together and he was so happy all the time. He thinks it’s his birthday and he hasn’t had a birthday party and we should throw them one.’’

    That was the thing Buie appreciated most about the idea the students had for the party.

    “They picked this,’’ Buie said. “It wasn’t a suggestion of mine. When the kids found out, they said, ‘we want to have a birthday party.’’’

    And what a party it was, filled with things that are Steven’s favorites.

    Among the items on the menu were pizza, Doritos, potato chips and cake. Most important of all, there were gifts.

    Each of the students was charged with making sure to give Steven a different gift, with new clothes the focus of the gift-giving, Buie said.

    “He doesn’t hardly have any clothes,’’ Buie said. “We wanted to try to help him a little bit.’’

    Riley Caudle, another of Buie’s SASI students from South View, said the project tied in with the SASI message about being an effective leader.

    The weeklong SASI gathering in this region has been hosted by UNC-Pembroke for many years. Students from high schools across the Cape Fear region are brought in for lessons on leadership and being alcohol- and drug-free.

    “Everyone can work together and come together on one thing,’’ Caudle said. 

    Mall agreed with Caudle. “I think it does send a good message,’’ she said of the party for Steven. “As a leader, you should do the right thing, help out, do things for other people and not just be a stubborn leader.

    “Being a leader doesn’t mean you have to be in charge all the time. You can collaborate and talk about things with other people.’’

    Photo: L to R: Lillian Flantos, Priya Mall, Davin Schmidt, Steven, Keshawn Dunham, Danielle Novak, Riley Caudle

  • 09Hedgepeths 2When Dr. John Hedgepeth came to Northwood Temple in 1968, it was only supposed to a two-year appointment by the local conference of the International Pentecostal Holiness Church. And Northwood Temple is where he’s remained for 50 years. On Sunday, Aug. 12, the church will hold a day of celebration in recognition of Hedgepeth’s years of service.

    “Like the old song said, just one day at a time,’’ Hedgepeth said. “That’s where I’ve been all my life since August of 1968.’’

    There will be no Sunday School that morning, just a 10:30 a.m. worship service honoring Hedgepeth’s unprecedented tenure at the church.

    The guest speaker will be Dr. A.D. Beecham Jr., general superintendent of the International Pentecostal Holiness Church from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

    The celebration will continue at
    5 p.m. with a banquet in the church’s Family Life Center gymnasium. Hedgepeth said he never dreamed in the summer of 1968 he’d stay at Northwood for 50 years.

    He said the congregation is made up of really great people.

    “You go to a place and you minister with all your heart to the people that are there,’’ he said. “If you have a ministry, that is your testament, it doesn’t stay static. It always keeps changing. Like it says in Acts, the Lord added daily to the church.’’

    Hedgepeth said a focus of his ministry from the start has been reaching out to people in time of need, especially when they are facing problems with their health.

    “They are looking for someone to love them and care for them,’’ he said, “someone that will lay hands on them and go to the hospital when they are sick, rather than saying if you need me, call me.’’

    Under Hedgepeth’s leadership, Northwood has also become a focal point for mission work. He describes what the church has done by paraphrasing the scripture passage Acts 1:8, which called on the apostles of Jesus Christ to be witnesses in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria and to the ends of the earth.

    “Jerusalem is your local people,’’ Hedgepeth said. “Judea, that’s your counties and state.’’

    He said Samaria referred to Samaritans, an unwanted people in the time of Christ. “We reached out to everybody,’’ he said.

    If you visit Northwood today, you will see flags of 54 nations displayed. They represent the countries around the world where the church’s members call home. 

    “My people have always had a heart to reach out to every race,’’ he said.

    And they’ve done it in ways other than just welcoming people to the congregation. Northwood’s Church On The Street program delivers meals to the local homeless.

    The church has sent mission teams to Mexico, Africa, the Dominican Republic and the Kuna Islands off Panama. They’ve been to Nicaragua over 20 times.

    “We helped build schools, built churches,’’ Hedgepeth said. “People got saved and healed. We can’t stop.’’

    Hedgepeth gives much of the credit for the success of his ministry at Northwood to his wife of 55 years, the former Fay Bullard.

    “I owe her everything,’’ he said. “She settled me down and made me think right. She taught me ways to do things I didn’t know because of her brilliance.’’

    He also praised the staff at Northwood, especially minister of music Buck Hodge, who has been with Hedgepeth almost 50 years.

    Hedgepeth is willing to talk at length about almost any subject, but there are two areas where he’s not that vocal. One is his age and the other is the subject of retirement.

    “I never tell anybody my age,’’ he said. “Age puts limits on you now.’’

    Hedgepeth is a firm believer in the philosophy of motivation. Nothing stands still, he said. It either goes backward or forward.

    He said he’s never read of anyone in the Bible that retired, not even Moses.

    “I really believe when you come to a place in life when you don’t want any more souls, when you don’t want to go to any more hospitals, when you don’t want to do any more weddings or attend a funeral, when you don’t have to worry about any more mountains to conquer, you don’t have to worry about being dead,’’ he said. “You’re already dead.

    “I really believe you’ve got to go get them. I might not get them as much as I used to, but man, I’m moving forward.’’

    Seating is limited for the event, and tickets are available at $8 a person. For reservations, call 910-488-7474.

    Photo: Rev. John Hedgepeth and wife Fay

  • 06Jane Fonda 1970sJane Fonda said she’s still confronted by Vietnam War veterans over her 1970s anti-war activism and welcomes the encounters. Such moments provide an opportunity to talk, she said, which needs to be done with what Fonda called “an open mind and a soft heart.” 

    The actress drew bitter criticism after being photographed sitting on an anti-aircraft gun during a 1972 visit to North Vietnam. She was dubbed “Hanoi Jane.”That same year, she and actor Donald Sutherland took part in an anti-war protest in downtown Fayetteville. At the time, Fort Bragg troops gave Fonda a different nickname: traitor b****. 

    Fonda met with TV critics this month to discuss a new HBO documentary on her life and expressed regret for that moment. She said it was thoughtless to perch on the gun and called it “horrible to think about the message her action sent to soldiers and their families.” 

    Her late father, the famed actor Henry Fonda, was a World War II veteran. Fonda had served as “Miss Army Recruiter” in 1954. 

    At age 80, Fonda looks back at her life in HBO’s “Jane Fonda in Five Acts,” debuting this fall. 

    Cold case arrest

    Fayetteville Police have cracked a nearly 30-year-old sexual assault cold case with an arrest. Antonio L. McNeil, 55, of Slater Avenue in Fayetteville, was 25 when he allegedly attacked his victim. He has been jailed on charges of second-degree rape, second-degree sex offense and first-degree kidnapping. The case dates to November of 1989. Detectives investigated the case then, but it went unsolved. 

    The case was recently reopened when the sexual assault evidence kit was tested for DNA. Police Sgt. Shawn Strepay said McNeil was already being held at the Cumberland County Detention Center on unrelated charges when arrested on the new allegations. He is being held on a $400,000 secured bond. 

    Strepay said 25 rape cases have been cleared with arrests over the last three years by the Fayetteville Police Department’s Cold Case Sexual Assault Unit. People with information concerning a sexual assault more than five years old are asked to contact Police Detective R. DeShields at 910-580-3016.

    Save the rain water

    The Cumberland Soil and Water Conservation District is offering rain barrels for sale. The barrels provide a storage system used for collecting rain water, which can be used to water plants, lawns and gardens. Fifty-five-gallon pickle barrels are transformed into rain barrels by adding mesh screen netting to the open tops and installing spigots to the bottoms. Rain barrels can be placed out in the open, under the drip line of a roof or under a gutter’s downspout. A typical one-inch rainfall can fill the rain barrel placed beneath a downspout. 

    Rain barrels are selling for $40 at the Cumberland Soil and Water Conservation District office at 301 East Mountain Dr. The office is open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Proceeds from rain barrel sales support youth educational programs in Cumberland County.

    40th annual International Folk Festival

    Grab a dance partner and get ready for an unforgettable evening during the 40th annual International Folk Festival in downtown Fayetteville. The Williamsburg Salsa Orchestra of Brooklyn, New York, is the Saturday evening headliner. The 11-piece band will take the Festival Park stage at 6:15 p.m. on Sept. 29. 

    The performance is part of an extensive entertainment lineup during the festival weekend of Sept. 28 through 30, featuring horn arrangements, pulsating percussion and sultry vocals. According to their promotional materials, “WSO has taken the typical Salsa form and infused it with a completely modern identity.” 

    Symphony leader’s contract renewed

    The board of directors of the Fayetteville Symphony Orchestra has announced renewal of its contract with President and CEO Christine Kastner. 

    “Chris Kastner is a great leader, and her history with the FSO is proof positive of that,” said board chairman Joe Vonnegut. 

    Kastner was hired as CEO in November 2011. Under her leadership, the FSO increased the number of concerts performed. The symphony also added a free concert in Festival Park, partnering with the city of Fayetteville for an Independence Day celebration. 

    The FSO has also made significant progress in its endowment under her leadership, Vonnegut added. 

    Photo: Jane Fonda

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